Bright star-shaped lanterns represent hope during a dark year for many Filipino Canadians - Action News
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British Columbia

Bright star-shaped lanterns represent hope during a dark year for many Filipino Canadians

Rosalyn Salanguit recently started making and selling her own parols or lanterns as a way to feel more connected to her family and Filipino heritage during the pandemic.

'Parols,' which once lit the way for churchgoers in the dark, are now a reminder of home and family

Rosalyn Salanguit with two of her handmade parols, outside her home in south Vancouver. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

For many in the Filipino community,the parol or lantern is a reminder of family and a symbol of hope in troubling times.

The star-shaped lanterns are often seen hungin the windows of Filipino households during Christmas.

For Rosalyn Salanguit, who started making her own this year after years of watching her father make the lanterns, it's a way to keep her family close during a year when she is unable to be with them because ofCOVID-19 restrictions.

"Right now, especially when we are now forced to stay in and we're really having that time to reflect on what's important to us it's like those times I took for granted when I was watching my dad make those parols are now traditionsI want to carry for myself," she said.

The lanterns are believed to originate in the Pampanga region of the Philippines. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

Parols were originally hungin windows to light the streets for peopleheading to church during Simbang Gabi, a tradition celebrated by Catholics that consists of a series of dawn masses on the nine days leading up to Christmas Eve.

The parolrepresents the star the three wise men followed to the birthplace of Jesus Christ.Traditional parols are made with five star points, but some believe the eight-star parol represents the eight major islands of the Philippines.

While many modern parols now feature bright multi-coloured light displays, artist Bert Monterona says the traditional parol is more representative of their origin in working-class regions of the Philippines.

"Since it's using bamboo and ...Japanese paper [that] are very cheap, you can even see some parolsduring Christmas in rural areas and even in the mountains living in the farmland," said Monterona.

Salanguithas spent much of the past month making and selling traditional parols. She says her designs are inspired by her father's, who used to make more elaborate lanterns.

"My dad would make the real big ones and the ones with all the frills and all the different colours on there," she said. "His would have the Christmas lights that would flashglowing around it."

'A piece of home'

Salanguitsays learning and immersing herself in this part of her culture has helped her feel more connected to her family.

She says shewon't be seeing them this Christmas due to COVID-19.

"During this time I would be celebrating this big milestone with my family, [but] I can't because I am ... in that high-risk category and so are my parents," said Salanguit, who is a cancer survivor.

Why these Christmas lanterns are more than just ornaments to Filipinos

4 years ago
Duration 2:13
Filipinos around the world hang up parols, colourful star-shaped lanterns, during Christmas. Oral cancer survivor Rosalyn Salanguit started making her own this year and tells us why they mean so much to her.

She hopes her handcrafted work will represent a little glimmer of hope for other people who might be in the same situation.

"To me, this might just be a star that I'm making," she said.

"But to someone else, it might represent something bigger, like a piece of home that they can't have right now."

Traditional parols are made with five star points, but some believe the eight-star parol represents the eight major islands of the Philippines. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

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