Before the Famine
Maria Prieto
I.
You come for a private island experience
to say you can blow a hundred grand
a night.
In the warmth of Banwa’s glittering white sand
in the company of the Sulu Sea
An iconic social media story
II.
I come looking for my mother
underneath the designer furniture,
peeling back floorboards, deconstructing
walls built by Tagbanwa,
the natives of the land uprooted
by colonial machines.
These bottomless piggy banks
dressed in the ethos of Tagbanwa
The great pretender
The new masters of Banwa tell me,
You will find your mother in the Tabon caves
I enter, finding cavities in the stone
Which museum do I call
for my ancestor’s skulls?
Rice-wine as an offering, I summon the diwata,
Bring them home
I ask the Hawksbill turtles, the dugongs, the Tabon birds,
Do you feel protected?
They say that is what’s promised, however
they do not talk to the new self-anointed masters and their guests
for they always appear hungry
III.
A camera’s flash captures a moment
The tourist says, Thank you,
breathes in the view of the Pacific
The worker, smiles back,
meditates on the harvest of sugarcane
Here, before the famine
On ‘Before the Famine’
Inspired by Caroline Hau's novel, ‘Tiempo Muerto’, Maria Prieto explores the modern-day commercialisation of Banwa and the subsequent forced displacement of Tagbanwa, the natives of the land. As these are processes that find their roots and sustenance in its colonial past, this poem spotlights how contemporary tourism in Banwa maintains unequal social power dynamics. Galvanised by her own experience of emigrating from the Philippines, Maria reflects on the way in which colonial mentality still permeates Philippine society.
Art courtesy of Amelia Earhart (@aaaearhart).