ELDERS. Pinukpuk elders and youth in full regalia, carrying forward ritual, rhythm, and the pride of their sub-tribe. Mia Magdalena Fokno/RapplerELDERS. Pinukpuk elders and youth in full regalia, carrying forward ritual, rhythm, and the pride of their sub-tribe. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

Diddiga: How Kalinga turns a peace pact into a living festival

2026/02/13 10:30
3 min read

KALINGA, Philippines – Before sunrise on Thursday, February 12, gongs echoed through Tabuk City as people gathered at the Rotary Marker for the Diddiga Cultural Parade, the centerpiece of the 7th Kalinga Bodong Festival and the 31st Provincial Founding Anniversary.

By 7 am, people from Rizal, Lubuagan, Tinglayan, Balbalan, Pinukpuk, Pasil, and Tanudan began their march toward the Kalinga Sports Center, joined by cultural groups from the Maranao, Bag’o, and Ga’dang communities, as well as the host city of Tabuk. The procession transformed the city’s main roads into a moving tableau of woven textiles, beadwork, gongs, and ritual dance.

Diddiga, which means pride, is designed as a premier cultural showcase – a presentation of the finest expressions from Kalinga’s sub-tribes. But beyond the color and choreography, the parade is anchored in the bodong, the province’s traditional peace pact system.

Kalinga Tabuk festivalTRADITION WITH GRACE. Women from Lubuagan move in step at Diddiga with woven skirts, raised hands, and tradition carried with grace and strength. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

The bodong, guided by elders and customary law, or pagta, historically ended tribal conflicts and established agreements on territory, justice, and social relations. Today, it remains a living institution – it is the moral foundation of Kalinga society. 

Launched in 2017, the Bodong Festival brings that heritage from village grounds to a public stage.

Inside the sports center, the showdown unfolded as a sequence of cultural narratives: matrimonial rites, harvest rituals, hospitality ceremonies, and other dances marking life’s milestones. These were not staged abstractions but codified traditions rooted in community memory.

Kalinga Tabuk festivalGA’DANG PRIDE. A Ga’dang woman in full regalia, layered in heirloom beads, wearing history, identity, and pride with every step. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

Kalinga Governor James Edduba said the performances were “not mere dances,” but living expressions of identity. Long before formal institutions, he noted, it was culture that shaped Kalinga’s values of unity, cooperation, courage, respect, and faith.

Under this year’s theme, “Naindaklan a Kultura, Isu’t Bileg ti Kalinga” (Great culture is the strength of Kalinga), Diddiga framed heritage not as nostalgia but as foundation. As modernization and tourism expand in the Cordillera, the festival positions Kalinga as the only province branding itself around a peace pact, an indigenous system of conflict resolution still practiced today.

Kalinga Tabuk festivalELDERS. Pinukpuk elders and youth in full regalia, carrying forward ritual, rhythm, and the pride of their sub-tribe. Mia Magdalena Fokno/Rappler

Culture is not a relic to be displayed once a year in Tabuk. It is performed, renewed, and defended in public view.

Diddiga is pride in motion, and the bodong is still real. – Rappler.com

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