Filipino Muslims form the largest non-Christian group in the country, comprising about 5% of the total Philippine population as of 2005. Also known as Moros, a term which originated from the Spanish colonizers, Filipino Muslims mostly live in the southern Philippines, in the island of Mindanao, southern Palawan and the Sulu Archipelago. Muslims also live in major cities in the Philippines like Manila, Cebu and Baguio.
In 1380, Makhdum Karim, the first Muslim missionary to the Philippines, brought Islam to the Philippines. Subsequent visits of Muslim Malay missionaries helped strengthen the Muslim faith of the southern Filipinos. The Sultanate of Sulu, the largest Muslim Kingdom of South East Asia and the Malay Archipelago, encompassed parts of Malaysia and the Philippines. The royal house of the Sultanate claim descent from the prophet Mohammed.
Many of the inhabitants of pre-Spanish Era Philippines were said to be of the Muslim faith. Rajah Sulayman, the local chieftain of Manila at the time of Spanish conquest under Martín de Goiti and Juan de Salcedo, was a Muslim. The chieftain of Mactan Island, Lapu-Lapu, led a skirmish with the Spanish in 1521 (known as the Battle of Mactan), in which Ferdinand Magellan was killed. An ingrained Muslim legacy in the Philippines is the custom to circumcise (tuli). When the Spaniards arrived, circumcision was justified as being Christian. The practice continues to this day and is still popular among Filipinos, even those of other faiths.
Longstanding economic grievances stemming from resentment of popular prejudice against them and years of governmental neglect contribute to the roots of Muslim insurgency in recent decades.
Filipino Muslims are not a closely knit group and lack solidarity. Each group is fiercely proud of their separate identities and culture, Muslim orthodoxy, and language, among other things. Endemic conflict persisted for centuries. Internal differences among Moros in the 1980s, however, were outweighed by cultural, social, and legal traditions and shared historical experiences vis-à-vis non-Muslims.
The Philippine government discovered shortly after independence the need for a specialized agency to deal with the Muslim minority and set up the Commission for National Integration in 1957, which was later replaced by the Office of Muslim Affairs and Cultural Communities. Filipino nationalists envisioned a united country in which Christians and Muslims would be offered economic advantages and the Muslims would be assimilated into the dominant culture. They would simply be Filipinos who had their own mode of worship and who refused to eat pork. This vision, less than ideal to many Christians, was generally rejected by Muslims who feared that it was a euphemistic equivalent of assimilation. Concessions were made to Muslim religion and customs. Muslims were exempted from Philippine laws prohibiting polygamy and divorce, and in 1977 the government attempted to codify Muslim law on personal relationships and to harmonize Muslim customary law with Philippine law. A significant break from past practice was the 1990 establishment of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which gave Muslims in the region control over some aspects of government, but not over national security and foreign affairs.
There were social factors in the early 1990s that militated against the cultural autonomy sought by Muslim leaders. Industrial development and increased migration outside the region brought new educational demands and new roles for women. These changes in turn led to greater assimilation and, in some cases, even intermarriage. Nevertheless, Muslims and Christians generally remained distinct societies often at odds with one another.
Islam in the Philippines | Filipino culture | Ethnic groups in the Philippines | Muslim communities | Philippine Moro Affairs
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"Filipino Muslim".
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