The palis is celebrated by the Benguet Kankanay against witchcraft, and also to cause injury to befall an enemy.
Tapuy, cooked rice, and either a chicken or a dog are necessary for sacrifice.
The prayer is addressed by the mambunong to the amlag. They are asked to dissolve their alliance with the witch and take the side of the people, or to visit the enemy and cause him bad luck, in consideration of the tapuy and food which are furnished.
As soon as the prayer has been finished, the people present sing the angba, a song in which the deities are called by name and asked to witness the palis.
One man then dances and waves a spear as if he were attacking an enemy, while some of the people keep time by beating together wooden sticks.
The palis is celebrated by the Nabaloi and the Lepanto Kankanay. The ceremony, or its equivalent, is probably celebrated by all Igorot tribes, since a belief in witchcraft is prevalent throughout their territory. When the ceremony is celebrated to divert injury from oneself to an enemy, it corresponds to the Nabaloi sagausau.
Buang
The buang is celebrated to cure deafness in Buguias, in some of the Kankanay barrios of Atok, and probably in some if not all of the Benguet Kankanay settlements farther west.
The mambunong holds in one hand the chicken to be sacrificed and with the other hand he holds a cup of tapuy above the head of the deaf person, while relating the following story: