Wednesday, February 15, 2012

A short history of Sulu


By all credible historical accounts, the Sultanate of Sulu was a sovereign state which had existed more than hundred years before the coming of the Spaniards to the Philippines, even as it had successfully withstood massive and long drawn politico-military campaigns by the Spanish colonizers for its subjugation within the three hundred years of Spanish colonial rule in the country.

            To dispel colonialists’ notion that the Philippine islands were inhabited by uncivilized and barbaric people at the turn of the 14th century, hence, the justification of colonizing the archipelago— historians most often cite the history of Sulu. The Sultanate of Sulu which spanned to around three hundred islands and islets (including north of Borneo, now Sabah) across the Sulu Sea to the north and the Celebes Sea to the south (Galang, 1936), was by all historical accounts, a sovereign nation— with centralized government instrumentalities, civil and military system, cultural institutions and state religion  (Tilla, n.d.) .
          Trade relations with different powers across China, Vietnam, Borneo and Indonesia, among others, were also widely practiced and, indeed flourished for hundreds of years, even  intermittently, as the on and off wars with Spanish colonialists disrupted commerce, time and again.   
          The American colonialists, similarly, had never subjugated Sulu even through their barbaric and horrendous war of aggression against the Philippines and after the partial defeat of the Spaniards from the Philippine revolution of 1898, and the ceding of the islands by the moribund Spanish colonial power to the American aggressors at the turn of the 18th century.
          While not very popular, the history of Sulu was fully documented. According to the website- Coming of the Islam:
The written history of Sulu is based mainly on Tarsilas. Tarsilas are lineal or multilineal written accounts of genealogy. Sometimes they are accomplished by an introductory legendary or traditional account. The best-publicized Sulu Tarsila is the one reported by Najeeb Saleeby, which was made available to him by Haji Buto Abdul Baqi, one time prime minister to Jamal ul-Kiram II, the last sultan who wielded political power in Sulu. Saleeby published his work on the histories of Maguindanao and Sulu in 1905 and 1908 respectively. The collection of Tarsilas on the history of Sulu was collectively designated by Saleeby as the Genealogy of Sulu.
          Interestingly, Sulu, the home of the proud Tausug people, has displayed a pattern resistance to colonization for over four hundred years. Its history is a history of protracted cycle of cont1ict, defensive submission, peaceful interlude and offensive riposte against invaders  (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu), including the “Imperial Manila” after the formation of the US-sponsored Philippine Republic in 1946 and beyond, which Sulus tended to believe as collaborationist regimes propped-up by the foreign powers.
          The inhabitants of Sulu known as the Tausug people were widely believed to be an amalgamation of the Budanons, Tagimaha, Baklaya and the the Badjao peoples. The Budanons traced their roots to the Dayaks of Borneo which tend to emphasize that Sulu was maybe a part of the Bornean empire in the late 5th century (Orosa, 1931).
  
          The basis of the formation of the nation and why it was able to maintain its identity and independence far so long can be traced to two arguments. The first argument concerns geography and trade, while the second addresses the arrival of Islam and the early institutionalization of a formal polity along Islamic lines (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu).
          Situated between Malacca, China and the Moluccas, Sulu’s commanding economic location enabled it to play an active part in international trade. Its ports were believed to have received different traders, including Chinese and Indians as early as 7th century. Again, as the gateway to the Philippines from the south, Sulu felt Islam’s influences as early as the 9th century. The fusion of the flourishing trade due to its strategic economic location with the relatively advance political and religious institutions of Islam, had made Sulu a nation which would serve as the basis by which the advance of christianising Spanish colonialists would falter. The northern Philippines, by contrast, was still without centralized political institutions and offered little resistance to the Spaniards (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu).
          The significance of Sulu has come to the public mind in the most recent past as some descendants of one of the sultans, claimed Sabah as part of its territory which was only leased out to the British-owned East India Company.  This gave strength to the claim that Sabah, or at least a part of the big island, is a Philippine territory. But that is another story.
         In 1390, it is widely believe that a certain Rajah Baguinda came to Sulu from Sumatra and assumed power through an inter-marriage, and when Sulu was still ruled by three authorities namely,  Sipad, Tagihama and Baklaya chiefs. Yet even prior to that, Macdum, a missionary from Jahore had already made Islmic converts in Sulu, including Baguinda (Tilla, n.d.).

          It was towards the end of Baguinda’s lifetime that Abu Bakr, an Islamic missionary, able administrator and a judge is believed to have come to Sulu. Following his marriage to Princess Paramisuli, the daughter of Baguinda, Abu Bakr introduced Islam not as a sect, but as a state religion with its attendant civil and political institutions. This signaled the birth of the Sultanate of Sulu, with Abu Bakr as its first state leader who prepared to be called, Sultan Sharif ul-Hashim (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu).
         Once in power, Abu Bakr immediately worked on a centralized form of government by organizing a form of Arabian Caliphate. He divided the island Sulu into five districts, namely: Parang, Pansul, Lati, Gitung, and Luuk. Appointing a Panglima as head of each district, he also introduced an eclectic code based on Koramic precepts which served as a foundation for the work of his successors. Abu Bakr was succeeded by his children and later, his grandchildren, and so the Sultanate was regularly organized (Tilla, n.d.) .
         After Abu Bakr, his son Kamalud Din succeeded to the throne of the Sultanate. The sultans who ruled later in the order of their succession were:  Maharajah Upu, Pangiran Buddiman, Tanga, Bungsu, Nasirud-Din H, Salahud Din Karamat, Shahabud Din, Mustafa Shafuid Din, Daruddin I, Nasaruddin III, Alimud Din I, Israel, Alimud Din , Sharapud Din, Alimud Din III, Aliyud Din I, Shakil'al Lah (1808) Jamalul Kiram I, Mohammad Pulalum, Jamalul Alam, Badarud Din III and Jamalul Kiram (Tilla, n.d.).
          Through the genealogy or Tarsilas, each ruler claimed to be a direct descendant of Abu Bakr who was by traditional belief, a descendant himself to prophet Muhammad. There are accounts which cited other names, but understandably, names of these sultans may vary as they were addressed differently in different historical accounts.
        Thus, prior to the arrival of the Spaniards in 1521, Sulu was by far, one of the strongest and best organized states in the region, whose power expanded to parts of Borneo, Palawan and the Sulu islands and islets  (Jabir, n.d.).
        The year 1578 marked the first attempt of Spain to colonize Sulu. Rodriguez de Figuroa arrived in Jolo to collect tribute and establish territories. He was driven back by the Sulus who at the time already claimed territories in Basilan, Palawan, Zamboanga and other parts of Mindanao. The Spaniards knew that Mindanao was their best staging point to conquer the Malaccas islands.
         Feeling that their trade and government were at under threat, the Sulus, instead of surrendering to Spain, launched counter-offensives in parts of the Visayas, which was known as the Moro wars between 1600s and the late 1700s. In fact in 1619 and 1627, during the time of Sultan Bungso, Sulu established an aggressive policy against Spain through piratical raids to expand territories and collect tributes (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu).
         The Spanish retaliated by plundering Sulu and massacring people in the islands. Sultan Bungo through an alliance with Sultan Quadarat of Maguindanao, launched further attacks in 1664 and 1665, triggering the Spaniards to conquer Zamboanga in the succeeding years. Zamboanga became the launching pad for the annexation of Sulu, but the Spaniards were defeated in a protracted war, over and over again.
          In 1668 Spain began another aggressive campaign to conquer Sulu. With full military force, Spain landed in Sulu, but the Sultanate evacuated to the mountains and launched a protracted war. The brutality of the Spanish in massacres and burnings of properties only seemed to strengthen the determination of Sulus to remain independent. With the help of the Dutch, in 1646, a peace accord was signed between Sulu and the Spanish colonial authority. It was at this period of relative peace when trade in Sulu came to flourish once again.
        In 1751, the Sulu-Spain relation turned sour again. Sultan Alimudin after being briefly imprisoned in Manila, returned to Sulu to lead raids and counter-raids against the Spaniards. Sultan Alimudin was followed by several Sultans who were perceived to be “friendly” with the British and Spanish authorities. In 1886, Sultan Jamalul Kiram perceived to be friendly to Spanish authorities, again proclaimed a halt of hostilities.  
       Kiram was succeeded by Sultan Pulalun. At his time, the Spaniards again initiated a new military campaign against the Sultanate. In 1851, military forces landed Jolo. The town was subsequently destroyed to compel the Sultanate to accept Spanish authority. Sulu refused, but instead signed another accord of friendship. 
         Realizing that Sulu was still independent, the Spaniards launched yet another assault to the nation in 1876. They used steam ships and heavily bombarded Sulu. The Sulu fighters had to resort to guerrilla war and ajuramentado (suicide attacks) to fight the invaders.
         Under attack from and occupied by the Spaniards, and with the Dutch encroaching into his Bornean island,  the Sultan was forced to lease out the Bornean territory to the British’s East India company. Again, Sulu was forced to sign another treaty with Spain by which the Spanish authorities would be recognized, while the Sulu autonomy would be respected, in turn (A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu). 
        At the turn of the century and after America colonized the Philippines, the new colonial power launched tremendous war of attrition against Sulu between 1891-1913.The Sulus resisted gallantly, but the hostilities with the much powerful colonizers ultimately weakened Sulu’s military capacity and further eroded the Sultan’s political power  (A Brief History of the Sultanate of Sulu).  Massacres upon massacres, attacks and counter-attacks characterized this era.
       In 1913, the American colonial government reorganized Sulu as part as the Department of Mindano and Sulu, in its effort to assimilate the Sultanate. With the spreading public education system, capitulation and corruption of some members of the ruling class as well as the persistent military campaigns of the Americans, Sulu was gradually, yet successfully integrated to the Philippine territory under the Americans.
      Sporadic resistance against the new colonizers would continue however until up to 1970’s when the Moro National Democratic Front (MNLFs) was formed to wage yet another attempt by the “Bangsa Moro people,” to wrest their independence from “neo colonial authorities” in Manila.


JR Valila
University of the Philippines- OU
2012 February

Bibliography


Galang, Z. (1936). Encyclopedia of the Philippines Vol. VIII. Manila: Philippine Education Co.


Jabir, S (n.d.) A History of the Muslims in the Philippines: A Nation Under Endless Tyranny.
            Retrieved from http://www.maranao.com/bangsamoro/index.htm


Kalaw, M. M. (1938). An Introduction to Philippine Social Science 2nd edition.Manila: Philippine 
            Education Co.


Orosa, S. (1931). The Sulu Archipelago and Its People. New York: World Book Co.


A Short History of the Sultanate of Sulu (n.d.) http://sovereignsulu.webs.com/Short%20History- Sulu%20Sultanate.pdf


The Coming of Islam. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.ranaocouncil.com/history/?id=9


Tilla, S. (n.d.). On Sulu’s Claim to North Borneo. Quezon City: The Philippine Law Journal.





No comments:

Post a Comment