September 10th, 2007 08:41 AM
#9
RP Cries Foul as APEC Tags Natl Costume as 'Peasant Shirt'
An APEC media backgrounder said the "barong Tagalog" is a peasant shirt. ...
Cecile Alvarez, ... said the Spaniards allegedly made the “underprivileged” Filipinos wear the barong Tagalog to make sure that the locals were not carrying any weapons under the thin clothing.
She, however, said that such claims are undocumented. ...
That the barong was used in the Spanish colonial era as an instrument of oppression may be "undocumented", but who documents peasant history, anyway? The only history the Spaniards found worthy of documentation were accounts relevant to the Crown. On the other hand, it's easy to "lose" documents, especially if - for whatever reasons - there's something you want to whitewash.
My own hypothesis is that the Barong had Indian and Chinese roots, which the Spaniards found they could use to their colonial advantage. "Christian" dress codes may have been imposed by Spanish authorities and missionaries in place of the indecent Indio hubad and bahag look. Or maybe there wasn't any official "decree" on Indio garments. Fashion has a way of just happening, and the what's in and what's out are usually more tacit than enforced.
More often than not, the clothes you wear depends on affordability. Here's the kind of talk I imagine Insulares and Peninsulares uttering: "Vosotros indios no hay capacidad de comprar nuestras robas, entonces, hanggang barong lang kayong mga hampaslupa kayo!" Sabay irap ng mga matapobre! Yes, the barong had humble beginnings, that's for sure.
But the situation has since evolved:
Today, every visitor and foreign dignitary invited to a Malacanang Palace state function must, by necessity, and dictated by protocol, be dressed to the nines in a Barong Tagalog. The invitations specifically say come in "Barong" instead of the traditional "Coat and Tie". Thus, every one invited to dinner at the Presidential Palace and in many Filipino homes will unknowingly and unwittingly have to experience directly, what it feels to have to wear his shirt tails out, to suffer the indignity of having the material of his barong transparent so that he can not conceal any weapon; and horrors, to be accused directly of incipient thievery by having no pockets in his barong to put the silver. So, when El Senor Spanish Ambassador is invited to a state dinner, you can say,
"Ah, what sweet revenge!" [SIZE="1"]~ History Of Barong Tagalog by Cezar Estrera[/SIZE]
Through the years, Filipinos ingeniously transformed this bane into a totally exquisite and elegant - even global - fashion icon, uniquely Filipino (just like the Jeepney in the auto design field, once-upon-a-time).
That APEC organizing committee is still living in the colonial era. 
They should update their knowledge of Asian history.
Maybe it's an indication of what their mindset actually is - colonial -
and what they are really after. 
[SIZE="1"]
More: Barong Tagalog[/SIZE]
Totoo yung sabi ni nicolodeon. A lot of those people "down under" are matapobre din,
kaya I sympathize with our kabayans down there.
.
Last edited by dprox; September 10th, 2007 at 08:52 AM.
[SIZE="1"]DESIGN is the missing link in the Philippine auto industry.[/SIZE]