By Franklin P. Gumapon
DIPOLOG CITY, Oct.
11- - Innate talents and skills among children may vary but these should be
nurtured and developed to bring out the best in them.
This city’s “Dahunog”
festival, which runs for eight years now, is primarily designed to develop the
children’s talents in music using wind instruments and drums.
For the past eight
years, the city government through its city tourism office in collaboration
with the city tourism council spearheaded the holding of the “Dahunog sa
Dipolog” festival which falls on the first week of October each year. “Dahunog”
is a Visayan term for rumbling or reverberating sounds.
Year after year the Dahunog festival has succeeded in drawing foreign and domestic tourists who would watch the interschool parade band competitions with elementary and high school students as participants.
Clad in colorful
costumes, the band members would regale the spectators with their breathtaking
performances in music and dances that go in harmony.
Tribute to children
Assistant City
Information Officer Leonor Ruiz-Rabino told the Philippine Information Agency
(PIA) that the Dahunog festival is one of the major entertainments for the
children’s month celebration in the city.
Aside from the
parade band competitions, Rabino said, there’s also a search for Miss Teen
Tourism to be participated in by high school students. Children below six years
old will also vie for “Little King and Little Queen” titles.
“By and large,
Dahunog festival is an avenue for children and youth to show off their talents
not only in music but also in arts,” Rabino stressed.
Child-friendly city
The city
government’s efforts in looking after the welfare of children have paid off as
it emerged as the regional winner in the search for child-friendly city
sponsored by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD).
A children’s center
has been set up to provide shelter to abandoned and street children.
The city leadership
also sees to it that children aged zero to five years old are given
immunization against preventable diseases like polio, TB, hepatitis and others.
The city council,
on the other hand, has also passed laws supportive of the welfare of children like
the anti-smoking ordinance that prohibits smoking in public buildings, places
and parks.
8th Dahunog festival
Six high schools
and seven elementary schools have participated in the recently concluded parade
band competitions with the following winners in the secondary level: Zamboanga
del Norte National High School band - champion, Saint Mary’s Academy – second
place, and San Istanislao Kostka of Manukan town- third place.
For the elementary
level, the winners were Dipolog City pilot Demonstration School – champion,
Estaka Central School – second and Manukan East Central School – third.
Miss Teen Tourism 2012
The search for Miss
Teen Tourism 2012 was joined by gorgeous teenagers from 11 public and private
high schools. The winners were Quennie Joy Ebal of Saint Mary’s Academy - Miss
Teen Tourism 2012, Alessa Turner of Global Springs of Learning Academy – Miss
Eco-Tourism, Justine Rey de la Cruz of Zamboanga del Norte National high School
– Miss Travel Adventure, and Fatima Flores of Dipolog Community School – 1st
Princess. (FPG/PIA-ZamboNorte)