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Piddig officials seek ‘heritage tag’ for church

St. Anne Parish Church
By Leilanie G. Adriano
Staff reporter

PIDDIG, Ilocos Norte—Local officials here have initiated the process to declare the 204-year-old St. Anne parish church as a heritage structure.

The said church was recently shuttered for good after the structure was deemed risky for churchgoers.

Piddig mayor Eduardo Guillen said their municipal council is deliberating on a draft resolution seeking the heritage status after the church was closed this month due to structural problems.

Mr. Guillen said once the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) grants the request, the local government would seek funding from either the NHCP or the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) to restore the church.

Rep. Rodolfo “Rudy” C. Fariñas (1st district, Ilocos Norte) offered to endorse Piddig’s proposal.

Meanwhile, the Diocese of Laoag through their spokesperson Fr. Joey Ranjo, spokesperson said the NHCP and NCCA recommended that the St. Anne parish church be restored.

But Laoag Bishop Renato Mayugba ordered the church’s closure pending the availability of funds and after noting a report from the Piddig municipal engineer that the building was “unfit for human occupancy” and would endanger churchgoers.

Last Mass
Bishop Mayugba celebrated Mass and closure rites for the St. Anne parish church on Sept. 14.

Fr. Ranjo said if restoration proved to be too expensive, the diocese may raise funds to preserve the church while building a new structure.

Fr. Lorenzo Torreflores, the parish priest, started a fund-raising activity for the church’s restoration.

Mr. Guillen, for their part, said the municipal government could shoulder the P1 million cost of materials needed to build a temporary church for Piddig parishioners.

Piddig, some 21 km from the capital Laoag City, is a former “visita” (a community with a chapel) of neighboring Dingras town. In 1798, Piddig was established as a town and St. Anne parish was created by the Augustinians in 1810.

During the Philippine-American War, a five-member team of Filipino guerrillas used the church as a base to repel American attacks.

An earthquake toppled the top section of the bell tower on March 19, 1932, but this was repaired.

During the Japanese occupation, the convent and the sacristy were burned, leading to the destruction of its parish records. The church’s facade and its interior were restored in 1965.

The convent was later repaired and converted into a parochial school, the St. Anne Academy, church records showed.

Representatives of the NCCA sub-commission on cultural heritage conducted a workshop on heritage law and basic conservation methods in Laoag City in early August.

Historical value
The NCCA also sent technical experts, composed of structural engineers, to assess old churches in Ilocos Norte that needed immediate repair and rehabilitation. The experts recommended that the St. Anne parish church should be restored.

Fr. Ranjo said the St. Anne parish church would be kept for its historical value but the parish will no longer use the building for Masses and other religious rites.

“The wooden trusses are deteriorating and its foundation has apparently loosened over the years. Water does not only seep in from above, there’s water also coming from the ground. Strengthening the foundation alone would cost us millions of pesos,” Fr. Ranjo explained.

Other historic churches in Ilocos Norte have undergone restoration or have been marked for repairs, church officials said.

Fr. Ranjo said the latest church that had been restored is the St. Joseph parish church in Dingras town.

The restoration of the church’s facade, altar and roof were funded by Ilocano immigrants in the United States.

The altar of the St. Andrew parish church in Bacarra town had been restored while the wooden trusses of St. William the Hermit Cathedral in Laoag City had been replaced with steel.

Fr. Ranjo said the St. Augustine parish church in Paoay town, listed by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as a World Heritage Site, is due for restoration.

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