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  2. Tarhata Kiram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarhata_Kiram

    Filipino and American officials in the new colonial government sought to educate certain Muslim youth into a heavily American-influenced, Christian Filipino culture. They hoped these elite children, the next generation of Moro leaders, would be able to "civilize" their Muslim brethren in the Southern islands where the former Spanish colonial ...

  3. National Commission on Muslim Filipinos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Commission_on...

    The National Commission on Muslim Filipinos (Filipino: Pambansang Komisyon sa mga Pilipinong Muslim; Arabic: اللجنة الوطنية لمسلمي الفلبين : allajnat alwataniat limuslimi alfilibiyn) is a government agency in the Philippines, whose objective is to promote the rights of Muslim Filipinos and to make them active participants in Philippine nation-building.

  4. Islam in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_the_Philippines

    Islam in the Philippines is the second largest religion in the country, [1] and the faith was the first-recorded monotheistic religion in the Philippines. Historically, Islam reached the Philippine archipelago in the 14th century, [2] [3] through contact with Muslim Malay and Arab merchants along Southeast Asian trade networks, [4] in addition ...

  5. Maranao people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maranao_people

    Like neighboring Moros and the Lumads, during the nominal occupation of the Philippines by the Spanish, and later the American and the Japanese, the Maranao had tribal leaders called datu. In the 16th century, upon the arrival of Islam, they developed into kingdoms with sultans due to the influence of Muslim missionaries.

  6. Maguindanao people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maguindanao_people

    In 1969, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) was founded on the concept of a Bangsa Moro Republic by a group of educated young Muslims. The leader of this group, Nur Misuari, regarded the earlier movements as feudal and oppressive, and employed a Marxist framework to analyze the Muslim condition and the general Philippine situation.

  7. Category:Filipino Muslims - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Filipino_Muslims

    Category: Filipino Muslims. 14 languages. ... This category includes articles of people who are Muslim (followers of the religion of Islam) from Philippines.

  8. Maynila (historical polity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maynila_(historical_polity)

    The Muslims were called "Moros" by the Spanish who assumed they occupied the whole coast. There is no evidence that Islam had become a major political or religious force in the region, with Father Diego de Herrera recording that the Moros lived only in some villages and were Muslim in name only. [85]

  9. Tausūg people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tausūg_people

    Tausug retain pre-Islamic practices in the form of folk-Islam like the pagkaja and other palipalihan, as mentioned by Samuel K. Tan, some of these practices were allowed by the majority of the Ulama like the former Grand Mufti of Region 9 and Palawan Sayyiduna Shaykh AbdulGani Yusop since the muslims in the Philippines were Ash'ari in Aqeeda ...