By: Arch. Ernesto R. Zarate
YOU MAY BRAND ME SUPERSTITIOUS… nay, not just superstitious but overly 
superstitious for delving on this topic. But, as I have often said in my
 books, “Oro, Plata Mata, Filipino Building Beliefs” and its sequel, 
“More Filipino Building Beliefs,” (with tongue-in-cheek, of course) 
“Wala naman mawawala,e. Kaya sumunod ka na lang.”
 
 There is this Batangueño
 building belief that they call “Bawal ang patiwarik” or “Upside-down is
 forbidden.” This means that building materials shall be installed in a 
house with their natural ends where they should be—the bottom end of a 
piece of bamboo should be at the bottom part, and the top end should be 
on top. Even wood members have to follow this “rule.” 
 
 The 
poser, as mentioned in the books, is—“How would you know which is the 
bottom or top part of a piece of wood that has been precision-cut in a 
lumberyard?” The ends look the same. One cannot visually differentiate 
the bottom from the top, it seems.
 
 Well, there are three ways in which to distinguish the natural top from the natural bottom.
 
 First, tie a piece of cord or rope at the exact middle of the length of
 wood. Raise it up. The end that tips down is the bottom. You see, wood 
is denser at the bottom. 
 
 Second, scratch both ends of the wood
 and smell it. The end that has the stronger scent of sap is the bottom 
because, by gravity, sap settles to the bottom of the wood.
 
 The
 third method is by observing how the piece of wood flows down a stream.
 (Lumber used to be delivered to the job site in this manner during the 
olden days.) The leading end is usually the heavier end, thus the bottom
 end. The lighter end always trails.
 
 Batangueños abide by this 
“Bawal ang patiwarik” idea because of the belief that if a post or 
vertical member is placed in a house with the wrong end up, “palubog din
 daw ang buhay ng mga nakatira doon.” (The lives of the people staying 
in that house would also sink.) 
 
 This belief applies also to other things and not necessarily limited to just construction materials.
 
 Which is brings us to the bone of contention of my “dissertation”.
 
 The root cause of all the ills and troubles of the Philippine National Police is this: their logo is upside down.
 
 What I am talking about is the shield symbol… it is upside down.
 
 I am from the North. And I observed that all the ceremonial shields 
used by the Igorots have their three points up and two points down. It 
is the representation of a warrior in a defense position. This is 
similar to a boxer in defense who has his two hands up. The third point 
would be his head. While the two ends pointing down would represent his 
legs. 
 
 In the course of my researches for the books I have 
written, in all the illustrations I have come across of indigenous 
Filipino weaponry, it is the same… three ends up and two ends down.
 
 Baligtad ang ginagamit na kalasag ng PNP.
 
 “Bawal ang patiwarik.” 
 
 Maybe the leadership of the PNP can look in to this. As I say again and
 again, “Wala namang mawawala kung sumunod sa pamihiin, e. Magastos nga 
lang kung ngayon pang gagawin ang pagbabago.
by Ernie Zárate.)

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