The first half is "La dalaga filipina", a music composed in the Philippines by a Filipino. Nowadays, the Tagalog version of the lyrics is more popular. Fortunately, we conserved its Spanish lyrics and saved it from oblivion ("La dalaga filipina/es emblema de la Patria") thanks to people like Guillermo Gomez-Rivera. The second half bears the "Jota Filipina" motif, which you can hear in many "Jota" music around the Philippines, from the "Mantones de Seda" music to the "lahota" dances in Samar/Leyte.
With the passing of the pre-war generation, and the demotion of the Spanish language in the constitution and from the school curriculum, a lot of Filipinos today are unaware that from the national anthem to patriotic songs like 'Bayan Ko' were all composed in the Spanish language. Even some of the modern arrangements of Hispano-Filipino music has lost some Latin flavor as we've drawn closer and closer to the world of the anglosajon and away from the rest of the Latin world.
@@rebecca4522 sadly, Filipinos these days will make any excuses just to deny what you said for the sake of "anti-colonialism" and "patriotism." I'm sure their ancestors are frowning upon them even up to this day.
Im 27, and i just started embracing the filipino culture. We cant deny how hispanic we are and theres nothing wrong with it. Viva Filipinas! I love you with all my heart.
There are lots of good things Spain brought us but historians only emphasized the negative side. We need to always look at the good side it brought to us. Our culture, unification and identity that echoes until today and the future. Viva Filipinas, Viva y Espana y America Latina.
@@ramelandalecio1630 blame making noli me tangere the subversive material, a fictional novel made mandatory in school. All filipinos have regarding history during Spanish times is the fiction in noli, the padre damaso etc.
I can't speak spanish. But, wow!! I can understand what you're saying.... Is it because I have a blood of spanish? Lol. By the way, my great grandfather is a Spanish.
I wish spanish language back in the Philippines cause our history written in spanish and i want to read them all specially the noli me tangere and el filibusterismo
Always reminds me of fiesta time when you hear this playing outside of the church. As the tempo starts to go faster, the people start to encourage with: 'Sige pa!', 'Arriba' and 'Ole!'. Nowadays I've heard 'Oh Yeah! Instead of 'Ole' or 'Oye' 😂😂
Everytime I hear this kind of songs it gives me goosebumps, I find it sad how the average Filipinos doesnt look back to this kind of gathering musics and how confuse Philippines on our historical identity, IT IS OBVIOUS THAT WE ARE ASIAN HISPANICS BY HEART. ❤️🇪🇸🇵🇭
Lol you mean our colonized and enslaved life. Fun fact! The Philippines was already a thriving community with trades coming from other parts of Asia and even to the middle east but the Spaniards took that away. Dont let your colonial mentality show its ugly face. Its pathetic.
Yeah the Spanish enslaved us but back then, Spanish is our staple soo its really good to go back to our few good colonial influences like Spanish and its foods
Filipinos are Asians , ( Not a Latino y Spanish ) but Hispanic Asians. Philippines is the only Hispanic country that is Hispanic but speaks English and speaks Spanish before.
According to a UA-camr and Fil-Am historian Kirby Araullo now teaching history at UCLA, the original meaning of Filipino is a Spanish or European born in the islands. I agree. Filipinos should mean somebody that can trace their heritage back to Spain. Anyway Las Islas Filipinas was named after Rey Felipe.
Filipinas from King Filipe. It was americanized into Philippines by USA. Why bro you're close to USA and we speak more English than you? Anyway Spanish language never left us. It's embedded in our dialect in the islands. Every islands have their own dialect or language. In every dialect there's Spanish and English in it. I can comprende some I just can't speak fluently in Spanish anymore. You don't use it , you lose it. You come to our islands it's similar to Mexican or any Latino country in South America. How can you lose a culture that has been there for 350 years?
@@suskagusip1036 Im questioning the wisdom of appropriating Tagalog and calling it Filipino. As stated Filipino means a mix breed. Tagalogs are Malay. It was Emilio Aguinaldo, the 1st president of the Philippine republic who btw has Chinese heritage like Digong that appropriate Filipinos to everyone and erasing the Malays in the process.
@@TheSweetnessDoctor Tagalog was made the national language so it's appropriate to call it Filipino so everyone can understand each other. President Manuel L. Quezon was the one promoted the unity of 7,600+ islands. Lingo ng Wika is celebrated on his Birthday in August. Check it out.
This is "Dalagang Filipina" with a touch of Spanish lively music with our vibrant culture of music...WE HAVE OUR OWN ORIGINAL FILIPINO MUSIC (OPM)...we are not stealers...
OPM that we know today is not really the original Filipino music. It's a form of American pop music, actually. The original and real Filipino music is what you can hear in this video that I hope was able to flourish and has become incorporated in the mainstream like how the traditional music of Spain and Latin America is very much alive even in the pop scene.
This music was originally composed by a Filipino, but originally in the Philippine-Spanish dialect. So, this is Filipino music and not the Iberian music from Spain.
This is "Ang Dalagang Pilipina". Originally composed with Spanish lyrics as "La dalaga filipina" but the Spanish lyrics were composed by a Filipino in the Philippines, so it is originally a Filipino music and not the Iberian music of Spain.
Raynald Lucios el nombre de esa canción tradicional es "La Dalaga (chica joven) Filipina" "La dalaga filipina es emblema de la patria. Es su hablar un cantar que cautiva, tiene el encanto de un noble candor..." Ahora en estes días todos solo saben las letras en tagalo, pero la canción fue escrita originalmente en español.
Many people in the Philippines think they have Spanish ancestry and families spread that story down through the generations, but the reality is the vast 99% majority of the Philippine population have no Spanish ancestry and most of the people that claim to have “Spanish ancestry” are misinformed with untrue and incorrect information equivalent to “Urban myths”, very few Filipinos have any Spanish connection as the Spanish Filipino population never exceeded in number more than a very small size of 30,000 by the 1920s out of a native Filipino and flourishing Chinese population of 11 million , take into consideration the contributing factors of thousands of Spanish Mestizos killed during world war 2, the latter figure is most likely even less. It is statistically impossible for many Filipinos to have Spanish blood due to the very small influx of Spanish settlers. Furthermore, The Philippines was never a settler colony like the Americas but an extractive colonial outpost used as a commercial hub for commercial relationships with Asia like the African and Indian colonies of Britain, very few Spaniards migrated to the Philippines and they remained a small minority never numbering more than 5000 , in 1810 Manila only had 1000 Spaniards and Leyte only 10, as the end of Spain’s colonial rule ended 1898, the vast numerous provinces and islands of the Philippines were absent and non existent of Spanish settlers while many had virtually no contact until the 19th century . The Spanish forced and implemented Filipinos to choose Spanish surnames so they could record the population and tax people. The existence of Spanish names and urban myths of Spanish ancestors passed down has caused many Filipinos to naturally assume they have Spanish ancestors while the factual real estimates of Filipinos that have Spanish ancestry is at 0.03% of the population, indeed the only authentic basis together with a foundation of factual information we can conclude is that the vast 99% majority of the population posses no Spanish ancestry. Most of the Philippines was never actually colonized by the Spanish. For example, most of the Interior of Mindanao and upper Luzon never saw a colonial effort. The only significant intermixing occurred with Chinese settlers who flourished in population throughout all aspects of Philippine history and society, maintaining influential status, which ultimately ensued the emergence of as many as 35% of Filipinos today possessing close and distant Chinese ancestry. They had become so numerous and so common and their influence very significant that the term “Mestizo” as commonly used by the Spaniard in the Philippines often refereed to Chinese Filipinos.
I see nothing wring with filipinos not having spanish blood, there is no denying that our culture has been influenced by spain because of colonization. There is a country in Africa, even brazil, where majority of their ethnicity is black and african, but still they embrace the hispanic side of their culture. All Im saying is that, this is what we are known for, this is what makes unique in a way from our neighboring countries. Why must we be strict on what our real ethnicity is when we can just embrace both our indigenous and hispanic culture, and just be the best of both worlds?
I actually don't think it's spanish ancestry but mostly latinos or mexicans since the philippines was governed by mexico which was still a vice royalty in the old times.
@@antondevera3701 “share the same culture” no you don’t. Filipinos are genetically Asian, speak Asian languages , and eat asian food. You can drop a Spaniard anywhere in Latin America and he or she will get along just fine; and the same is true if you drop a Latin American in Spain. That, however, is most certainly NOT the case if you drop a Spaniard in the Philippines or a Filipino in Spain completely Alien cultures. Despite being Catholic, The Philippines has an overwhelmingly strong South East Asian vibe ... the philippines looks and feels exactly like any other South East Asian country.
Filipino culture is Asian. The largest impacts of our culture, ethnicity, come from our Austronesian roots and Chinese. The culture of the Philippines and Latin America/Spain are very different. 1. The vast majority of Filipinos have no Spanish ancestry 2. Our languages are all Austronesian variants 3. The cuisine of the Philippines is dominantly asian. The only spanish influences are surnames religion loan words and a few dishes. Furthermore, much of the Spanish culture is long gone.
@@racooncity3325 I mean you're using Latin letters with English words. Spain is not the only country to colonize the Philippines. It's in American era where most of filipinos had the chance to study because the Spain caste system was abolished. It shows how westernized our country compare to other Asians. But that doesn't mean we're not Asians. We're asians but influenced by the western world. Yes, we do have some eastern traditions but western influence pave its way in its culture in various regions of the Philippines. Mindanao would have eastern culture but visayas and Luzon would have western culture.
@@rim2116 You clearly have no idea of the meaning of “western culture” nor have been to a western country if you think Luzon practices western culture. The culture of the Philippines and western culture is vastly different. Western culture is a result of globalisation that is present in every country around the world. Do Americans practise Mano Po, cock fighting, eat rice as their staple food, ? Even Chinese influence on Philippine culture has a much greater impact than western.
@@racooncity3325 Mano Po? What's the Spanish term for hand? If you really want the whole philippines to practice the culture of ifugaos, Maranaos, and other ethnic tribes you're no different from western colonizers then. I'm saying that there are western influenced regions which is dominant and also have eastern influenced regions that is only a portion. I could literally elaborate all the Spanish and western influences but I'd rather not to. I've been seeing you around hating the Hispanic heritage and even I as a Catholic won't even bother to council your ignorance. Adios mi amigo.
The first half is "La dalaga filipina", a music composed in the Philippines by a Filipino. Nowadays, the Tagalog version of the lyrics is more popular. Fortunately, we conserved its Spanish lyrics and saved it from oblivion ("La dalaga filipina/es emblema de la Patria") thanks to people like Guillermo Gomez-Rivera. The second half bears the "Jota Filipina" motif, which you can hear in many "Jota" music around the Philippines, from the "Mantones de Seda" music to the "lahota" dances in Samar/Leyte.
Kanang kuratchag kuradang sa samar og leyte (taga sogod here) mao na sha o dile? Thanks.
With the passing of the pre-war generation, and the demotion of the Spanish language in the constitution and from the school curriculum, a lot of Filipinos today are unaware that from the national anthem to patriotic songs like 'Bayan Ko' were all composed in the Spanish language. Even some of the modern arrangements of Hispano-Filipino music has lost some Latin flavor as we've drawn closer and closer to the world of the anglosajon and away from the rest of the Latin world.
@@rebecca4522 sadly, Filipinos these days will make any excuses just to deny what you said for the sake of "anti-colonialism" and "patriotism." I'm sure their ancestors are frowning upon them even up to this day.
Fuck yes. Very rare to see these two cultures mix in the modern era. Love that Bandurria.
Im 27, and i just started embracing the filipino culture. We cant deny how hispanic we are and theres nothing wrong with it. Viva Filipinas! I love you with all my heart.
Yes that’s true we can embrace our hispanic culture but we’ll never forget what Spain had done to us!❤️
There are lots of good things Spain brought us but historians only emphasized the negative side. We need to always look at the good side it brought to us. Our culture, unification and identity that echoes until today and the future. Viva Filipinas, Viva y Espana y America Latina.
We are Hispanic whatever it is.
@@jeanxoxo_ofc ano ginawa ng Espana satin?
@@ramelandalecio1630 blame making noli me tangere the subversive material, a fictional novel made mandatory in school. All filipinos have regarding history during Spanish times is the fiction in noli, the padre damaso etc.
Qué maravilla!!! Simplemente hermoso. Saludos desde Colombia a todos los hermanos filipinos!!!
Me encanta esta música, me recuerda mucho a la música de Andalucia❤️ me encanta la gente/cultura filipina.
Los filipinos son nuestros hermanos 🙌
Soy mitad Español Filipino! Saludos desde Filipinas todos mis hermanos hispanico. Buen dia a todos mi amigos! :D👌
Greetings from Mexico.
ua-cam.com/video/NX_xrw6ZoKU/v-deo.html canción tradicional de pilipnas
Alex Juanerio y Lentejas just saw ur comment in the other video 😂👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I can't speak spanish. But, wow!! I can understand what you're saying.... Is it because I have a blood of spanish? Lol. By the way, my great grandfather is a Spanish.
Sori i cant understand, can yu translate in english? Haha
¡Hermosa! ❤ La senti muy próxima; me encantó. ¿Dónde oír más? Saludos de Locombia.😂😅
I wish spanish language back in the Philippines cause our history written in spanish and i want to read them all specially the noli me tangere and el filibusterismo
Ang daming mga pinoy na magaling sa rondalla . keep on sharing po.
Pa support den po sa rondalla namen. Thank you.
Always reminds me of fiesta time when you hear this playing outside of the church. As the tempo starts to go faster, the people start to encourage with: 'Sige pa!', 'Arriba' and 'Ole!'. Nowadays I've heard 'Oh Yeah! Instead of 'Ole' or 'Oye' 😂😂
Everytime I hear this kind of songs it gives me goosebumps, I find it sad how the average Filipinos doesnt look back to this kind of gathering musics and how confuse Philippines on our historical identity, IT IS OBVIOUS THAT WE ARE ASIAN HISPANICS BY HEART. ❤️🇪🇸🇵🇭
Mismo mi amigo
Agree
Exactly
I miss Rondalla!!!! I used to play it during High school days!!! huhu I wanna learn to play it again
The rondalla like in Mexico, spanish influence at all.
Wow! My dear friends. You play it so very good. Filipinos intire the world will love you.
Beautiful music the Filipino’s are our brothers Frank from Texas
Wahaha I danced this ethnic song on stage when I was in grade school 😅. The Maria Clara dress and bakya 😂
Ethnic naman talaga ! Hahaha
Its not ethnic. Its Hispanic-Filipino. Ethnic is yung pure katutubo talaga.
*folk
I love listening to this kind of music so classicly lively and well with much ellegance as you sip your drinks! Bravo!
That Filipino guy looks a lot like Joey Generoso former vocalist of Side A band.
I hope to bring back the Spanish language as our 3rd language in Philippines to also feel the origin of our civilized life.
Lol you mean our colonized and enslaved life. Fun fact! The Philippines was already a thriving community with trades coming from other parts of Asia and even to the middle east but the Spaniards took that away. Dont let your colonial mentality show its ugly face. Its pathetic.
Yeah the Spanish enslaved us but back then, Spanish is our staple soo its really good to go back to our few good colonial influences like Spanish and its foods
@@augustus1318 that's the most ignorant comment yet.
@@nico77212 welp i just stated my opinion
@@marconintendo5062 ijaw ang walang alam. Mag research ka muna at baka malaman mo na mayaman ang pinas pre colonial era. Baka Indonesia pa ang nasakop
Certainly better than K pop
Yo acordar
Kpop is but a noise.
Agree😑
True
reminds me of my elementary days during summer
We are going to use your Lawiswis Kawayan version. I am hoping our choreography will do justice to your music.
Ang sarap i-loop, ang ganda!!!
I swear it sounds like "son cubano"..love it. Greetings from Las Vegas, Nevada
We also have our version called "Son Filipino". 😂✌
Filipinos are Asians , ( Not a Latino y Spanish ) but Hispanic Asians.
Philippines is the only Hispanic country that is Hispanic but speaks English and speaks Spanish before.
me encanta!
Bravo!
According to a UA-camr and Fil-Am historian Kirby Araullo now teaching history at UCLA, the original meaning of Filipino is a Spanish or European born in the islands. I agree. Filipinos should mean somebody that can trace their heritage back to Spain. Anyway Las Islas Filipinas was named after Rey Felipe.
Filipinas from King Filipe. It was americanized into Philippines by USA. Why bro you're close to USA and we speak more English than you? Anyway Spanish language never left us. It's embedded in our dialect in the islands. Every islands have their own dialect or language. In every dialect there's Spanish and English in it. I can comprende some I just can't speak fluently in Spanish anymore. You don't use it , you lose it. You come to our islands it's similar to Mexican or any Latino country in South America. How can you lose a culture that has been there for 350 years?
@@suskagusip1036 what's your point?
@@TheSweetnessDoctor
And yours?
@@suskagusip1036 Im questioning the wisdom of appropriating Tagalog and calling it Filipino. As stated Filipino means a mix breed. Tagalogs are Malay. It was Emilio Aguinaldo, the 1st president of the Philippine republic who btw has Chinese heritage like Digong that appropriate Filipinos to everyone and erasing the Malays in the process.
@@TheSweetnessDoctor
Tagalog was made the national language so it's appropriate to call it Filipino so everyone can understand each other. President Manuel L. Quezon was the one promoted the unity of 7,600+ islands. Lingo ng Wika is celebrated on his Birthday in August. Check it out.
El cajón peruano siempre presente!
This is "Dalagang Filipina" with a touch of Spanish lively music with our vibrant culture of music...WE HAVE OUR OWN ORIGINAL FILIPINO MUSIC (OPM)...we are not stealers...
OPM that we know today is not really the original Filipino music. It's a form of American pop music, actually. The original and real Filipino music is what you can hear in this video that I hope was able to flourish and has become incorporated in the mainstream like how the traditional music of Spain and Latin America is very much alive even in the pop scene.
This music was originally composed by a Filipino, but originally in the Philippine-Spanish dialect. So, this is Filipino music and not the Iberian music from Spain.
OPMs are trash, respectfully
The “Cajonero” 👍🏼
Entonces encontré mi canción favorita del momento.
I'm half pilipina half spanish
utot mo, nakiki-half spanish, nakakain ka lang ng spanish bread half spanish ka na, lol
@@gulonyotalaga hala
@@gulonyotalaga wow, pilipino ka talaga... Asal mo kasi pang ilog pasig.. mga depotang taga-ilog kayo....
ok , 😧
No you’re not lol
BRAVO
Filipino is castillan of Asia♥️♥️♥️
Amm ola im pilipino y im tan feliz de ver este agradecimiento
Philippines in 1521 AD.
beautiful...
Esa canción la tocan todas las Tunas de España, America
ua-cam.com/video/NX_xrw6ZoKU/v-deo.html tradtional filipino folk music
im half spanish half filipino
my grandmother always played it and sometimes she even played it
Amazing.
Alpha! Bravo! SUPERB!!!!
Love that song (s)
what is the name of this group and where can I hear and see more of it's music videos?
sarap sa tenga
You look Europeans but you played our local songs so well...👏👏👏👏👏👏
Middle guy is pinoy sir.
They are Spaniards...this type of music is originally theirs
@@prosimian yeah thats why it says Filipino "Spanish"
@@silver7288 My old account...
I wonder why I was so stupid lol
this video was taken in Napa Valley, California. The Caucasians are Americans & one Filipino American playing the guitar.
Dalagang pilipina yeah😖🤤
what is the song or ano ang kanta or porque es canta
This is not a Spanish song. This is called Dalagang Pilipina played here with a bit of spanish flair.
Loner Fest
Dalagang Pilipina aka Filipina Women...
This is "Ang Dalagang Pilipina". Originally composed with Spanish lyrics as "La dalaga filipina" but the Spanish lyrics were composed by a Filipino in the Philippines, so it is originally a Filipino music and not the Iberian music of Spain.
Loner Fest I wanna learn to speak in spanish 😭😭😭
Where the perform?
Saluditos❤
¿que es el nombre de musica por favor?
sorry my Spanish is rusty
es numbre del musica es "Dalagang Filipina" (Filipina Maiden)
"criada filipina" sorry for my poor translation
Raynald Lucios
el nombre de esa canción tradicional es "La Dalaga (chica joven) Filipina"
"La dalaga filipina
es emblema de la patria.
Es su hablar un cantar que cautiva,
tiene el encanto de un noble candor..."
Ahora en estes días todos solo saben las letras en tagalo, pero la canción fue escrita originalmente en español.
Se llama "La dalaga filipina", originalmente compuesto con letras en español.
"La dalaga filipina/es emblema de la Patria!"
Me encantaría saber el nombre de esta cancion
La dalaga filipina
La Dalaga Filipina
The Rhythm of Iloco folk song sounds exactly like this,
we the filipino's are basically the Mexicans of Asia
can't deny it
Only estupido people can deny that fact! Hispanic Philippines is the best!
@@TeaDrinker-eq3md instead of estupido. You translate as "pendejos".
Cringe
Nope
@@alas2210 ok otacock
filipino revolution was in spanish tagalog is just a bad dream
Ndi tama palo ng beatbox tur kan kita pre
lol
I am Half Spanish half Sardines
Your humor confirms it.
Lmao ligo sardines 😂
gitara
Many people in the Philippines think they have Spanish ancestry and families spread that story down through the generations, but the reality is the vast 99% majority of the Philippine population have no Spanish ancestry and most of the people that claim to have “Spanish ancestry” are misinformed with
untrue and incorrect information equivalent to “Urban myths”, very few Filipinos have any Spanish connection as the Spanish Filipino population never exceeded in number more than a very small size of 30,000 by the 1920s out of a native Filipino and flourishing Chinese population of 11 million , take into consideration the contributing factors of thousands of Spanish Mestizos killed during world war 2, the latter figure is most likely even less. It is statistically impossible for many Filipinos to have Spanish blood due to the very small influx of Spanish settlers. Furthermore, The Philippines was never a settler colony like the Americas but an extractive colonial outpost used as a commercial hub for commercial relationships with Asia like the African and Indian colonies of Britain, very few Spaniards migrated to the Philippines and they remained a small minority never numbering more than 5000 , in 1810 Manila only had 1000 Spaniards and Leyte only 10, as the end of Spain’s colonial rule ended 1898, the vast numerous provinces and islands of the Philippines were absent and non existent of Spanish settlers while many had virtually no contact until the 19th century . The Spanish forced and implemented Filipinos to choose Spanish surnames so they could record the population and tax people. The existence of Spanish names and urban myths of Spanish ancestors passed down has caused many Filipinos to naturally assume they have Spanish ancestors while the factual real estimates of Filipinos that have Spanish ancestry is at 0.03% of the population, indeed the only authentic basis together with a foundation of factual information we can conclude is that the vast 99% majority of the population posses no Spanish ancestry. Most of the Philippines was never actually colonized by the Spanish. For example, most of the Interior of Mindanao and upper Luzon never saw a colonial effort. The only significant intermixing occurred with Chinese settlers who flourished in population throughout all aspects of Philippine history and society, maintaining influential status, which ultimately ensued the emergence of as many as 35% of Filipinos today possessing close and distant Chinese ancestry. They had become so numerous and so common and their influence very significant that the term “Mestizo” as commonly used by the Spaniard in the Philippines often refereed to Chinese Filipinos.
I see nothing wring with filipinos not having spanish blood, there is no denying that our culture has been influenced by spain because of colonization. There is a country in Africa, even brazil, where majority of their ethnicity is black and african, but still they embrace the hispanic side of their culture. All Im saying is that, this is what we are known for, this is what makes unique in a way from our neighboring countries. Why must we be strict on what our real ethnicity is when we can just embrace both our indigenous and hispanic culture, and just be the best of both worlds?
Ampota kala kasi nila dahil sa apelyido
I actually don't think it's spanish ancestry but mostly latinos or mexicans since the philippines was governed by mexico which was still a vice royalty in the old times.
It’s not always about ancestry racoon its the fact that we share the same culture and that alone counts more than blood or lineage…
@@antondevera3701 “share the same culture” no you don’t. Filipinos are genetically Asian, speak Asian languages , and eat asian food. You can drop a Spaniard anywhere in Latin America and he or she will get along just fine; and the same is true if you drop a Latin American in Spain. That, however, is most certainly NOT the case if you drop a Spaniard in the Philippines or a Filipino in Spain completely Alien cultures. Despite being Catholic, The Philippines has an overwhelmingly strong South East Asian vibe ... the philippines looks and feels exactly like any other South East Asian country.
Filipino culture is Asian. The largest impacts of our culture, ethnicity, come from our Austronesian roots and Chinese. The culture of the Philippines and Latin America/Spain are very different. 1. The vast majority of Filipinos have no Spanish ancestry 2. Our languages are all Austronesian variants 3. The cuisine of the Philippines is dominantly asian. The only spanish influences are surnames religion loan words and a few dishes. Furthermore, much of the Spanish culture is long gone.
Yet you're using Latin letters and numbers.
@@rim2116 Same with Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesian, brunei, Singapore . Latin letters does not = spanish lmao 😂
@@racooncity3325 I mean you're using Latin letters with English words. Spain is not the only country to colonize the Philippines. It's in American era where most of filipinos had the chance to study because the Spain caste system was abolished. It shows how westernized our country compare to other Asians. But that doesn't mean we're not Asians. We're asians but influenced by the western world. Yes, we do have some eastern traditions but western influence pave its way in its culture in various regions of the Philippines. Mindanao would have eastern culture but visayas and Luzon would have western culture.
@@rim2116 You clearly have no idea of the meaning of “western culture” nor have been to a western country if you think Luzon practices western culture. The culture of the Philippines and western culture is vastly different. Western culture is a result of globalisation that is present in every country around the world. Do Americans practise Mano Po, cock fighting, eat rice as their staple food, ? Even Chinese influence on Philippine culture has a much greater impact than western.
@@racooncity3325 Mano Po? What's the Spanish term for hand?
If you really want the whole philippines to practice the culture of ifugaos, Maranaos, and other ethnic tribes you're no different from western colonizers then. I'm saying that there are western influenced regions which is dominant and also have eastern influenced regions that is only a portion. I could literally elaborate all the Spanish and western influences but I'd rather not to. I've been seeing you around hating the Hispanic heritage and even I as a Catholic won't even bother to council your ignorance. Adios mi amigo.
Estoy llorando mientras escucho