Pahiyas Festival is a colorful feast celebrated every
15th of May by the people of Lucban, Quezon in
honor of San Isidro Labrador. It is the farmers'
thanksgiving for a bountiful harvest with a grand display of colorful rice
wafers, fruits, vegetables, and handicrafts adorning every house in the town.
The festival's name comes from the Filipino terms hiyas (jewel) and pahiyas (precious
offering). This feast is an ancient farmers' harvest celebration that dates
back to the 16th century. According to legend, San Isidro Labrador magically plowed the
field whenever he went out of the church. This is the story that the Spaniards
passed on to the Philippines from Mexico during
their colonial period. Since then, the Pahiyas Festival has been a source of
excitement for the locals and visitors of Quezon Province.
The highlight of the festival is a procession along the
streets of the image of San Isidro Labrador, to ensure the people's bountiful
harvest in the coming seasons. The procession features a pair of giant papier
mâché figures of a farmer and his wife. This is followed by the image of the
patron saint and his wife Sta. Maria de la Cabeza, who carries a basket with triangulo biscuits,
which are given to the children during the procession. This culminates with
generous sharing of food among the townspeople.
All the locals' houses are decorated with agricultural
harvest (fruits, vegetables, rice grains, rice stalks, flowers, and ferns) and
colorful rice wafers, called kiping.
These thin wafers made from rice dough are usually arranged into two or three
layers of chandeliers called aranya. The locals use different kinds of
leaves to add flavor and color to the kiping. They also produce varieties
of tastes and textures by using different ingredients such as kabal,
coffee, talisay (umbrella tree), cocoa, and banaba leaves.
Each house tries to outdo each other in decorations in an
annual competition as they vie for the honor of being recognized for their
creativity. After the competition is over and the awards are handed over to the
owners of the winning house, the decorations of the house will be thrown away
to the huge flock of people as free treats. For the other houses, after the
festival, those kipings that were used as decorations are cooked and
eaten as rice chips. Also during the festival, the people display their harvest
in front of their homes so that the parish priest can bless them as the
procession passes by.
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