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A warm and friendly greeting derived from the Dabawenyo word "dayaw" that means good, valuable, superior or beautiful. Such is "Kadayawan," a weeklong celebration of life, a thanksgiving for the gifts of nature, the wealth of culture, the bounties of harvest and serenity of living.
The festival began from a government-initiated program called Unlad Proyekto Davao in 1986, planned to unite the Davaoeños after the chaotic martial law years and to showcase the city as a peaceful and colorful place to visit and do business in. At the time, it was called Apo Duwaling,a name created from the icons Davao was famous for: Mt. Apo, the country's highest peak; durian, the king of fruits; and waling-waling. The queen of orchids. Davao is also home of the majestic Philippine eagle, the national bird. In 1988, the festival was renamed Kadayawan sa Dabaw by Mayor Rodrigo Duterte to celebrate the city's unique wealth in flowers, fruits, and ethnic culture
Today, Kadayawan has metamorphosed into a festival of festivals, the mother of many other fesivals in the region as it honors Davao's artistic, cultural and historical heritage, its past personified by the ancestral "lumads" (indigenous people), its people as they celebrate on the streets, and its floral industry as they parade in full regalia in thanksgiving for the blessings bestowed on the city.
The festival is famous for it's "indak-indak sa kadalanan" (tribal street dancing), floral float parade (where one can see countless and breathtaking mobile floats full of real and fresh flowers) and kasamongan festival (a celebration where one can taste indigenous food prepared by the different tribes of davao). Kadayawan sa Dabaw is an enriching experience with a difference as its explores the past, present and future of the Davaoeños, the Mindanaoans, the Filipinos. Its sights and sounds remain supreme.
This internationally renowned festival is a week long celebration held every third week of August. The activity coincides with the harvest time of Davaos exotic fruits and the blooming of the waling-waling (vanda sanderana).
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