Manuel Elizalde was the head of
PANAMIN, the Philippine government agency created in 1968 to protect the interests of cultural minorities. He was the son of a wealthy father of Spanish lineage and an American mother. He was a known
crony of the late Philippine dictator Marcos. He took credit for discovering the Tasaday, which he did on June 7, 1971, shortly after a local barefoot
Blit hunter told him of a sporadic contact over the years with a handful of primitive forest dwellers. He released this to the media a month later, and many excited people began the long task of clearing the thickest forest in the world. Weeks later, visitors' way was blocked by PANAMIN guards who answered to Elizalde alone and allowed only a select group of the visitors to meet them.
Introduction of the Tasaday Elizalde brought the Tasaday to the attention of PANAMIN, which funded all efforts to find, visit, and study the Tasaday. With a small group including Elizalde's
bodyguard, helicopter pilot, a doctor, a 19-year-old
Yale student named Edith Terry, and local tribesmen for
interpreting attempts, Elizalde met the Tasaday in a pre-arranged clearing at the edge of the forest in June 1971. In March 1972, another meeting occurred between the Tasaday, Elizalde, and members of the press and media including the
Associated Press and the
National Geographic Society, this time at the Tasaday's secluded cave home site. This meeting was popularly reported by Kenneth MacLeish in the August 1972 issue of
National Geographic, which featured on its cover a photograph by photojournalist John Launois of a Tasaday boy climbing
vines. Since these first meetings and reports, the group was subject to a great deal of further publicity, including a
National Geographic documentary,
The Last Tribes of Mindanao (shown December 1, 1972). Visitors included
Charles A. Lindbergh and
Gina Lollobrigida.
Ban on visitation In April 1972,
President Ferdinand Marcos (at the behest of PANAMIN and Lindbergh) declared of land surrounding the Tasaday's ancestral caves as the Tasaday/Manobo Blit Preserve. By this time, eleven anthropologists had studied the Tasaday in the field, but none for more than six weeks, and in 1976, Marcos closed the
preserve to all visitors. The reason was the
martial law imposed on the country; outsiders were unwelcome as that put the Marcos regime under more scrutiny.
Elizalde's flight and return In 1983, sometime after the
assassination of Philippine opposition leader
Benigno Aquino Jr., Elizalde fled the Philippines. It had been rumoured that he fled with and eventually squandered millions of
dollars from a foundation set up to protect the Tasaday. It was also rumoured that Elizalde used the photos and other information he got from the Tasaday and Blit tribes for moneymaking businesses in various countries. It was reported that he amassed money amounting to US$100 million, which Elizalde denied. Elizalde returned to the Philippines in 1987 and stayed until his death on May 3, 1997, of leukemia. From 1987 to 1990, Elizalde claimed he had spent more than one million
U.S. dollars of Tasaday
non-profit funds. During this time, Elizalde also founded the Tasaday Community Care Foundation, or TCCF. == Controversy ==