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CHAPTER IX
BONGAO DESPITE the fact of its remoteness from civilization, or perhaps because of it, we found Bongao most attractive. Situated on a dot of an island belonging to the Tawi Tawi group, it is the southernmost part of our new possessions to be garrisoned. West of it Borneo looms up on the horizon, and to the south is Sibutu, for which Spain was paid a good round sum because certain gentlemen on the Paris Commission lacked geographic accuracy; while to the east and north are coral islands belonging to the same group as Bongao. The garrison is situated on a mountainous spur of land running down steeply to the water. It is laid out like a park, the soldiers’ quarters, hospital, library, and storehouses being of bamboo and nipa, over which the men have trained vines and creeping plants, while before each door bloom beds of bright flowers. The officers’ quarters are built higher up on a wind-swept slope
overlooking the bay, where it curves around the point of the island, and while
these houses are picturesque from the outside, they are roughly finished
within, the “banquet-hall,” as they dignified the mess, being especially al fresco. Over the extemporized
sideboard, consisting of some rude shelves, on which were piled a heterogeneous
collection of tinned fruits and vegetables, hung a motto which read “God Bless
our Home. If you don’t like it, get out!” On the reverse side of this somewhat
suggestive placard was the pleasing gastronomic intelligence, “Chicken today,”
chicken forming the staple of diet at Bongao, as of course fresh meat is to be
had only at the rarest intervals. For six months at a stretch the monsoon blows across the coral peninsula
in one direction, and then changes and blows six months in the opposite
quarter, so that, as an officer stationed there remarked, one could take his
choice and be blown off to the crocodiles in the bay or to the sharks in the
sea outside. This high wind moderates the climate perceptibly, however, and
notwithstanding the fact that Bongao is situated within five degrees of the
equator, we found it exceptionally cool, and the officers and men in splendid
physical condition. There was but one company of infantry stationed at Bongao when we were
there, comprising perhaps fifty men and three officers. Because of the two
hundred miles of treacherous ocean between him and higher authority, the young
captain acting as military governor was, so to speak, a small Czar, and he
ruled an unique kingdom, untouched by civilization, and peopled entirely by
ex-pirates or the descendants of pirates. The official letter-book of this functionary, at which he allowed us to
peep, read like a story of adventure, while some of his own personal
experiences, and those of the former commanding officer, seem almost SOLDIERS’ QUARTERS, BONGAO Under the date of February 21, 1900, a thrilling story was told, it
being the official and unvarnished account of a disastrous hunting trip taken
by five of the post soldiers, the dispassionate routine language but giving it
verisimilitude; while the subsequent happenings serve to show what kind of
government seems most to appeal to these people. The story, as nearly as I can remember it, reads that five of the
garrison soldiers were given permission to go to a neighbouring island of the
Tawi Tawi group on a hunting expedition after wild boar. Relations with the
Moros on that island having been, at least, nominally friendly, there was not
the slightest hesitation in granting the soldiers’ request, particularly as
there had been no fresh meat in the garrison for some time. The men left in a rowboat and spent the first few hours in Balambing, an
ex-pirate community, where they were entertained in the best Moro fashion,
leaving amidst mutual expressions of regret and good-will. The Moros’ love for
firearms is well known, and about ten of them were so taken with the soldiers’
rifles that they accompanied the party, ostensibly to act as guides, but in
reality to witness the sport. Delayed by a strong tide running to windward,
they camped that night on a lonely beach, both Americans and Moros in the best
possible humour. After a supper cooked over the camp-fire, all the soldiers, with the exception of one man who was preparing for bed, indulged in a game of cards, the Moros watching the proceeding with apparent interest, but talking a great deal among themselves. Each soldier had his Krag on the ground beside him in case of danger, the rifle of the man who was undressing being in a far corner of the room. Suddenly, at a word from their leader, the Moros seized their wicked barongs and simultaneously attacked the
men playing cards, beheading one poor fellow at a single blow, and fearfully
cutting the three others. One died almost immediately, and the second fell
unconscious, while the third, who was cut across the side of the head and neck,
feigned death and so escaped with his life. The soldier who was partly undressed, seeing that he could not reach his
rifle, felt it was only a matter of seconds before his turn should come. But
the Moros, having obtained all the firearms, escaped into the forest, leaving
him unharmed. As hastily as possible, he lifted the still unconscious man into
the boat, which had been hidden in the bushes against just such an emergency,
the wounded soldier who had feigned death helping with all his little strength,
though he was so grievously hurt that he had literally to hold on his head with
his hands, the cords on one side of his neck being severed. Fortunately, the
jugular vein escaped the keen knife’s edge, else he would not have been alive;
but it was with no little difficulty he helped the unwounded man push off from
shore. All night they rowed, the wounded man working with one hand, despite his
fearful suffering, and all the next day, the blazing tropic sun shining down on
their unprotected heads. Once they were beached on a coral reef, and it was all
they could do to get the boat off again into deep water. Meanwhile the third
soldier died, but at last the survivors of the massacre, in a pitiable
condition, reached the post, carrying between them the already putrefying
corpse of their comrade. Scarce waiting to hear their gruesome story, the commanding officer and
most of his company put off in bancas for Balambing, the unwounded man
accompanying them for the purpose of identification. Arriving late in the
afternoon, the soldiers quickly surrounded the town before any Moro could
escape in his prau, and the
rapidity with which the Philippine Mohammedan can drop from his house, built on
poles over the water, and paddle away is little less than miraculous. The head men of the village were then summoned by the American captain
and ordered to hand over the murderers and the stolen rifles, or lead the way
to the hiding-place of the criminals before eight o’clock of the following
morning, the penalty for their disobedience being the burning of the town. That night numerous lights and the sound of voices in the village
testified to the earnest discussion that was proceeding, and at daybreak six of
the offenders were delivered into American hands, the survivor of the outrage
testifying to their identity; but the captain was not satisfied and consulted his
watch so impatiently as eight o’clock approached that the head men, after much
consultation among themselves, finally led the way to where the others were
concealed along with the captured rifles. Here the ten prisoners were rounded up and preparations made for the
return to Bongao, when suddenly a simultaneous break for liberty was attempted,
and the Moros had a lesson in the deadly aim of the American soldier, for a
fearful fusilade was opened on them at short range, and not a prisoner escaped.
To one unacquainted with the Moros, this swift and sure vengeance would
seem sufficient to cause the relatives of the dead men to hate Americans and
plan blood feuds in retaliation; but it was not so, for they recognized
perfectly the wrong that had been done, and accepted the death of their kinsmen
as well merited, while any regret they may have felt was at the unlucky turn of
fate which put them into the hands of justice. Being captured, it was
inconceivable to a Moro that the offenders should be spared, and the break for
liberty was doubtless induced by the belief that at the worst they merely
advanced the day of execution. For had they not killed, and what is quite as
bad in the Moro code of ethics, stolen? No punishment following this outrage,
the Moros would have looked on the Americans as white-livered, cowardly,
pusillanimous, and that first crime would doubtless have been succeeded by
raids on the town, and massacres, and feuds, which only a bloody war could have
ended. As a result of his prompt action, this very efficient young officer had
the satisfaction of knowing that the cordial relations with the citizens of
Balambing rested on a new and more secure foundation than ever before. That no
ill-will is harboured against the Americans may be seen by the large crowd of
Balambing natives who weekly market their wares at Bongao, and the invariable
respect shown by them to the uniform. Americans go freely without arms all over
the island. In truth, it is asserted by different head men that the first
attack would never have been made on the soldiery had it not been for the
rifles they carried. Human life is cheap among the Moros, and the inconvenience
of that life standing between them and what they want is soon remedied by a barong, unless fear of punishment, prompt
and pitiless, stares them in the face. From Balambing of bloody memory comes a Moro love story of some interest
and no little humour. It appears that a rich woman there fell in love with a
handsome young slave belonging to a man in a neighbouring town. After some
difficulty she effected his purchase and married him, despite the fact of his
being so far beneath her in the social scale. Not long after this the happy
couple went to Bongao on a market-day. The lady, being an inveterate gambler,
repaired at once to the cockpit, where she lost so heavily that her remaining
funds were inadequate for the return trip to Balambing. Then a happy idea
struck her. Why not pawn her husband, awaiting her next visit to Bongao, for
although she was married to him, he was still a slave in the eyes of the law,
and she could redeem him at her pleasure. Acting on this happy inspiration, she sought an audience with the Governor, explaining through the interpreter her predicament, and offering her husband as a security for the loan of two hundred and fifty dollars, gold. The Governor, being a bachelor, was skeptical as to this marital transaction, especially as the couple had been wedded beyond the traditional honeymoon. He was afraid that he might have the bridegroom permanently upon his hands did he advance so great a sum. This was made plain to the bride, who protested that life would be quite unendurable without her liege lord, or more properly speaking, in this case, liege subject; but the Governor was unrelenting. How the lady finally managed to reach Balambing is not told. Perhaps
some trusting Moro accepted the risk of the marital loan. Perhaps she induced
the owner of a prau to row her
across. However the distance was accomplished, it is to be hoped she was less
reckless in her subsequent gambling, a husband having proved so bad a hostage. Another love story of different import comes from a village on the
island of Simi-nor, just south of Bongao. There, it is said, lives an old Moro
who so loved his wife, and strange to say, in this polygamous community, his
only wife, that when she died he watched her grave long beyond the appointed
time, after which he had his house built over her burial-place, and there lives
to this day, still faithful to the mouldering bones beneath him. Surely a proof
that great love sometimes stirs even savage breasts. Considering the
environment, for this man lives in a country where polygamy is not only
recognized but encouraged, and where women are bought and sold by the pound,
like so much meat, his love is on a par with the idyllic attachments of history
and fiction. Speaking of buying and selling women among the Moros, reminds me of an
old Maharajah in Bongao who had never seen an American woman until the arrival
of the Burnside.
Of course all white women are considered very beautiful by these dusky savages,
an evidence of how much they admire Europeans being found in the fact that they
firmly believe in the Sultan’s Seventh Heaven all the wives of his harem will
have white skins. Noticing the Maharajah’s absorbed interest in our appearance,
the Governor, to our intense disgust, insisted upon asking the old fellow what
he thought the quartermaster’s wife should be worth in dollars and cents. The
toothless Maharajah took it all quite seriously, looked at the lady in question
with much discrimination, pulled at his wisp of a billy-goat beard in
contemplative silence, and after some minutes of deep thought replied that she
should be worth about a hundred dollars, Mexican, an abnormally large amount,
as Moro women seldom average over forty dollars, Mexican, apiece. Then the irrepressible young man turned to me, asking at what the
Maharajah thought I should be valued. Without a moment’s hesitation, the old
sinner, to my chagrin and the uproarious delight of the whole party, appraised
me at only eighty dollars, Mexican, and this despite the fact that I had smiled
my pleasantest, in the hope that he would rate me at least as high as the
quartermaster’s wife. Datto Sakilon, whom we met next day, proved more diplomatic, for when
asked what he thought we women should be worth in the Mohammedan market,
replied that it was impossible to tell, because if Moro women could be bought
for forty dollars apiece, an American woman should be worth at least a thousand.
Not bad repartee for a barbarian! In return for his consideration, I must admit
that he was the best dressed Moro we saw in Bongao. On the day in question he
wore a suit of gray drill, made with the conventional tight trousers and
vest-like coat, broken out at regular intervals in an eruptive fever of
gorgeously coloured embroidery. A fez topped off this costume and added to its
picturesqueness, while clumsy tan shoes of undeniable American make well-nigh
ruined the whole effect. Balbriggan undershirts, hideously utilitarian, are much worn by these Moros of Bongao in lieu of the skin-tight gaily coloured jacket, which combines so effectively with the snug trousers buttoned up the side with gold or silver buttons, and the bright turban or scarlet fez. But fancy the shock to one’s æstheticism at seeing coarse balbriggan allied to barbaric splendour. The Moros really looked more undressed so attired than if they had appeared without any coat at all, but they thought these shirts very elegant, and would buy them of the soldiers at every opportunity. NATIVES OF BONGAO The women’s dress in Bongao, unlike that of northern Moros,
is more typical than the men’s, and There was one beauty in Bongao, however, a slave girl of eighteen, so
graceful and lithe that her every attitude suggested a bird just alighted for
an instant from a flight through space. Her dark eyes were fringed by the
longest of black lashes, and even her stained teeth could not detract from the
curves of her pretty mouth. She had a self-satisfied consciousness of her own
attractions, and was as imperious and overbearing as any American beauty, stamping
her tiny foot in rage at our photographer’s lack of haste in taking her
picture, and once walking away from the camera with a disdainful toss of her
head. When, after much persuasion, she was finally induced to return, it was
only to scowl sullenly at everybody with the most bewitching ill temper, poised
so lightly that the very wind seemed to sway her slender figure back and forth
like a flower on its stalk. We called her the Belle of Bongao, and said all manner of nice things about her, which she repaid with a bold stare from under those wonderful lashes, and a contemptuous manner which said as plainly as words that American women were not much to look at, what with their ugly clothes and still uglier faces. She was glad she wasn’t so large and clumsy, and that her teeth weren’t white, nor her throat all screwed up in high bandages, and she smiled a little as she thought of her own attractions, for the Belle of Bongao had not learned she was a beauty for nought; and then, too, had she not cost eighty dollars, Mexican, the highest price ever paid in Tawi Tawi for a slave? Small wonder the little beauty rated her charms high. It was in Bongao we first made the acquaintance of Toolawee, the chief
vigilante of Sulu. It seems this personage had been sent to the Tawi Tawi
Islands as pilot of the launch Maud,
which, under his careful seamanship, was then lying high and dry on a coral
reef within sight of the little garrison. Pirate
under Spanish regime, chief of police under American administration, Toolawee is
known to fame throughout the archipelago, though perhaps most of his reputation
depends upon Mr. Worcester's delightful account of him in “The Philippine
Islands.” As all may remember, Toolawee acted in the capacity of guide,
philosopher, and friend to Mr. Worcester and Doctor Bourns on their second
visit to Sulu, many moons before our occupation of the place. Toolawee was at
that time acting as “minister of war” to the nominal Sultan, having for reasons
of his own become a renegade. Mr. Worcester says of him: “A
Moro by birth and training, he had thrown in his lot with the Spaniards. As a
slight safeguard against possible backsliding, he was allowed a fine house within the walls, where he kept
several wives and some forty slaves. Arolas reasoned that, rather than lose so
extensive an establishment, he would behave himself. Later we had reason for
believing that the precaution was a wise one. . . . “He
was considered a ‘good’ Moro, and we were therefore
interested in
several incidents which gave us some insight into his real character.
After
satisfying himself that we could use our rifles with effect, he made us
a
rather startling business proposition as follows: ‘You
gentlemen seem to shoot
quite well with the rifle.’ ‘Yes, we have had some
experience.’ ‘You say that
you wish to get samples of the clothing and arms of my people for your
collection?’ ‘Yes, we hope to do so.’
‘Papa’ (the Moros’ name for their
governor-general) ‘told you if you met armed Moros outside the
town to order them to lay down their weapons and retire?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Papa does not
understand my people as I do. They are all
bad. When we meet them, do not ask them to lay down their arms, for they will
come back and get them, and probably attack us; just shoot as many of them as
you can. You can take their weapons and clothing, while I will cut off their
heads, shave their eyebrows, show them to papa, and claim reward for killing Juramentados.’ Toolawee never
really forgave us for refusing to enter into partnership with him on this very
liberal basis. “Just
before our final departure from Sulu, he presented himself before
me and remarked, ‘Señor, I want to buy your
rifle.’ ‘But, Toolawee,’ I replied,
‘you do damage enough with the one you have; what do you want
of mine?’ ‘My
rifle is good enough to kill people
with, but I want yours for another purpose,’ my good Moro made answer. Pressed
for details, he confided to me that he had heard ‘papa’ was soon going back to
Spain, and, after the governor left, he should be ‘afuera,’ i. e. offshore, waiting for victims. He explained
that he never fired at the people in a canoe, but shot holes in the boat
itself, so that it would fill with water. The bamboo outriggers, with which all
Philippine boats are provided, would serve to keep it from actually sinking,
and the occupants, being up to their chins in water, could easily be despatched
with the barong, thus economizing
ammunition; and he added, ‘My rifle makes but a small hole in one side of a
canoe, señor, while yours would make a much larger one, and the ball would go
clear through.’ Toolawee was nothing if not practical.” TOOLAWEE While in Bongao, a Moro dance was given in our honour at the house of
the governor’s interpreter, a German, who at the time was away on a business
trip. His wife, a plump and jolly matron of Moro descent, did the honours, and
smiled her good-natured, indiscriminating smile on one and all, shaking each
cordially by the hand and indicating where we should sit by many motions of her
fat, brown wrists and many shrugs of her still fatter shoulders. Unlike other
Moro women, our hostess’s hair was neatly arranged, her teeth were beautifully
white, and her costume, which consisted of a nondescript skirt and loose
dressing sacque, much affected by Spanish women throughout the islands, was
daintily clean. The other occupants of the big room were Moro — unadulterated Moro —
fifty or sixty of them, all in gala dress, the women squatted on the floor, the
men leaning against the side of the house, and all staring with unabashed
interest in our direction, while we stared back at them quite as interested. Every man there was armed with at least a barong stuck into his broad sash, and many of them boasted a
kris and campilan as well, while the brilliant
colours of their costumes, and the still more gaudy sarongs of the women, made them resemble a gathering of
strange tropic birds, our European apparel looking singularly dull and sober
beside their scarlets, greens, and purples. Over this strange scene flickered
the dim light of cocoanut-oil lamps, and outside a shower beat softly against
the trees, and the moon looked down at us whitely from a cloudy sky. Presently a weird noise broke in upon our conversation. The orchestra
had begun to play. Now, Moro music is strangely un-rhythmical to European ears,
consisting as it does of a monotonous reiteration of sound, even a supposed
change of air being almost imperceptible to one unaccustomed to the barbarous
lack of tone. The Moro piano is a wooden frame, shaped like the runners of a
child’s sled, on which are balanced small kettle-drums by means of cords and
sticks. These more nearly resemble pots for the kitchen range than musical
instruments, but each is roughly tuned, forming the eight notes of the
scale. Women, crouching on the
ground before this A MORO ORCHESTRA, BONGAO Meanwhile the dancing had begun, or rather the posturing of the body,
for the feet and legs are used but little in the Moro dances, which consist
principally of moving the body and arms rhythmically and to music, the wrists
always leading gracefully. Among the women this attitudinizing was very pretty, the bangles
tinkling on their round arms, while the sarong half-revealed, half-concealed
the curves of their figures. Most of them danced with their heads turned away,
but whenever the evolutions of their measured step brought them face to face
with us, they would hold up the sarong
so that it concealed all but the eyes, evidently a survival of the yashmak, for Moro women do not hide their
faces at all times from the gaze of men, as do the women of India. When the men danced it was far less graceful, and at times bordered on
the grotesque. They contorted and twisted themselves out of all semblance to
the human body; they made their abdominal muscles rise and fall with the music;
they seemed at times to put the body out of joint, and then reset it properly
with jerks and jumps and sudden fierce movements; they twitched, and twisted,
and twirled, hardly moving their feet from the floor. Then came sword-dances with naked blades, when some young Moro advanced
and retreated, leaped high in the air, or crouched on the ground, waving his barong or kris
aloft, now retreating, now coming uncomfortably close to the little party of
unarmed Americans, the flickering light gleaming redly on the glittering knife, and reminding one,
with a horrid insistence, that the time and place were ideal for a wholesale
slaughter. As the necessities of the dance took the last of these lithe youths
farther away, I must confess to a feeling of relief, which mounted to a nervous
joy when, after apparently slaying his enemy and grinding him under heel, the
dancing combatant gave place to a chubby youngster who stamped, and twirled,
and gestured himself into our very hearts. This baby, for he could not have
been over four years old, was also a prime favourite with the Moros, who yelled
out their delight at his prowess, and even clapped their hands and jumped about
in their enthusiasm. But the baby was stoically calm, and moved not a muscle of
his little round face in response to their greetings. Then came the old Maharajah, who had set his price on the American
women. Wrinkled, white-haired, and toothless, he danced amidst great applause;
and after him a tiny girl posed most picturesquely, throwing out her plump,
dimpled wrists, on which twinkled innumerable bangles. Waving each wrist in
turn, the little maid would fasten upon it a serious gaze, as if she were a
snake-charmer and each arm was a serpent, her hand representing the head, which
waved ever back and forth restlessly and in time to the strange music. Before leaving, a mock marriage was performed for our benefit by the
one-eyed Pandita. As is the custom at such times, all the Moro women, including
the bride, who is never present at her own wedding, were hidden behind an
extemporized curtain. On the ground before this curtain sat the Pandita and the
prospective bridegroom, the bare soles of their feet touching and their hands
closely clasped beneath an enshrouding cloth. The Pandita then chanted or
intoned a service, the bridegroom occasionally joining in, and not infrequently
some outsider introduced a facetious expression or joke, which was greeted with
uproarious delight by the others, the Moro sense of humour being apparently
well developed. Of course, the mock marriage ended here, but we were told that at this
point of the service in a real wedding the groom would go behind the curtain
and seize his bride, who was supposed to struggle violently to escape. She
would then be carried to the groom’s house, and for three days the feasting and
merry making would continue — for everyone but the happy pair, as according to
custom, the bride must quarrel violently during this time with the groom, and
not allow him to come near her, though when he finally leaves her alone, she
must bitterly weep and lament. At the expiration of the three days, this
charming state of affairs is discontinued, and they are considered legally
married, and thereafter may be as happy as they are capable of being. On leaving the interpreter’s house to walk back to the ship’s boat, we were lighted by a misty moon which gave the effect of twilight, and in our half lethargic state could hardly be sure that what we had seen that evening was not, after all, a dream or a strange hypnotic memory — the dancing Maharajah, the Pandita performing the marriage ceremony, the terrible sword-dance, and the little snake-charmer fascinating her own plump hands! Was it possible such things had occurred in the twentieth century and on American soil? |