Cebu province reiterates call to return church pulpit panels

By John Rey Saavedra

April 2, 2024, 9:10 pm

<p><strong>TUG OF WAR.</strong> The four pulpit panels, being claimed by the Roman Catholic church in Boljoon, Cebu as theirs, are displayed at the National Museum of the Philippines in Manila. Edwin Bautista (right), president and chief executive officer of Union Bank of the Philippines, and wife Aileen turned over the panels portraying the founding of the Augustinian Order on Feb. 13, 2024 from their collection. <em>(PNA photo by Yancy Lim)</em></p>

TUG OF WAR. The four pulpit panels, being claimed by the Roman Catholic church in Boljoon, Cebu as theirs, are displayed at the National Museum of the Philippines in Manila. Edwin Bautista (right), president and chief executive officer of Union Bank of the Philippines, and wife Aileen turned over the panels portraying the founding of the Augustinian Order on Feb. 13, 2024 from their collection. (PNA photo by Yancy Lim)

CEBU CITY – Cebu reiterated its request for the immediate return of the four pulpit panels of Boljoon town’s church, citing the cultural value that the provincial government protects.

In a press conference Tuesday, Governor Gwendolyn Garcia said the first letter that the provincial government sent to the National Museum of the Philippines (NMP) was left unanswered, prompting her to send another letter repeating the stand of the province regarding the four religious-cultural items that went missing in the 1980s. 

“These panels are integral to the cultural, historical, and religious heritage of our province. Our letter extended a formal invitation. This visit underscores the panel’s comparable connection to Boljoanons’ identity,” Garcia said.

The panels form part of the pulpit of Boljoon’s centuries-old Nuestra Señora del Patrocinio de Maria Parish Church.

The original design has a total of six panels but the fifth is under the care of the church’s priests while the sixth is still missing.

Sometime in the late 1980s, the panels went missing, with locals raising suspicions including looting or selling without the permission of the Archdiocese of Cebu.

The whereabouts of the 19th-century panels went unknown until the province discovered in February this year that the panels were added to the collection unveiled at the NMP in Manila.

Garcia said she wants to meet with NMP officials and with Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma to discuss the panels’ return to the church.

During the press conference, legal officers of the Cebu provincial government hinted possible filing of administrative and criminal charges if the panels are left unreturned. (PNA)



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