The story begins with a group of women washing clothes by the cool, shallow banks of the Loboc River. As they beat the cloth against flat stones and wrung out the water, a flock of kiriwkiw birds flitted from bamboo clump to bamboo clump, performing their signature aerial dance. The birds would dart forward two steps, pause, hop backward, then fling their tails open like tiny folding fans before darting sideways in a zigzag. One woman, named Marikit, laughed and imitated the bird’s sudden, playful movements, shaking her wet patadyong (a wrap-around skirt) to mimic the fanning tail.
But the heart of the Kiriwkiw is unchanged. When the dancers take those three quick steps forward, two shy steps back, and then zigzag sideways, they are not just dancing. They are remembering Marikit by the river, the birds that taught them to be quick and light, and the wisdom that life, like the kiriwkiw in flight, is a zigzag path worth dancing all the same. kiriwkiw folk dance history
Long before the Spanish friars built the stone church that still towers over the Loboc River, the riverside settlements of Bohol were alive with the rhythms of daily life. The people fished, planted rice, and raised families, but they also watched the world around them with keen, observant eyes. Among their most fascinating neighbors was a small, restless bird called the Kiriwkiw —the Philippine Pied Fantail ( Rhipidura nigritorquis ), known for its jerky, never-still movements and its habit of fanning its tail as it hunted for insects. The story begins with a group of women
But the dance needed a purpose. At the time, the people of Loboc were preparing for the harvest festival—a thanksgiving to the spirits of the river and the rice fields. The village elder, a woman named Lola Sabel, recalled the washerwomen’s game. “Why not dance the Kiriwkiw ?” she proposed. “It honors the clever bird that eats the pests from our crops. And its zigzag path reminds us that life is never a straight line—it moves forward, then back, then side to side.” One woman, named Marikit, laughed and imitated the