A Visayan Saint
BY JD VELEZ
The
Philippnes will have its second saint in San Pedro Calungsod, a Visayan
martyr who was with the Jesuit mission in Guam led by Blessed Diego.Luis de San Vitores.
Thousands of Filipino faithfuls, especially Cebuanos are in Rome to
witness this rare event to unfold on Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012.
Claims
have been flying as to the saint's genealogy following his
canonization. There are those who say he is from Ginatilan in Southern
Cebu. Some say he is from Bohol and others say he is from Iloilo. There
are only two clues to help us based on his name in official Spanish
records which was Pedro Calonsor Bissaya. He was from the Visayas which
was then part of the Cebu archdiocese. And that his surname is Calonsor.
Calonsor
is most likely a Spanish version of a native name, Kalonsor, How it
became Kalungsod or Calungsod is probably the result of the effort to
discover his roots in the Visayas.
Prior to the
Claveria decree in 1849, Filipino surnames were very confusing to the
Spaniards. There were Spanish as well as indigenous surnames that were
commonly used like delos Santos and dela Cruz, Abaya, Abad, etc. The
Claveria decree issued on November 21, 1849 by the Governor General of
the Philippines, Don Narciso Claveria y Zaldua required Filipinos to
adopt Spanish and indigenous names from the Catalogo Alfabetico de
Apellidos for civil and legal purposes.
San
Pedro's surname which his family carried 200 years before the Claveria
decree is likely to be indigenous. And one close Bisayan name
to it is Calungsod. D and R tended to be interchanged which
probably prompted the adoption of Calungsod. The singular noun lungsod
(town) becomes kalungsoran in its plural form. Kalonsod or Kalonsor very
likely referred to the same thing. Spaniards often mispronounced
Visayan words and hispanized them in spelling and pronounciation to suit
their own tonque.
Calungsod is likely to be a Central
Visayas surname as there are Calungsods in Cebu, Duhaylungsod in
Siquijor and Cal in Bohol. There is high probability he is from the
region. Besides in 1600s the Jesuits were active in the area. It was
them who Christianized the Chinese of Parian in Cebu where they
established a school and a parish.
However, with the
claim of some Calunsods in Iloilo based on their family's supposed oral
tradition, the search for the saint's roots need to be widened. It's
rare to have oral traditions going as far back as the 17th century (if
theirs indeed go that far back). By nature, oral traditions are prone to
inconsistencies and need to be verified by historical evidence to be
accepted as true.
Iloilo, however, used to be part of
the Cebu archdiocese. And there's also probability he may have come from
that area. But wherever St. Pedro's roots in the Visayas was, the fact
remains that he is our first Visayan saint. It's a cause for unity, not
discord.
Beautiful Cebu
Cebu is not the same colonial province time has forgotten decades ago. It is not a periphery to the center but rather, a destination with its own unique charm. Discover for yourself. See new destinations in the Cebu mainland. Read on...
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