By
DANTE CORTEZA
Daily
Zamboanga Times
June 21, 2013
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Source: http://zamboangatimes.ph/pep-talk/7835--thy-womb-brings-dignity.html
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I
am glad that the film, Thy Womb by Director Brillante Mendoza, continues to get
rave reviews and recognitions in the local and international market (it has
been shown in world's top film festivals in Venice, Toronto, Busan, Bologna,
Vienna, Brisbane, Taipei, Dubai, Munich, Amsterdam, etc. ). Last June 19, 2012,
Thy Womb won the best actress award for Thy Womb main character, Nora Aunor,
and the Best Production Design during the 36th Gawad Urian Award at the NBC
Tent in Taguig City. Urian awards are
given by the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (MPP), a group of film critics and
academicians.
What
makes Thy Womb endears in my heart, it was filmed in Sitangkai, Tawi-Tawi and
revolves around the people, culture and life of the Badjaos. Films like this I believe uplift dignity as
it changes perceptions for better understanding.
Starring
superstar Nora Aunor, Thy Womb revolves around the unconditional love of a
Badjo midwife (Nora Aunor) coping with both the cultural burden and gendered
irony of her own infertility amid the deprivations of the Badjaos in Tawi-Tawi.
One of the most interesting peoples in southern Philippines, the Badjaos are
native sea-dwellers and are called Sea Gypsies who are skilled in building
various types of boats, and widely known as fishermen, pearl divers and mat
weavers.
Director
Brillante Mendoza said, “I am making a film about the Badjaos, with the aim to
celebrate a nonviolent people amidst a very violent world. It’s an intriguing
premise about a particular people of peace living in a place of endemic
violence.
Art
Tapalla of Enter Showbiz wrote that ‘as a film, Thy Womb examines the opposing
natures of two women (Nora Aunor/Shaleha’s sterility against Lovi Poe/Mersila’s
fertility) to reflect the prevailing condition in Tawi-tawi, a place endowed
with natural beauty and rich resources but mired in economic and
socio-political crises. A quiet hell of a paradise, Thy Womb’s “birth place” and its environs are constant
reminders of yesterday’s conflict that has remained unresolved up to the
present.
The
Badjaos are considered to be the most primitive and oppressed among several
ethnic groups in the region; and they assume a subordinate status in their
diverse and divided community, which includes the Samal and the Tausug, among
others. But in spite of this, the Bajaus are generally perceived to be
non-confrontational, forgiving, seemingly contented and happy people.
When
wronged, it is said that the Badjaos would simply move to another place,
bringing their houseboats (lepa-lepa), constantly roving, living in harmony
with nature. To this day, they are mostly looked down, degraded and much
maligned by their ethnic neighbors and others, thus rendering them harmless,
helpless and almost powerless.
But
in their heart of hearts, are they really so, or is it just another way of life
merely misunderstood by those inured to violence? With this thought and theme,
and my curiosity further piqued, the narrative voice of the film has emerged
loud and clear.
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