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Home arrow Sections arrow Health and Medicine arrow More Proof that Ivatans Are Related to Ethnic Taiwanese and Need for a Nationwide DNA Study in RP
More Proof that Ivatans Are Related to Ethnic Taiwanese and Need for a Nationwide DNA Study in RP
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Written by Bobby Reyes - Nov 24, 2007 at 10:43 AM   

More Proof that the Ivatans Are Related to the Ethnic Taiwanese and the Need for a Nationwide DNA Study in RP

A medical study is currently being done in Taiwan, the results of which prove that the people of the Batanes Islands are related to the Aboriginal ethnic Taiwanese. The provisional results of the Taiwanese medical research add more scientific basis to the public knowledge in Northern Luzon that the Ivatans of Batanes have more kinship with the native Taiwanese than to the Ilocanos of Region I and/or the Ibanags of Region II (Cagayan North Valley).

Copper Sturgeon posted in the what Paul Kekai Manansala of Northern California sent to him. The material was an article from the Taipei Times, excerpts of which are reprinted in this article.

Perhaps the Philippines should conduct a similar study in all the 15 regions of the archipelago. Perhaps a study using “DNA comparison techniques” may be able to show more common denominators among the different ethnic groups in the Philippines, so as to accelerate the formation of a true Filipino nation.

This writer suggested several years back to several e-forums that a nationwide DNA study in the Philippines be conducted. The study would also prove or disprove that the claimed Filipino cofounder of Los Angeles, California, was indeed a native son of the Philippines.

Other benefits of a nationwide DNA study in the Philippines are the expansion of the volunteer pool of blood and bone-marrow donors.

Perhaps this suggested DNA study can merit the support of the more-than 22,000 Filipino-American physicians, the 500,000 Filipino nurses in the United States and the tens of thousands more Filipino medical professionals working in the American healthcare industry. Yes, perhaps the Filipino medical practitioners in the United States can channel their efforts to a more-productive cause like the suggested DNA study than directing their anger at the ABC Network over the “Desperate Housewives” brouhaha.

Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2007/11/21/2003388825


Most Hoklo, Hakka have Aboriginal genes, study finds

By Hu Ching-hui
STAFF REPORTER
Wednesday, Nov 21, 2007, Page 1


Eighty-five percent of Hoklo and Hakka people have Aboriginal ancestry, according to a study on the DNA of non-Aboriginal ethnic Taiwanese conducted by Mackay Memorial Hospital's transfusion medical research director Mari Lin (©).

Those 85 percent have strains from both plains and mountain Aboriginal tribes, as well as from Fujian and Guangdong and minor traces of ancestry from the Philippines, Indonesia and other Southeast Asian islands, the study found.

Only 1.5 percent of Taiwan's population have full Aboriginal ancestry, the study found.

As an example of the nation's ethnic diversity, Lin cited the example of Taiwan independence activist Peng Ming-min, whose patrilineal DNA is part Aboriginal, while his matrilineal DNA has Hakka and North Asian traces.

Lin said Hoklo and Hakka DNA was diverse. She said the tests showed that more than 90 percent of Hoklo and Hakka have at least some Vietnamese ancestry, specifically from China's southeast coast.

Lin said genealogical analyses had shown Vietnamese are genetically more similar to Southeast Asians than northern Han.

Lin said Fujian's mountains made it easier historically for residents to have contact with Taiwan and Southeast Asia than with the rest of China

Official statistics show Taiwan's population consists of approximately 73.5 percent Hoklo, 17.5 percent Hakka, 7.5 percent Mainlanders (who arrived after 1945) and 1.5 percent Aborigines. Lin's study excluded Mainlanders.

Lin said that researchers began by recruiting volunteer blood donors. The first stage of the project consisted of analyzing the DNA of 100 Hoklo and Hakka -- 58 men and 42 women.

Of these, 67 percent were found to have Aboriginal ancestry through DNA comparison techniques. An additional 18 percent were found to have Aboriginal ancestry through HLA chromosome typing, bringing the total to 85 percent.

An analysis of the DNA of "pure" Aborigines as a group compared with the DNA of non-Aboriginal ethnic Taiwanese as a group showed that the Aborigines had a highly homogeneous genetic range because of thousands of years of isolation from other ethnic groups, Lin said. Hoklo and Hakka in Taiwan have developed a highly diverse genetic mix through marriages, she said.

Taiwanese Aborigines have close genetic links to Southeast Asian islanders such as Indonesians and Filipinos, Lin said.

The research could help solve mysteries of human migration.

Studies indicate Taiwanese Aborigines may have migrated from Southeast Asian islands tens of thousands years ago and that there may have been repeated waves of migration to and from Taiwan.

The summary of Lin's research has been submitted to a human genome conference to be held in the Philippines. Lin hopes that the statistical analysis of 200 blood samples will be completed by next year, with a goal of 300 samples after that.

Volunteers for the project can contact the Transfusion Medical Research Laboratory at Mackay Memorial Hospital in Tamshui.

Su I-ning, a physician at National Taiwan University Hospital's Medical Genetics Department, considers the results of the research to be "intriguing and logical."

Su said the research could help solve mysteries of human migration.

DNA studies have been controversial because of alleged cases of collecting Aboriginal blood without informed consent. # # #


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User Comments
Aboriginal Taiwan and Philippine languages were compared one time and by removing Chinese-western language origins, both people understood each other. In Taiwan before they theoretically moved south to Luzon there were already many language groups. 
 
But all of them call each group with the prefix "I", meaning "from". 
 
TI
Comment by Copper Sturgeon on 2007-11-24 21:43:52 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Dear Bobby and T.I., 
 
I recently attended the joint meeting of the PCBC and 
CPBC (Philippine Chinese Business Council and Chinese 
Philippines Business Council respectively). Chinese 
here refers to Taiwanese in contrast to Philippine 
China Business Council where China refers to Mainland 
China. 
 
In promoting our trade relation with the Taiwanese, it 
may help by establishing our cultural ties between 
Taiwan and the Philippines.  
 
Just as I'm interested in establishing the cultural 
ties of our Sulu Archipelago with China and the Arab 
countries, I shall take this up in the next Philippine 
Chinese Business Council meeting. 
 
I remember Fr. Robert Young of Batanes (whom we 
supported as a Seminarian) mentioned to me that 
Batanes is very near to Taiwan and that there are 
signs in Batanes of the cultural linkages between our 
Ivatans to the ethnic Taiwanese, just as there are 
cultural and historical ties between the Chinese in 
Mainland China to our Tausugs in the Sulu archipelago. 
Remember the story of Datu Batara of Sulu being buried 
in China long before the Spaniards discover the 
Philippines? 
 
We need to go back historically in time beyond just 
the Spanish era for the benefit of our people. 
 
All the best, 
 
Alex Kho 
Alabang
Comment by Alex Kho on 2007-11-24 21:47:54 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Bobby, 
According to Chau Ju Kua, who wrote the annals of Chinese travels, Fujian province and Taiwan was often raided by people from what is now called Philippines according to the descriptions and origins. 
 
T.I. 

Comment by Copper Sturgeon on 2007-11-25 11:29:11 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Bobby, 
 
Not that I know much about anthropology, but the DNA Analysis Laboratory in UP is actually working on using DNA samples collected from different regions around the Philippines to determine relationships among ethnic groups within the country. I think the data is also being analyzed to make hypotheses about migration patterns of these groups throughout history.
Comment by L on 2008-09-06 16:34:45 Using IP: 58.69.88.47


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