Bago tribe of Pugo wins Panagbenga 2026 Street Dance crown

STREET DANCE VICTORY. Young members of the Bago Tribe of San Luis, Pugo, La Union in traditional attire during the Panagbenga 2026 Grand Street Dance Parade in Baguio City on Feb. 28, 2026. The group was later named champion of the street dance competition. (Photos by JC Presco/GMB)

BAGUIO CITY — The Bago Tribe of Pugo, La Union clinched the crown in the Panagbenga 2026 Grand Street Dance Parade on Feb. 28, delivering a powerful cultural showcase anchored on their Tinungbo Festival tradition.

Performing as “Tribu Siglat – Tinungbo Festival,” the contingent portrayed the enduring identity of the Bago people, an indigenous community straddling the Ilocos-Cordillera boundary.

Their presentation blended ritual, livelihood and resilience in a tightly choreographed narrative that drew sustained applause along Session Road.

The performance opened with scenes of Panagkammel — the community’s traditional farming and fishing livelihood — underscoring their deep connection to land and water.

Dancers moved in synchronized formations symbolizing rice planting, harvest cycles and collective labor, accompanied by the rhythmic pulse of gongs and bamboo instruments.

Traditional dances such as Manmanok, Sadong and Tadek were woven into the storyline, reflecting ancestral beliefs and communal solidarity.

The choreography transitioned to the preparation of Tinungbo, a customary method of cooking food inside bamboo, highlighting the tribe’s ingenuity and harmony with nature.

Clad in vibrant indigenous attire, performers embodied the Bago’s core values of unity, perseverance and shared progress. The finale culminated in a unified call: no one lets go, no one gives up — a message that resonated with the festival’s spirit of renewal and growth.

The annual Panagbenga Festival, held in this northern highland city, celebrates culture and floral abundance through grand street dancing and float parades that draw contingents from across Luzon.

Finishing first runner-up was Tribu Kanluran Jones – Pinilisa Festival from Isabela province, while Tribu Balitok A Pagey of Malasiqui, Pangasinan placed second runner-up.

For Pugo, the victory marked not just a competitive triumph but a reaffirmation of indigenous pride and cultural continuity on one of the country’s most prominent festival stages.

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