Our Lady of Caysasay

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Our Lady of Caysasay
Mahal na Birhen ng Caysasay
File:Our Lady of Caysasay.JPG
Location Taal, Batangas,
 Philippines
Date 1603
Type wooden statue
Holy See approval December 8, 1954 by Pope Pius XII
Shrine Archdiocesan Shrine of the Our Lady of Caysasay
Patronage Taal, Batangas, Batangas
Attributes Crown with thirteen stars

Our Lady of Caysasay (Spanish: Nuestra Señora de Caysasay) is a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary venerated at the Archdiocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Caysasay in Taal, Batangas in the Philippines. The image, which depicts the Immaculate Conception, is believed to be one of the oldest in the country, having been found in 1603 by a man fishing in the Pansipit River. The subsequent Marian apparitions documented by Spanish colonial church leaders were the first in the country; devotees today continue to attribute miracles to the Virgin.[1]

The image was canonically crowned in 1954 and was later given the title the "Queen of the Archdiocese of Lipa". The feast day of Our Lady of Caysasay is celebrated every December 8 and 9. The image spends half the week in the Shrine of Caysasay and the other half at the Basilica de San Martin de Tours, to satisfy the needs of the locals and followers.[1]

Description

The wooden image, measuring about 272 mm (10.7 in), shows the Virgin as tilting slightly forward, her hands clasped across her breasts below her right shoulder. One eye is slightly bigger than the other. It was found wearing a simple, red tunic gathered above its waist that billowed into huge folds around the ankles, and clad in a green shawl.

Our Lady of Guidance enshrined in Ermita, Manila, is the oldest known Marian image in the country.[2] The report and documentation of the apparitions of 1611-1619 and 1639, are unique in Philippine church annals as they are believed to be the first Marian apparitions in the Philippines. In those days, the country was under the autonomous Mexican vicariate; Fr. Casimiro Díaz, who reported the confirmation of the apparitions and miracles, was a deputy of the order's Mexican center.

History

Discovery

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File:The catch of Juan Maningcad.JPG
Fresco inside Caysasay Church depicting Juan Maningcad catching the image.

In the year 1603 in Caysasay, which was a small barangay of Taal, a fisherman called Juan Maningcad went out fishing. Instead of casting his net to the sea, he threw it into the nearby Pansipit River. When he drew in his net, he caught a small, wooden image of the Blessed Virgin Mary less than a foot high. Though waterlogged, the image had a heavenly lustre, causing the pious Maningcad to prostrate himself and pray before the statue, which he brought home.[3]

The precise origin of the image and how it got to the river is unknown. One theory was that the image was cast into the sea off Batangas by the Spanish to pacify it during an expedition, and that it was somehow pushed upriver. Other opinions held that perhaps someone exploring the river had inadvertently dropped it, or that it came from China. News of the image began to spread until it reached the parish priest, Fray Juan Bautista Montoya, and the vicar that represented the reigning King of Spain. They went to Maningcad's house to verify the story, and upon seeing the image, knelt down and venerated it.[3][4]

Disappearances

Doña María Espíritu, the widow of the town's judge, was assigned as the image's camarera or caretaker. She ordered a precious urna (a wooden, canopied shrine that sometimes has glass panes) to be made for the image and kept it in her home. Every evening, she noticed that the image went missing from its urna, but then in the morning it would be back in its usual place. Worried, the widow told the story to the priest, who accompanied her back to her house and saw that the urna was empty. The urna suddenly opened and the image appeared before them. The priest decided to gather volunteers to keep vigil beside the image, and during the night they did see the urna open by itself, and the image leaving and coming back again.[5]

Finally, the priest decided that the villagers should now come with lighted candles and follow the image the next time it left. When this happened, the image led them to Caysasay, to the place where it was originally found. The priest decided to take the image to the Basilica of Saint Martin de Tours for safekeeping, but the image continued to leave the church until one day it disappeared and was nowhere to be found.[5]

Years later, two girls named María Bagohin and María Talain were gathering firewood, and saw the image reflected in the waters of a spring near where Juan Maningcad had found it. They looked up, and saw the image of the Lady of Caysasay on top of a tall sampaguita (Jasminum sambac) bush, flanked by two lit candles and guarded by several casay-casay (silvery kingfisher, Alcedo argentata) that abounded in the hillside area, thus called Caysasay by the Spaniards. The two reported what they saw to the parish priest, who with the people concluded that it was the Virgin’s wish to stay in Caysasay. A makeshift chapel was built on the very spot where the image was found, and native devotion to the Our Lady of Caysasay had started even without official church sanction. Fr. Pedro Murillo Velarde SJ in his Historia de Filipinas and other 18th century Spanish chroniclers put the year 1611 as when natives began reporting strange visions on the hillside. This was also the year, according to Fr. Pedro G. Galende, Director of the San Agustín Museum in Intramuros, that the first makeshift church was reportedly built there.

Apparition to Catalina Talain

A series of apparitions by the Blessed Virgin Mary were first reported at the rocky hillside of Caysasay. According to a church inquiry, a vision appeared to a native servant girl, Catalina Talain, who had gone up the hillside with a companion to gather firewood and fetch some water. The unexpected vision of something small in stature but radiating extraordinary brilliance from a hollow in the rocky landscape so bewildered the girl that she ran to tell her companion, and both fled terrified back to the town of Taal, by the shore of the lake. From the cave near the spring was found the image of the Blessed Virgin—the same image that was fished out of the river almost a decade earlier and mysteriously disappeared.[citation needed]

Historian José M. Cruz, S.J. reviewed original microfilm documents of the inquiry into the apparitions, which he dated to 1619. He reported that Church officials interrogated Talain, but she told them she could not clearly identify what she saw. The sparseness of her report, however, convinced Cruz that Talain was not fabricating the story; he noted in his study on the events that in 17th-century Philippines, a servant girl like Talain had much to gain from associating herself with God or the saints.[citation needed]

Apparition to Juana Tangui

The apparition of the Lady of Caysasay to Juana Tangui was a more documented report. Fr. Casimiro Díaz, a representative of the Mexican vicar, in his 18th century Conquista de las Islas Filipinas (Part II), gave a detailed account:

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In a sitio called Bingsacan, near the village of Caysasay, around 1611, the natives saw several times, mainly at night, near a river where they go to fetch water, a very great light coming from a small opening in a large rock.[3] From a distance it shone more brightly than four giant wax candles. As they got nearer, they could hear sweet and harmonious music made by very pleasant instruments, which entranced them, not so much because they did not expect to hear music but because of the divine melody that they heard. As they approached closer, some saw a beautiful hand and arm jutting out of the opening in the rock. It held a lighted torch, which moved up and down, though it remained in its place in the opening. They watched this light for a long time, listening to music. Others saw only the great ray of light, while still others saw that above the rock, there was a very great light, and another group saw a great flame, which seemed to devour that sitio.[citation needed]

After this unusual phenomenon had been witnessed, which had never before been seen or heard of in that sitio, some natives, both men and women, decided to see what it really was. They saw an vision of the Virgin Mary, just a little taller than the size of one open hand from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the middle finger, dressed in white, with a crown on her head, and in her arms was the Infant Jesus, who also wore a crown. Miraculous healing powers were attributed to the waters from the spring. More than 30 people declared they saw visions of the Lady at Caysasay. Word got around and many people flocked to the area.[6]

The news reached a native named Juana Tangui, from the town of Bauan who was the servant of Don Juan Mangabot, one of the town's prominent natives. She was a simple woman who led a devout life who had been suffering for a long time from a burning sensation in the eyes leaving her almost blind. Her eyes could not be healed by the many remedies that had been applied to it. She was resolved to go to the rock where people said that the Blessed Virgin appeared. She went accompanied by one of her master's daughters to that place where the ray of light was first seen. She had also heard that everyone who took a bath in the small stream was cured of any sickness of which they may have been suffering. For this reason she bathed in the stream, in the company of nine or ten other people doing the same. During the entire time of her bath, she noticed an unusual shadow by her side, though there was neither sun nor moon that could cause it, since it was already evening, and it was very dark.

After some time she felt that someone was holding her and turning her body. When she turned to the place toward which she was being turned, she saw a great light, like that coming from an enormous lighted candle, which caused her great wonder. But she did not dare to move forward in order to examine what she had seen. She went to a nearby field where she recounted what had happened to some native women. But they told her to return and to examine closely what it was. Since she said that she could not see very well, on account of her eye disease, they offered a young servant to accompany her to that place. (The recent account of Fr. Cruz is similar but says it was a young servant boy that was sent back with Juana.) Upon their arrival at the spot, she made the girl kneel down. Juana walked further and saw a very bright light and the image of our Lady, almost two palm measurements in height, dressed in white, with a crown on her head and a cross on her forehead. The image seemed to be alive, as it was moving and blinking. When the native woman moved closer to her, the image spoke to her, thanking her for remembering her and coming back to see her. Juana declared that the apparition told her,

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"You have been kindhearted to me, but unless you wear the belt of the Cofradía de San Agustin (Confraternity of Saint Augustine), do not come back to see me, until you are a member of the Confraternity, and you wear it."

The native woman returned to the town, and did not tell anyone about what had happened until she had spoken with Fr. Juan Bautista Montoya, the prior of the Taal Convent. She asked him reverentially for the belt of the Confraternity. After spending eight days in confession, the prior gave the customary belt to her.[3]

She returned to the place where the Blessed Virgin had spoken to her. In addition to herself, she brought with her eight or nine people, among them the wife of her master, Doña Juliana Dimoyaguín and other prominent residents, whose declarations appear in the accounts published about the event. They returned to the same place where the girl who had accompanied her the first time had knelt down. She moved forward to the same spot where she had been a few days before, and she saw once more, clearly and distinctly, the Blessed Virgin. After making a deep bow, Juana knelt in her presence.

The Virgin told her that she was much more pleased with her than before, because she was wearing the belt of the Confraternity. The devout native asked the Virgin directly what sign she should carry so that people would believe that she had spoken to and been in the company of the Virgin. The Virgin responded by asking for Juana's rosary and belt, telling her that it was a sufficient sign for her to touch them. Juana gave the Queen of Heaven her belt and her rosary, together with the rosaries that her companions had taken care to bring with them.

The Virgin accepted them and then returned them to the said Juana Tangui. The women who received the rosaries declared that the fragrance that emanated from them elevated their souls. Moreover, Juana's eyes were healed, her eyesight restored.[3]

Deliverance of the town

By 1732, the town of Taal became the prosperous capital of the Batangas province. The town center of Taal was then located along the shore of Taal Lake (then known as Lake Bombon). Its prosperity came from provisioning the Manila galleons plying between Acapulco and Manila. These galleons also found protection from typhoons at Taal Lake, which was then saline and open to the sea through the navigable Pansipit River.[7] They honoured the Lady of Caysasay with cannon fire as they passed in front of her shrine located close to the river.[8]

The most violent eruption of the Taal Volcano occurred in 1754 lasting more than eight months. The ejecta from the volcano devastated the towns around the lake covering them with layers of deposits. The townspeople of Taal, together with their parish priest, fled from their capital and sought refuge at the Church of Our Lady of Caysasay. Layers of ejecta and deposits blocked the entrance of Pansipit River, which eventually raised the water of the lake, permanently flooding parts of Tanauan, Lipa, Sala, Bauan and Taal. All five towns relocated to higher ground, away from the volcano and lake.[8] The present town center of Taal was established on a hillside near the Caysasay Shrine, overlooking Balayan Bay. The townspeople believed that the image saved the town of Taal during eruptions of Taal Volcano.

The old town center is now the present San Nicolas, Batangas. Eventually, a considerably narrower and shallower Pansipit River was formed from the volcanic deposits rendering it impassable for large ships.[7] Bombon Lake, later renamed as Taal Lake, slowly transformed from saline to a freshwater lake.

Solemn coronation

On 8 December 1954, two hundred years after the great Taal eruption, the image of Our Lady of Caysasay was canonically crowned at the Basilica of San Martin de Tours in Taal, Batangas by Spanish Cardinal Fernando Quiroga, representing Pope Pius XII.[9]

Well of Saint Lucy

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This old spring-fed well where María Bagohin and María Talain saw the reflection of the Virgin of Caysasay is known as the Balón ng Sta. Lucía (Well of Saint Lucy), which was where the public devotion to the Virgin of Caysasay was initially centred. A beautifully carved coral stone arch with a bas relief of the Virgin on the facade was constructed over the spring on the slope of a hill near the church, forming twin wells. The exact reason for St Lucy's name being attached to the spring has been lost, as was the date of its construction. The site of the wells is known as "Banál na Poók" ("sacred place"), and vestiges of the spring running close to the wells are known as "Banal na Tubig" ("sacred water).[10]

The well is accessed from the Saint Lorenzo Ruiz Steps behind the Caysasay Church. An inconspicuous narrow walkway from the Steps takes visitors to the well.[11]

To the townsfolk, the apparition had empowered the spring with healing powers. Continues Fr. Díaz:

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"The Holy Image has performed numerous miracles, not only for those who have gone to the rock to ask for help from the Queen of Angels, but also for those who drank from the water and bathed in the nearby stream. These miracles are confirmed in the accounts that Fr. Pedro de Arce, Bishop of Cebu, and Governor of the Archbishopric of Manila ordered to be drawn up and prepared by Fr. Juan Bautista de Montoya, Prior of Taal, together with Fr. Gerónimo de Medrano and Fr. Juan de Rojas."[6]

Syncretism

Our Lady of Caysasay is identified by some Chinese Filipinos with the sea goddess Ma-cho. Both are considered emanations of each other, with the images of Our Lady of Antipolo and Our Lady of the Abandoned as additional emanations, as all four are related to water and/or travel.[12]

In popular media

In 2005, a musical play titled Mapághimaláng Birhen ng Caysasay (Miraculous Virgin of Caysasay) was staged in July 2005 at the Cultural Center of the Philippines in Manila. The religious play was written and directed by Nestor U. Torre with music by noted Filipino composer Ryan Cayabyab. It focuses on the 1639 miracle on Chinese artisan named Hay Bing who was brought to life after he was decapitated. After its initial run, a touring production took the musical to the outskirts of the capital city including Batangas province.[13]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "The disappearing lady & stories of faith and miracles". Philippine Star. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  2. De AnDA (2009-11-22). "In Honor of Nuestra Señora de Guia". Retrieved on 2013-02-08.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 "Apparitions (1600 - 1699 A.D.)". The Miracle Hunter. Retrieved on 2013-02-08.
  4. "The Story of Our Lady of Caysasay". Caysasay.com. Retrieved on 2013-02-08.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Caysasay (Philippines) 1603". The Miracle Hunter. Retrieved on 2013-02-08.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Policarpio, Lulu. "Our Lady of Caysasay". Totus Tuus Maria. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Herre, Albert (1927). "The Fisheries of Taal Lake and Lake Naujan". pp. 288-289. Philippine Journal of Science.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "History of Taal's activity to 1911 as described by Fr. Saderra Maso - 1749". Taal - A Decade Volcano. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  9. Orosa, Dan. "Story of Our Lady of Caysasay". Taal, Heritage Town. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  10. "Well of Sta. Lucia". Taal, Heritage Town. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  11. (2012-04-29). "The Miraculous Well of Sta. Lucia and the San Lorenzo Ruiz Steps | Taal, Batangas, Philippines". The Poor Traveler. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
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  13. (2006-02-22). "Musical immortalizes Our Lady of Caysasay". Malaya (Newspaper). Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  • Taal, p. 95, Filipiniana Section, Teodoro M. Kalaw Memorial Library, Lipa City, Batangas
  • Barcelona, Mary Anne (2004). Ynang Maria: A Celebration of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Philippines. Edited by Consuelo B. Estepa, Ph.D. Anvil Publishing, Inc, Pasig City.

External links

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