Mythology Book

(ff) #1

226


YOUR RICE OF


THE SKYWORLD


IS GOOD


FIRE AND RICE


T


he story of Wigan and
his brother Kabigat is
a founding myth of the
Ifaguo, a tribe originating in the
highlands of the Philippines. It
explores the symbiotic relationship
between humanity’s Earthworld
and the Skyworld of the gods,
and how they negotiated their
mutual sustenance.
In Kayang, Wigan and Kabigat
wanted to go hunting. To see if
their hunt would prove successful,
Wigan chose his fattest chicken
and sacrificed it to several lesser
gods, such as the Tired-Ones, who

lived in the Upstream region and
the Downstream region, and the
Alabat gods, who lived in the
moutains and owned the game.
The omen was good, so Wigan and
Kabigat took their spears and dogs
into the hills in search of a wild pig.

To the heavens
The brothers entered the forest
and, sighting a pig, sent their dogs
running, yelling encouragement.
They drove their quarry ever
upward until it eventually climbed
up into the Skyworld. Wigan and
Kabigat followed the pig all the way
up to the Skyworld. They found it
by the house of the gods Lidum and
Hinumbían, and Wigan speared it.
When Hinumbían rebuked
Wigan for killing one of the pigs of
the Skyworld, Wigan replied, “This
is no pig of yours. We followed it all
the way from Kayang.” Then Wigan
and Kabigat carried the dead pig to
Lidum and Hinumbían's granary
and, cutting it up, shared it with
the gods. Both gods took small

A seated Bulul (rice god) holds
a basket used for harvesting. This
15th-century wooden carving, made for
an Ifugao home or granary, comes from
the island of Luzon, in the Philippines.

IN BRIEF


THEME
The origins of agriculture

SOURCES
The Religion of the Ifugaos,
Roy Franklin Barton, 1946; The
Mythology of the Ifugaos, Roy
Franklin Barton, 1955.

SETTING
Kayang, in Luzon, the
Philippines.

KEY FIGURES
Wigan Ifugao hunter; brother
of Kabigat.

Kabigat Ifugao hunter; brother
of Wigan.

Bugan Wigan’s wife.

Lidum “The Giver”; a male
god of the Skyworld.

Hinumbían A male god of
the Skyworld; shared a home
with Lidum.

Dinipaan The blacksmith
god of the Upstream Region.

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227


The Ifugao rice terraces in
the mountains of Luzon were built
2,000 years ago. Watered by intricate
irrigation systems, they were handed
down from one generation to another.

See also: Prometheus helps mankind 36–39 ■ Nanga Baiga 212–13 ■ The killing of Luma-Luma 308–09

ASIA


pieces of the flesh, mixed them
with blood and rice, and ate them
raw. They asked Wigan and Kabigat
why they were not eating, and
Wigan told them that they would
not eat raw meat.

Mutual gifts
Wigan and Kabigat took their
share down to the Earthworld,
where they made fire with a
bamboo drill, and cooked both
meat and rice. They summoned
the spirits of the place, children
of either Lidum or Hinumbían,
and gave them food to eat. These
spirits took the food back to the
Skyworld to share with their
fathers. Delighted with the tasty
offerings, Lidum and Hinumbían
summoned Wigan and Kabigat
and asked them for the precious
gift of fire. In exchange, they
offered jewels, but Wigan held
out for the Skyworld rice, which was
so much better than the bearded
rice that grew in the Earthworld.
The gods opened up their
granary, and gave Wigan two
bundles of seed rice. In return,
Wigan made them a fire. The gods
excitedly carried the fire into the
house, but set the house ablaze.

They called for Wigan to come
and take back the fire—instead, he
quenched it with water, then built
the gods a fireplace to contain the
flames. In return, the grateful gods
told Wigan and Kabigat exactly
how to cultivate and store the rice,
and how to make the rice fields.

Feeding humanity
Back in Kayang, Wigan told his
wife, Bugan, that in order to create
the rice fields, she must wrap
herself in a blanket and remain
absolutely still while he stabbed
the earth repeatedly with a digging
stick. After he had created eight
fields, Bugan moved; from then on,
when Wigan stabbed the ground,
he turned over just a small amount
of soil. Wigan reprimanded her, but
Bugan said, “We have enough. Our
children can increase the fields.”
Appeased by this, Wigan stabbed
his stick into the bank above the

fields, causing water to gush out
and irrigate the fields. With this,
Wigan knew that he would soon
become the first human to harvest
the rice of the gods.
When the rice was ripe, the
blacksmith god made knives for
the harvest and exchanged them
for Wigan’s chickens. Wigan stored
the rice in the granary with rituals
and sacrifices to the gods of the
Skyworld, the Underworld, and the
Upstream region, and to the Bulul
granary gods. Wigan invoked the
gods again, so that in Kayang the
rice should always increase and
flourish and, in doing so, would
mirror the seasonal cycle of birth,
death, and renewal. ■

Thou, Rice, here!
Multiply like sands ...
The Religion
of the Ifugaos

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