by
Carmen Ching Unabia
Bata Mama and Bata Bahi were brother and sister, seven and
two years old. When their kind father, the first datu died, their mother
married his brother, the second datu. The stepfather was cruel and punished the
children for everything they did.
One day, the stepfather said, "Dear wife, let us move
to another place and leave the children behind for it is difficult to feed and
raise them."
"But they are too young to live on their own," the
mother protested. "Once in a while, Bata Bahi still suckles my
breast."
"Whether you like it or not," the datu said,
"we are leaving them. Or would you rather that I had them killed?"
The mother wept but she was afraid of her husband so she quickly packed their
belongings.
The datu called Bata Mama and Bata Bahi. "Take this
basket to the fields and fill it with (gabi) leaves," he ordered them.
"Do no come home until the basket is full, otherwise I shall hang you
upside down." As soon as the children left, the datu said to his wife,
"Cook our food, dear wife--let us have chicken for our last meal."
Silently, the mother prepared the meal. While they were
eating, the datu warned his wife not to leave any food for the children and to
put out the fire in the stove. When the datu was not watching, however, the
mother hurriedly wrapped some food in banana leaves. She pressed her breasts
and filled a bottle with milk. Together with a small knife, she buried the
chicken and bottle in the ashes of the stove.
The datu and his wife set out on their journey. While they
walked, the mother secretly unrolled a skein of abaca threads on their trail.
The datu did not notice this, for women walk behind their husbands.
In the wide gabi field, the children had already gathered
all the young leaves they could find. Still the basket was not full. "What
shall we do now?" said Bata Mama to Bata Bahi. "There is nothing more
we can find." They sat down. They could not go home for fear of their
stepfather hanging them upside down.
After a long time, Bata Bahi began to cry. "I am
hungry," said Bata Bahi, "Let's go home." Bata Mama pitied his
little sister so he said, "Let's go home, then, even if we get hung."
As the two children entered the yard, they falt that it was
unusually quiet. There was no one in the house. Not an object, not even a piece
of cloth was left behind. "Where is mother?" said Bata Bahi, "I
want to suck milk," and she cried and cried.
Bata Mama tried to look for something to eat. He went to the
stove, but there was not even a live ember. Bata Mama leveled the ashes with a
stick. He found some chicken pieces wrapped in banana leaves, the bottle of
milk, and the knife. "Come Bata Bahi, here is some food mother left for us
to eat." As they could not finish all of it, they buried the remaining
food in the ashes again. They waited for their mother to arrive, but the sun
set and evening fell and still there was no one.
At midnight, Bata Bahi began to feel afraid and started to
cry. "Bata Mama, the witches will come to eat us."
"Let us just sleep here," said Bata Mama,
"Anyway, the witches will find us anywhere we sleep." They decided to
lie down across the door in a straight line. Their heads were in opposite
directions, and the soles of the two feet were touching. It was very dark.
In the middle of the night, they heard the witch's
footsteps. Bata Bahi trembled with fear. "Do not cry," said Bata
Mama, "The witch will surely find us if you do."
They heard the footsteps climbing up the ladder. They kept
very still. Bata Mama kept close to his sister, the knife held securely in his
hand.
It was pitch dark and the witch's clammy hands began to
touch the children's bodies. He said, "This is the head and these are the
legs--what long legs! This is indeed a long one! And then it has--another
head!" The witch was puzzled. "This must be the true witch!" he
cried, moving back. Immediately, Bata Mama stood up and screamed as fiercely as
he could, "I will eat you!" And the witch fled.
Morning came. "Where shall we find our mother?"
asked Bata Bahi. As they crossed the yard, Bata mama noticed a trail of abaca
fibers leading to the road. "They must have gone this way," said Bata
Mama. "Let us follow the abaca wherever it goes." Bata Bahi was too
young to walk a great distance, so Bata Mama had to carry her on his shoulders.
Now and then, they would come upon a spot where the datu and his wife had
cooked and they would always find some food and milk in the ashes.
After a long time, the trail of the abaca fibers ended. Then
began a trail of ashes. The children felt the ashes and they were still warm.
"Let us walk faster for they must be near," said Bata Mama. But after
following the ashes for a long while, the children go lost. Aimlessly, they
wandered in the thick forest. Finally, they came upon a balangas tree. A lot of
its fruits had dropped to the ground. Bata Mama noticed that there were
footprints of wild pigs on the ground around the tree, so he said, "Let us
climb up the tree and eat there in case the wild pigs return."
As soon as they reached the higher branches, a herd of wild
pigs of different sizes arrived. They fed on the fruit on the ground and left,
all except one, the biggest and fattest of them all.
Bata Mama though hard how he coudl kill the pig. He selected
the biggest and ripest fruit and stuck his knife into it, then he dropped the
fruit. The wild pig immediately snapped it up. The knife got stuck in its
throat. Squealing horribly, the pig died. "Now we got a big pig,"
said Bata Mama to Bata Bahi, "How do we cut it up and cook it?"
"Bata Bahi, stay here while I look for someone to help
us with the pig," said Bata Mama, "There must be some people living
nearby. Don't try to follow or you will get lost."
So Bata Mama went to look. In the distance, he saw a wisp of
smoke and went towards it. Upon reaching the house, he called out, but no one
answered; so he climbed up the ladder and peered inside. In the hut was a
sleeping giant snoring loudly. Bata Mama took a stone and struck the giant's
forehead. "Wake up, Apu!" he said, "For I am here."
The giant got up. "Ah, so that's why I was having such
a nice dream of eating a young datu," said the giant. Bata Mama replied,
"Do not eat me, Apu, for I have a big fat pig under a tree which I cannot
butcher. And I need fire."
The giant got up and followed the boy to where the pig and
his sister were. Bata Mama and the giant brought the dead pig to the river
bank. The giant began to cut up the pig and throwing all the meat into the
river. "These parts are no good," he explained.
The children watched the giant quietly. They noticed that
ever time the giant threw some meat into the water, a big crab came to take the
pieces away to its hole under the rock. When all the meat had been thrown into
the river, the giant took the intestines and told Bata Mama, "Wash
this--it is the only part that is fit to eat. I have to go downriver for I have
other things to do."
The giant left. Bata Mama was washing the intestines and
Bata Bahi was playing in the water when suddenly the crab bit the little girl's
finger and she cried. Bata Mama got angry. "You foolish crab!" he
said, "why did you bite my sister?"
"I want you both to come to my house," said the
crab, "for when the giant returns, he will eat you both. He just went
downriver to see if the pig's flesh he threw away has been caught in his
trap."
The children entered the crab's house, which was very
beautiful. "You will never be hungry here," the crab said, "for
I have so much food. You are safe from the giant in my house."
The giant reached his trap and found nothing. "Where
did the meat go?" he wondered, retracing his steps, but he could not find
the slices of meat. So he thought, "I'd better eat the children."
When he reached the place where they had sliced the pig, the
children were no longer there. He sniffed here and there, then under the rocks.
He said, "So that's where you're hiding. I'll get you out."
He put his arm into the hole of the crab. Immediately, the
crab cut it off with her sharp claws. The giant was shocked. "Well, don't
I have another arm?" he said, reaching in with his other arm. The crab cut
that arm, too. The giant said, "Well, don't I have feet?" and he
placed one foot in the hole. The crab cut the foot. He placed the remaining
foor inside and the crab snapped that off, too. Then, the giant said, "I'd
better put my head inside and eat them right there." So he pushed his head
inside the hole. Quickly, the crab cut his head and the giant died.
When the giant failed to come home, his wife sent their son
after him. "He must have gotten plenty of food and couldn't carry
it," thought the giant's wife. And so, the son went to look for his
father. When the son reached the river, he saw that the giant was dead and so
he ate his father's body. Then, he sensed the children. "There must be
human beings here," he said. He smelled them under the rock. The son put
his arm inside the crab's house and the crab cut it. The giant's son placed his
other arm in and the same thing happened. He stuck in his feet, then his head,
and then he died.
The giant's wife became tired of waiting for her husband and
son, so she decided to go herself. "Perhaps they ate everything right
there, that is why they could not return," she thought. When she reached
the river, she found the body of her son and ate it. Then, she smelled the
children under the rock. She reached under the stone with her arm and the same
thing happened to her. The crab cut off her arms, her feet, and her head. So
the wife of the giant died.
"Bata Mama and Bata Bahi," the crab said to the
children. "For the meantime, live here with me. You may continue to search
for your parents when you are grown up." The children lived with the crab
until they grew up.
One day, after many years, the crab said, "Now Bata
Mama and Bata Baha, we must leave this place, for I shall soon die. I will go
to the source of the river and await my death there." The children were
filled with sadness for the crab had been like a mother. "But before I go,
I will leave you my claws. Plant the claws wherever you decide to live and a
tree will grow. The tree will give you everything you need. One of the things
it will provide you with is a set of powerful gongs. As for your parents, they
will come to you one day. And you will know it is the, for there will be a very
heavy rain." After these words the old crab took off its claws and,
following the crab's instructions, they continued the search for their parents.
The brother and sister asked at the house of an old woman
whether anyone had passed that way. The old woman replied that a datu and his
wife had, but that it had been a long time ago. "They went in the
direction you are facing," the old woman said. The children thanked her
and went on. One week after, Bata Mama said, "Bata Bahi, let us build our
house here." So they planted the claws of the crab. A big kingdom came to
be. They climbed up the beautiful palace and found all they needed in it. There
were gongs of different sizes and clothes fit for a prince and a princess. Then
and there, they became Donya Maria and Don Juan.
The people living across their palace were surprised.
"Who is this powerful datu who was able to build a palace in one
day?" the asked each other. And they decided to visit the dwellers. Among
the many visitors were the wicked datu and the mother of Bata Mama and Bata
Bahi.
When Don Juan saw all the people marching towards the
palace. he beat the gongs. The people were welcomed with all kinds of delicious
food and gong music. As soon as the datu and his wife were within sight of the
house, however, a heavy downpour began. The rain was so strong that it created
a big hole in the ground. Don Juan and Donya Maria exclaimed, "They must
be our mother and our stepfather!"
Don Juan continued beating the gongs. It rained harder and
harder. The wicked datu was blinded with rain. He could hardly struggle through
the mud. The children's mother, however, did not find any difficulty getting to
the palace. She quickly reached the stairs although she was very wet. Donya
Maria welcomed her mother with elegant warm clothes. When the mother learned
that Don Juan and Donya Maria were her children, she embraced the tearfully.
Meanwhile, the datu had stumbled in the rain and crawled in
the thick mud. He could hardly make it. Walking on his hands and knees, the
datu finally reached the gate and fainted. They found him shivering in the mud,
sobbing with fear. Don Juan stopped beating the gong and the rain ceased. Donya
Maria gave the datu warm water to drink and he kissed the hem of her skirt and
asked for forgiveness. After that, they all lived happily together.
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