^

Freeman Cebu Lifestyle

Future home of Chinese Heritage Museum

Maria Eleanor E. Valeros - The Freeman

CEBU, Philippines - There is no obvious Binondo here because Cebu is one big Chinatown.

John Vincent “JV” Castro, director and chief curator of Sugbu Chinese Heritage Museum which will be housed by a restored Gotiaoco Building on M.C. Briones Street, enthused that because the Chinese have contributed that much in Cebu’s economic prosperity it is but proper to recognize these efforts through the establishment of a Chinese Heritage Center here.

It is the aim of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Sugbu Chinese Heritage Museum Foundation Inc. to display the socio-cultural heritage of the Chinese community in terms of its contribution to customs, language, economics, trade and industry, science and technology, arts and lifestyle, education, religion, civic outreach and its contribution to nation building.

In a lecture after the opening of The Fil-Chinese Heritage Exhibit at the Parkmall in Mandaue City to welcome the Year of the Water Snake last February 8, Castro described the SCHMFI as the “leading institution in the appreciation, preservation, and promotion of the Chinese-Cebuano heritage and culture.”

“It values the Chinese legacy through research, curation, and exhibition; conserves the artifacts, documents, and other collections through new technologies and techniques; and enriches the community and the nation through educational programs,” he cited.

Immigration, social organization, economics, trade and industry; political orientation and culture and the arts will be the scope of the museum. Immigration will tackle on the history of early Chinese arrival in Cebu. Social organization is about the form along family name, province/village in China where these early Chinese settlers came from and their dialect.

How early Chinese prospered in Cebu and how they contributed to society and nation building will be under the header: economics, trade and industry. Kuomintang, Mainland China, local/national politics will be dealt with under Political Orientation, while school, education, religion, and civic outreach, language, and art and science will form part of the Culture and the Arts scope.

When asked on the future site, Castro pointed to a restored Gotiaoco Building as the home of the Sugbu Chinese Heritage Museum. That building across the Cebu City Hall was named after Go Bon Tiao who came to Cebu after the opening of its port to international trade in 1860. He came as a penniless immigrant from Kei-tang, part of present-day Fujian Province in China. It was said that his coming to Cebu was precipitated not only by economic want like many of his countrymen, but also by his accidental manslaughter of a cousin.

Baptized into Roman Catholicism with the hieratic Chinese mestizo of the parian, Don Mariano Singson, as baptismal sponsor or padrino, Go Bon Tiao became known as Pedro Singson Gotiaoco.

Via City Resolution No. 12-4663-2012, the Gotiaoco Building is now declared a local heritage site based on the fact that the said structure was built in 1914 and is one of Cebu’s earliest commercial buildings (being part of Cebu’s earlier wholesale business section) and is considered to have contributed to the City’s economic growth. It was the first five-storey building in Cebu (its bell tower included) and is the first to have an elevator.

A souvenir shop and a restaurant are part of the ground floor plan. “It would be exciting for the restaurant to showcase, say, spices in the 1914. There would be plenty of things to look forward to,” Castro said.

Galleries and an audio-visual room will be situated on the second floor.

The heritage project is actually three-fold. Aside from the museum, a coffee table book on Sugbu Chinese culture and a documentary on building the project are also being planned.

When asked by the audience – Grade 7 students of the St. Theresa’s College, as to why the need to embark on the heritage preservation project, Castro pointed out that heritage preservation is not just a collection of inherited traditions, arts, objects, and culture. Preserving our heritage can deliver a full range of contemporary activities, meanings, and behaviors that we can draw from.

“It can shape the present and the future public opinion on certain historical accounts. What memories can we enjoy, regret or learn from,” he replied.

According to him, heritage preservation is a contemporary undertaking and not an ancient one. Because of its richness and significance, it allows the present generation to understand its socio-political underpinnings.

“It can be the platform for political recognition, a medium for intercultural dialogue, a means of ethical reflection, and the potential basis for ongoing local economic development in Cebu,” he expounded.

Sugbu Chinese Heritage Museum is a gift to the future generations by collecting, documenting, and sharing resources with historical significance to Cebu’s early Chinese-Filipino communities.

“Sugbu Chinese Heritage Museum wants to be relevant in the Cebuano youth,” Castro quipped. (FREEMAN)

 

vuukle comment

AD HOC COMMITTEE OF THE SUGBU CHINESE HERITAGE MUSEUM FOUNDATION INC

BRIONES STREET

BUILDING

CEBU

CEBU CITY HALL

CHINESE

GO BON TIAO

GOTIAOCO BUILDING

HERITAGE

SUGBU CHINESE HERITAGE MUSEUM

  • Latest
Latest
Latest
abtest
Are you sure you want to log out?
X
Login

Philstar.com is one of the most vibrant, opinionated, discerning communities of readers on cyberspace. With your meaningful insights, help shape the stories that can shape the country. Sign up now!

Get Updated:

Signup for the News Round now

FORGOT PASSWORD?
SIGN IN
or sign in with