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salamat
how much Philippines influenced Guam...i wish dalawapo was still here so i could throw this at his face...ha ha f-ck p-islanders...Guam is Philippines lite

From goods to dishes
Close contact between Guam and the Philippines after Spanish rule brought not only Filipinos to Guam, but also flora, fauna, food, and other cultural goods and practices.

Fauna
Perhaps the most popular animal brought from the Philippines is the carabao (in Tagalog kalabaw) or water buffalo. Filipino farmers traditionally use these very strong, lumbering, water-loving, slow-moving animals to pull carts for travel, to draw soil tillers in rice and other farm cultivation, and to provide very rich and creamy-tasting milk. Because Filipino conscript laborers were also Guam farmers, they were most probably instrumental in bringing the animal over, though some are recorded to have been brought to Guam from Malaysia.

Filipino farmers most probably also brought with them the practice of cockfighting around the first half of the 19th century even though the Chamorro word for it is the Spanish gallera, whereas Filipinos call it sabong. Other betting terminologies used in this practice are most probably from the Philippines. Up to the present Chamorros and other locals raise cocks and hold cockfights in cockfight stadiums as well as in private farms and properties.

Food and flora
Chamorros speak fondly of “carabao” mangoes, a special species of mangoes brought over to Guam from the Philippines. Chamorros developed a taste for these fragrant and sweet golden yellow fruit after they were brought to the island. Unfortunately, Guam’s supertyphoons destroyed most of the trees. Today, local supermarkets import carabao mangoes from Guimaras Island, Iloilo, Philippines.

Filipino farmers introduced the making of tuba, or coconut sap liquor, to Guam. In tuba making, farmers cut off the coconut tree’s inflorescence tip in increments to allow the sap to drip into a bamboo container. This results in about four quarts of collected sap daily. When allowed to ferment, the sap becomes sweet tuba liqueur. Left to ferment longer, the sap turns to vinegar.

Chamorros also distilled tuba to produce aguajente (from Spanish aguardiente), described as similar to raw rum served during fiestas and other festivities. Another sweet concoction is what old Chamorros called Almibad, prepared by boiling sweet coconut juice.

Guam’s dialect of English has numerous borrowed words for food that reflect the island inhabitants’ rich and varied backgrounds and diet. A number of these words are Filipino in origin. Among the fruit that probably came from or via the Philippines are atis, siniguelas, kayomito, balimbing or bilimbinis, duhat, and camachile. Younger Chamorros may no longer familiar with duhat or camachile.

Among the dishes brought to Guam by Filipinos are pancit, Chinese noodles introduced to Guam from the Philippines; lumpia or fried spring rolls; lechon or pit-fired whole roast pig; paksiw, meat or fish boiled in water with vinegar, salt and hot pepper; banana lumpia for turon; and potu for white rice cakes.

Other Filipino dishes and pastries served in Guam’s hotels and restaurants, or sold in local stores, have not yet been fully integrated into Guam’s dialect of English. Among them are: karekare, the Filipino version of the Spanish callos; halo halo, a dessert made with sweet preserved fruit and beans, served with shaved ice and milk; leche flan or the Spanish crème brulé; sticky rice cakes and puddings of various kinds – kuchinta, maja blanca, pichipichi, bibingka; pastries called ensaimada; mamon; and the Filipino pungent caviar called bago’ong.

Modes of dress and games
In the 19th century up to prewar Guam, Filipinos and Guamanians dressed alike in the Spanish-influenced “Filipino” mestiza style of dress, with its bell-shaped, transparent, sometimes richly beaded blouse made of pineapple fiber (piña), and long cotton skirt. Both people’s mode of dress became more “American” after 1898, but older women in both places still dressed in the Spanish-influenced traditional way up to the 1980s. Worn with this dress was footwear made of the natural fiber called abaca or richly beaded colorful slippers that much older women still wear today.

Tschongka, a game played with small shells placed in a carved oblong wooden board with seven facing holes and two big holes on either end, most probably came from the Philippines too. Many of these boards are carved from solid pieces of wood in the Philippines’ Mountain Province. Filipinos call this game sungkâ.

Religion
Iglesia ni Kristo (Church of Christ) is a Filipino independent church that has a very active congregation on Guam. Established by Felix Manalo in the Philippines in 1914, Iglesia is one of two groups that separated from the Filipino Catholic Church. About three percent of the Philippines’ 76 million population belong to this church. Chamorro members of the church on Guam are those married to Filipino members.

Celebrations held on Guam
Filipinos on Guam celebrate the Philippine Independence Day on June 12th. On this day, Philippine dignitaries visit Guam to give speeches to various Filipino ethnic and provincial organizations, as well as the umbrella group, The Filipino American Community of Guam.

Additionally, each May, the Santa Cruzan, a religious folk parade, is celebrated along Ypao Road, with young, good-looking men and women participating. Sometimes, local organizers fly in beauty queens and performing artists from the Philippines to give the celebration parade an extra boost and appeal.

The University of Guam’s Fieldhouse, as well as local hotels, have been typical venues for visiting Filipino performing artists, designers, and groups. Past performers include the Ateneo Choir, Broadway artist Lea Salonga, Filipino singers Sharon Cuneta, Pops Fernandez, Philippine designer Pitoy Moreno, and the renowned Bayanihan Dance Group.

Suzuka00
QUOTE (salamat @ May 30 2009, 11:17 AM) *
how much Philippines influenced Guam...i wish dalawapo was still here so i could throw this at his face...ha ha f-ck p-islanders...Guam is Philippines lite

Palau is more influenced by filipinos that they have filipino dna as well their ties are from even before spanish era.....
taybenco
guam was the most brutal example of spanish colonization ever in its 400 year history: of the 200000 Chamorros only 5000 survived. the spanish repopulated the island with visayans and their colonists. that's why everybody is soemhow related to filipinos, not only through the proto-austronesian link.
Suzuka00
QUOTE (taybenco @ May 30 2009, 10:24 AM) *
guam was the most brutal example of spanish colonization ever in its 400 year history: of the 200000 Chamorros only 5000 survived. the spanish repopulated the island with visayans and their colonists. that's why everybody is soemhow related to filipinos, not only through the proto-austronesian link.

And also because the island is too small for them to escape and expand and also because they were too isolated...
AzNboii
most tha chamorro cats here in vegas are half filipino. come to think of it all tha ones i met are half filipino but dont wana claim it for some reason
orient
It's better to be a Filipino than a Chamorro but that's just an opinion. embarassedlaugh.gif
salamat
QUOTE (orient @ May 30 2009, 11:03 AM) *
It's better to be a Filipino than a Chamorro but that's just an opinion. embarassedlaugh.gif

obviously thats why they r copying us
Sonofvisayas
QUOTE (AzNboii @ May 30 2009, 11:54 AM) *
most tha chamorro cats here in vegas are half filipino. come to think of it all tha ones i met are half filipino but dont wana claim it for some reason

Yea I know some chamoros that are like that, I guess they just want to be known as different people just like some Filipinos don't want to be called Asians.
islander
In Guam Chamorros are 57% of the total population. Filipinos (25.5%), White (10%) both European often of Spanish and white American ancestry. The rest are of Chinese, Japanese and Korean ancestry. Chances are Chamorros in Guam will keep going down especially since US it thinking of restablishing Guam an important Pacific base plus many Asians especially Filipinos moving there.

In the Northern Marianna islands, which is separate from Guam, Filipinos are the largest ethnic group making up over 29% of the population. Chinese are 22.1%. The Native Chamorros are only 21.3% in population.

Wonder why the US did not keep the Northern Mariannas together with Guam since its also the homeland of the Chamorros.




The Japanese controlled the Northern Mariana which included the important island of Saipan and which they got from Germany after WW I. The Germans had gotten them from the Spaniards who sold it to them in 1899. Guam was the Southern most island of the Marianas but that was under US control.

In WW II when the Japanese attacked and conquered Guam they rounded up most of the Chamoros and sent them to concentration camps.

QUOTE
During this period, the indigenous people of Guam were subjected to forced labor, family separation, incarceration, execution, concentration camps and prostitution.


It is said the entire native Chamorro population was sent by the Japanese to concentration camps.

But the bad thing about all this is that the Chamorros that had been under Japanese control in the Northern Marianna islands were brought to Guam to help the Japanese.

QUOTE
It was the Chamorros from the Northern Marianas who were brought to Guam to serve as interpreters and in other capacities for the occupying Japanese force. The Guamanian Chamorros were treated as an occupied enemy by the Japanese military. After the war, this would cause some resentment by the Guamanian Chamorros towards the Chamorros in the Northern Marianas.




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Suzuka00
No wonder there are filshams from micronesia and polynesia....
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