The Panak Bukidnon are the tumandok, the native or Indigenous dwellers of the more interior portions of Panay Island, covering the interior barangays of the four provinces of Aklan, Antique, Iloilo, and Capiz. They speak the same Kinaray-a language with very few semantical differences, and are similar in their farming and hunting practices, in their spiritual beliefs and binabaylan (shamanistic) practices, in their having a binukot (kept maiden) tradition, and in their tradition of epic chanting. Every activity, whether in agriculture, fishing, hunting, and so on, is influenced by the environmental spirits and deified umalagad (souls) of the departed ancestors. Their economic life is largely dependent on ka'ingin agriculture, supplemented with hunting and fishing. They also make bolos with elaborately carved handles, knives, and spears and weave baskets, mats, and headwear - items which they exchange for lowland goods such as cloth, salt, and other household necessities brought into the mountains by Christian traders with whom they carry on seasonal commercial relations.
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Answer:
sana maka tulong po
Explanation:
The Panak Bukidnon are the tumandok, the native or Indigenous dwellers of the more interior portions of Panay Island, covering the interior barangays of the four provinces of Aklan, Antique, Iloilo, and Capiz. They speak the same Kinaray-a language with very few semantical differences, and are similar in their farming and hunting practices, in their spiritual beliefs and binabaylan (shamanistic) practices, in their having a binukot (kept maiden) tradition, and in their tradition of epic chanting. Every activity, whether in agriculture, fishing, hunting, and so on, is influenced by the environmental spirits and deified umalagad (souls) of the departed ancestors. Their economic life is largely dependent on ka'ingin agriculture, supplemented with hunting and fishing. They also make bolos with elaborately carved handles, knives, and spears and weave baskets, mats, and headwear - items which they exchange for lowland goods such as cloth, salt, and other household necessities brought into the mountains by Christian traders with whom they carry on seasonal commercial relations.