Malasiqui Pangasinan
Malasiqui is a 1st class municipality in the province of Pangasinan,
Philippines. According to the 2000 census, it has a population of 113,190 people
in 20,798 households. It is mainly an agricultural municipality with rice, corn
and tropical lowland vegetables as main crops. It is also famous for its mango
fruits having one of the largest concentration of mango tree population in the
Philippines.
The word Malasiqui originates from the Pangasinan root word "lasi" meaning
lightning. With prefix "ma' indicating high degree and suffix "qui" indicating
place - Malasiqui means "place full of lightning".
The municipality traces its origins during the middle of 17th century when
Spanish friars opened a mission intended to convert the native population to
Catholicism. There were no organized communities in the area before the
Spaniards arrived. The present site was then heavily forested with small family
groups scattered along banks of small rivers and creeks. The socio-political
history of the municipality parallels that of the Pangasinan province and the
country in general. Its history is punctuated by periods of foreign domination
first by the Spanish, then by the Americans during the first half of the 20th
century and briefly by the Japanese during the 2nd World War. The population
participated heavily in some of bloodiest rebellions during the Spanish period.
Catholicism and other Christian sects dominate the religious life of the people.
Ethnically, it is one of the few places in the province of Pangasinan which did
not experience in-migration from other regions. Consequently, Pangasinanse is
the dominant ethnic group with almost no other groups mixing into the locality.
The poblacion or town center, is recently experiencing high commercial growth
spurred mainly by high consumer spending generated by increase in family incomes
attributable to earnings of OFWs (Overseas Filipino Workers). The estimate of
OFW population as a percentage of adult labor force is as much as 22% - one of
the highest rates in the Philippines. The OFW phenomenon is so significant that
almost all households have at least one member working outside of the country.