Alonzo Saclag


Alonzo Ayutu Saclag Sr. or Apu Kesu was a Filipino musician and dancer who was a recipient of the National Living Treasures Award.

Early life and career

Alonzo Ayatu Saclag was born in August 14, 1942, in Lubuagan, Kalinga. A member of the Kalinga people and a native of Lubuagan, Kalinga province, Saclag taught himself his people's traditions in the performing arts. He learned how to play traditional Kalinga musical instruments and Kalinga ritual dance movements without formal or informal instruction.
Saclag worked to revive the dying tradition of playing the gangsa, a type of Kalinga gong. He lobbied for two years with the provincial government to grant funds to convert the abandoned Capitol Building into a museum. With support from the provincial government and other financiers, a branch of the National Museum was established in Lubuagan.
He also campaigned for the promotion of Kalinga culture in schools in his community by engaging in talks with the institutions' administrators. He was instrumental in establishing the practice of children wearing traditional Kalinga clothing for important school events as well as the teaching of Kalinga folk songs in schools. He also lobbied for the broadcast of traditional Kalinga music along with contemporary music in their local radio station. He also formed the Kalinga Budong Dance Troupe with the intent of promoting Kalinga dance to a wider audience.
Saclag was conferred the National Living Treasures Award in 2000. By 2016, he had established a village within his town, named Awichon, which aims to promote Kalinga culture to tourists.

Personal life and death

Saclag who is also known as Apu Kesu married to a woman named Rebecca with whom he had nine children. He died on November 29, 2025, at the age of 83 in his hometown of Lubuagan.