Welcome to the home of Moro Herald. Your source of Bangsamoro News,  History, Tradition, Politics, and Social Commentary.

Brief History of Bangsamoro Struggle – Video

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

MOROLAND – Land of the Bangsa Moro

Mindanao, Sulu and Palawan comprised the Land of the Moros since the 13th century. The lands north of it like the Kingdom of Manila were invaded and colonized by Spain. The Moro sultanates — Sulu, Maguindanao, Buayan and the Maranao confederacy — however fought and maintained their independence until the coming of the Americans in the beginning of the 20th century.

The 16th century European map below proves that Mindanao was already known to the world even before the so-called “discovery” of the Philippines by the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan.

When Ferdinand Magellan arrived in Cebu in 1521, an island north of Mindanao, he met with the Cebu King, Rajah Humabon. The Spaniard immediately introduced his religion, Roman Catholicism to the natives, and planted a wooden cross to commemorate the arrival of Christianity in Asia. This angered the Muslim religious leader Cali Pulacu (known to the Filipinos as Lapu-Lapu), who protested the presence of the foreigners. Magellan, in typical European arrogance, led his men to the neighboring island, Mactan, where the Cali (meaning judge) lived. Magellan met his death at the hands of the Muslim Cali, thus depriving him the honor of being the first man to circumnavigate the globe. However, his flagship, the Trinidad, was the first ship to circumnavigate the globe (at least according to Western documents).

In 1571, Miguel Lopez de Legaspi arrived in Manila, in Luzon Island, north of Cebu. Manila at the time was ruled by Muslim Malays from Borneo. Rajah Matanda ruled Manila together with his teenage nephew, Rajah Suleiman, the Rajah Muda. Suleiman’s elders, including his other uncle, Lakan-Dula of Tondo welcomed the foreigners. But the young prince realized that Legazpi had devious intentions. He declared war against the Spanish. Without the help of his elders, Rajah Suleiman fell in battle. Rajah Muda literally means Young King but Malay sultanates use this title to denote Crown Prince. But the Filipinos celebrate Rajah Suleiman as the last king of Manila.

The Spanish conquistadors could not believe their eyes. It was not too long ago when they revolted and drove away the Moros (Moors) from Spain. And now, halfway around the globe, they met them again.

The Spanish differentiated the two natives of the archipelago into Moros (Muslim Malays) and Indios (pagan Malays). They then formulated their simple policy regarding the natives — convert the Indios to Christianity and kill the Moros.

And so, for about three hundred and fifty years, the Spaniards tried their best to christianize the Indios and annihilate the Moros. They succeeded in the former but failed in the latter.

In 1898, the Spanish left and the Americans came. Again the Moros fought. In 1946, the Indios became masters of the Philippine Islands. In 1972, the Moros resumed their fight. # Source.

Where have we all gone wrong?

Monday, January 26th, 2009

When operation Merdeka flopped and the whole diplomatic community blushed along with Marcos, we remember that it was the Moros most convenient excuse to grab a kalashnikov rifle and shoutsky high about a massacre. The malays did something about it, sending in their special branch (since they hadnt yet the strength to fight the second most powerful army in SE Asia at that time) to carefully select, train and arm Moro ideologues and revolutionaries. Fast Forward more than two decades of War… and you see ourselves back to square one.  With more than just the cost of War enough to rebuild economies lost and squandered either by misplaced IRA allocations, or corrupted Pork barrel funds. Not to mention the notion that the Asia Foundation through research have found that the most corrupt municipalities are in the ARMM and Moro controlled areas. Thats just not it, at the moment, were fighting a never-ending separatist insurgency (as imperial manila calls it), and negotiations are going nowhere. Cap to that whenever theres a political scandal or coup d’ etat, something sparks in Mindanao. So if anyone cares about it… isnt this all coincidence?

Right now as of this moment, everybody has been debating that why is it that the dreaded ASG was already eliminated nad here they are again striking it off with their new prey.

Really really, our intellectuals have to do more than just wash their hands, we need a total reassessment of whats happening in Moroland.

Almost majority if not all of the prime lands in the mainland are owned if not controlled by the non-Muslims. Recently The US navy and the Japanese research vessels have been doing underwater marine research in MIndanao and palawan areas. Why?

let me tell you why…. the area surrounding the Island has huge reserves of heavy water (deuterium) which is being used for cold fusion, an alternative power source. (for those who are unfamilliar with the idea please watch Val Kilmers movie “the saint” to know more). Its better and safer than nuclear energy. and if we dont realize it, If Mindanao becomes independent, this power source will be one  of the things that US and japan will clobber heads to gain control of……

Now if we havent realized where have we all gone wrong, the other people will end up gobbling our resources.

Something to think about folks

Thank you, Supreme Court of the Philippines

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

By: Atty. Fatimah Bin Guerra

Thank you, Honorable Chief Justice and Associate Justices for showing us how justice works in this country.  Thank you for issuing the TRO on the MOA-AD, for showing to the Filipino people how fast you can actually act upon cases filed by powerful politicians like Emmanuel Piñol and Celso Lobregat.  Indeed, the speediness at which you have acted on this case was extraordinary and phenomenal.  In 3 months time, you have struck down a document which took more than 10 years of painstaking negotiations to accomplish.

Thank you, too, for helping MILF base Commanders Ameril Ombra Kato and Bravo recruit more fighters and supporters.  Your decision vindicated what they have always believed from the very beginning — that this government will never be sincere in talking peace with the Bangsamoro people.  Now we are faced with the world’s longest running armed conflict that sees no resolution in sight.  Thank you for condemning Mindanao as the next Afghanistan or Darfur in Asia. (more…)

The MOA is NOT dead

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

By: Engr. Don Mustapha Arbison Loong

 
The MOA-AD is “dead”. This became the headline in newspapers when the Supreme Court (SC) declared the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD) as unconstitutional last October 14, 2008. The “death” of the MOA-AD had divided and polarized the country like never before in recent history. 

The debate on the MOA awakened dormant religious prejudice and discrimination between Muslims and Christians. While the people who were Anti-MOA celebrated, some Moros felt that they had lost something. Some other Moro sectors felt like an “anti-dote” to the Moro problem was deliberately withheld from them. Disillusioned MILF rebels renewed hostilities with the government forces. Suddenly, the dreaded “ilagas” emerge and revived past Muslim-Christian community conflicts. There is so much blissful celebration and emotional retaliation by each side respectively, yet only a few really know the issues involved that was “killed” by the Supreme Court decision.   (more…)

Datu Michael O. Mastura – An Open Letter re: MOA-AD

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

By Datu Michael O. Mastura

Dear All,

We don’t have money to further enrich the national dailies with a whole page AD.  So I do have to settle for alternative media prints “a la pobre”.  But it has the benefit of global interconnectedness.  Here’s my initial salvo to Frank’s ADS on MOA-AD.  I will elaborate my commentary much later.  For the sake of a broader debate, please help circulate this Open Letter on the MOA-AD.

Yours truly,
Datu Michael O. Mastura (more…)

Malang: We might end up becoming the Darfur of southeast Asia

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

ANC’s Tony Velasquez interviewed on August 18, Zainudin Malang, executive director of the Bangsamoro Center for Law and Policy, on the clashes that have erupted in parts of Mindanao and on the prospects for peace in the south. Malang has been a close observer of the peace process with Muslim separatists.

Q. What was your expectation after the signing of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD) in Malaysia, had it pushed through?

A. I was expecting optimism on the ground, not what we are seeing here, not what we saw today. I was expecting the complete opposite after they had signed the MOA.

Q. Are these recent clashes in North Cotabato and Lanao del Norte an offshoot of the failure to sign the MOA-AD?

A. I cannot help but arrive at that conclusion. You know, there are only two ways to resolve the conflict: either through military means or through negotiations. And apparently, after the cancellation of the signing of the MOA, the product of a dozen years of long and hard bargaining on both sides, perhaps, there are armed groups who feel it will already be hard to resolve the conflict by way of negotiations. (more…)