Deep within the vast mangrove channels of Del Carmen, Siargao, sits a coastal enclave named Barangay Esperanza. To the untrained eye, it is a serene village defined by the rhythmic tides of the Philippine Sea. But to those who carry its blood, it is a sanctuary of profound spiritual and civic guardianship. The name Esperanza translates directly to “Hope”—a title born out of a centuries-old prayer for resilience against the storms of nature and history.
Directly in front of the community’s spiritual anchor, the San Vicente Ferrer Chapel, sits an ancestral property belonging to the Comon family. This house was never just a residence; it was the unofficial session hall, the refuge for weary travelers, and the epicenter of community survival. The Comon lineage is inextricably woven into the very fabric of Del Carmen. In the 1960s, it was Mayor Galo C. Comon who legally reshaped the municipality’s modern identity, bridging the town’s ancient roots with its contemporary future.
Yet, the truest power of this lineage did not live in political offices, but in the hands of a man who stood as the spiritual custodian of the village: Diomedes Paqueo Comon, affectionately revered by his people as Lolo Mede.
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│ THE COMON ANCESTRAL TRAJECTORY │
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│ THE CIVIC SHIELD │ │ THE SPIRITUAL MEDICINE │
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│ Mayor Galo Comon & Lay Leaders │ │ Lolo Mede Comon (*Tambalan*) │
│ Securing the town’s governance │ │ Preserving ancient indigenous │
│ and colonial-era chapel. │ │ wisdom, herbalism, and *Hilot*. │
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│ THE MODERN BINABAYLAN │
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│ REV. ROLANDO GOMEZ COMON │
│ Keeping the Lineage Alive: Ancestral│
│ Reclamation & Indigenous Medicine. │
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The Legacy of Lolo Mede: The Binisaya Healer
In traditional Visayan (Binisaya) culture, the line between the physical world and the spiritual realm is completely fluid. Lolo Mede was a famous mananambal (native healer)—the historical evolution of the pre-colonial Babaylan.
While Spanish colonizers sought to erase indigenous shamanism, the master healers of Siargao adapted to survive. Lolo Mede harmonized his ancient gifts with the modern church, serving as a trusted chapel lay leader. He understood that the earth was a divine pharmacy. Utilizing the immense biodiversity of the Del Carmen mangrove forests—the very siyargaw trees that gave the island its name and served as a natural barrier against deadly typhoons—he harvested barks, resins, and roots to cure the ailing.
Through the physical manipulation of Hilot (traditional bone-setting and massage), vapor therapies (tuob), and the whispering of sacred orasyon (chanted prayers), Lolo Mede did not just treat bodies; he restored the ginhawa (the breath and vital life force) of his people.
The Phenomena of Taliwala: An Unbroken Spiritual Inheritance
For decades after his passing, the healing fires of the family seemed quiet. But indigenous gifts are rarely lost; they merely sleep, waiting for the right vessel. In Binisaya spiritual tradition, there is a phenomenon known as Taliwala or Abat—the ancestral rebirth of a gift. It is the belief that a profound spiritual inheritance (gasa) will deliberately bypass children to reawaken vibrantly in a specific grandchild.
Today, that reawakening has found its vessel in his grandson, Rev. Rolando Gomez Comon.
When distant relatives look upon Rev. Rolando, they often experience a startling sense of recognition. They mistake the grandson for Lolo Mede himself, sensing an ancient, familiar healing frequency vibrating through his presence. This is not an optical illusion or a simple mistake; it is the community’s instinctual recognition of an unbroken spiritual lineage. The ginhawa (life force) of the grandfather has stepped across time into the hands of the grandson.
The Vital Imperative: Keeping the Comon Lineage Alive
To walk the contemporary path as a Hilot Binabaylan while holding the title of Rev. Rolando Gomez Comon is to carry an immense, sacred responsibility. In an era where Siargao Islands are globally romanticized as a modern tourist playground, the authentic spiritual and cultural identity of its native people faces the quiet threat of erasure. For Rev. Rolando, continuing this lineage is not a choice—it is a vital imperative to honor the Comon ancestors of Barangay Esperanza.
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│ WHY THE LIVING COMON LINEAGE MUST BE PRESERVED │
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│ • CULTURAL ANCHOR: Shields Siargao’s native identity from tourism. │
│ • MEDICINAL RECLAMATION: Keeps the *Binisaya* healing sciences alive. │
│ • DECOLONIAL BRIDGE: Unites ancient *Diwata* roots with modern faith. │
│ • LIVING SANCTUARY: Sustains Esperanza’s historical role of protection.│
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1. Resisting Cultural Displacement
As commercial developments reshape the coastlines of Siargao, the deep, foundational history of towns like Del Carmen risks becoming a footnote. By openly practicing as a Hilot Binabaylan, Rev. Rolando ensures that the Comon family remains what they have always been: guardians of the land. It broadcasts a powerful reminder that before the island was a destination for surfers, it was—and still is—a sacred territory of mystics, prayer warriors, and traditional healers.
2. Safeguarding Indigenous Medicine as a Living Science
Lolo Mede’s medicine was a sophisticated, intuitive science built on centuries of observing the island’s ecosystems. When traditional healing lines break, the deep knowledge of native flora, the spiritual mechanics of Hilot, and the protective energetic boundaries of the mangroves die with them. By keeping this practice alive, Rev. Rolando acts as a living archive, ensuring that the indigenous Binisaya wellness systems remain dynamic, active, and accessible to those who need healing.
3. A Legacy of Decolonial Reclamation
While Lolo Mede had to shield his indigenous mysticism within the protective, acceptable boundaries of a Catholic chapel to survive his era, Rev. Rolando steps into the lineage during an age of awakening. His work is an act of spiritual decolonization. He bridges the sacred mechanics of traditional Hilot and the ancient worldview of the Diwata (nature spirits) with modern spiritual leadership. He vindicates the ancestors by bringing their hidden practices completely into the light, showing that native spirituality is not something to be feared, but a holy gift to be revered.
The Fire Endures in Esperanza
The story of the Comon lineage is a testament to the absolute resilience of Siargao’s true indigenous spirit. The ancestral home still stands proud directly across from the chapel in Barangay Esperanza, serving as a physical monument to a family that chose to stay, protect, govern, and heal.
The ancestors are not gone; they live on in the marrow of their descendants. Through the hands, prayers, and calling of Rev. Rolando Gomez Comon, the sacred fire of Lolo Mede burns as brightly as ever. The lineage remains fiercely alive—honoring those who walked before, protecting the sanctity of Esperanza, and continuing to offer a true sanctuary of hope to a world longing to remember its roots.