ri~ W1~~~ 1 {~~ \t\aa, &italvl,,~ ~~ I 11 I I ., J U,~~ 1 l'iflN '111 (. 12 07116 PROLOGUE Rimi and His Times To a.pprmatc and undentand the life of Dr. Jose Rizal, it is necessary to know the historical background of the wortd and of the Philippines during hi, times. The 19th century when ~c lived wu I century or rennent caused by the blowin1 winds r1f history. In Asia, Europe, and the Amencas, events surged 10,,•<>r· ably like sea tides, ugnificantly affcctlng the lives and fortunes of ,mnltind TIN World o1 Rial's Tlaa On February 19, 1861 , four months before Rizal's birth In CaJamba, ll1c.libcral Cur Alcundcr ll (IIISS-1881}, 10 IPf><:....C the nsing disc:ontcnt of tbc Russian masses, issued a pnxlamahon cmanapanng 22,500,000 When Rizal was born on Jur,,e 19, 1861, the Amencan Civt1 War (1861-65) wa. raging funouwy in the United States over the 111Suc of Negro slavery. This titanic conftict, which erupted on April 12, 1861, compelled President Lincoln 10 aaue his !1JDOus Enanapauon Pr~1ion on Sq>, tember 22, 18<>3 frCW1g the Neg,o $lava &em. On Jur,e I , 1861, just e1gbtccn daya before Rizal'• btrtll, Benito Juarez, a full-blooded Zapotec lodian. was rleclcd Preaide111 ,of Mexico.' A yeu after his elecuon (in April 1862) &1pcror Napol:on Ill of the Seoond Fn:nd1 Empire, in his impr riawtic desuc ro secure a colonial ,we in Latin America, teGl Freach troof'6 whicb i,ovaded and QODqUetcd Melico. Prc:a,idcnt Juarez.. owing to the ragmg Amencan Civil Wu, could not obtain military aid fl'OOI his friend , l'ruid<,nt Uncoln, but be continued to rCJist the Frend! invaders with hit valiant Indian and Mexican freedom fi&btcn. To consolid.tte his occupation o f Mellicx>, Napoleon Ill, installcd Ardldukc Muimilian of Austria • puppet emperor of Mexico at Mexico aty on Juoc 12, 1864. Finllly, lfie:r the cod of the American Civil War, JuaRZ, witll U.S. wppon, defeated Me:rimllien'• French fon:ca in the 81tll,e of Oueretaro (May 1S, 1867) and executed Emperor Maximilian on June 19, 1867 (Rlzal's sixth bin~y anniversary). Thus fizzled out Emperor Napoleon Ill'& ambition to colonize Lalin America. In Ri:r;al's limes two European nations (Italians and Germans) succeeded in unifying their own countries. The Italians under the leadership of Count Cavour and of Garibaldi and his Army of "Red Shins" drove out the Austnans and French armies from ltaly and proclaimed the Kingdom of Italy under King Victor Emmanuel, wi1h Rome as c:ap1tal city The Prussians led by Otto von Bwnarck, the "Iron Chancellor", defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War and e,ublished 1he German Empire on January 18, 1871, with King Wilhelm of Prussia as fir:s1 Kaiser of the Gennan Empire. With his defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, Emperor Napoleon nt's Second French Empire collapsed, and over its ruins the Third French Republic arose, with Adolph Thlers u first President. The times of Rizal saw the flowcnng of Western imperiahsm Fngland emerged as the world's leading 1mperialis1 power. On account of her invmcibl'e navy and magnificent army, she wa~ able 10 conquer many countries throughout the world and to c,tabh<h a global colonial empire. Thus the Bntish people during the glonous reign of Queen Victoria (1837- 1901) proudly =rti:d: "Britanma rules the waves." By winning , he First Opium War (1~1842) against the tottering Chinese Empire under ,~., M~ncbu dynasty, ,he acquired the ~land of llong Kong ( -,a;;nnt Harbor> In the Second Op1uln War (18S6-1860),1 she ••01 , 6 am and forced the hel;•lcss Maochu dynasty to cede the Ko,.,loon Peninsula oppo,11e l!ong Kong. In 11!5!1, after , uppre,~ing the lndrnn R ·bclho~ .tnd dhmalllhng the Mogul Empire. she impo<ed her r&J (rule) over the subcontinent of India (now cons,stmg of India. PakiMan, and Banglade•'1\ By w111111ng th Three Anglo Burme,e W:1r, (1824-16, 1852, and 18k'i}, she conquered Burma Other land~ ,n A"a which became Bnush colon,~ were Ceylon (Sr, Lanka), MaJd,ve,. Aden, Mal~ya, Singapore, and Cgypt Australia and New Zealand in the South P mfic also became Bntish colonies. Other imp,. iahsts, following Britain's example, grahbed the "eak countries ,n Southeas, Asia and colomzed them. In 1858ltioJ 1- Hnce, . ,11, the help of Filipino troops under Spanish h officers.3 conquered Vietnam; annexed Cambodia (1~3) and Laos (1893); and merged all th~e cuunlnc, ,ntu • lcdc1JteJ colony under the name of French Indochina The Outd{ 1fter driving away the Portuguese and Spanmrds from the Ea~, Indies m the 17th century, colonized th1, vast and nch arch,pµlago a~·j named it the Netherlands East lndie~ lnn11, lndone~if.t,) Czarist Russia , unable to expand Wl's&w:H<I to Fun Jr,:, turned eastward to Asia, conquering Siberia and latt·r otci~p,ed Kam cbatka, Kuriles. and Alaska (which she ,old m 1867 to the lJ .S for $7,200,000). From 11!65 10 11184, ~he: conqucr.:tJ the Mu,hm KhBnntes of Bokhura. Khiva, and Kokond on 1,"entr.il A"a Expanding tow~rds O,ma. Czarist Russ,a jn'lned Entzland, Fcancc, and Germany 10 the despoliation of the crumbling Chinese Empire, acquiring Manchuria~ a "~pberc of innucncc .. thus enabling her to buil~ the 5,80(1-mile Tran~•Sibcnan RailWll), reputed to be "the world's longest railrbad" hnlung Vl:Jdi,,,~1ok and Moscow , On July !I, 11!5~. an Amcncan squadron unJl! r th,: rnmm.nJ of C.ommodore M•tthew C. Perry re-opened Jfiian II• 1h ~ "orld, After this event, which ended Japan's 214-ye ,r isolation (16391853), Emperor MetJi (Mutsuhtto) modermzid 1hc c:ountry by freely accepting Western influences, ,ndud,ng ,mpcriah~m Nq sooner bad Japan strengthe'1cd her navy and arm~ at.>11)! w.,.,,cm lines, when she, Joining thli Western 1mpe'na1t,1 power., ht:gan be.r imperialist career by fighting 11,cal Clurr.; ,n the S1110 'J1w1c"' War ( 1894-9$) and grabbed Formosa ('fa'1wan) and Pc mlurc, And later in 1910 she annexed Korea / Germany ti should be recalled bfx:ame a "wcreigr ,utc m January 1871, and wa. late 1n the scra.mblc for colunic, ,n Asia and Africa. In search !or ooloni11I ~takc:s. ~he turned to the 1,l:ind archipelagoes of the mid-Pacifi~ world On August -2~. IAA~ a German warship. the llt~s. entered the harbor of Yap (an ,~land in the Carolincs). landing the German ,nannc~ who M"1zcd the island, ho.sled the C,crman flag and prod~1mcd the Carohncs and Palaus arcbipelagoes as colonies of German, Stran!!el\ the Spanish governor of the Carolines (Don Enrique C1pnlcs) was present in the L~land, with two Spam<h \hips moored ut it. harbur. but due to cowardice or other reasons, he d,d nut nffcr re~iMancc to the German aggression. "' The Gennan seizure or Yap Wand enraged Spain who claimed 50vereia,ity over the Carolines and PalaL1S by cl discovery ft should ~ noted that the islll1l(I of Yap wu discovered by the Manila galleon pilot, Fr81!cisco Lezcano, who name~ it ~Carolina" in honor of King Charles 11 (1665-1700) of Spain, which name was applied to t he 01her islands.• Spanish-German r~~tions grew critical. In Madrid, the Spanish populace ro5c an1t•olcn1 nots, demanding war agains1 Gennany. To aven ae1ual d'511 of arms, Spain and Germany suhmiltcd the Carolina Oues1100 to Pope Leo XIII for arbitration. right The Holy Fa1her, after careful study of the pertinent documents submitted by both panics. issued his decision on October 22, 1885 favoring Spain - recognizing Spain's sovereignty ove.r lhc Caroline\ and Palaus, but granting two concessions to Germany - ( 1) the right to 1rade in the dispuled arc:hipclagoei and (2) the right to cS1ablish a ooaling station in Yap for the German navy Boll\ Spoin and Gcnnany accepted the Papal decision. so 1ha1 lhc Hi!.pJno-Gcm,an War was aborted II i~ in1ercsl ing to recall that during the critical days of the Hispano-German imbrogho over the ~oline~, Rizal was an Barcelona v1Siting hrs friend Muimo Viola Al the i.11me time he wrote an anicle on the Carohna Quest ,o n which was published in L,i Pi,bfi<:idad, 5 a newspaper owne\t by Don Miguel Morayta. While the ill\J>Crialist powers were enjoying the fruits or 1he1r colonial ventures and achaeVJng global prestige. Spain. once upon a trmc the ~mi~trc~s or 1he v.orld." wa~ StJgnating as a v.orld power Gone with the winds of nme v.a, 1hc dalliance of the 1mper1al glory l•I Ii~, vanished Siglo d, Oro (Golden Age) S:i lo~_• her nch colonles ,u Laun Amenca - Paraguay ( 1811), (1816), ~ile (1817), Colombia and Ecuador (1819), lhe Central Amencan countnes (Costa Rica . HonJuras. Gua1cmalJ, El Salvador, and Nicaragua) in 1821, Vene2:uela (1112:!), Peru ( 1824), and Bolivia and Uruguay (1825). These fonner Sranish colonies had risen in arm~ agains1 Spanish tyranny and achae\'cd their independence . EVJdently, Spain never learned a lesson from 1he loss or these colonies, for she conunued a despocic rule in her remaining overseas coloniei, including Cuba, Puenc, Rico, and the Philippines. A•A•"'.'"a n. n ,., , •- "' 1t1111•• n.. During the times of Rlzal, the linister shadows of Spa.in', decadenc:e darkened Philippine sltiea. The Filipino people aaonized beneath the yoke or Spanllh 1nisnale, for they were unfonunate victims of the evils of an unjust, bigoted , and deteriorating colonial power. Among these evils were as follows: (1) lnstabihty of cc>loni,I administration, (2) corrupt officialdom (3) no Philippine reprcsfntation in the Spanish Cones, (4) human rag)\LS deDJCd to Filiptl¥)$, (S) no equality before the law, (6) m1ladmlnistre11on of justice, (7) racial discrimination (8) frailoc racy, (9) forced labor. l10) haciendas owned by the friars, and (11) the Guardia CiVil. \ lmtabillty of Colonial Admlnlttradon. The Instability of Spanish politics smce 1hc! turbulent reign of King Ferdinand VII (1808-1833) marked the beginning of political chaos in Spain. 1'hc Spanish government underwent frequent changes owing to bluer struggles between the forces of despotism and liberalism and the explosions of the Carlast Wars. From 1834 to 1862, Spain had adopted four constitutions, elected 28 parliaments, and installed no less than 529 ministers with ponfobos; followed ,n su~quent years by pany strifes, revolu1ion1, and other political upheavals 6 This political in51ability in Spain adversely affe<:ted Philippine affairs because it brought about frequent pcriooic shifts ir colonial polic:ics and a periodic rigodon of colorual o(ficials For insiance, from 1835 10 1897, the Philippines wa~ naled hy ~ governors general, each serving an average term of only one year and three months, 7 Al one time - from December H!53 10 November 1854 - a period of less than a year, 1herc wer• four governors-general. To illustrate the confusing instability of Spanish politics Jn its anamic:al effect, an anecdote was 1old KS follows: In the year 1850 a Spani~h JUriSI, who was appointed oidor (magima1e) of 1hc Royal Aud,encia or Manila, left Madrid with his whole family and took the longer route via Cape of Good Hope, arnving an Manila after a leisutely trip of about six months. Much to bu surprise and discomfiture, he found out that another Jurist wa.s already occupying his position. During 1he six months when he was leisurely cruising at sea. the ministry which appointed bin> fell Madrid, •and Andinth" • the AK:Ceeding mlnlct.., - ; , Iiamed h'1s successor IS new Jllnst traveled faster, taking tlhe shoner route vi~ the Isthmus of Suez and reached Manila earlier. . The frequent change of colorual offi,cials hampered the pol111c;al and economic development of the Philippines. Hardi had one governor-general begun his administration when he ~ soon replaced by his successor. Naturally, no chief executive no matter how able and energetic he was, could aa:om r15 much for the colony P h ~rrupt Colcoial Offld•~· With few ex.cepnons, the colonial officials (go~ernors-general , Judges, provincial executives etc ) sent by Spain to the Philippines in the 19th century we...; 8 r~r cry fro m their a_ble and dedicated prcdeces/;;rs of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centun~. They were either highly/corrupt, incompetent, cruel , or venal. Apparently, they symbola;'ed the decadent Spa1 of the 19th century - not Spain of the Siglo de h· ~ produced Miguel Cervantes, Lope de Vega Calden:~ :e •~a 8 arc;a , El Gr:co (Oomeniw ~cotoc:opuli)', Velasquez, SI. Theresa de Avda, and other glones of the Hispanic nalion. o General Rafael de ~uierdo (1871-73), a boastful and rurhless ~vemor _g eneral , aroused the anger of the Filipinos by exndccu1lll~ theZamnooent Fathers Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos, a 1acmto mora, the "M•...,,.. of 1...,.,,, H"s 0 Admiral successor " • , - ·, •• 1ose Malcampo (1874-n). was a good Moro fighter' bu_1 was an__irtepl and weak administrator. General Fernan~ Primo de Riv~ra, governor general for two tenns (1880-83 ,md 1897-98)_. ennc~ed himself by accepting bribes from gambling casinoc m Manila which be scandalously permilted to operale General Valeriano Weyler (1888-91 ). a auel and corrupt govcr: nor general or Hispanic-Oerman an<:estry, arrived in Manila 8 poor man and retu~ to Spain a ?ri"ioaaire. He received huge b n bes and gills of ~,a~nds for bis wife from wealthy ChtnC$C whl> !vaded}he anti-Chi~ law. The FilipinQS scornfully called bun tyrant . because of bis brutal persecution of the Calamblo tenants, particularly the family of Or. Rizal. The Cubans contcmptuolllly _curMd him a "'lbe Butcher~ becallle of his ruthless reconcen~llon policy during his brief governorship in Cuba in 1896, ca~g the death of thoUWlds of Cubans. General Camilo tie PolavteJa (189<>-97), an able militarist but heaniess governor ull general, was widely deteated by the Filipino people for cxecullng Dr. Rizal. Other Spanish colonial officials were of the same evil breed of men as the corrupt and degenerate governors-general men11oncd above. After the loss of Mexioo , G ua1cmala, Chile , Argcnlirs, and other colonies in Latin America, numeroUJ> job-seelcens and penniless Spanish sycophants came to the Philippines, where they became judges, provincial executives, anny officers, and empleados (govcmmcn1 employees). They we re either rcla1ive~ nr proteges of civil o fficials and frians. Mostly ignora nt and profligate, they conducted themselves with arrogance a nd superciliousnc,s because of their alien wtute skin and 1all noses. They bccMm<' rich by illegal means· or by marrying the hcircsse~ of rich Filipino families. As early as ,n 11:no, Tomas de Co myn, Spanish writer and government official, bewailed the o bnoxio us fact 1ha1 igMrunt h.ir• hers a nd lackeys were appoinled p rovinciGI governors, and rough 53ilors and soldie rs were named district magistrales and gam:,,.>n commanders. 8 Philippine Represotadon in Spanish Cortes. To win the ,uppon of her overseas colonies during the Napoleonic inv~sion, Spain granted them representation in 1he Con es (Spanish parha• ment). Accordingly, the Philippines experienced her fim perioJ ol representation in the Cortes from 1810 10 1813 Hl\tory demonstrates that· the first Philippine delegate, Ven1ura de In· Reyes, took active pan in the framing o f the Constttulion of 11112, Spain's lirs1 democratic constitution , and was o ne o f its 11!4 "gnen.. This cons111ution was extended to the Ph11ippme• Anothct achievement of Delegate Delos Reyes was the abolition of the galleon trade . The first period or Philippine representation m the Spanish Cones ( 1810-1813) was thus fruitful with beneficent rc<ult• for 1hc welfare of the colony. However, 1he second period o f represent a• tion (1820-23) and the third period (1834-37) were less fruitlul because the Philippine delegates were no r M energetic and dcvot~d in parliamentary work as De los Reyes. Unfonunatcly, the reprCKntation or 1he oversea~ culnmc, (including the Philippines) in the Spl(llish Cones was abolished i1 1837. Since then Philippine conditions worsened beca~ there wu eo means by wblch the Filipino people Q0QJd e1pose the anomabea perpetrated by the colonial officials. Many Filipino pauiot• vat1antly pleaded for the rC$1onuion of Ph11Jpp,ne representahon in the Cones . On~ of them , the 1il\er-toniued 0radano Lopez Jacna , implored 1D wnoroua Castilian on Oct.9b:r 12, 1883, durinc , the 391st anmven.ary of the discot'eryof America byCohimbuJ 1D Madrid: · we waot rcprcaentauon in the legislative chArnbcr 10 that our up1ra1iom may be known to the morhcr country and 111 government ."9 umentably Spam 1gno~d the fervent plea of Lopc,z Jacna and ho:. compatnots 'Olcir g11evancc was embirtered by 1he fact that Cuba 111d Puerto Rico were ,ranted ~prescnuhon in the Corta by tile Spanish Constitution of 1876 Unul the end of Spanuh rule n IS'lll, Ph1hpptne represcniauon m the Cortes waa ne,.cr restored No wQndcr. Jose Riz,11, M H. dcl Polar, Graciano Lope:, Jacna , and o ther youthful pa1no11 launched the Propapnda Movement, which paved the way tor the Ph1hppme Revolution ol 1896 Human Righll Dailed to Filipinos. Smee the adoprion of the Spanish C".on~111u11on of 1812 knd other cons111utions tn succeed Ina years, the people of Sp"m enjoyed freedom ol speech, freedom pf the PrClS , freedom of assoa.111on, and other human rishts (e11,,ep1 freedom of religion). The Spaniard. ardently guarded thele riahts IO that no Spamih monarch dared aboli~h them. Strangely enougll the Spanish authonue, who cherished these human riahtsorcon,11tu11onal libert1e11n Spain denied them 10 the Flhpm~ m A!Ja . Such inconsistency was lamented by S1mbaldo Jc Mu, Spanish ccono1X11St arid d1plom•t. who wrote in 1843 " Why do ,.e fall into an anomaly, such as comb1nlns our chum for hbeny for ounelvcs, and our wish to impoi;c our law on remote pt."Oples'1 Why Jo we deny to others the benefit which we desire for our fatherlond?• 10 . No £quality Bcf'ore the Law. The Sp.tnish mlllionane$, who llltroduccd ChnU1&1llt) IDtO the Ph1hppincs as tariy as 1n the 16th century, taught 1hat all men, lm:specuvc of color a11J race are c~tldren o( God and as such they are brothen, oequal before !'~oared by tht• noble concept of human relations and convinced by the truths of the Chrntlan faith, mott Filipino• (except those In God. a.c llintcrtands of LWIIOII ud die Vilayu and ill Mindenao and Suha) b«aioe Olrilaiam. = tn practice, however, the Spanish colonial authorilict, who Olnslians did not implement Christ's precept of !he brotherof all me~ under the fatherhood of God . Eapecially dunng I.be 11111 decade$ of Hrspanic rule, they arropntly regarded the brown-skinned Filipino& u irtfenor bcinp, not their Omsnan brothert to be protected but rather u their ma1c.ty's subJ~_ts to be exploited To their ,mperillllM way of tlunkmg, brown 1-tllp,nos and white Spaniardl. may be equal before God, but not before the law and certainly not in practKZ. It II true that the IL}C lndiaJ (1.aw, of the Indies) were promulgateJ by the Oms111n monan.-h1 of Spain 10 protect the rigllll of the nativew in Spain's overscu oolonitll and lo promote their welfare . However, these good colomal laws. infll5Cd aii they were11>ith Chruua.nchanty andiushcc, were rarely enfo~ccd by the officials m the ,fotanl col<>IIIC$, partkularly the Phlhpptna , Cnn • sequcntly, the Filipmos were abuscJ, brutalized, pcr5CCUkd , and •landcrcd by their Span1>h m~c~. 'lllcy could not appeal to the law for 111,11cc because the law, being d1~pcnscd by Spaniards, Wal only for the white Spani"nb. The Spanish Penal C.ode, which was enforced in lhc Phihppi~. panicularly imposed heavier penalties on n.,uvc fihp1~ or n~tu.o,, and hgllter penaltie. on whit1:-o->mplcx10ncd Sran11rds. To .. legal inequality wa, naturally ro<"ntcd hy _th<' ,Filipino~. As Professor Ferdmand Blumenlritl wrote to Dr. Riul in 111117: The provision of the Penal Code that a heavier penalty will be 1mpo~d on the lnJio or mesh.a> irritates me exceedingly. bccau\C 11 sigmfi~ that every pc,_ noc born while is 1n fact a latent cnm,nal . is • very great 1nJU$l1CC that seems enormous and unJust for ' Iaw. " 11 bc1ngcm bod1.eel 10 u Th•• Maladmlnlstnlloe vi Juab. The courts of JUJtice in the Ph1hppmc, durina Ri,al', time were notoriously coi:rur• Verily, they were courts of MtnJUSbCC". as far a., the brown Filipinos were con.:crned . The SpaRQI\ iudgc:s, fise&II (pr01Ccut1ng attorney~). and oth,·r court offioal• were ,nept, venal, and oftentamca 11noran1 oflaw . Justice was costly. partial, and slow Poor Filipinos ha<I no access to the courts because they could not afford the heavy = eqie1- (If litipdoo. Wealdi, IIOdal pratige, and color of akin were pn,pooderant facton in winnina a cue in coun. II 1apcctive of tbe weipt ol evldellce, a ricb man or a Spaoiard, wt:io.e skin wu wlllt.e, cuily lldlieved vtetory m any litigallOIL To the Flllplno IDUICI, a llt1gation 1n court was a ca1anuty. 1be expenses inc;urred even In a simple lawsuit often ucel:dcd the value of the property at mue, 10 that in many instances the litipnts fOWld themselves ,mpovenshedat theendorthelong tussle. Cnminal cuesdniggedon for many years during which periode1ther1he delinquents took to flight, or the documencs were loat. The judicial pnlQCdure wu so llow and clumsy thac it was easy to bave justice delayed. AJid justice delayed, as a popular maxim states, *is justu;e denied". Thu., related John Foreman. a Bntish eyewitness of the last yean of Spanish sovereignty in the P1nhpp111e1: 12 It WU bard co Fl the jllClpnent executed u II WU lo win the C&5e. Even when the queitioo at wue wusuppoted to be settled, a «feet in lhe acntencie could always be eoncocted to reopen !ht whole affJ11r If tbe case bad been tned and iud&· -.at g,v"D undtT tbe Cavil Code, a way ,i,u found to convcn 11 mto a Cnm1nal Code. a flaw c:ould be dlscovcn:d u~r the I.Awa or the lndJes, or the Siete Pan1da1, or the Roman I.Aw, or the NovuJma Recopllaooo. or the Anus- f11el'OI , Decrees, Royal Orders, Orden11JU1 del Buen Goble mo, and so forth, by,. lncft the case 00Uld be reopened A speafic instance of Spanish maladmirustr11tion of j11$ticc wu theinfamouacueof Juan Jela Cl'Ulin 1886-1898. On the night of June 7. 1886, two men were bnitally killed ID their sleep at the waterfroot of Cavite. 1be oen day a couwain of a motor la1111ch named Juan de la Cl'\ll wu arrested on mere suspicion of having perpetrated the murder. Without preliminary inveshgalion and proper trial, he wu jailed in Cavite, where he languished for twelve yca.n. When the Americans landed ID Cavite after the Bat• tie of Manila Bay (May l, 1898), they found him ID Jail 1.ull awai11ng trial.13 Dr Rizal and his family were victim, of SpaniJh inJ~llcc. Twioe, fint m 1871 and aecond in 1891, Dona Teodor11 (Riul·s mother) was UDJUllfy arrested and Jailed on fumsy lfOUllds. Rw.l bim,elf wu deported in July, 189210 Dap1tan without benefit of a av! tnnl. His brother Paciano and severll brothers-in-law were exiled to various parts of the archipelago without due process of law Like Fa then Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora, Rita! was executed - a noble v1cum of Spani•h miscamage of JI.CltKC Racial Dllcrtaunatlon. Spain introduced Christianity into the Philippines with its beauuful egalitarian concept or the brother· hood of all men under God the Father The Spano<h au1hon11«:i. civil u well as eccl~iastical. zealou.<ly propagated the Chn<t1an faith but seldom practised its sublime tenets. They regarded the conv~ned fihpinos not as brother Chnstians. but a, infcnnr l>cinjts who were 1Dfin11ely uodeacrv1ngofthe rightsand prh lc2~ 1t,at the white Spaniards enjoyed. With this unchristian attitude, many Spaniards and 1hc1r me,dzo satellites derisively called the brown-skinned Jnd tlJt. no,cJ Filipinos *Indios" (Indians) In retahall<>n. the r·,hp1no,1ealou_sly dubbed their pale-complexioned detractors with the d1<para)!ing term "banguJ" (m1lkfish) Ounng R,zar~ time a wh11e <km. a high nose and Castilian lineage were a badge of vaunted \Upenorny . Hen~. a Spaniard or a mc,1110, no matter hvw ,1up1d or mun~rcl• bom he was, always en)Oyed political and social prest111,c 1n the community. Racial prejudice w:n prevalent e,·er,"Wherc - in &°'crnment office~. in the courts of ju.mce, 10 the armed fore.;< 1n the '<Klal <'Ir• cles and even 1n the educ111onal m~t1tu11on, an<1 111 the cccksi,,,11 cal hierarchy One of the \hiningstors of the FilipinoclerJ)', Fathcr Jose Burgos (1837-1872) bewailed the Spanish ml\concepuon 1ha1 1 man's ment depended on the pigment of h1> ,kin. the h, tht ,,f )us nose . the color of his hair, and th~ •hare of h1> ~\.ull. ,~nd cum• plained. of the lack of opponunitie, for educated young Fihrin•.'.' to rise ID the service of God and country "Why for in;1.incc. h~ Jameoted. •·shall a young man stnve 10 nse ID the profcSMon 1•f lav. or of theology, when he can vision no futu~e for himself ~a~e that of obscurity and jaunty unconcern? What F1hp1no will aspire to the seats of the wise and will devote sleepless nighb 10 ~uch an ideal. when he clearly sees that hil noblest feeling. are crushed down ID the unwelcome atmosphere of contumely and obhv1on, and when he knows that among the pnvileged few only are dispen11ed the sinecures of honor and profit? .." •J. ,..., 1 Owin1 to the Spqiah polltic&I philoeoplay ot lllliDa of Onm:la and State, tlieff ll10IC a lllliqw form of p,•u• mcnt lti Hiapank Philippmea c:&llcd •tm1oc:ncy· (fral/Offlld4) ~ named because it wu •• pernmc.a1 by frian• History dndoses that 1111CC the d.lys of the Spanish conque11, the frian (Augustlnhns, O'lminicans, and Franci.1ea111) controlled the rtligjous and educational life of the Pbalippinea, and later in die 19th ccntury they tame to acquire lrtmcridou, polibcal J>C",er. in!lucna:, and n ~. _The frian pranically ruled the Philippines throuah a facade o f civil ,ovemmem. The coloo1.1I authorities, from the aovcmor 1encul drn.11 to the a lc1tldes mayorca, were uodcr the control of 0c trian Al!nosl ~ IOWD Ill the ardupcl•go. cscq,c 111 unpaafied Islamic Mindanao and Sulu and 1n the pa,an hinter, lands, was nalcd by a friar curete AJ.ide from his priesth dutiee, the fnu was the 111pav1sot of loc:&1 clcctiom, lbc w~--tor of schoob and Illes, the arbhcr of 1110ral1, the censor of bookt and CO!lledias (Jta&e pbys). 1bc superintendent of pllbhc wort,, and the guudl3n of peace and order. So ercat bla polibcal b.llucnce that bis rccommcndaUom WW' bccdcd by the 1o~cmor 1e~crnl knd the provtndal official, He could &end a patriotic Filipino to ,all or deno:mce him • a filibaaicro (traitor I to be Hllcd 10 a distant place or to be executed II an enemy of Ood and Sp&U1. w• 0 Rizal , M.H dcl Pilar, G . Lopez Jaena, and other F"illptno rdormulJ aSS;&ilcd frailocracy , bumina it for the prcv.Wna policy of obscurantum , fanaric1wn, and opp,eaion in the country. Rizal, for imtana:, denounced the frian II the cncmica of liberal reform, and modem proarcu tn the Phllippina. Like the Roman god Janua, fnilo,ncy had~ faca. Iu bad fa,-c was darkly ponrayed by Rizal and hi, oontemporarie1 by way of rttaliatiOn qainst cien.a.1n evil-hearted fnan who penecu1cd them . For the lake of lust<>tical llllth, the other,_ of fratlocucy, 111 Sood face, lhould be known. In the felicitOlll llpin,oo 01 Dr, JOK P. I.Am-cl, •11 would be a arou iDVlbllldc on the pan of the Filipinos 10 be oomcioua only of the abm. of the fnan, and to c:IOK the1r eyea to 1h41 bcne6ocn1 1nnueof the oo:lesi1111cal elc111e'nt on the life ol 111c: Fi11plnoa~ 11 u rlU Q-edd mlllt certainly be s,vca tow Span• fsian Cor baviac inlroduced Ou'iltianil)' ud European~ inlO t h e ~ ptnca To them, the Filipinoa owe a las!•~• debt of pbl\ldc. Without their anapificent ICrviccs tbe F'wpiPo people would not have emerged from dlc1r pa.11 as a unique Ouilti.an n.woe, lbs only nation tn A11a with an Oriental, Latin and tlispanic-Amen• CIIII cull Uf1II hental'" • Of c:ou=, 11 ii regrettable that nol alt Sr,amsh fn~ who came 1o 1hc Ptulip~ were sood men aad wonhy mumtcn of God Among the bad lnara who wtrc recreant 10 thcu ,ubbmc ailing and 10 1hc 6nnt tr.dt11on, of Jbc:rian p ~ r were Fray M1gucl Lucio Bustamante, Fray Jose Rodrif,llClt, Fray Junomo Picmaue1a, and other rcacgadc man """1,wcre traycd by Ri,..al tn hu novcb aa P;1dre Damno and I aJre Salvi ud htlariottlly canca1urcd by Jacna IIS Froy Bot<:>d 'l'hc<e had frian besaurchcd lhc noble csmtdlcon of Spain. wnisbed the repuw 1on 1,I hundred of 1he1r gooJ brethren (including fr~y Andres de Urdaneta. Fray Manin Ra.la, Fray J= de Plascncu, Bishop Doaun,:o de Sabz.u , Fray Franwco Blancas de San JOM: , and Fniy Mtpel de BcnavidCJ), and ~ d the biller luttn-d of the: t iliplnos 10..aril, lhe Sp111iilll religious ordcn. P.": • .-a,it LMNr. Kno,r,n a, the polo. 11 was the: rompubof) labor impi,..·ll hy 1hc Spam~h coloni~I authonttea on adult filipmo males in lhc comtructton of chun.hcs, acbool•, hospiUb; bwldong and repair ol roach und bridges; the building of shop& in 111(, ,hipya,d,; and other pubhc worb . Ongin.tlly , F1hrino males from 16 to 61) ycan old WCK obli~I to render torccd lab<1r for 40 daya • ~car. Later, the Royal Decree of July 12. 1883, llllf!cmcnlcJ by the New Rcgut..liom promulptcd ti) the Co un.:11 o f State of February 3, HIii~ ,ncrc-d the m1rum11m ai:c of the pollitas (those wbo perl~rmc:d the fori;cJ lal11,r) frorn lb 10 IK and reduced_the days o( I ,1 .. r tr..,n 40 to IS lbe umc royal decree provided !bat nol only nahvc r 1hp1r,oa, hul alr,o all male Spa111~h resulcnts frol'I 18 v•·•n old 10 60 mu~, render forced labor hul this partu:ular p<o\llS10n ..-a. nc,cr 1mplcmcn1~ _ID the Phabpptn<:~ for uhviou reason,. So actuallv the hrown f-lhp,n~ d,d 1b.- dirty joh of bu1ldtng or rep:a1ring the public works. ~ well to-do 111nt"'1 them were able to escape tlui manl.lll labor by payui£ l&U, tbe /.U., wbidl .,.. a awn of money paid to the aovemment to be cuaipted froo, the polo. 'The Fihpiooa came to hate the forced labor because of the abuses conaected with it Fint of all, the white Spanish resident.•. contrary to law, were not recruited by the colonial authoriliti to pcrfonn the ubliJatory labor. Second. 1be Filipino po/uuu, accord1n1 to law, •ere to receive a daily stapend of two ~tas (SO centavos) but actually received only a pan or this 1muun1 and worse, they got nothing. And, tlurdly, the annual fon:ed labor caused so much inconvenience and suffering to the common people because 11 disturbed their work m farm, 1d hops ,nd also because they were so~tuncs compelled to work m construction proJCClS far from their homes and towns. A true iOCtdcnt or the; hardship suffered by the F"tl1pinos from fortcd labor "'U related by Riul, u follo,., •• In the to-a,n of Lot B•llos a hosp1uil was but11 by laborers Nl&tcbcd fTOm Ill the towns of the province. Each laborer fnr.,.d by the autbontiea w1> paid ei&(,1 cuanos (five ccnllvoa) daily, llw onlin,ry d~dy •Hgc bcmg n.o pcw:w Of fout peales fllcrus. In ldd1t10n. Mies and cbanly l>.u.aan "ere hc-lJ 10 defray the "'"' of 1bc buildings. The arch11ea wus a Fnmruc:an brother. Tht h0ip1lal wu erected. a p•lacc of the captain icncraJ wa, 00nst.ructcd. a,:riculturc and the suffcreJ for lhc.ir con.trua.oo Why are the people ,.1,n pay 1hcir tucs compelled lo worl,, grahs' Why do they pay tucs if they are 001 g01ng 10 be allowed to live wilh their families? Do they pay taus su 1h01 they w,11 be cll!bved? Will lhc mor,,y of the ta•peytr be u!ICJ to hire po:«y !yrantl and 1101 to aucnd to the dcmanda or ""'''Y' \lih11? b •he Spani.tt Oaa pc,rchancc 1he flag or the slave lradc' '°'""' •ta:1 hr OwDtd bJ th.- •'rtan. Dunng Riral', tm>Q the Sparu.h from bcl<lnr.ing to d1fferen1 religious ord"" were the nchct11 landlor<ll, for the) owned the be,t haciendas (agnculturat !ands) in the Ph1hppin1:1 The rural folk\, who had Ileen hving ID these hacicndiu and cull1vatina them gcnera11on aOer gene, l.bOn became tenants. Naturally. they resented the loS$ of their lands wh,ch bclonaed to_ their all()Cstors since pre-SpantSh umcs; l~ally, however, the friars wcto recognized BS legal o wners or aaid lands becaWIC they obtained royal btlcs of ownership from tbc Spanish crown No wonder, these friar haciendas became hotbeds of agrarian revolts, in as much as the Filipino tenanu regarded t.h e fnar owners ~s usurpers of their ancntral lamls One of these bloody aparian revolts wa~ the agranan upheaval in 1745-1746. As early as in 1768 Governor Anda realiDng the danger of the {nar-owned haciendas to F1hpt~Sp1uush rclattons. strongly recommended to the M adrid government the. snle of the friar estates Unfonunately, his wise recommendation w:i\ ignored Filipino odium towards the fnars. who turned hacienda owocr5. persisted unabated unul the end of Span"h ruk Rizal, whose faMJly and rela1.-es were tenant;, of 1hc Dominican Estate of Calumba. tncJ 1<1 i111tia1c agrunan rclorm, in 11187, but in vain Hi, ~dvocacy of 11grarian reforms 11n11cd the wrath of the Domirucan fnars. v.ho rctahatcd b) ramnr, the rental~ or the land, leased by his family and other C'alantha tenanu Acu>rd1ng to Riul the fnar "'"nt'--sh1p or the produ t.-e tarnh contributed 10 the economic \tagn · uon of the Ph1hpptncs dunng the Spanish penod. In his famou~ essay "Sobrt' lo lndo(~ncia dt los Fllip111os" (Indolence of the hhpmo;,) he wrulc 1be fact that the bcSl plantalJOllS, the l>c ' lla<:b of arc 1n th< h19ds ol the r,hg1ous land 1n &0me prov,o,;c1 corporation, . i• one of lhe rea,on• why many 1<1wn~ do not progress insp11, of the cf{ons ol I heir mhab1tk"l<. We v.,11 be mcl w1tb the obt<ChC'fl u n ar,umcol n 1h<· olh<- r \ICX, l~t lhllK which do not l>clong 10 them They <urcly are! Jusl u their brethren ,n Eumpc. in lounJm~ then convenu, knew how to r.t'lec-t lhe hc:\t ....nc\ , the hc11 upland> for the C\lluvauon or 1hc """ ,, th,· f'' xloct,on ur beer. so al,o the Phibpptnc mool.< h~•c lcno"'n tov. 1 \ClcCI th<c bc,1 town,. the hc•u11h.l pl1111, the .. en-w,trrcJ ftctd,. 10 male of 1hcm nch pl,in1a1ion,. For "'me time 1hc friars have dc,civcd many b) making 1hcm hehe•c thul 11 tbc,;c plantaoon, 'Acre progprnnJ:. 1t "".a' ~•cau..c lhC"\ "-'Cfc unJicr 1hcir arc and the indolence ol 1h• na11,.-. "',.. 1hu, cmpbas,zed, t,ut they fort<>t 1ha1 1n some pro,1ncc, where they bav,· not been able IO a~• of th~ llcM tra,1~ of land, their planm,on.. hke Bauan and uani arc ,nfcnor f'<""'""'" "' IO Taal, Balayan and Lipa, rqk,01 cubivated entirely by the nativca ..-ithout any monltilh m~nce what90eVer. ne Guardia CMI. The last hated symbol of Spanish tyranny Guardia Civil (Constabulary) which was created by the Royal Decree of February 12, 1852, as amended by the Royal Decree of March 24, 1888, for the purpose of maintaining internal peace and order in the Philippine,. It was patterned af1er the famo115 and well-disciplined Guardia Civil in Spain was the While it is true that the Guardia Civil in the Philippines hAd rendered meritorious services in suppressing ,e bandits in the provinces. thc,y later became infaJJ10~ for u1eu rampant abuse$. such as maltreating innocent people, loo11ng their can.baas, chickens, and valuable belongings. and raping helple,._, women. Both officen (Spania.rds) and men (natives) were illtrained and unditeiplined, unlike the Guardia Civil 1n Spain who were respected and well-liked by the populace ~ actually witnessed the atrocities committed by the Gulltdui Civll on the Calamba folks. He hlm$elf and his mother had been vicums of the hrutahtic~ of the lieutenant of the Guardia 0vil It was natural that Rizal directed his $tinging ~lire agam111 the hated Guardia Civil. Through Ehas in Noli Me Tangere, he cJtposcd the GuarJia Civil as a bunch of ruthless ruffians good only J'for disturbing the peace" and "persecuting hone,1 men" He proposed 10 improve • the! military organization by having it be oompo-.cd cf good men who possessed educi11ion and good prin<"iple~ nnd who were oonscious of the limuauons and responsib11Jties of authority and power "So much po.,.er io the hands of men, ignorant men filled with passions, without moral trainin&, of untned pnn,iplcs," he said thtough cllas, "is a weapon In the hands of a madman in a dcfenscle$S multitude." 0 •••• • Chapter 1 Advent of A National Hero Dr. Jose R izal is a unique CJtamplef of ati~:"f!~~;:r:~ the greatest hero o • na · be gm1us who c:i-me ked with the world's geniuses. I God with versatile gifts, he tru Y ra_n ) poet dramatist, (oph1halm1c surgeon , • h •· He was a P ysici_a n . ·hitect painter, sculptor, educator. essayist, novelist , h1stonan,_arc • . . surveyor, engineer, her bibl·ngu'•t musician naturahs1, cthnologis1. 1 ~• • · cographer cartograp , farmer businessm_an. cconom,~t. g, lkl st 'philosopher, trans. phil h.l l .,,st grammanan • ,o on • . . lio e, p , o o..,. • . , hurnorul saurist, polemicist, lator, inventor, magician, h Abov~ and beyond all these, I sportsman, traveler. a~ prop c · who consecrated his life for he was a hero and ~bucal le. No wonder, he 1s now the redemption ot bis opprcsse pcop . . ' acclaimed as the naiional hero of the Ph1hppines . Rizal wa, born on the moonht Tht- Birth of • Htro. Jo~ . the lakcshore town o f 86~~" His mother almost died night of Wedne~day, J_unc Calamba, L.ag~a Province, f big. head As he rccoun1ed O oirs· ,. 1 was born in Calamba <!uring the dehvcry ~ausc many years later In his student mem .d 'dn1gh1 a few days · . 186! between eleven an mi , dncsda and my coming out m o n 19, June, before full moon. 11 was a We . \,other her lift> had she this vale of ICJl"S wo~ld ~aA'(e ~'; take me to her sanctuary not vowed to the virfllll o nupo 0 by way of pilgrimage.'' 1 J e . th h 0 I church of his 1own on un He was baptized m e Cal . ,c .'h ric-;t Father Rufino ~a7 ~bi/ ~Pf: ~J 22, aged. three days o~d, b)', 1h;o p~: f.:dfath,er (mnong) was Collan1C$, who wa•, a aui~g~e Calamba and close fnend o f father Pedro Casan~s. nauv~Jof tt . chosen by his mother Rizal f ii His- name O>'; was :.:, was a ~~o{e~ of lhe Otri,11an iaint San Jost (St Jo~crh) Durin1 the chnsteruna ceremony Father Coll1n1e, '"'b impresaed by the baby's bi1 head, and told rhe nl(mbers or rhe fanuly •bo ,..ere present : "Take sood care or lhtS child, for someday he wUI become a IJeat man.• His words pro,ed 10 be propbetic. as confinocd by sut.quent evcnu The bapfi,mal cert1f1C:111e or Rizal reads u follow, ·1, the undc:ni,ned pa11111 pncac or Calamt,a , a:n,ty that fTom the 1n•atipdon made ••th propc,r 1u1honl)'. (or ttrl«M1& the: parl&h booh ,.hod, •ere burned September 28, 1862, IO be round ,n Docket No .I o( B•rc•smi, p 4Y , appcan by the SWOt'II lalunony Of COlllpCtCDI •1t...,_. that JOSE RIZAi.. MERCADO d the fe&JUmatc ton , and of la'Wful wedloclt, of Don f'ranc:isro Raul Mercado ~ml Dolla Teodota Realoftda , U\IUI& bttn bap11ud ,n 1h,s P,,n\h on the 22nd day ul June 1n the )car 11161, by the IM"'h pone Rn- Rurino ~ntcs, Rev Pedro C.a\l= Mina h11 aodlalher W,1nesa my ..a.,,a,ure II (S.aned): I.IONCIO LOPCZ It should be nored that at the hrnc R,,al w.~ hc>rn, the ao•cmor general of the Philippon~ v,as l.Jcutenant Gen~ral Jose Lemery. forffl(r senator of Spain (member of the upper ,hambcr of the Spanish C'ortes) , He 1ovcmcd th<' Ph,hpp,n ~ from Feb nwy 2, 1861 to July 7, 1862. lnaden1ally. on the same d~tc or Rizal'< birth (June 19, 1861). he \Cnt Jn off,c,nt t.ll\f'Jlch 10 the Mini,try of War and the: Mon,,try of Ultram•r in Madr,tJ , dcnounana Sultan Pulalun or Sulu and .cvual ,,.,,.c,rut Moro t.la1us for fr.11emi1mg "'1th a Bnti,h con,ul Among hi< a.:hic,r, rnenl\ n ao•emor genaal v,ere (I) fo~1errn1 1hc cu11 .. ~11on or cotton m 1hc provm«, and (2) e•tul>hshrng the pulot1<.o-nul11.1r) gc>\'er~ni, ,n lhc VN1ya, and tn Mmdanao IUw·, ~nts. J,>,c Ru~ 11,~S the SC\Cnlh nf th< de I ch,ldru of Fran,r:,co Mercado RILII ant.I Tcot.lora \lon,n f •..ionda Oic hero•, fllhcr. Fronm,c o (111111-18911) ... , l>om ,n IJ111an. Laauna on May JI. 11118 Ile ,1udict.l I mu, ~nil Phtlo<tophy 11 the College of San Jose ,n Manila In earl) man hood. followina p.rrenl, dea1h, he moYcd 10 (alamhJ ~nil hecame a tenant-farmer or 1he Oominrcan-o,.,ncd hJoenda . He ,..,lS • hardy and tndcpcndcnHninded man. who talked les., and w. ked more, ant.I was 11r0ng m body and v1han1 in sp,nt. He h,. 1 died in Manila on January S, 1898, al the age oJ MO. In tu. ltudcnt memous, Rizal a(lc,110111tcly called him • l!IO<kl of f11hen" 1 0 0 IUI Teodora (tl!2t,..191I) , the hero'• mother,"' t '" n Mami. on November 8, 1826 and wai educated at the C"nllq:e of Santa ROMI a well-known cullcg,: for girls '" th• "' oc "'u a remarlt~ble v,oman , pol'c•<ine rchnct.l cult ure . htcr ,,ry talent bu inei.~ at,ility, and tht t •11,·u,1, of Srartaa .,. "' · R12al '1ovmgly said of her · .. My mo1hcr ts a wom~n of null~ than ordmary n1lturc; t,h., ._"""'' hlcrJtu,c and 'J)Ca\.s Sr ' . l>ellcr 1han I Sh<' cmrc,tcd my r<>cms .ind ~u,c m~ good ~•~<e when I <tu,ty,n,: rh<"tnrit" -..h,· IS a mat~mat,c,an a •~ '--··k .. f l'-" a feodora 1.hed ,n M,,n,I., on Au~u,1 read many uuv •· "'' l'h I 16 1911 II lhc ~IC ol KS. Shortly before her dca1h the '~rpme vcmmo;nl ofrcrcd her I hrr rcnsinn ~he ~ourteoml) n,1c<1c-d ~,a m . "M family has nc-,er hccn p.11nouc for cwnc} II lht govirn~ent pknl) of lun,h ,,nd docs not 1.rn,... 10 d~ wuh them, belier rcclun: 1he IM\es " Such rtm.ir1" truh hd,11~ her as I wonhy mother of a natronal hero •.i• :a. ,.f.,, Tht Rllal Chlldrffl. GoJ hlcs.scd the mamagc of hanc1'1('(' do Rizal and feodura Alon'ill Realonda w,th dcven ,h, I• erca bo and •~ "'- ..••rb · I hc-sc ctuldrcn "-ere as foll>-..~ drcn _ M ,,..o )• I ~turnena (IR~l91)) ~ of tl>c R,ul ,hll drcn , meknamed Nencng; •he marr,c,d M,nucl T H1<l,,l1W of Tanaw1n, Baungaa 2 f>ari1no ( 18'1 ' IY:IO) ol1lcrl>r111hcr ,utd" nhJ nl 0 r J • Rizal afttt hn younger brot~r•• e1rcu11on he , . ; :the Re•olu110n and became • coml>at : ....... •fl<r the ~•oluhoei, hr IChfcd lo h farm '"di::, B li<>f •here he l"cd "' a a<"ntkman fat mer one! dJt ~ l'130 , an olJ l>achek,r ~d 79 Ile h.,I '"" du:drcn by tu• mlstreu CS.---cnna l'leccfta) M h<>) •nJ • ' 3 Nud.., (U!S2 1\llV) - h, r pcl n:uae wa, ~'"' an,1 11w nwncd AftlOftk> ~ I \nt,.... ol Fathct ~ ~%), a Khoo! tc..<:her uf Mo«,ng. Ph,hppu,,, il, 4, Otitnpoa ( 18U-1 lll>---J I - Ypoa '""' P' she roamed Sil•~tro Ub.Joo, • tcleaurh up,.r~11>< from Manila 3 S. Lucia (18S7-1919) - She married Mariano Herboa or ~lamba, who wu a nephew of Father Hcrnosa died of cholera in 1889 and wu denied Christian bunaJ because he wu a brother-in-law of Dr. Rizal. ea.an... 6. Maria (l859-194S) - B.iang wu her nlclr.namc· Faustino Cruz of Billan, Laguna. • she married Ditniel !be grca1ea1 Filipino hero Pepe; during his exile 1n D1p11an he hved .with Josephine Bracken, Irish girl from Hong Kong; he ha~ • so~ by her, but Ibis baby•boy died • .few hours after birth; Rlzal named him ~Francisco• after h,s father and buried him in Dapltan. 7. JOSE _(1861:18?6) - ~d pe~rlcss ge~1us; Im nickname was 8. Con<:cpcion (1862-11165)- her pet name was Concha; she died of sicltness at the age of 3; her death wu Rb:.al's first sorrow In life. 9. Josefa (186S-1945) - her pel name was Panggoy· she died an old maid at the age of 80. ' I_O. Trinidad (1868-1951)-Tri~ing was her pel Mme; she died also an old maid in 1951 aged 83. 11. Soledad (1870-1929)-youngesr of the Rizal dill· dre~; her pet name was Cholchg, she married Pantaleon Quintero of Calamba. Siblin~ relations.hip among the Rizal children was affcctiona_rcly cord,al. As a little boy •. Rizal used to play games with his SJS(ers. Although he had bo)'lSh quarrels with them he respected them. Ye_ars later when. he ·grew to manhood, he always called them Dona or Senora (if married) and Senorita (if single). For he cal!ed ~~ olde_r sister "Doila Ypia, • his oldest sister Senora Saturnma, and his unmarried sisters ~senorita Josefa" and "Senorita Trinidad." :~•~occ. ~••s r_elation with his only brother Paciano, who wa.i, U!.11 yea~ his seo1or, was more than that of younger to older brother. Paciano wa~ a second father 10 him. Throughout his life, Rizal respecte~ b1:"1 a_nd greatly valued his sagacious advice. He imrnor• ta~ed him m his first novel Noli Me Tangere as the wise Pilosopo T8$to. In a lencr to Blumentritt, written in London on June 23 1888, he regarded f'aciano ilS the "most noble of F"ilipinos" and ~though an Indio, more generous and noble than all the Spanl'uds put together"•. And in a ~ubsequent letter also written to Blumen- , tritt and dated London, October 12, 1888, he spoke of his beloved older brother, as follows: ~He is much finer and mor~ serious than I am; he is bigger and more slim; he is not so dart; his nose is fine, beautiful and sharp; but he ls bow-legged.~, RIDl's Ancemy, As a typical Filipino, Rizal was a product of the mixture of races.6 In his veir,s flowed the blood of both East and West-Negrito, Indonesian, Malay, Chinese, Japanese, and Spanish. Predominantly, he WII$ a Malayan and was a magnificent specimen of Asia.n manhood Rwll's great-great.grandfather on his father's side was Domingo Lam~o. a Otlnese immigrant from the Fulcien city of Changchow, who arrived in Manila ahout 1690. He be~me a Chnstian, manied a weU-10-do Chinese Christian girl of Manila named Ines de la Rosa, and ' . . assumed in 1731 the surname Mercado which was appropnate for him because he. was a merchant. The Spanish term mercado means "market" in English. Domingo Mercado and Ines de la Rosa bad a son, Francisco Men:ado, who resided in Biiian, m.,rried a Chinese-Filipino mestiza, Chila Bemacha, and was elected gobern1JdorcUlo (municipal mayor) of the town One ul their sons, Juan Mercado (Rizal's grandfather), married Cirila Alejandro, a Chinese-Filipino mestiza. Lllte his father, he was t,lecLed govemadoreillo of Biiian. Capium Juan and Capi14M Cirila had thirteen children, the youngest being Francisco Mercado, Rizal's father. At the age of eight, Francisco Mercado lost his father and grew up 10 manhood under the care or his mother. He st11dted Latin and Philosophy in 1he College of San Jose in Manila. While studying in Manila, he met and fell in love with Teodora Alonso Realonda, a student in the College of Santa Rosa . They were married on June 28, 1848. after which they stttled down in Calamba, where they enpged in farming and bush,e115 and reared a big family. It is said that Dofla Teodora•, f~ily descended from L · , nDula, the lut native king of Tondo. Her great•grandfall,... r (Rizal', maternal great-great-grandfather) was Eugenio Ur;ul' (of Japanese ancestry), ..,ho married a Filipina named i-emgn.. (surname unknown). Their daughter, Regina, married Manuel de Quintos, a Filipino-Chinese lawyer from Pangasinnn One of the daughters of Attorney Quintos and Regina wa~B.igida, who marriw Lorenzo Alberto Alonso, a prominent Spanlsb-Filiplno s - 111ZAL, u..._ "°""' - ""'""ca m~)of Bibo: Their children were Narcisa, Teodora (Rizal' mo..,..r, Oreeono, Manuel, and Jose. s was~ 8:,U-.Rbal. lbe real surname of the Rizal family pa~:al • (the w~ WU adopted in 1731 by Domingo Lamco full-blooded l::;!eatR:~u1r;ther of Jose Rizal), who was a name - Rizal h s. amlly acquired a second sur- "di (p~ovina.J gov~;r) of ;:';u:;e~h~ :a~a;;:y"'':;'ikdmThayor Aid Dr RizaJ in his lett ' en . us place):7 ' er to 8 lumentriu (without date or satc~~:r°:'ro~:~ Riial bccau~ at home my parents, my · • and my rcla11vcs have always preferred 0 O 1umame Mercado. Our family name WI! in fact en::ado, lxn there were many Mercados in •he PhT who are not related to us. II ,s said that an alcald: ippincs "'ho "'•~ • fncnd of our family added Rizal mayor, My family d"d to our name ha i DOl _PBY much aucntion to this, but now j ve to use it. In this way' ,t seems that I am an illc••timate ~.r Id son. r Amb:::;c~hat Spanish ale11Jdc mayor was, " commented diplomat "h" ch~ Ma Guerrer~, distinguished Rizalist and • o,ce was prophetic for Rizal in s . h a field where wheat cut while 5·till pams means • green, sprouts aga1n."8 hero~ R.Jzal Hom~. The house o~ the Rizal family, where the Calamb:~ dbo':'1, wsns ~ne ~f the distinguished stone houses in unng Panish times. lt was a two- t b . . rectangular in shape built of d be s orey u1ldmg, ,. d . • a o stones and hard-wood d roo,e wnh red tiles. It is described b D R s, an of Rlzal's presttgious bi01faphers, as louo::.:S:9 arael Palma, one •··The bouhse wu hich and e•en •umptuous a solid and m-1,e can quake-proof stru . ' dowa Thick w . cture with sliding shell Winthe ~ o( lime and '10ne bounded the first floor: root which 0 was ~ e ~nllrcly of wood except for the Manila at th;,~:,'/cd nl1 m the style of the buildings in and wid . · t the back there wu an uotca a c, deep cistern to hold rain water for ho :},lt B bin me lliC. e d the house were the It chlc:lcens and a big ....._ f _pou ry yard full of turlccys and O chia, ,.........o tropical fruit trees - ads b b· • mocopa, ptJ/HIJG, sontol, ttvnpoy, etc. , a ,m "'I, r ' It wu a happy home where parental affection and children's laughter reigned. By day, it hummed with the noises of children at play and the songs of the birds in the garden. By night, 1t echoed with the dulcet notes of family prayers. Such a wholesome home, naturally, tned a wholesome family. And such a family was the Rizal family . A Good ud Mlddle-0- Family. The Riz.al family belonged to the prindpalia, a town aristocracy in Spanish Philippines. It was one of the distinguished families in Calamba. By dint of honest and hard work and frugal living, Rizal's parents were able to live weU. From ihe farms, which were rented from the Dominican Ordtr, they harvested rice, com, and sugarcane. They raised pigs, cbicltens, and turkeys in their backyard . In addition to farming and stoclcraising, Dofta Teodora managed a general goods store and operated a small Dour-mill and a home-made ham press. As evidence of their affluence, Rizal's parents were able 10 build a large stone house which was situated near the to wn church and to buy another one. They owned a carriage. which was a status symbol of the ilu.strados in Spanish Philippines and a private library {the largC$t in Calamba). which con~isted of more than 1,000 volumes. They sent their children to the colleges in Manila. Combining affluence and culture, hospitality and courtesy, they participated prominently in all social and religious affain in the community. They were gracious hosts to all visitors and guC$tS - friars, Spanish officials, and Filipino friends - during the town fiestas and other holidays. Beneath their roof, all guests irrespective of their color, rank, social po,,ition, anc.1 economic status, were welcome . ff-e Ure or the Rluls. The Rizal family had a simple. contented, and happy life. In consonance with Filipino custom , family ties among the Rizals were intimately clos;:. Don Francisco and Doi\a Teodora loved their children, but they never spoiled I.hem. They were strict parents and they trained their children to love God, to behave well, to be obedient, and to respect people, especially the old folks. Whenever the children, including Jose Rizal, got into mischief, they were given a sound spanking. Evidently, they believed in the maxim: "Spare the rod and spoil lhc; child." 1 ,_IIIZAI. UN:.WO..q _ _ , a the Every day the Rizala (parents and children) hcud M• I da t~urch. ~n,cutarty during Sundays and Ouistian boli~ YI • •~r prayed together daily 11 ho the i:: - SUl\let and the RO&aey before ti . Angcl111 at family prayer,, •II the children :7sse~~~ohandsaotfrutb~t. After the . eu parents. Life was not however all lbe Rizal childre~ The • prayer, and church tcrviccs for lo pl y .,ere given ample lime and treedo . •y by their stnct and reliJious parents The I d .m ,n the tuoka or an the garden by themselves y.J:Yel memly .,e,e aUowed to pl;ay w11h the children of oth~r farru~::r one• Chapter 2 Childhood Years in Calamba •• ••• Jose Rizal had many b<;aulifut memories of childhood in htS native town. He grew up tn a happy home. ruled hy good parenu. bubbhng wtlh JO)', and unctified by Ood's blet111nr• H,. Mt~I town of Calamba. so named after a big native jar, .,a,a fiuini:cr.i die for a hero. Its 5':Cnic beauties and 111 mdustnous, hosp111blc, and fnendly folb imprened him during hit childhood yean and profoundly affected his mind and character The happiest period of Rizal's life .,,s spent m this lak.eshore town, a wort.by prelude to his Hamlet-like tragic manhood. Calamba, the Hero'• Town. Calamba wa an hacienda town which belonged to the Dominican Order, .,ltida alloowned all the lands arouad ii_ It tS a pteturesque town neatling Oft a verdant plain covered with irrigated ricefield:. and aupr-lands. A few kilomc1era to the south looms tbe legendary Mount Mak:iling tn 10mnoten1 grandeur, and beyond lh11 mountain II lhe province of Batansu. East of the town tS the Laauna de Bay. an utland lake of son~ and emerald waters beneath the canopy of uurewea In the rruddle of the lake towers the storied i~land ofTalim, and beyond ii towards the north is the distant Antipolo, famoiu mountain shrine o{ the miraculous Lady of Peace and Good Voyage. Rizal loved Calamba with all his bean and soul. In 1876, when he was 15 years old and was a 11udent m the Atcneo de Manila, he remembered his beloved town . Accordin&Jy, be wrote a poem Un R~cutrdo A Mt Pu~blo (In Memory of My Town). u follows: 1 When early chlldhoocl's happy days In memory I .ee once more • Alona 1hc lo-.ly verdan1 <hore 9 Ai. IIIZA&.1 U~I.-Q - " " " - Thill meets a acn1ly mum,una, sea· Wheo I recall the whisper 10f! ' Of Uphyrs dandn& dn my brow WltJi coobna n,ec1nea, e•en now New luxiout Ufe II bom ;11 me When I behold lbe lily while That sways to do Ille wind's command ' While 1ea1ly &lttplng on lhe Mnd Tbe stormy water rests awbllc • When from lbe tlowen there ~ breathes A bouquet ra"1shui,iy sweet, Out•poured lhc newborn dawn to meet Al on IIS she beafns to smile. ' With Udoe$$ I ttw!I . .. recall Thy fa«, 1n p - . i.ftfancy Oh mother, fnend ,iu,'10 me Who &••c 10 bfc a wondrous ch&rm• I Ye! recall a vtllaac plain, · My Joy, my family. my boon, B«ldes lbe fruhJy cool lagoon, The 'POI for •hich my hcan buts warm , Ah yes! my (00111eps insccu~ In your dark forests deeply sank; And !here by e,e,y river's bank I found rcfrcshmeni and dclraf,t W11hiA that CIISCIC temple prayed Wil h chlldlloocl'a simple faith unteia,,cd While coolin& breezes, pure, unstained Would send my heart on rapturous flight. I 11w lbe MaJcer ,n lhe grandeur Of your anaenr hoary wood Ah , never in your rcfuac ~fd A monal by regret be smiuen· And '"hilc upon your sty of biue f Ple , no love nor tenderness Could fail, for here on nal11tt's dress \fy happiness itself wu wrincn. Ah, tender childhOOd, lovel) io--n, Rich fount of my felicities, OIi tho.c harmon tous rndodics Wllkb pul to 01&h1 all dosmaJ hours Come back 10 my hcan once mottt' Olldhood Ye.,, In C._,.e CocDc beet, pile hours, I yeao,f Coote back u the birds return, At the buddln& of Ille ftowcn I Alas, fareweUI Eternal vigil I keep For thy peace , thy bli5S, and 1ranqv1l11y, 0 Geaius of JOO(I, to kind 1 Olve me~ alf1l, with charily. To thee are my fervent vo,111, To thee I eeue not 10 sigh Thctc to learn, and I call to the sky To have thy s1nccn1y Earliest CbUdhood Memorlft. The fi!'lil memory of R11al , in his infancy, was hia happy days in the family garden when he wa~ three years old. Because he wu a Crail. sickly. and undemied cluld, he was given the 1enderc,1 care b)' b, parent, "" father built a lillle mpa c,11tnKc ,n the p., ,k, ,r ' ,m ,., pl,1\ 111 1h, 1,,. time. A kind old woman was emplo)·ed a~ an oya (nur,;e m,ud) 1c, look. after his comfort. At time~. he was left alone 10 n,u,c llO the buutla of nature or to play by himself In h,~ boyhood mcmrnn. he narrated how he, 11 the age of 1hree watched from h•• r'<den 001ta1c, the culiauon, the mayo, the mono rap,a, the mamn the pipit, and other birds and listened "w11h wonder and JO) Ill 1hctr twllis)lt 10ngs. Another childhood memory wau the Ja,ly Anjlciu\ pra)cr B) nis)ltfall, Rizal related, his mother gathered .ii 1he children a1 the hoUJC to pray the Angelus. With nostalgic feeling, he al~ 1emembered 1hc happy moonlit The ova rela1cd 10 the R.iz.al children (including Jose) many stones 1hou1 the fame, tale~ of buried treasure and trees bloommg with diamond~. and other fabulous stories. The Imaginary tal~ told by the ayn amu,cil 111 Rizal an enduring interest 1n legends and folklore Sometime, , when be did not hke 10 take his supper, the aya wou.ld threaten h,m that the osuang, the nuno, the nxbolong, or a 1emble bearded and turbaned Bombay would come 10 take him away 1f he would not eat his ,upper. nigb1111 tbeazolra a.her the nightly Rosary Another memory of his in(aney was the nocturnal "'alk ,n the town. especially when there was a moon . The aya took. him for a walk in the mooalight by the nver, where the trees cast yotcsque 10 II ~ Y t 1 r 1 l n C....... shadows on tbe bank. Recounting this childhood e~rience in bis student memoirs, Rizal wrote; "Thua my heart fed on sombre and melancholic thoughts so that even while still a child, I already wandered on wings of fantasy in the higb regions of the unknown. ~z The Bero•, Flnt S011ow. The Rizal children were bound rogcther by !let of love and companionship. They were well-bred for their parents taught them to love and help one another. ' Of his sisters, Jose loved most the little Concha (Coocepeioo). He was a year older than Concha. He played with her and from ber he learned the swetrr•ess of sisterly love. unfortunately, Concha died ofsick.ness in 186~ when she wu only three years old. Jose, who wna "cry food of her, cried bitterly at IOS1.ng her. "Whe n I wu four years old," he said, •110111 my little mte, ~nc~and then for tbe fint time I shed tears caused by love and gnef. . The death of little Concha brought him his tint sorrow. ~oted Soa ot die Claurdi. A scion of a Catholic clan bon, and bred in a wholesome atmosphere of Catholicism. a n d ~ ,cd of an mbom pioua 'f)lrlt , Rizal grew up a good Catholic. •ae At the of three, be began to take part in the family prayers. Hit mother, who wu a devout C.thohc, 1augh1 him the Catholic prayers. When he wu five years old be was able to read haltingly the Spanish family Bible. ' He loved to go to church, to pray, to take part in novenas and to jom the religious procession,, It is said that he was so se~usly devout that he was laugbin,:Jy called Monong Jose by the Hrrmmios and Hr"'"4114S Tt1rct1r1U, One of the men he esteemed and respected in Calamba during h1, boyhood was the scholarly father Leoncio Lopez, the tnwn pnt-•I He used 10 ~1 this leam«.d Filipino rnest and lisien to his s~mulating opinion, on a•rr:nt e vents and sound phil0<0phy of h!c. ~ le Andpolo. On June 6, 1868, Jose and bi, father left Calamba to go on a pilgrimage 10 Antipolo, in order to fulfill lus mother's vow which was made when Jose wu born. Dofta Teodora oould not aca>mpany them beca111C she had '"Ven birth to Trinidad. .. IJ. the ft was first trip of Jose across La,guna de Bay and his first pilgrimage to Antipolo. He and his father~ in a C4JCO (bar&e) He was thrilled, as a typical boy should, by h~ first lake voyage. ~e did not sleep the whole night as the C4JCO ~ed towards the Pas1g River because he was awed by "the mag111ficence of the watery expanse and the silence of the night.~ Writing many yean l~ter of this e,rpcrience, he said: "With what pleasure I saw theSU;Dnsc; for the first time 1 saw how the lwninom raysshone, producing• bril• Jiant effect on the ruffled surface of the wide lake.•• After praying al the shrine of the V!rgin of Antipolo, Jose ~nd his father went 10 Manila It was the first time fosc saw Marnia. They visited Saturnina, who was then a boarding student 11 La Concordia College in Santa Ana ~ Story of the Moth. Of the stories told by Dofia Teodora to her favorite son. JO'IC , chat of the young moth made the profoundest impression on lum. Speaking of this incident, Rizal wrote:~ One night , all the fanuly, except my mother and myself, ,.enl 10 bed early Why, I do not know, bul we two rem1111ed siltini •looe The candles had already been put out. They had been blown out lll their globes by means of a curved tube of ltn. n,a1 tube seemed to me the finest and most wonderful plaything in IM world The rrom was dimly hghted ~ya 51ngle lighl of coconut oil. In all Filipino homes suc;h a hght burns through the night It goes out just at day-break 10 a..-aken people by its 1plullering. My mother was 1eaclung me to read in a l>panish read~r called "'The Children's Fnend" (El Amigo de los Nuio1). This wa.• quite a rare book and an old oopy. It had lost its cover and my sister bad cleverly made a new one. She had fastened a sheet of thick blue paper over the back and then covcr,cd II wilh a piece of cloth This night my mother t:>ccamc 1mpaOcn1with hearing me ,e..d so poorly . I did not understand Spanish and so I co_uld not read with cxpr=n. Site took the book from me Fu-st site scolded me for draw,ng funny pictures on tta pages ,:i,en she told me 10 listen and she began 10 read. When her $1g)tl was good, she read very well. She could recite well. an~ she undcrSlood vcrsc-malung 100 Many times dunn& Chnstmas vacations, my mother co~e<:ted my poetical compcsitioas, and she always made valuable cnllcisms. 13 ~ l llstened to be1-, fuU of dilldish enthllliasm. I maNellcd ruce-tOUnding phrases wblcb abe read from thole pageg. The pllruea abe read 10 easily stopped me a1 every breath. Perhape I grew lircd or listening to sounds that had no m~an!na for ~ · Pethapt I lacked sell-control. Anyway, I pa,d little attenbon to tbe ·readina. I was walebina the checmd It the !lame. About it, aome little moths were circlina in playful Oi&hts. By chance, too, 1 yawned My molher soon noclcod that I was not interested. She &topped readin1. Then lhe Mid 10 "I am going to read you a very pretty story. Now pay me: anention" • On hearing the word 'story' I at once opened my eye, wide. The w(Jf)l 'story' promised somelhmg new and wonder• ful. I watched my mother whi~ she turned the leaves of the book, as 1f she were looking for 10melhing. Then I settled down to listen. I was full of curiosity and wonder. J had never even dreamed that there were stones in the old book wbicJ, I read without understanding. My mo1her began 10 read me the Cable of the young moth and the old ooe. She translated it into Tagalog a little at a time. My attenuon increased from the first sentence. l lookecl toward the light and fixed my gaze on the moths which were circling around it. The story coukl nol have bq:n belier limed. My .mother repeated the warning of the old moth. She dwelt u~n II and directed ii to me. I heard her, buâ–º it is a curious thing 1ha1 the light seemed to me each time more beautiful, ~ flame more attractive. I really envied ,the fortune or the 1nâ–ºect1. They frolicked so ,oyously m its enchantlng splendor that the ones which had fallen and been drowned in the oil did not cause me any dread. • 14 My mother kept on reading and I hstened breathlessly. The fa!e of the two insects m1cres1ed me greatly. The flame rolled 11, golden tongue to one side and a moth which lhis movement had sJnged fell into the oil, fluttered for a tlme and then became quiet That became for me a great event. A curious change came over me which I have always noticed in myself whenever anytlung has stirred my feelings. The flame and the moth seemed 10 go farther away and my mother's words sounded strange and uncanny. I <lid not notice when she ended the fable. All my attention was fixed on the face of the insect. I watched it with my whole liOUJ, •• It had died a martyr 10 its 1Uusions. y_,. In C,t_.. As Ille put - to bed, my mother said: "See that you do not behave like Ibo )'Ollllt modi. Don't bedlsobedlent,or you may set burnt u it did." I do 001 know whether I answered or not .•. The story revealed to me things until then unknown. Mod1s no longer were, for me, insignificant iM<:Ct1. Moths talked; they knew how to warn. They advised just liked my mother. The light seemed 10 me more beautiful. It bad grown 'more danllng and more attractive. I knew why lhe moths dr- ded the Ila.me. The tragic fate of the young moth, which "died a martyr to its illusions ," left a deep impress on Rizal's mind. He justified such noble death, asserting that "to sacrifice one's life for it." meaning for an ideal, is "worthwhile." And, like that young moth, he was fated to die u ·a martyr for• noble ideal. Artlsd.c Taleots. Since early childhood Rizal revealed his God-given talent for art. At the age or five, he began 10 make sketches with his pencil and to mould in clay and wax object~ which attracted bis fancy. It is said that one day, when Jose was a mere boy in Calamba, a religious banner which was always used during the fiesta was spoile<I. Upon the request of the town mayor, he painted in oil col• ors a new banner that delighted the town folks because 11 was better than the original one. Jose had the soul of a genuine artist. R.ather an mtroven child, with a skinny physique and sad dark eyes, he found great joy looking at the blooming flowers, the ripening fruits, the dancing waves of the lake, and the milky clouds in the sky; and listening 10 the sonp of the birds, the chirping, of the cicadas, and the murmunngs of the breez.es. He loved to ride on a spirited pony which his father bought for him and take long walks in the meadows and lakeshore with his black dog named Usman. One interesting anecdote about RIZal was the mc1dent about his clay and Wall images. One day when he was about six years old bis sisters laughed at him for spending so much time making those images rather than participating in their games. He kept 51lent as they laughed with childish glee. But as they were departing, he told them: "All right laugh at me now! Someday when 1die, pe1>ple will m,lt:e monuments and images of me!" IS . - IIIIAL: Ul'I.-QMDWIIITINa Ftnt Pona by R.bal. Aside from his ~tching and IClllpruring talent, Rizal poaessed a God-given gi_ft ror literature. Since early boyhood he had saibbled vcl'SCS on loose sheets of paper and on the textbooks of his &ilten. Hu mother, who was a lover of literature, noticed his poetic: inclination and eocouraxed him to write poetry. At lhe age of eignt, Rizal wrote bis first poem iD the native language entitled Sa Alcing Mga Kababata (To My Fellow Children), as follows: 6 TO MY FELLOW CHILDREN Whenever people of a country truly IM1e The lan1uage which by hcav'n they were taught to use That country also surely libeny pursue A& docs the bird which soars 10 freer space above. For language Is the final judge and referee Upon the p,:ople in the land where it bolds sway; In truth our human race resembles in this way The other l,ving beings born in libcny. Wboevrr knows not how to IM1e lus rumvc tongue Is worse than any beast or evil smelling fish. To make out language richer ought to be outi wish The Slime as any mother love• 10 feed her )'Qung. Tagaloe and the utin language arc the same Aod English and Castiban and the angels' tongue; And Ood, who&e watchful care o'er aU 1s flung, Hu given ua His blessing in the apeccb we claim, Our mother tongue, like all the hi~hc51 1h11 we know Had alphabet and letters or its very own; But tllCM: were lost - by furious waves were overthrown Like bancu in the stormy sea. long years ago. This poem reveals Rizal's earlic5t nationalist sentiment. In poetic verses, he proudly proclaimed that a people who truly love their native language will surely ~trive for libeny like "the bird which 50nn, to freer ~pace above" and that Tagalog is the equal of Latin. English, Spanish, and any other language. First Orama by Rizal. After writing the poem To My F~llow Children, Rizal, who was then eight years old, wrote his first dramatic work wh,c:h was a Tagalog comedy. It is said that it Chlldlood YNn tn C.. . . - aged in a Calamba fwival and by the audience. wu delightfully applauded A gobemadorcillo from Paete, a town in l..agunJI famo111 for lanzones and woodcarvings, happened to witnea the comedy and liked It so much that be purchased the manuscript for ~o pesos and brought it to his home town It was 111gcd In Paete during ita town 6es11. lllzll u Boy Ml&f,dan, Since early manhood Rizal had been interested in magic. With his deirterous hands, he learned various tricks, such as making a coin appear or disappear ill his fingcr1 and making a handkerchief vanish in thin air. He entertained Ins town folks with magic-lantern exhibitions This consisted or an ordinary lamp casting its shadow on a while screen. He twisted his supple fingers into fanwtic: $lulpe>, making tbcit enlarged shadows on the 111:fcen resemble certain animals and persons. He also gained skill in manipulating manoncttcs (puppet shows). In later years when he attained manhood, he continued hia keen predilection for magic. He read many books on magic and attended the pcrformanocs of the famous magicians o( the ,rortd. In Chapter XVIT and XVITI of his $e00nd novel, El Filibus~rismo (Treason), be revealed his wide knowledge of magic:. Lalleshore Reveries. During tbe twilight hours of summertime Rizal, accompanied by his pct dog, used to meditate at the shore of Laguna de Bay on the sad conditions of his oppressed people. Years later, he related· 7 1 spent ma_ny. many hours of my chUdhood down oo the wore ur the lake, Laguna de Bay. I was thinking or what was beyond I wu dreamina of wha1 migh1 be over on the other side of the waves. Almost every day, in out 1own, we saw the Guardia Civil lieutenant ca111Dg and tnjur• ing some unarmed and inoffensive villagers. The villager'• only fault was that v.'hilc at a dimincc he had not taken off hi• h•1 and made his bow. The alcalde 1re111cd lhc pour villagers in the same way whenever he v,\ited us We saw no restrain I put upon brutality Acts of violence and other excesses were commined daily ... I asked mysetr ir, m the lands which lay across the lalr.c, the people lived in this iame way. I wondered if there they tortured any countryman with hard and cruel whl!)I merely on suspi.cioa. 16 17 ,._. IUZM.sLIA.. WOIIU.,_MWI Did llwy 1hett rctpeet the home' Or e•er yo,idcr abo, 111 «der 10 Ii~ in peace, - I d "~ ha•c to hnt--c l}ran11? Youag though be wa,, be ,nncd deeply O\'er the unhappy t.lluauon of bis beloved fathcrbnd . "The Sptndh m1tcleeds â– 1"11ke11cd 1n his boyish hcan a great detennma11on 10 fight tyranny. When he became I man , many ycan later, he wroce lo his friend, Mariaon Ponce: "ln new or thne 1nJtutica and crw:hiea, al1houg)I ye1 a child, my •~n.lllOl'I . . . a..nkrnNI and I m.ide a vow dedicaung my.elf aomcday to avenge the many vi<:ttms. With this ,<lea in my mmd, I 11u,hcd, and this is seen 10 aU my "nungs Someday God ..;11 pvt me the opponuni1y to fulfill my promise.•• ,an- OD tllc Here's loyl,ood , Qn lhc nigbl Jo..e R11 al WR\ born, other children were bom in Cal.omb.t and bunJreds of other duldrcn were abo hom all o•cr the Ph1hppmc., Bui ""hY ia 11 •hat ou1 ol all these children, only one t>oy - JOS F. RIZAi - row 10 fame and grca1ne1o01 In the hve~ of all men there arc influena:5 "'hi<h ciutc 60m ' • be r-c,11 and Olh<-B nol In lhc ca~ of Rizal , he had all th.. fa, " olc influences [e,,, (!\her children m h1\ time enjoyed The>< 1nflucncr, ,.rrc the following. (I) hercd11arv 1nflucncc, (2) eJw1ronmcn1al mflucncc, and (J) 111d l>Mne Providence. I Hc,cJ>••" lnOIKll<.c. Ae00rd1ng It} b1olog1c.il .c1cncc, there arc anherc111 qu.1l11ies whu:h 1t pcnon lnberiu lr,,m his anc:ctor. and par,·nts. From his Mttlâ– yan ancc.stor,, Ri,.11 , ev1 dcntly, mhc:nr~J I lo,e freedom, h11 inn.tic: de\lre to ir.a,el, and hts indo1111~ I.: wu,age Frnm 1,, C"n1nesc an.:~1on. he demcd hi< ~noui nature r" ,.111,. r,i11encc, and lo,e lur children hom h1• SpJmsh .mcc:,to", he got h.- deganl'I, of be:mng, <en'111'1t) to 1n,uh, and galljnlry 10 lad,,·, fr ,m ~i, fathu, he ,nheritcu a profound oen\C or Kif rC'$f'Cct , the 111,c or ,.ork, and the habtt of 1ndc~n<lcn1 thinkin~ And from h11 mother, he ,nlltntcd hi> 1cl1g1ou, nature the )p1m uf self-,;;ic, rifice, 11nd the p.i ion for arts and htenturc. ,,f 1,,. 2 En\lronmental l nflucoor· Aa:ord,ng to fl')<holog"" · nvuoruncnt. b ,.ell as hcrc<l1ty, affects the nature of 11 ptl'\On ~ronmcntal influence include, places, a,sociatcs, and event\ n1c beauiles of C:al.mba and the beautiful garden of th< Raal famil lllimulatcd the mbom â– ro,11c an<I htcrary taknts ,f ......., y..,__ ,....,..... ~ r e at bb home fon,r" i ..s Joae ,.._ '"" re.._--r· • b' mind 1he ,cij . us n.1turc. llis brother• Pacuno, instJllcd m 11 freedom and Jl.lltlKC From his mien, he kamcd to t,e COIIJtCOIIS and kind to women. The fairy tales 11,IJ by h ~ o,a chariQ& his early childh->Od awakened bb interest an foll.tore and 1ov!':.: le,endl. His three uncles, bfotbcn .,f hi\ mothtr, exerted • r·•.<l influence on him . T,o J()1,c Alberto , who had Mud1cd for .-ll">cn '-'- - ~ - - j l'-•-·tta India and had ua,cicd ,n years ID a Bnt_,-"" 111 Earope impirNI bim tn dcYclop bis art:SIIC abilit) Tw M~nuc,, a buaky and athktic mnn, cncourogcd h1rn to ti, ,elop hi< lra,I body by means of phyt,1cal e,c-r~,:scs, 111dud1ni: horse 11ding. walkin&, and ..,,~,tling. And lio Orcgorlo, a book k1'cr • mtcn• lific,cl his vor~ reading <lf good t,oou Fathc,r 1 ~nn.-io l ~ r the ois1 and lc:arnccl pan<.h J'f" ' · •f Calamba. footercd RiU\I'~ love for ,rh<lla1,h1p and ,n1clle,1ual -u • · lloo,csty. The '°"o"" ,n h1\ family, &u,11 as the dc'•th 01 l'unc'i 1165 and the impnsonmc:nt of his mother m 11171 7-1, contn , to 1tren111h~n h1> character' cn0Mm1 him ,., adversity '" later years rhe Spam.la abuse,, anJ ,iucluc>" __ ..,., h ..__ hood ,ucti a the br'u1al acts 01 ,c.,,'. h~,1w;, °' ,n -d o~ ,r,e M Wit...,_.. in 1$ •~J ' bide h ~• wr• ·-• licuttnant the, Guaid1a a,il and the a • • t c UnJ r 1 inflicted on innocent Filipinos , and the cxrcuuon of al ' r~ Gomez Burgo,. and 7-..amora Ill 11172, av.•alccncd h"' 0 pat~ d ~spired him 10 consecrate hts hk and tak "I""' ' ,ed,,eal bi< "Pl'fcsscd reople d J Aid of Divine 1'1M1dcncc. Grc11tcr th,m hcred11y an . h f nl man 1$ the a,d of I hVIOl' 1'11tYhk1trc. cnv11nn"1er,1 m t c ate Ith a J A m ' have cYCl'}th1ng m hie - hraln\ , v,ca ' n b<it ...~lhoul the ;ud of 01v,nc ProYldellCC, he ann<•I ..- .. f I u Runl ,. •• prn-.,k11atlâ– ln grcatncs , in the 11J11tah o I ie 1111 ' 11 · • 1h d ttally dcsttncd to he the l'"d,· anti glory or h1~ n~unn C"" • codowed him ..;th the ,cr~tilc gifti, of a i;cnnn, the Y1l>rnnt . of ,,___ ,:., and the va!lant bean to .:icnf1cc I ,r a 1p111t a naUV1....... , ...,.!':~ ,oblc câ– UK. .. . . ,. " Chapter 3 Early Education in Calamba and Biiian Ra&I had h,a tarly edua11t0n 10 C'.awnba and Billan, It 1ypicnl ~hoahna lhat a 11>n of an dustrado faauly received durin, his lune, , han.:1enuJ by lhe four R·, - readina, wn11n1, anthmehc, and rd,g,on. ln<trua,on wu npd and 11.rict Kno,,,. ~ was furccd 1n10 lhe m,nda of the pupds by means or the ledn11 memory me1hoJ aided by 1he teacher·, 1rb1p. Dcapite I.be defect. of 1hc ~nish ,yscnn of elementary cducalloO, Rizal WlL\ able to ac4wre the ncceSSMy IIUll'UClJOD preparatory for roUcac ..ork ,n Manila and abroad . It may be aaid that Riz.al, who •as horn a phyucal wc,klin&, l'Ole to bttome an in1ellectu.J pnl not because of. bur r•ther an spite of, the outmoded and l•ad.•ard 1y.icm of 1m1ruct,on obt11run1 in the Philippines duruaa 1hc l,m dcndcs of ~r..mlh rea,me . 11 TIie Hn-o'• '1nt Tuch«. The fin1 te1thcr o l R.iul •as his mother. ,. ho wa, a re mar~ able '"'OIDIR o f good charac1er and fine rul1urc. On bu lap, he lc,i ned a1 the of three the 1lphal>c1 a nd lhc pr â– ycn " \fy mother;· wrote RiuJ in h11 s1uckn1 mcmoir1, -11u1h1 nic ho• 10 reA<I and to uy Mllln&Jy the humble praycr1 11,hich I raucd fervently to God ." 1 ace As a 1u1or, Dona Teodora •as pdticot , 000llC1enhous, and und(omanding It wa, 1he who fint duco,,ered that bcr M>R had a Wcnl for poc-try. Accordingly, ahc encouraged htm 10 wmte poem~ ro lighten th,- monotony of mernortlln& the ABCs and to ltunul.tte her too·, 1mag,na1ion, she related m,ny stories AA Jaee grew older, h&a parents employed pnvate tutors to him leNOna II home , The f111t wu N~tro Cclcall.DO aod the lellOlld Mourro Luc:u Padua. Later, an Old man named Leon Mon~y, a former claam,t~ of Rizal's father. became Ilic boy'a tutor. ThiJ old teacher Uvcd at the Rlul borne and ,rutructcd JOIC ,n Spenilh and Lattn U11fortunatc:ly, he did not hve Iona. He died 6ve months later. After Monroy's death, the hero's parenu dcadcd to ICfld their &Jfted aon 10 a pnvate achoo! 1n 811\an , J - c;o. 1o 816u. One Sunday afternoon 1n Ju:ie, 1869, tc,ae after ki11ina the hinds of hi• partnll •nd • tearful p,rting fro~ htl 11stef1, left Cal,mb• for 811\an He •Ill ac:rompanied by Paciano, who acted u ~" ,ccond father The two brothers rode in a carrom,11, rcacluna their ck-\t,n,tmn after one and one-half hour1' drive , They proceeded to their aunt'â– house, 11,here JOk -wu to lodac . It •u a1molt n1gbt whc:n tbcy amvcd, •~d the moon was about to n11e. That omc maht , J01e , ..,th h11 cou"? named l..c:•ndro, wmt sialttsccin1 ,n the town Instead of enJoyma the 1iahts, Joac beame deprcMed bccaUJe of h o m ~ In the MOOnhght ,• he recounted , "I remembered my home town my idoltrcd mother. and my aoltcitOUI llltCl"I Ab, how ,,..r,t I l1IC was Calamba, my own town, m spite of the fact, that it was not u •calthy u B,ftan ,.., nnc Dey In lllllu School. The ne•t mornm1 (Monday Pac11no brouaht hn younacr brother to the h. ,ol , of ltlomro Ju,tiniano Aquino Cruz , ,.-,,,ch The school was ,n the hoir.-e of the teacher, w-» a mall mpa hut about 30 metcrj from the home of Jose's aunt Pae1,no knew the teacher quuc well bccau1e he had been 1 pupil under tum before He 1n1roduced Jose 10 lhc lca(bcr, after v.hich he deraned to return to Calambl tmmed,,,ttly . Jo<c was au,,ncd his ..ear •n the clau The 1uchcr asked him -oo you kno" Spantw?· -.., httle , sir," replied the Calambl lad . -Do you know Laun?" -A bttk \'Ir ,• 21 brty fauallon If\ C.. .-nbei Arid tm1a, The boy~ in the class esp · II p laughed al J=•'s , coa y edro, Ille lc&cher's son ~ answers. • The teacher sharply Sto d • ppe a11 noise and began the lessons or the day Jo.c described lus teacher 111 B .. tall, thin, long-necked with t,_ man as follows: ..He was bent• forward, and he ~cd tou; nrp .n~c and a . body slightly t~e skilled hands o( the women e:~ 8 smamay shin. woven by the grammars by Nebrija and G~mZ.:'a;~~s. He ~new by hean that in my judgment was exa · to this his severity, ~rhaps vague . that I have andbyoul have picture, 1h11 " •m. UI remember only m~C:~:t•- a First School Brawl . In the af1e f h· when the teacher was having htS sie'::::°; o is fi~t day in school, He was angry at this bull fo • ooe met t e bully , Pedro. conversallon \Jlilh the teacte r mhakmg f~n of him during his r m I e mommg. Jose challenged Pedro 10 a figh . 1 1 Th 1 il · e auer readily accepted thinking that he co Id u eu Y beat the Calamba bo b ' smaller and younger Y w o was The two boys wrestled furiousl 111 . h the glee of their cla~~motcs. Jo~ Y ~ e classroom, much to wrestling fmm his athletic 7:11 M • ~vmg, learned the art of For this feat he ·bee ' anue defeated the bigger boy • ame popular among his classmnrcs · After the class in the afternoon · Salandanan challenged hi • a c1bsma1e named Andres wen, lo .a sadcwan. or a : ,u an darm-wrestling match They ouse an wrestled with lhe1r arms, Jose, ha,ing the wcalc on the sidewalk er arm, lu,t " nd oedrly crack,;d his head In succeeding days h • h 3 d 01 h . c er frghr, wllh the hoys of . . f l'_S nt)l quarrcl,ome 1-.v na1ure t>u1 he never ran a\Jlay rom " f1gh1. · ' B1nan lie w , P1dnllng L<"-'ons In Dinan Near 1h .. of an old paim~r called Jua · e s.: hool "as 1he house 'n~hu, who wa, lhc tn1hcr-111-ldw o f the school tea •h • J c er ose, lured by his lov, fo • many leisure hours 31 the painter's st d"0 ' painting, spent gave him lesson~ 111 drawin d ~ • d Juancho freely I the ams11c talent of the c:i~;b:;~~ung. He was impressed by o/ l2 Jose and his classmate, Jose Guevarra, who also loved painting, became apprentices of the old painter They 1mpmved their art, so that in due time they ~ came ~,he favori1e painters of tbe class". Dally Ufe ID BUian. Jose led a methodical life ,n Biilan, almos1 Spa nan in simplicity. Such a hfe contributed much 10 his future developmcn1. It s1rengthencd his body and 10ul. Speaking of his daily life in Bij\an, he recorded m hr memoirs:' Here was my life. I heard the four o'clock Mils.\ , if there was any, or I Jtudted my les;wn a1 1ha1 hour and I wcnl 10 Mass afteiwards I returned home and I wcn1 10 1he orchard co look for a mabolo to est. Then I took breakfast, which consisted generally or a dish of rice and iwo dried ,mall fuh. and I went 10 clas.\ rrom whkh I came out at ten o'clock. I went home at once. If there was some $f>Ccial cfulh, Leandro and I took .ome or 11 to the hou,e or his children (which I nc, er did at home nor would I ever do it). and l rc1urned without saytog a word. I ale with them and afterwards I etudlcd, I went 10 school at two and came out at five. I prayed a short while wirh '°me nice cousins and I returned home. I studied my lesson. I drew a little, and artcrwatds I 1001< my 1upp¢r conshtong uf on, or' two dishes of rice with an ayungin. We prayed and 11 lhcrc was a moon, my nieces invited me 10 play in 1hc street 1ogcther whh othcn. Thank God that I never got ,ic~ away from my parcnu lat Stlldenl bl Sdlool. In academic studies. Jo,.,, beat nil Bidan boys. He ~urpasscd them all in Spant~h, l..atin. and other subjects. Some of his older classmates were 1ealous of his ,n1ellcctual superiority. They wickedly squealed 10 lhe teacher whenever Jose had a fight outside the school, and even told lies 10 d1~crcd11 him before the teacher's eyes. Consequently the teacher had to punish Jose. Thus Rizal said that ~in spite of the repu1auon I bad of being a good boy, the day was unusual when I wa not laid ou1 on a bench and given five or ~ix blows."' Ead ol Blian Sc:hoolJnc. Before the Christma& se~n in 1870, Jose received a letter from his sister Saturnina, inform him ,,r lhc am,JI of the steamer Tal,m which would talc him from 1311\an to Calamba Upon readina the letter, he bad a ;,rcmon111on 1ha1 he "-0uld not return to Binan, so that he became -.aJ I Ir pra, ·cJ in the town church, collected pebbles in the n,cr for ,<'u,cmr,, and regretfully bade fare"'ell 10 h,, teacher nod dJssmatcs. lie left Binan on Saturday afternoon. December 17, 1870, after one )car and a half schooling in that town He was lhnlkJ 1<1 lake P·•~•agc un 1he ,teamer fa/1m, for II wu the ,,r 11m,· he cwr rode oo a .icamer On board was a Frenchman named Arturo Campo, a fncnd of bu father, who rook care of him ft11,1 Ma, l)rdom of Gom•Bur-Za. On the n1gh1 of January 20 1872, .,hour ~no hhpmo 1old1cr, ,md v.orkmcn of the Cavit~ ar.rna! uno,•r the lcadcr\htp of I .amadr1d, F1hpmo q,raeant, rose tn \lolcnt mutJny t>c,·au~ c,f the abolition of their usual privileges. 111clt1<h11M c,cmp11on from tnbute and polo (forced labor) by the tt•aum11,lr) C,ovcrnur Rafael Jc 17qui~rJo Unfortunately this Ca\ltc \1uuny was ,uppre«~eJ 1v.o da), Iller by troop reinforce• mCJ>I~ lru\11 MJnil I~ Spannh 1uthon11es. ,n order 10 hqwdatc fatht-,, \l.111 ,nn Cw,ncz, Jose Burgos, und Jacinto Zamora, lcadc1' ol the ,c,ulur m.1vcmcnl 10 F1hp1niic the Philippine par ,he,, .1nJ thc11 ,upportcrs (J~ Ma Bua, Attorneys Joaquin l'.11'10 ..., I u•cra •nJ ,\nton,o Ma , Rc111dor. etc.) magnified the failed n ut,ny into a 'rc,olt" for Ph1hpp1ne independence. A,-cmJlnglv Onm-Bur•Zo (Gomez, Burgos, 1111d Zamora), de..p11 ... th, archh1,hop's pica for clcmen,-,, bc<:ausc of their 1n110<.se..,.c. ~re executed at ,unnse, February 17. 18n, by order Oou·111,11 General Izquierdo Their m11nyrdom was dccplv mourn~d hy 1he R11.il family and many other patriotic families 1t1 !he l'h,hppmc~ 01 l'ao.1nu. C"lfa~,J h\ the execuuon of Burgos, his beloved ii'tend t,.•n,h<.'r dnJ houi,cm~te, gull h,, ,tud1cs at the College of S~n Jo,r and rrturned 10 Calamba. where he told the heroic stDr)' ul lluri;o, to younger hrother Jose, "'ho was then nearly tie""" v,•.1f'I ,,Id h,, 1h, mart)rJom of Oom-Bur-Za m 111n truly in1pired Rizal to h11l11 th,· evil, uf Spani,h tyranny and redeem his oppressed }A people. Seventeen yean later, in hi~ le!ter written In Paris, April 18, 1889, to Mariano Ponce , he ,aid: Without 1872 there would nol be now either a Plandcl or Jaena. or Sanoangco. nor would there cmt brave and acnerous F,hplno colonies ,n £uropc; Without 1872 Rizal would be a Je•u•I now and, ln>1ead of writing Nol, Mt Tongttt. would have wnuen the opposite At the sl&ht or 11,ote ,n1u,ticc• and cruelt,u ,.,h,lc ltdl a cluld my 1rna11na• t,on was awakened and I iv.ore to devote myself 10 avensc one day so many victim, and w,lh this Idea In m111d I have Ileen s1udyina, and thia can be read 1n all my works and wnt,np God v.lll someday ,,.e me an oppomimty to carry out my promise " And later, m 1891, he dedicated his second novel, El Fil/bus• 1ulsmo, 10 Gom Bur-Za. lJIJustk:e to Huo'• Moeller. Before June of 1872, tragedy struck the R1Lal family. Do"• Teodora was suddenly arrested on a malicious charge 1ha1 she and her brother, Jose Alberto , tned 10 pooon the laner·s perfidious wife Jose Alberto. a nch Binan ilu,trado . had 1ust re1urned from a business tnp 1n Europe. Dunna h1~ ablence his wife abandoned their ~ome and children. When he arrived m Biilan, he found her hv11,1a w11h another man lnfunated by her Infidelity, he planned to divorce her. Doll• Teodora, 10 avert family scandal, penuadcd him 10 forpve his wife The family trouble was amicably sen led. and Jose Alberto lived again with his wi{e. However, the evil wifo, with the c()nnivance of the Spanl5h lieutenant of the Guardia Civil, filed a case in court acc:u1mg her hu\b&nd and Doila Teodora of attcmptJng to poison her Tots lieutenant happened to have an ax 10 grind against the Rizal family. because at one time Don Francisco (Rlz.al's father) rcfu-.cd 10 give him fodder for his horse Taking the opportunity to a,cnge htm~lf. he arrested Don_ • Te~ora, with the help of Calamha's gohrrnadorcillo, Antoruo V1vcnc,o del Rosario, a menial or the fr1ars These two ungrateful men had been frequent &ue,1• at the Rini home After arrntmg Ooila Teodora, the sadistic Spanish lieutcn• ant forced her 10 walk from Calamba to Santa Crui; (capital of Laguna Province), a distance of 50 kllomcten. Upon arrival In lS , _ IIIZAL: LIPI. WOfllCI MD Wlll'lWIGI Santa Cru_z, she was incarcerated at the provincial prison, where she (ang~ushed for two years and a half until the Manila Ro al Aud1tnaa (Supreme Court} acquitted her of the alleged crime. y Riz ~e~u~tin~ this incidence of his mother's imprisonment a sa,d in his student memoirs: "Our mother was un·ustl ' sna,ched a"'.ay from us and by whom? By some men wb~ ha~ been our fnends and whom we treated as honored guests We learned · aa uum us and at d dlater that our mother got sick , far ,_ a vance . age. My mother was defended by Messrs. Francisco de Marcaida and Manuel Marzan , the most famous lawyers of Man,la. She fin_aUy succeeded to be acquitted and vindicated in thhc eyes of her Judges, accusers, and even her enemies but after ow long? After two and a hair years. •7 ' . . ... . Chapter 4 Scholastic Triumphs at Ateneo de Manila (1872-1877) Four months after the mortyrdom of Gorn Bur Zu and wtth Doiia Teodora still in prison, Jose. who had not yet relehratcd his eleventh birthday, was sent to Manila. He studied m the Atenco Municipal, a college under the supel" ,s,on of the Span"h Jesuits. 1llis college was a bitter rival of the Domm,can-owncd College of San Juan de Letran . It was formerly the Elrnd,1 1•,., (Charity School) a school for poor boys ,n ManilJ \\ hi<.:h wa, established by the c:1ty government m 1817. Wh,:n the k,un,. who bad been expelled from the Philippines m 176K. rcturned to Manila in 1859, they were given the management of the &cut/a Pia, whose name was changed to Atmto Mu111r1plll, :ind later became the Ateneo de Manila They were splendid educators, so that Ateneo acquired presiigc as an c,cdh!nt oollcgc for boys. Rizal Enters the Ateneo. On June 10, 1872 Jose. ,1e•,,1mpJn1ed by Paciano, went to Manila He took the entrance cum m,11i 11n, on Christian doctrine, arithmetic, and reading al the ColkKC ot San Juan de Letran , and passed them. He returned I<> Cal,,mb:, to stay a few days with his family and to attend the In" n r,c,1., His father, who first wished him 10 stud) at Lc1r.in ch.111µc,I his mind and decided 10 send him 10 Atcnco ins1c.1tl Thus. upon his return to Mantia. Jose. a~ain .,cc,,,ur,111,nt by Paciano, matriculat~d at the Atenco MunidpJI ,\t 111,1, Father Magin Ferrando, who was the college rcr1,1r,11 rdu,cJ to admit him for two reasons: (J) he wa, late Im rcci,1n, 1iu11 and (2) be was sickly and undersized for his age . R11.,1I w:i, 1hcn eleven years old. Huwevcr. upon the intcrcc~slon o l MJnuel 27 Xuez Burgos, nephew of Father Burgos, he was reluctantly admitted at 1he Ateneo. Jo;i«' was the first ~r his family to adopt the surname "Rizal. .. He registered under this name at the Ateneo because their family name ~~ercado" had come under the suspicion of 1he Spanish au1hon11es. Paciano had used "Mercado" as his surname at the College of Son Jo'le and he was known 10 the au1honties as Father Burgos' favorite studenr and confidant. Ar the time Jose studied in the Ateneo, 1his collcae w~s located i_n Intramuros, wnhin the walls of Manila. He first ~arded, in a hou~e oursidt ln1ramuros, on Caraballo Street, 25 minute~ walk from the colleae. This hoarding house was owned by a spinster named T1tay who owed the Rizal family the amount of P300 Jose boarded wnh her in order 10 collect pan of 1he debt. Jesuit System of Education. The system of education given by the Jesuits ,_n lhe Ateneo was more advanced than that of other college~ in. 1ha1. period. It trained the character of rhe st ud~nt by ng1d d1sophne and religious instruction. rt promoted physical_ culture. hum~nitics, and scientific studies. Aside from academic co~rscs leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts it offered vo~a11onal courses in agriculture, commerce. mcch a.n d surveying. an cs, i :he _\luden'.s heard ~as\ in the morning before the beginning .o~ the du1ly clas• Cli1,scs in every subject were opened and closed wnh prayers . S1u.~cn1, were divide(! intn two groups, namely· the "Roman Empire c~n~1sung of the lmnnns (hoarders) and the "C~nhagi• man Empire_ uimposeJ of the urnnos (non-boarders). Each of these empm,s hod its r3nks The best ,1udenr in each ".:mpl rc• was rhe emperor; 1he second be\l, the tribune; the third bc~l ihe dccuno11; the fourth best, the cenrurion; and the fifth b ' the sra~~ard-bcarcr. Within the "empire", the studcnrs fou:; ~or P?S''.,1ons. Any student could challenge any officer 10 his empire ro ~nswe~ questions on the day's lesson. His opponent could lo~ h,s pos111on if he committed three mistakes. An Sluden1 m,~h_t be at the end of the line, but if he studied har~ and was bnll1ant, he could depose the officers one after another and become an emperor. 28 The two groups, "Roman Empire• and "Carthaginian Empire," were in constant competition for supremacy in the class. They bad their distinctive banners: red for the Romans arid blue for the Carthaginians. At the beginning of the school tenn, both banners were used equally in the classroom. "Upon the first defeat . the banner of the losing party was transferred to the left side of the room. Upon the second, it was placed in an inferior position on the ngh1 side. Upon the third, the inclined nag was placcd o n the left Upon the fourth, the Oag was revencd and returned 10 the right. Upon the fifth, the reversed flag was placed on the left. Upon the Sutth, the banner was changed with a figure of a donkey." 1 The Atenco students in Rizal'~ time wore a uni(onn which consi$ted of "hemp-fabric trousers" and -striped cotton coat." The coat material was called rayad,Uo, which later became famous for it was .idopu:d .is rhe uniform for Filipino rroops during the days of rhc First Philippine Republic. Rlul's First \'ur In At~MO (1871-73). On his first day of class in the Atcneo, in June. 1872. Rixal first heard Mass at the college chapel and prayed fervently to God for guidance and success When the Mass was finished. he went to h,s class, where he saw a grcar number of boys, Spaniards, meni~O\ ond Filipinos. Rixal's first profcs~or in the Are ne<> was Fr. Jose Bech. whom he described as a - ,an, thin man , with a body slightly bent forward. a harried walk. an ascetic face, severe and im,pired, smull deep-sunken ")L°', o ,harp 09'( 1hot wos nlmosr Greek, and 1hm lip<, form mg an arc whose ends fell 1owarcl the chm. '" 1 B~mit a newcomer and knowing little Span:sh. Rizal wa~ placed al 1he bou om of rhc class. He was an exu!rno, hence he wu~ assigned m the Carthaginians, occupying the cnu of the line. Af1cr the first week, the frail Calamba ooy progr\l$,Cd rapidly At the end of the month, he t,ecame -emperor' . He was the brighrest pupil in the whole class, and he was awarded a pnle. "How pleased I was," he said, "when ·1 won my first prize, a religious picture!") He was proud of it because it was the first prize he ever won at the Aleneo. T o improve his Spanish, Rizal took private lessons in Santa Isabel C•)llcgc during the noon recesses, when other Ateneo 2') - IIIIZAL: U•I, WOIIID ANO-ITINOS studeots w~ playtng or gossipuig. He paid three pe$OS for those extra Spa.nish lessons, but it was money well spent. In the 5eeond half of his tint year 111 the Ateneo Rizal did oot try h~rd enough to retain Ins academic supremac; which he held dunng !he fim half of lbe term This .___ d · was ~use be resente some remarb or his professor. He placed second at the . end of the year, although all his grades were still marked "E.Jrcellent" SulDfflft' Vaatloe (1873). At the end of the school year ,n March, 1873, Rizal returned to Calarnba for summer .,acation. He ~•d n~t particularly enJOy Ins 'lllcatioo because his mother was m P~soo :ro cbcer hi?1 up, lus sister Nencng (Saturnina) brought barn to Ta°:awan wtth her. Thi, did not cure his melancholy W1thou1 telling his fatbcr, he wem to Santa Crux and \'lSttcd hB mother in prison . He told her of htS brilliant grades at the Atenco. She gladly embraced her favorite son When the summer vacation ended, Riial returned to Manila !or. lus second year term in the A teneo Th:; t1me he boarded msidr ln~ramur~ a1 No. 6 Magallanes Street. His landlady was an old wido"' named Dona Pepay, who had a widowed daughter and four sons. Sttood Year in Awoeo (1873-74). Nothing unusual hap-ncd lo Rizal dunng r- be . 1w. second Ierm m the Ateneo, except that repented havrng neglected has studies the prc~ious year simply ~cause he was offen_ded by the teacher's remarks. So, to regain has los1 etas~ leadership . he sludied harder Once m h '-·• "emperor' ore e ,..,came Some of ~1& clMSmales were ne,.,. Among them were three bo)& from Sm.in who had been hi, cla&,matc, ,n the ""hoot ol Maestro Jus11111ano. Al the end of 1bc school year Rital re~c,ved cxcellcnr grade, m all subJeCb and a gold medal W11h ~uch :.cholaslic hono~he tnumphantly returned 10 CaiJmba m Mardi, 1!!74 lor lhe summer vacation Prophecy of \1other's R~leasc,. Rizal 10,1 no 1,me m going ro Sama Cruz m or~er to visit h,s m<>thcr m 1be provincial jail He cheered up Dona Teodora's lonely heart with news of hts 30 a::holastic triumphs in Ateoeo and with funny talcs aboul his professors and fellow s1udents The mother was very happy h> know that her favorile child was making such splendid progress iD c:ollege. In tbc course of their conversation, Dona Teodora !old her son of her dream the pt"evious rugbt. Rizal , 1ntcrprcriog the dream, told her that she would be released fro m prison in 1hree month's time. Dona Teodora smiled, thinking that her son's prophecy was a mere boyish auempl to console her. Bui Riz.al's prophecy became true. Barel) three mon1hs paased, and suddenly Doi\a Teodora was set free By tha1 lime. Rizal was already in Manila al1ending his classes at the Ateneo. Doila Teodora, happily back in Calamba, "'-as even more proud of her son Jose whom she Wi:ened to the youthful Joseph in the Bible in his ability 10 mrerprel dreams. T - . IJll~rat la Rtadlng. ll was dunng rhe summer vacauon' in 1874 in Calamba when Rizal began 10 lake interest in reading romantic novels As a nonnal teenager, he became illtercsled m love stones and romantic tales. The first favonte novel of Rizal was The Count of Mont~ Cristo by Alexander Dumas. This lhrilling novel made a deep impre~sion on him His boyish imagination wu stirred -by the sufferings of Edmond Dan1cs (the hero) in pnson, his spcetacular cacapc from the dungeon of Chateau d'lf: his finding a buried treuure on the rocky island of Monie Cristo, and his dramatic revenge on his enemi~ who bad wronged him Rizal read numerous other romantic no~-cls wirh deep interest. The reading habit helped to ennch lus fecund mind. As a voraciou.. reader, be read not only fiction, but al,-o non-fiet1on. He persuaded bis father 10 buy him n cmll) wt or Cesar Can1u's historical work enlitled Univer<al History According to Raal, this valuable work wai. of greal a1J in his studies and enabled 1nm to w111 more pnzes 1n Atcneo Later Rizal read Trav~u in the Phil,pp,nts by Dr. Feodor Jagor, a German saen11s1-1raveler who visited !he Philippines in 1859-1860. What impressed him in 1h1s book were (I) Jagor's lr.ccn obscrvauons of the defects of Spanish colonization and (2) H bis prophecy lhat someday Spam would lote the Pb.dippnes and that America would come 10 1uccced her as coloniz.er Tluri Year la A - (1174-75). In June 1874, Rtz.al returned to lhe Atenco foT h.. 1unior year Shortly after the openin1 of classes, Im mother amved ud joyously told him that she wu releued from pruon, Just u he had prccbcted dunn1 his last vis11 to her pruon ctll 1n S.lnta Cruz, Laauna He wu happy, of CO\IJ1e, to sec his mother once more a free ...,oman However, de1tpi1c the family happir,e+o.. Rtul d,d not make an excellent sbowmg m his uodlo u ID the previous year. His gr.odes rt"mained c~c.,Ucnt 1n all subJCCts. but be: won only one medal - ,n Latin He failed to"''" the medal ID ~n,.Ji bcca.w.e ht) spoken Spanl>h ,us not fluently sonorous He wu beaten by • Spaniard ..,ho, naturally, could speak. SpaJU>h wttb fluency and with "lhl acx,cn11Mt1on Al the end or the lehool year (M arch 1875). Riz.al returned 10 Cal:amba for the summer vacation He binuclf was not impres~d by h" schol.utlc ,.ork. was extremely happy. for he ""85 able to repay his •father somewbat for his sacnfi~". I.Mt Year I• Atl'IICO (1176-771- After t.bc summer vaca11on, Ra.at returned 10 Manila in Jun< llf7(, for h•~ la,1 year m the Atenco Hi,- -.1ud1u <1n11nucd tv IJrc ... 11 A· , m~ncr-of fa~. he exl-elled ,n all $Uhjec1'. The most bnlhant Atenean of his 1,me, he was trul) · the pudc or the Jc-..in, , Rial fin"hed hi\ la,., year at 1he, Atenec> ma blue of glory He ohc•incd the h1~hc,1 srld.: n ••' ,ut,, 'Cl\ - ph,lo,,. ,rhy • physia., t>ioloSY, chcm1,tl'), lan,...,tge, , mmcralogi, , etc. """°"· Gnd.atiaa with H"~ Rizal sraduatcd at the head of bis dass. H,~ scholauic rr..ord!. al t.bc Ateneo from tt3n 10 187' "'ere n follow, 1871-1873 Anlhrvtic Laun I ••• ••• 'li-,,1.h I • , Fo.,rtJ, Year In Ateao ( 1875-76). After a refreshing and happy ,ummer vacauun, Rizal went back to Marula fo r lus fourth year course On June 16, 1875, t,., bcume an 1ntcmo ID the Atcneo. One of his profcsso11 th•• time was Fr Franasco de PoulA Sanchez a great educator and scholar He inspucd the )Oung Riz.al to 1udy harder and 10 "'nte poetry He became an admirer and friend of the <lender Calamha lad, wbosc God-given gcMI, he Yw and re<X'fflaed On h1< part Rizal had the highcsl affecuvn ,md re peel fur Father Sanchc7, whom he considered his bel.1 profe~',(lr in the Atenc:o Greek I •••. In his 1udcn1 memoirs, R,ul wrote or Father Saochet m glowins terms , ~ho,. 111g bis affection and 1ra111ud< lie descnbcd thi< Jc.un pml= a. "model of upnghtness, camc5tness, and love for the advancctncnt of hlS pup,ls" • !.pan1sh 3 •• Inspired by Father Sanchez, Rizal resumed his studJCS with vigor and test. tic topped all h1l> claS$m1&1cs in all WbJCCU and won 6n mcdali at th- end of the 1o:hool term He returned 10 Calamba for hi. summer vacauon (March 1876) and proudly offered his 6ve mcdab and eKeUcnt rauogs to has parents. He 32 111.l-1174 • 1- tcellcnt Laun 1 ..... -·· · .•.. .. 'lpamJI 2 • GtteL 2 . •... • .. Un,vu~I ~oSrarhY •••• E,ia:llcnl Lahn ) . • ... • • • GrccL l . Un,vc=I Hmory Hi>1ory of Spam ai,d u,e P'dhpp,nn Arithmetic ~ Algtbra 117~117• Rhc1onc A Poe.tr)' .... Fttn..-t, I . , ••••••• ~,n,cuy A Tn, â– pc,,nt11,,,_octrJ •• • •• .... Exccllelll •• ll76-lffl ::::~ya: Ph,lolophy I •..........-Y 2 Ph )'IICI Botany " · ............. · .... E1ccllc111 ChemtStry ...... ............... . . •. "'aJ --~··•····· • .. . .. .. ... .. •................... .. ····~·· .. , o. ,. ,. • ••.• Zoo..._ ••••••••U•••••••••••• •••n ooo••••• • On Commencement Day March 23 1877 . 16 }'Cllrl old received f h.' • • Rizal who1"as lhe de,rcc ~f Aa Alma ~tcr, Ateneo Mun,c p,.1 . proud da for lus fam JU, 'tlllh highest hono" It wa~ 4 mcnccmc~t Da w ily_. But to Rizal. like all graduates, Com• with . y as a ttmc of btttct swcctnes. a ,oy mellowed the :i:~an;;rmi~ mght before sraduauon. his 1ru., night at morrun gthe da '("' be could not sleep Early the follow101! cha g. Y0 graduation, he prayed fervently at the 11 pcl and "commetidcd my 1,J • he ._.., ege that when 1 should st . c, as S&KI, .. ,o the Virgin so ., much terror _,._ C!'._'.!1JO that world, wluch ,n~p1rcd me with • Wuwu protect me• Extn-Canicum Adlvlda la AleMO · ~m•c tnurnphs, Wlb not a mer . Rizal unsurpa,.ed in m extra-curricular activities A • e boo~.worm He "as active be was a campus leader out~ emperor ,ns1Jc: the. clii..-.:.roolft later secretary, of a religious side. He was an aC1NC member He was ac(1CJ)led soaciy • the Manan Cungrc11a11on o f his academic b~'-mcmbcr of th1s sodah1y oot onl) tx·cau<,e uwancc but also because f h' d · Our Lady of the lmmac:ula C . o 1s n,,11 ,n 1,, Rizal member ~eth the college patrnnes\ 01 0 and the Academy of Nat rat ~ Y Spanish utcra1ure exclll$1ve societies ' th uA ncci. TheliC ".ocadcm1c<." ,.,ere were gifted ,n liter:ur/ dtenco , to wluch onl) Ate nun, wh<' ship. an seicnccs could quabry for member Bacbclorr:7 was also a on:=· Sanchez In his le,sure hours Riul cutllvate · d his . literary talent unJcr the guidance of Father Vilaclara advised lum l . Another profc...ior Fatl,<"r Jo,c 1 pay mor~ attention ~ ; ::m~ru;g with the Muse\ and 10 and natural sciences Rizal did • u ses, such .. pluJo\Oph) to sobdt Father ~ • not h~ed hi\ advice He conunu,·d . CZ s help m unpro"ing h,s poctn AsideHefrom wriung. poc'"' .1.ns <l died -, • he d evoted his sp~re · 11mc 10 u pa,nung under the famous Span1>h painter• ... Aptm Saez, and sculpture under Romualdo de Jesu~ noted Filipino ICUlptor. Both art ro»tc" honored him ,.,th 1hc1r affec• lion, for he was a talented pupil Furthennore, Rual, to develop hi, weal body. engaged 1n 1)'11\NStics and fencina . He thereby contmued the ph)"o;ical tnin· ina be began under has sporu-m,ndcd T,o Manuel. Sclllpbiial Wcwb la,. _ _ Rizal ,mprcss.:d h,, Jesuit professors in the Atcneo with his arusu.; I.kill One eta, he carved an image of The Vir11n Mary on a pi«c ,,f t,,,l1l<ulmi; (Ph1hl'('inc bardwOod) with hss pocltet•knife. The Jesuit fathf'rs were amazed at the beauty and grace of the amage, Father Ueonan , unpressed b) Riul's $CUlptural t.tknt, requested him 10 carve for him an ,mace of the Sacred Hean of Jesus . Youns Rini complied, and within a {C" ,lays he presented it to Father Ueonart .• The old J~u•t wa> lughly pleased and prof1ACly thanked the teenage sculptor lk mtelklcd to take the ,mace w,th him 10 Spain, hut, being an abi.cn1,m,nded profCS50r, he forgot 10 do so The Atcnco boarding $tudcnts placed 11 on the door of their donrutol'), and 1herc 11 remained for many years, reminding all AtencaM of Dr R11al the great..-~ alumnus of their Alma Maier. ThlS image played a significant part in Rinl's last hour!' at Fon Santiago Aae,tdotes . . Rbal. Uw A u -• One ot Rizal', •·tm1cm,n the Ateneu was l'cl\X M Rcixn~ I le related an ,naJcnt of Rizal'~ 1thooldavs 10 the Al nco ... hid, ,c:,cat~ the hero's rei.1gnauon tl• pain n~d forgwcnc , On d!I) m:1n, ,\1eneans, including R izal, .. ere s1udy1nt, th<:1r lesson< IH the ,tu.l• ball T""o Atenea.m,. Manzano nd 1.c-,, ,ca qi..1rrc cd ~nd •1<â–º ltntly hurled books at e;ich 01hcr Riul, "111 wa, husy , I 111\ d~lt ponna o,c, hl5 lesse>n> , ,.~, h,t in the lace I>) one ol th., thrown boolt.s He d,d not ra1<,e " CQ <>I pro1c,1 .,llhuugh h" wounded face: "u bleeding 111» da.,,,mJlC bro •~ht him 10 th.: infirmary where be bad 10 unJcrgo mcd1,al 11< tm<" t Im sc\l'r.11 da)·S After the incident. he cunt,nued to au.. nd h,< cbs,..-,. (eehng ne11.hcr b,ucrlld'> nor rancor ww:uili the iu1lt) ('JII\ ' Another an~do•~· un 1(11.ol the At~nc.10 v.11, 1cl,111:d b ~ Manuel Xere, Bur go,., in "'hMC holbC Rwil ho;mlcd "1l<ntl, before he became an antcrno 1n the Atenco 1 h1, a necdvte porancs 3S ..,_IIIZ41. Ll'1, WOIIU _ __ •~us1ra1C1 Riul '• prcd1lec11on 10 help the helpless at the nsk of h11 o-..n hfc One Thurtday a fternoon , being vacatfon day. the hoy< new thc,r kites fro m Lhc azote a Yo ung Rizal then was bu5y rcadmj,l a C.panosh book of fables at the window After a whole he h, rd Juloo Me hu from Hodo, o ne o f the ~•llcst l>oardc~. crying - becau'IC h" lute wa, ca ught b y the Vines gro11,,ng on the belfry of the Manila cathed ral which was near the ""•:ding-house. The bagger boy, were laughing , making fun of Juhu_, m1\for1unc Rue l closed the book he was reading and told Juho not to cry, for he wo uld try to retrieve the kite T rue to his prom,~ he courageou$1y climbed the high cathedral towe r anJ u,« ,fully rero,cred the lute.• ln 1876, Rizal wrote poems oo various topics - rdigion, education, childhood memories, and war. They were as follo<NI: Un RtaU!rdo o Ml Pwblo (ln MemofY of My ToW11) A 1mdcr poem ,n honor or Calambe , the hero's aaul town 2. A/..,,.u, lntuno Entrt /11 R,t,,;.orr y Ill Bwria A,t......,i/1,, (Intimate Alliance Between RebaJon and Good F.duc:a lion) 3 l'or /11 Eduuo6n Rt~ Lu.ttn i. POlrla (Throup F.ducatioo the Country Recc,,,cs LiaJ,t) 4. £1 C."""mo y d TnUttfo.· s.u,/J• tk U.CtM y l'nJiolt de Bollbdil (The Captiv,ty and the Tnumph: Battle of Lucena and the lmpriAOnmenl of Boabdil). This IIW'II~ p0em dcscribc1 the defeat and capture of Boabdil, 1M1 Moorish sultan of Granada. S. t.,, &tr/JIM TnUttfol tl.t lo, &ya CMOUUJ.,. G,.,..,. (The Tnumphal Entry of lbe Cathohc Monarclll iltCO PO«"ms Wrlttea In Ateneo. h was D o/la T eodo ra who first d1scovcr~d the poet,c., I gcniu• of he r t.On, a nd it wos also she wbo fir..t encouraged him 10 write poems I lowever. 11 wa, Father Sanchei "'ho inspired R12a l to ma.Ice full u'IC of his God-pven g'.f' 1n J)C>c:try and 1mpro\Cd the latters poetical an by o pcru111 bu mind 10 the ennchm11 ,nnuence o f the "'o rld's b teratu re. The fi r<il poem R u.al probubly wnnc dunng hts day, in the Atenco wa\ M, Primera lru ptraci611 ( M y First Inspiration) which wa\ dcdil-atcd 10 his mother o n her binhday It 1s said 1ha1 he wrote 11 hcfure he "'•~ 14 ycM~ o ld . that i.s. 1n the year 1874 Befo re this year he did not wn te J'Oe tr)' becau,e there wa. gloom ,n h1, heart owing 10 h is mo ther's 1mp n <.nnme n1 U po n the rclc~,, uf his mother 111 11!74, his poetic hcAn began 10 ~rng w11h l'l~l,1<y :in,I joy. In 1~7~ 111.<r11rcd h, f illher Sanchu. he ,oro1c more poem\. " • Uc. h Frlirtt<k um ( Frhr1ta1,c,,o) 2 -1 A year later. 1n 1877, he wrote more poems. It NI bit yea• ,n the Ateneo. Among the poems written that year were; I. £/ Htroumo tit Co/6rr ("The Hero11m of ColWBb,.) . This poem prailCI Columbus, the dl1e0vercr of America. l . C61on y /"411 II (Columbus and John II). This poem rclAtea how K1n1 Johll ll of Ponupl - . t bat ad ncbcs by 1us failure to finance the PfO!Cded wpedit>011 of Columbus 10 the New World ). Gnu, Consialo ~" l,i M11yor DudicM (O?eai Solac,c •• Orea! Mlsronune). This is a le&end In vene of the trtp: Ufe of Columbus) 4 Un D,&,go A l""'''" ' lo Dapt"'4tl tk lo1 Col,p,IG (A Farewell Dwoaue of the Studcotl). TIIIS wa tile lall I / 1-rnl•flrqu,. lfim1111 o lo Flota dt Mogallants. (Tho ner,murr lhmn 3 Granada). This poem relates the victonous entry of Kina Ferdinand and Queen Isabel into Granada, last Moorish \lronghold ,n Spain I F:, III Magellan'•~,.,, ) rpa,io/ Flco'ICI, ti l'rim,ro tn dor Ill Vwlu, o/ is Span11h Elcano, the Firs, to Circum• t1•"11•1e the \\orld) f. ..,,.,.Jo(And He f·I <'omba,r Urbwundo, Ttrror dt Jolo (The Battle: Urhor1nndo, Terror of Jolo) potm wrinen by Rizal of farewell 10 in Atcnco; 11 11 a po,p,ant .,.- 1us claumatcs " M1 F1nl ~- 1 I adoa." It wu moat finin& that the fin: poem written by Rizal u an Atenean ihou.ld be about bis bc-low:d ,, .,._ ll1%AL1 Llfl, WOIIQ AHD WIIITINCla mother: In ~s ~ • he felicitates his mother on her birthday, expressing his filtal affection 1n sonorou~ verses. It runs as fol• lows:9 MY fflll,'T INSPtltATION Why do the scented bower, In fragrant tray Rival each Nhcr·, Oowcrs This fesdv«e day? Why •• •wcct melody bruited In the sylvan dale, Hannony sweet and Outed Like the nighhnplc? Why do the birds sing so In the tender grn., Flitting from bough 10 bough Wnh the winds 1ha1 pass? And why docs the cry~lal spnni Run among the Oowcrs While lullabv icphyn sing Like its crystal showers? I see the dawn in the Easl With beau1y endowed. Why goes she 10 a fca~I In a carmine cloud? Swcc1 mother, they cclcbraic Your naial day The rose with her scc,m innate ' The bird wi1h h1' lay • The murmurous spnn~ llus day Without alloy, Murmunng bids you always To live in Joy. While the cry~talline murmur, glisten Hear you the acccni. ,1rong ' Struck from my lyn:, li~t•n! To my love's first song. Schol. .lc T••-· A l · - · de Menll•. 118» 1882) Rlzal's PoeDS on Eclucadolt. Although R izal was merely a teenager, he had a very high regard for education. He believed in the significant role which education plays in the progress and 10 welfare of a nation. Thus be stated in his poem: THROUGH EDUCATION OUR MOTHERLAND RECEIVF.S LIGHT The vital bruth of prudent Education Instills a virtue of enchanting power; She lifts the motherland 10 highest station And endless dattllng glories on ber shower. And as the uphyr'1 gentle exhala1ion Revives the matrix of the fragrant flower, So education multiplies her gifts o r grace, With prudent hand imparts 1hem 10 the human race For her a mortal man w,11 gladl~ part With all he has; will give his calm repose; For her arc born all .sciences and all art~. That brews of men with Inure I fau cnclo>C, As from the \owering mountain's lofty heart The purest current or the streamlet nows. So education withou1 stint or measure gives Security and peace to lands in which she lives Where education reigns on lofty scat Youth blossoms ronh with vigor and agility; His error subjugates with solid feet, And is exalted by conceptions or nobility, She breaks 1he neck of vice and its deceit; Black aimc turns pale at Her h0$dhty; The barbarous na1ions She knows how to lame, From savages create heroic fame. And as the apnng doth sustenan,:e beMow On all the plants, on bU$hes in the mead. Its placid plenty gou 10 overOow And endlessly with lavish love to recd The banks by which it wanders, gliding slow. Supplying beauteous nature's c_vtry need So he who prudent Education 1116,lh procu(e The towering heights of honot ~I secure. °"" F.i.. bps the wmeraysQI ,-re, Of perfea ""'"" llwl not cease 10 . ,. W-a careful dodnnrs of lui farda tn.de turc, The ~ n or nd be Will o,,erthrow. Like feamiQI wavea that never Inna endure, Bill perilb . . the sbore at cvc:ry blow: Aod froffl hia good cunaple other men mall learn Thar upward 11q11 &award rbc bc.a•c.aly paths to tum Wi..,n the breasa or wretd\ed hlmlanlond She bpi. the livu,1 na,nr of 100dnea bnaht. Tbe haadl ol lielttsl t•mn,nal d<>lh bind, And If! the&e hru.,Lt, will ,urdy pour deba)it • Whidt tttlt be r m,u,c bcadi" to find. ~ S0<1ls Sbe aets anamr w,th love or nah1, nu.1 p-.cs to hre ,ts A1resr como!Jttton AA<! as tlilc m1abty rock aloft may IO'ftr Abcwe the cznter or the ,m,, dctp le scorn o( /llonn, or ficr« Sou'•cstcr's powrr Or hrry of the waves 1h11 ragma sweep, Until, their rint mad b.atttJ, s.pent. Ibey cower Aad , I.Ired at last r.ubotde ond fall ..lttp, So he that taltcs ,.~ Education by the haod, lrmnablc t.hall guide thc rrrgn, or motherland . OIi aapphircs Iha.II h11 sen,ce be cna~d. A lh<-..d ~ • to lum by b11 land be a,anud, F« 1n thc,r bolom,, will h.. noble sons have aa.-ed laaulUJlt ~ n bos transplanted, And by the love of go..dneu c-cr laved Tbc lords and eo,,cmon ... ,n ICC implanted l'o enJlcss day• the Chnshan Eclucati... W-oth,n tncu noble fardl el'fapturc;d nalJOn, And b ,n early mormng "'c behold 11,c ruby ""' rour for1h re rlclldcn& rays. And lovely dawn her scarlet and her golJ, I lc:r bnllu,m cokin all abour her sprays. So uolllul noble 1 uch,na doth Wlfold To lmna rrandt. the JOY or v,nuous -.ays She ofr.n our <kar motbc/land the l1abt That lead. at to 1m!ll<lrtil glory'., hc1abt .,.... lnrimatt ,41/,anrl' s ..rw,m Rl'ligion I n annt h er poem . .,,.. of Ii d Good Educarwn, Rizal showed the impoT1anoc re pon an d To him cdocatmn ,. llh-Oul God tS nol IN\." etluca111 c ucauon • 11 1100 Thus. he said ,n hrs poem THE INTIMATE Al U A'ICE BETWUN llEUC IO"' A1"'D COOO EDllC~TION As the chmb1ng ivy o,cr lefty elm Cree~ tortuously• togclher tbe adornment Of 1he verd.lnt plain' cmlx-lh,h1ng Ekh other and toecther 11'°""'"1 • But should the kindly elm re~ IIJ ard The •"Y "'ould impotent and lncndkss wit~.cr So ;, Educauon to Rehg,on By •pmtual alluncc bound Throuah Religion , Educauon pins r<i!O"'n Woe to the ,mp,ous mind that bhndlv -rum•ng The "'l)'Cnl teachtnp ol Rdipon, dus Unrolluted fountain-head lonakc, ""° .-.. the :,pruut, gra-1ng from the pompous "'""• Pruudl) offcn u, 11> hon.:)ed du,tcr. While the cenerous and 10-,ne ,,rmcnt Fcctb 11t roots, IO the Crc..,·n1111 ,. ..te,. Of c:clc.11&1 vinu,c 11•e ne• 1trc To EducattOII INC, shedd1na On ,1 .. amuh and bp, bccalliC of t~cm • The vine smells ,wcct and pv.,. dchc,ous rru,1 Without Rcbgiun , Human Education 1, hl..c unt,> a ,cucl struck by w,ntb Wh-.:h , sore bc,ct, IS of IIS helm depnved By 1hr ro3 nng blo"'s and buffet> of the d1ad 1 cm~•- Boru, •ho focrcrly wield\ Hi~ power un11I he proudly sends her down Into the d,:cp ~b)>k• of the ""gtrcJ lel •s the hca•en·s de,. the meadow teed> and. ~trcngthens no,.c,s all the eanh f.mbruid.:t 1n the dayt of <pnna, SO •Ito H R~bg,on holy nuunshcs Educ1110n "'"h us doctnnes, she So th.it hloom1ng 41 °"-de Shall wallc in JOY and generoaty Toward the Good, and everywhere bestrew 'The fnierant and luxuriant fnlirs of Virtue Jlbal•,. lteilpo111 ~ · During his student days Rizal expressed his d~votron 10 his Catholk faith in melodious poetry. One or the religious poems he wrote was a brier ode coutled Al Nino Jaus (To the Child Jesus) It is as follows: 12 TO 111B CHU.O JES1JS How, God-child hast Tbou come To utth 11'1 cave forlorn? Docs Fortune naw deride 'Thee When Tbou art scarcely bom' Ah, - ! ~lcst1al King, Who mor1al Crom dost keep WoutJ,'t rather than be Sovereign Be Shepherd of Thy Sheep? This poem was wriuen in 187S when he was 14 years old Another religious poem which he wrote was entitled A La Vugen Maria (To the Virgin Mary). This poem is undated, 50 1h_a1 we do not know exactly when II was wnuen. Probabl Rizal wrote it after his ode to the Oiild Jesus. It runs as follows: 1 r, TO THE VIRGIN MARY Dear Mary, g,vin11 com/on and ,,.eet peace To all afflicted moruth: thou 1he spring Whence Dows a current o( relief, 10 bnng Our IOII ren1b1y thal does not CCI.SC; Upon thy throne, where thou dest reign on high · Oh, bt' with pity as I weeful grieve And <pread thy radiant mantle 10 rece,vc My voice ,.,hich rises swiftly to the sky Placid Mary . thou my mother dear. My sustenance. m, fonitu<le mu>t be, And m 1his fearsome sea my way must ~teer Ir dcpnvauon comes 10 buffet me, And if jnm cle•th m agony draws near, Ob. succor me. Crom aogwsh set me free. Work ID Ai-o. Wlulc Ru.a.I wa~ still a studrnt at the Ateneo, his ravorite teacher. Father Sanchez, requcsi~d him to write a drama based on the prose story of St Fu,tace the Manyr. During the summer vacattnn of 1871> "ie wr.,,c the requcs1ed religious drama in poelic verses at his home 1n < 1.1mha and finished it o n J une 2, 1876 Upon the ope.rung o r c!~s at 1he Atenco in Jun<' l'-71> his last academic year at the Jesw1 college - he ,ut>m1t1ed h• Father Sanchez the finished manU>Cnpt of the drama <0n111kd San Eustac,o, Manir (SI. Eusuicc, 1he Manyr) The ~ood rn.st teacher read it and relicitated the young Atcnean for w,,rl "'ell done. Finl Roman~ of Rizal . Shortt) allcr his J!rJd u "" the Ateneo. Rizal, who was th.:n sixteen ~ear. oW . "'1" n, ,J bis first romance - "lhat painful c•1•cncnu: v. l:1d1 , , , 1 nearly all adolescents~ The girl ""' S.-~undi, Kahfb,,~ ,1 fourteen-year old Batangueiia from I ,pa In R11al', " " ,, , r, "She ,,,as rather short. with e,es that wne do-1uer t "" , k, at times and langu1J at others d,c~k I "'" 1 and provocati,e smile that revcalcJ vcr. tx-,111 1 ful the air ofa sylph: her enlire self diffusea a m\·,t,·nuu, di.ttm • ru,· One Sunday Rizal visited hi,, maternal ~ranJ111uth, 1 ,h lived in Trozo, Manila. He was accomp.1n1cd b) lu, rnnJ Mariano Katigbak His old grendmothc· ·" 1, .. fro, • 11 Katigbak family of Lipa. When he reached h1> grJndmothn , holl5C, he saw other guests. One of whom -N~ an Jttrav :, c .:.11 l who mystenowly caused his heart to palpuatc w11h •tr.,n~,ccstasy. She was the sister of his mend Mariann. and her n.,m, was Scgunda. His grandmother's guests. who were mostly C<>llcgc ,1udcnt,. knew of his slull ,n painttng. so that they urged hun , JrJ"' Scgunda's portrait He complied reluctantly and m.idc - p.:n,·1 sketch o f her. ttfrom time to time." he rem1m,ccd later ",he looked at me. and I blushed . ttlS Rual came to know Scgunda more mumatd~ ,lur ni: h1, weekly visits to La Concordia College. "'here h" "''"' Ohmp,a was a boarding student Olimpia v.as a close fricnJ ,,t ~,i:undJ It .was appuent that Rizal and Segunda loved ca..:h ,,1h,·r Their, wu mdeed •a love al fint agbt". But it was bopdcts since the very bcpnina bccaUIC Scl'fflda WU a1rady c11pp to be married to her townmate, Manuel Luz Rizal, for all his artislJC and intellc::ro&al prowes1. was a shy and timid lover. Scpnda bad manilQled, by lflltnuatJon and deeds, her affcctlOll for blm, but be timidly failed to propo1e 1be last tune they talked to each other was one Thursday io Oooembcr. 1877 when the au.cm. vacanon wu about to bqin. He visited Seguod.a at La Concordla College to say eoodbyc because be wu IOUII home to Calamm the followin& day. She, on her pan, told him she wu abo aoin& home one day later. She kept qui.et after lier brief rq,ly, wa.tina for him to ay -thir,a which her heart was clamonna to bear. &II Rizal failed 10 come up to her expcctatioo. He c:ould ooly mumble: •well, good-bye . AIJyway - l'U ace you wbeo you S- Calamm OD your way to Upa " Tile nut day Rizal a~ed by 11cama m lus bomctaw11 Hill IIOClwr did not rccogni:u him at lint, due to her failin& CJCliabt- He was saddened to find Olll about bis mother's a,owina H d . H» listen gaily welcomed bun, tcuina him about Scpada, for they knew or bis romance throup Obmpa. 'lbat aipt be dcmoutrated hia atill in fenang to his family. tn Calambe andbacedbam. Kc bad a frieAdly feocina bout with the bell fencer Tile ioUowina day (Saturday) be learned lhat the llcamcr QIITyiDg Scgunda and her family would not anchor at Calamba bccauac ol lhc strona winds; 11 would stop In Bil\an. He saddled his white hone and waited at the road A cavalcade of carromatu from Binan passed by. In ooe of -..hom ScJUDC!a amilinr and waVU1g her bandkcrcbtef at ham. He doffed his hat and wa, COGpe-tied to say anythlna Her carnage rolled aa and varusbed in the distance Ii.kc •• swm lhadow• He returned home, dazed and dcsolalc, with his fint romance "'ruiDcd by bis own sbyocu and reserve• TIie first pit, 'llrhom he loved with ardent fervor, waa lose to him forever Sbe returned to Upe and later married Mallud Luz. He remsincd tn Calamba, a frustrated lover, cbcrillbiog DO&talp: memories of a Joa lo¥e. Three ycan later, Juul , rcco-rdulg lus fint and ~ romance, 181d: •Ended, at an early bour, my 6nt love My · h n will alwa"" mourn the rcdd- step 11 took on lbe vu-gin ca ,. bu '-·"ff ft• f)owcr-dcckcd abyss. My illusions will rclUOI , yes, t...,. ~ . uncertatn , ready roe the fint betrayal on the path of love. •• • • • Madie.ii S1uc:JIN At Tht UnMf"liltV Of Sento l'o,n• , Chapter 5 Medical Studies at the University of Santo Tomas (1877-1882) ill _Fortun.atel!, 'Rnal's tragic: fim romance, with 11s b111er dtsf~omem, dtd not adversely affec:t hu studie~ in the University ~h-l to Tomas. After finishmg the fim year of a course in 1 osophy and Letters (18"7-71!), he lntn$(erred to the medic:al : : : Dunng tb_e yea" of his med1c:iJ _~tud1cs m this university was adrmn1stercd by the Dom1nac:ans, rival educ:ators o ( the Jesuu~. be remauted loyal 10 Ateoeo. where he continued IO patllopate 1n extra-curncular ac11vit1es and where he completed the voc:at1on C:OID'SC in surveying. As a Thomasian he ""on more btera:ry laurels, had other romances with pretty '·rts an~ _fought agams1 Spanish students who insulted the b!wi; Filipmo students. ~ • - to R icber Ech•aitioa. Aller graduattng . MllCiler's ..,....._.,... With the highest honors from the At-o n ,__ , had thU · ~--.~ ~~IO e nivers,1y of Santo Tomas for lugher studies The Bachclo or Arts cou= d r s · h · high u mg pan,s limes was equivalent only to ther . school and Juruor college c:ourses today It merely qu1tlified llS !!13dua1e to enter a university. Both Don Francisco a.n d Pac:1ano wanted Jose 10 pursue lugher tcammg tn the Bui o0 - ..- d ho un1vers11y. . na • co ora, w knew what happened 10 Gom-Bur-Z.. :gorously 0 ~ the idea and told her husband. wDon't send m to t.fan1la agwn; be knows enough. If he gets 10 know ~re, the Spaniard~ wiU c:ut off his head. " 1 Don Franc:isco kept ~wetlaanded told Pac,ano to accompany his younger brother to an, , spite their mother's tears. ,an~ 18821 Jose R.iza£ himself was surprised why htS mother, who was a woman of education and c:uhure, should objcc:t to his desire for a univcnity education. Ycars later he wrote in his Journal: -oic1 my mother pecbaps have a foreboding of wha1 would happen IO me? Does a mother's heart really have• second s1gh1?M llbal F.atns die Unl•mdty. In April 1877 Riz.al v,;ho was then nearly 16 yean old, matnculated in the University of Santo Tomas, talnng the c:ourse on Philosophy and Leners. He enrolled m this c:ourse for two reasons: (1) his father liked 11 :ind (2) he was "still unoeru.in as lo what career to pur,;ue" He had wnnen to Father Pablo Ramon, Rector of the Ateneo. who haJ been good to him during his s1uden1 days ,n that college. il!>lung for advice o n the choice of a c:areer But 1he Father Rec:tor wa\ then in Mindanao so that he was unable 10 advise Rizal, Consequently, dunng lus first-year term (1877-78) 10 1he Un1ven.il) of San10 Tomas, Rizal studied Cosmology, Metaphy... c, Theod icy, and History of Plulosophy. It was d uring the following term (1878-79) 1ha1 Rizal, having received the Atenco Rector's advic:e to study medicine. took up the medical course, enrolhng simultaneously in the prc:para1ory medical course and the regular lint year med1c:al course Another reason why he chose medicine for a career was 10 he able to cure blS mother's growmg bbndness. FiDisha Saneytnc Coune In Ateneo (1878). Ounng h1,. first sc:hoo! term in the University of Santo Toma, (18TI-7K), R11al also studied in the Aleneo. He took the vocational course lcadinJ! to the title of peri10 a~mor (expert surveyor). In 1hosc day, it should be remembered, the c:oUcgc, fur be•)' in Ma1111.t offc:r~o vocational c:ourses in agricullure, ccmmercc, n1cchamc~. ~nd surveying. Rizal. as usual, exc:elled in all subje.:ts m the ,ul'\c~,n~ cou.ne m 1he Ateneo. obtaining gold medals ,n agncultur~ .,n,1 topography At the age of 17. he P·"scd the finul cxam,11,,1101 in the surveying course. but he could not he granted ·he 1111.: as surveyor bec:ause he was belo"' age. The 11t1c v.Js ,.-.,.ued to him on November 25. 1881. Although Rii:al W-.lS Lhen J Th..imai.ian. he £re4ucntly v1,1tcd the Atenco. It was due not onl) to hi~ surv.:)ing cour,c hut 47 more because of bis loyalty to the Ateneo, where be had ao many beautiful memories and whose Jesuit professors, unlike th~ Dominicans, loved him and inspired him to asa:nd to grcaaer heights of knowledge. He continued to participate actively in the Ateoco's extra-cunicubr activities. He was president of the Academy of ~pani5h Literature and secretary of the Academy of Natural Sctence$ He also continued his membership in the Marian Congregation, of •1lic:b he was the secretary. Romances wttb ~ Glrll. Notwithstanding his academic studies in the Univeri.ity of Santo Tomas and extra-curncvlar acttvtties in the Ateneo, Rizal had ample tune for love. He was a romantJc dreamer who tik.ed to sip the "nectar of love". His Rd experience with htS first love had made him wiser in the ways of romance. Shortly after IOSlng Segunda Kali&bal:, he paid coun 10 a young woman m Ca1amba. In his student memoirs, be called her simply "Miu L ,• dc~ribing her as •fau with seductive and 2 attractive eyes" After visiting her m her house several times he suddenly stopped hts wooing, and the romance died a naturai death. Nobody today knows who this woman was. Rizal himself did not give her name Hence, her 1den1tty is lost to history. Ho,,.-ever, he gave two reasons for his chanie of bear1. namely: (I) the sweet memory of Segunda was still fresh in his heart and 2) h,s father did not like the famtly of "Miss L • Several monthli later, dunng his sophomore year at the Univer~ny of Santo Tomas he board~d in the house of Dooa Concha Leyva in lntramur<K. The nut-door neighbors of Dona Conch~ were Capitan Juan and Capilano Sanday Va.Jenzuela from P.1gsan1an Laguna, "'ho had a charrrung daughter named Leonor. Rizal . the medical ~•ud<"nt from Calamba, was a ,,.elcome visttor in rhe Valenzuela home, "'here he was the life of the social part,e, l:M:cliu,c of h•.- clever sleight-of-hand tricks. He courted Leonor Valenzuela, who -~ a tall girl with a regal bearing.'· He sent her love notes wri11en in invisible ink. This ink consisted o~ common table salt and water. II left no trace on the paper. Rizal. "'ho knew lus chctrustry, taught Orang (pet name o( Leonor Valcnwela) the secret of readmg any note wriucn m the 1nvisib!e ink by heating n over a candle or lamp so that the 48 wocds may appear. But, as witb Segunda, he stopped llbort of proposmg marriage to Orang. Rtzal's next romance was 'Wit adOther Leonor - ~ Rivera - hi,; cousin from Camiling In 1879, at the start of bis 11;;nior year at the uni.,ersity, be hvcd 1n Tomasina; at 1'.o. <> Calle Santo Tomas, lntramuros. His la.ndlord-uncle. Antomo Rnera had a prcll} d..ughter, Leonor. a student at ta Concord, , CoUc~e. where Soledad (Rizal'~ yoongcst sister) was then ,1u ~. Leonor, born 10 CMJl1hng. Tarlac. on A pnl 11. 1867 ... as a !rM1I, prctt} girl "tender a,, a budding Oower with i.,ndl tful c,c,•. Bctwc, , Jose and Leonor 'J)r&ng a beautiful romance They became engaged. In her letters to Rizal, Leonor signed her name a, cunt!.,· m order 10 camouOage their intim.,tc re .iion ,h,p f m their p;,rents and fncnd.,; ~easa \'lctim or Sp,,.nl!;b Offlctt's Bnatallty. When Rizal was a freshm:m "" die ,I ,;1udri,1 at the University of Sanlo Tomas. be expenenced his fir<1 taste of Spanish brutality. One dart night m Calarrba dunng the ,ummer vacatton 1n 1871!, be was "'.ilking m t~ ~tn:ct lie duntv P"'r<'<'ivcd the figure of a man while passrng him Not lmow,ng the person due to darkness, be lftd not sal1.1e nor say a councous "Good Evemng". The vague figure turned ou1 10 be a lieutenant of the Guardia Civil. With a snarl. he 1umed up<m Rizal, "'hif>p('d ou: hi5 sword and brulallv '>lasbed the lauer on the back The wound wa.~ not !oenous, but it was painful. 'When be recovered. Rizal repor1ed the inadent to General Pr :no de R,vcra, the Spani<h governor general of the Philippmcs ,1 that time But nothing came out of Im complaint, because he was an Indio and the abu>1ve lieutenant was a Spaniard. Lai , tn a letter to Blumcntritt dated March 21, 1887, be relat, I ~1 w~n• 1, ch, C •o• n r ,,.., I l>ut I could not obtain justia my - In lh<' f 1lipinn \ «Hilb" U879t. Ir ,., car 1879 the I.ice, Ar11,11ro- l 11erano (Am~11c L ,crary Lyceum) of Manila, a SOC· 1el) ot lnerary men and amsb, held a literary contest. It offered a pnz,. for the best p,..:m h> .i n.tllvc or a mestizo Rizal, ,.-ho ... as then c1~h1ecn years old, subm1t1cd bis poem enutled A ua Ju,·mtud F,t,p,na (To the Filipino Youth). 0 - IIIZM,: UPI. - The _Board of Judges, composed of Spaniards, was impressco ~y Raal s poem and gave It the fim prize wlucb consisled of a 11lvcr pen, feather-shaped and dcco,-tcd with a gold ribbon. ~oung Rizal was happy to win the poetry cootcst. He was Mcerely congratulated by the Jesuits, especially bis Conner profC5SOTS at the Ateneo, and by bis mends and reia_tives. . :nie prize-winning poem, A LIi Juvrntud Fwpina (To the ~1.bpmo Yout~). is an inspiring poem of tlawless fonn rn exqu,s: 1te verses, Rizal beseec!:ed the Filipino youth to rise from le!hargy. to let their geruus fly swifter than the wind and descend With ~. and soence lo break the chains that have long bound the spun of the people. Thu poem is as follows:5 TO THE FU..1P1NO YOUTH Theme: "Grow, 0 ,rmul F1owtr" Hold high Ille bn,w acrcDC , 0 youth. "'here now you s11nd . U!I lbe bnghl sheen or your gr1ee be -n. Fau hope or my (111Krtand1 Come now, thou gcniu, grand. And bring down inspiration, With Illy nugluy band, Swifter than the ~mds •olauon Raise 1hc: eager mind to hi&ftcr •sta;it,n Come down with pleasing light Of an and scieocc 10 lhe Ripu. 0 youth. and there unue The chains lhu1 hca-, he, Your spuit free to bnght. See how 1n nanung ,one Amid 1hc: $badows thrown, The Speiard's holy band A crown's resplendent band Proffers to this Indian land Thou. who now •oulcht nsc On winp of rich emprise, so _ _ 14,n,.,u,,twn1ty()f ....,0T-ltan 11921 -111111'111• Seek from Olympiaa ams Soop of .-te:51 strain, Softer than ambrosial raui. 'Ibou, wboee •oioc diviDC Rivals l'hilomcl's ~tna. And wilh nned bnc Tbroush the night :.en"1' Freu mortality from pain. ..1ou. ,whv by lhalJ} strife Wite5l thy mind to life; And the memory bright Of thy ge111U1'1 light Mu.est immoruJ ill iU 1trcnctb And thou 1n aa:cn• dear Of Pboebl&S. to Apollos dear: Or by the brush's mag,c at1 Tu.est (roni na111re·, uo,c • par! To fix it oo the sunplc canva..<' length. Go fonh, and then the sacred fttc Of thy gcni11$ to the laurel may aspue; To spread around the flame, And in victory 1ccla1m. Tbroue)i ,rider sphcces lhe hu111a11 aame. Day. 0 bappy day, Fair Fihptnas. for thy Jandl So blca lbe Power today lbat places in thy wa) Tbts favor and this (onune grand. This winning poem of Rizal is a classic lD PhihppU!C bleraturc for two reasons: Fant, it was the flN great poem in Spanish written by a Filipino. wh~ merit was recognized by Spanish literary authonbcs, and secondly. it expressed for the fint lime the nat100alistic concept that the f"tlipinos, and nol the foreigners, were tbe "fair hope o( the Fatherland~ " " - Couadl ol tile Gods" (laG). TIIC following year (1880) the Artistic-Literary Lyceum opened another literary contest to commemorate the fourth centennial of the deatb o( Ceniantes. SI -IIIZAI. 1.,,.__ANOW.i I SpaiD's glorified IIUUH)f-letters ..nd f.amous author of Don Quu• Ok. ThB time the contest was opened to both F"iJipmos and Spaniank of the f<=a$1 Day of the Immaculate Coooeptioa ,'Patrooc:M_ol the Atenco He wro1c 1t as President of the Academy o f Spanish l.11era1ure in the Ateneo Man) wntcrs participated in the amtest - priests, newspapermen sdacla.a and profC$S01$. Rizal. inspired by bJs poetical lriumpt, the pn:Yious year, entered the literary joUSl, submitting 8'1 allegoric:al drama entitled £/ Conujo de los Diosa ('Ibe Coancil ol the Gods).6 As pteo: of IJterature al Pasig is _mcchoae. B~t there are passages in II wltl~h <:xpress ,n su.btJe sa11ro: the authors The judges of the contest were all Spaniards. After a long and aiticaJ appraisal of the entries, they awarded the first prize to Ra..al's work because of its literary superiority over the others. 7 The Spaniih community in Manila, spear-headed by the Spanish press. howled in great indignation against the decision because the winning authoc was an Indio. Despite all obJections, the prize was awarded to Rizal, a gold ring on which was engraved the bast of Cervantes. A Spanish writer, O .N. del Puzo, woo the M:>tOnd pnzc. For the first time in history, an Indio - a niortN:O year old Filipino medical student at that - excelled io a natioaal literary cootesl, defeating se-.eral Spanilh wnters of bis lime in Marula.• lliza1 was panimlady happy, for he proved tbc flll.lacy of the alleged Spanish $Uf>C~rity over lhe F"iliptnOS and rcvc:alcd that the Filipino could bold his own in fair c:ompet• itioo agai-r.l all faCC$. 1bc winning allegory of lliza1 was a literary masterpiece 1-.:d oo the Gn:elt da.ssics.. In wnting ii, Rizal, although a student of the Uorvcrsity of Santo Tomas, was aided by the kind Fathet- Rcaor of the Atcneo in scc:u.ring the needed reference matcnals. 1bc allegory established a parallel among Homer, Vugil, and C-c:rvantcs. The gods duaiss the comparative meri!S of ~ great writers and finally decide to give the trumpet to Homa, tl:c Jvr-e to Virgd, and the laurel to Cervantes. The allegory gJorMXA!y closes with the naiads, nymphs. satyrs, and other myt.llloiog;c.l characters dancing and gathcnng laureu for O:tvantes Odlcr l.Jm-ary WOl'b. Aside from lhe two pnz.c-winnin& worts meutioocd above. Rizal, allhough midying medicine, pc-lu.:ed other poems and a ™1.a, !his z.ar~t. was JUIIIO Ill (&side the Pasig), whjch was sugcd by the At.cncam o,, Dea:mbcr 8 1880, on the ocasion of ,h,- .. ,..,,. .. , relebratioo P-, Sl a ,,.,,.,o na1,onahs1 ideas. for ins1•ncc, Rizal milkes Sau,n wy tbat the Philippines "Now wrdiow com/on, Sadly groans t11 diL pnwa of• forngn ~ ople. ,w..,/y And hJ ,,. tltl: impitxa c/111ch of Spauo." Tn the same year (ll!80) he wrote a so anet e?lltJcd A. Fwpinas for the album or the Soaety of Sculptor . In this sonnet. he urg, ,I II 1 , no artist• II of- the Phili pines. The year before , in 1g79, he composed a poem entitled Abd~I-A zis y Malwma, which was declaimed by an Atencan. Manuel Fcmandez, on the m~t of December g, 1879 1n honor of the Ateneo·, Patrvnt.=. Later. in 1881. he composed a poan cn 111lcd Al M.R:r. Pab/(1 Homen He wrote thiJJ poem as an eq,rc:..ion of affe.:t10ll to father Pablo Ramon. the Atenco rector, ~ho had been so kind and helpful to him. Rb.al's VWt to Pur.11 and ~ u. In the summer month of May . lR!ll. when he was still a medacalstuder.tat the Umversity of Santo Tomas, Rizal went on a pilgrim~ c 10 the to~ of Palnl famo,u ~hone ol the Bu-hen Maria ti,;: los Ooton:,. He w~~ ~ompanicd by his si,tcr< Saturnina, Maria , and Tmt!~ad and their female friedds They took a cu.sec (flat-bouom ..aili:.ng Ycsscl) from Ca.lamb. 10 Palu!, Laguna, and 5taycd at the home of Mr.1 . and Mrs. Manuel Regalado, who,c son Nicola~ was Rizal's friend in Manila. Rizal and his comp.. mons were fascinated b • the famolt' 1urumba, !he people uar ng m lhe streets dur:ng :x proccs.sao in honor of the mir.m ~ Birhen Maria de It> Oolorrs A they danc,cd, the dancer Turvmba. Tun.. MalJlWa tavo't m4irawa Modlc1115Mlloe AIT.. Unh9rol1V Ol$on11> T-• S11m11yow 11g IW'llmlHI l'l,rl 111 BirlK11 Morl4 . In Pall:il Rizal was infatuated by a pn:cty girl colegiala. Vicenta Ybardolaza, who ~lulllully played the barp at the Regalado home From Palul. Riz:11 and hi~ party made a side ttjp to the neighboring town of Pagi.anjan for two reawns it was the native town of Leonor Valenzuela, one of Rizal's girl friends 1n Manila, and to see the world famed Pagsan,an Falls. Years later Ri.zal mentioned the Turumbo in Chapter VI of Noli M~ Tangtre and Pagsanjan Falls in his travel diary (United States - Saturday, May 12, 1888), where he said that Niagara Falls was the ·gi-catest cascade,, I ever saw" but ·not so beauuful nor fine as the falls at Lo$ Banos. (sic) Pagsanjan" Champion or F1Up1Jlo Stvc14!ots, Rizal was the champion of the Filipino s_tudeni., m their frequent fights against the arrogant Spanish studenu, who wen: often surpassed by the Filipinos In dBS$ work and who insultingly called their brown classmates • JndJo, chongolk In retaliation. the Filipino students called them •K,utilo, bangu,1" Hostility between these two grouP5 of students often exploded in angry street rumbles. R.iza1 participated in these ,tudent brawls Owing to his skill in fe~~ng, ~is. prowess in ,nestling, and his indomitable courage, be dutinguuhed himself in these student skinnlshes. In 1880 he founded a secrcc IOCiety of Filipino 1ludents in the University of Santo Tomas called Compaiiuismo (Comradeship). whose memberi were called "Companions of Jehu.·· after the valiant Hebrew general who fought the Armaeans and ruled the Km&• dom of Israel for 28 years (843-816 B.C.). He was the chief or this_ secret student society, with his oousin from Batangas. Galicano _Apaable, as se~rctary. As chief, he led the Filipino lilUdent.s into combat against the Spanish students in vanous street fights. In one of the fierce encounters between the Filipino students and their pale-skinned detractors near the Escolta m Manila Rizal.was wounded on the head His friend, brought him bleeding and covered with dust to his boarding hou,c, acasa Tomasina•· Leonor Rivera teodedy washed and dressed his wound. 54 t18TT 18821 Ullhappy Days at the UST. Rizal, Aleneu·s hc.,y wonder. found the atmosphere at the University of Santo Tomas \uff~nt ing to his sensitive spirit. He was unhappy at 1h1s Dominican institution of higher learning because (1) the Domirucan professors were hostile to him, (2) the Filipino students were meld Hy discriminated against by the Spaniards, ,rnd (3) the method 1>f instruction was obsolete and repressive. In his novel.£/ Filibuster,smo, he de,;cribed ho"' the Fihpin<' students were humiliated and m~ulled by their Uomm1can pn>fessors and how backward the method of on,tructwn "•'· c,1w ciaUy in the teaching of the natural ,;cience~ I le rcl,11ed in Chapter XIII. "The Class in Physics.'' that his sc,ence ,uh1-c" was taught without laboratory experiments. The m,cru,u>pc ,111d o ther laboratory apparatuses were kept on~1dc the ,hown"~' 111 be seen by visitors, but the students could not even tom:h them Because of the unfriendly attitude or his profo"or' RM.ii, the most brilliant graduate of the Atcneo. fa1kd Ill wm high scholastic honors Ahhough his grades in 1hc first v,·.or of the philo50phy course were all ''excellent ," lhey were nnt 11nprc,,iv~ in lhe four years of his medical course His sc:hulas110 record, In the University of Santo Toma!> (187'.1•82) w"r~ a, fnl111w, . •u 1877-78 (Philosophy & l.cllers) Cosmology & Metaphysics Thcod,cy . H15tory ol Ph,loll<lphy 187S-1!179 (Mcd,one) PhySIC$ Chemistry Na1ural Hisrory Anatomy I Diiscction I 1879 1880 (Medione) - Ana1omy 2 Dissection 2 Physiology . . . . Priva1e Hygiene Public Hygiene 1-xrdlenl l1celkn1 hcdknt ls1 Ycor f-,ur f,rrlknl Good Cith)J \lncl\J Znd Year (mod Goud Good Go,'ld Good 1811).1881 (Mediane) - Ocnc,1'111 Pathology The,..peuua Surgery • • • • . • . . . • Fair • • . • E1cellen1 • • • • • • • Good 1881-1882 (Mcd,anc) - Mcd1tal Pathology SWJ)<..oJ Pathology . Ol>stt•flCM . )rd Year Chapter 6 In Sunny Spain (1882-1885) 4th Year ... . . . . .. . Very Cloud Very Good Very G<IOd Oeds on le Study Abroad. After 6n1shin& the fourth year of 1us me, -cal course, Rt.al ckcided to study m Spam He rould no longer ndure lbe ramr,10: bigotn J1v-nmma11on, .,nd h•>s · oluy in lh • lniversity of Santo Toma~. H1~ older bro1hcr readily approved lu, going to Spam and 5,0 did his two sisters Saturnina (Nencna) 1A11d Lucia. Unde Antonio RJvera, lhe Valenzuela family. and ~me friends After (onl\hmg ch,· -llh Y,·ar o llni,eNI\ of Santo Torn,., lmc R1 ntlQ I t tt'' ti J ,1 n ,t L · ... l" vctMt) u1ul tht tdc1al prcJudu.:c ol l lcH1 u. 1 .'H • Filipino •tu,l<•nh decided IO compktL h· tJd,e; m r~•n A 1 that lime thL government of Spam" " • con-.utut,onal m• march• m.Jcr a .. 1111cn consmuuon which grante<I human ny1t I lhc pc<>pl<- p:imcularly frcc:Jom of ,pccch freedom ,r l " Jll<~. and freedom of assembly As,dc from th,s ostensible rca<;0n, he had another reason, which wa. more ,mponant than merely completing h,, studu:s m Spain Th_is was his "scc_ret mi'-'IOn," whKh many R1ulis1 h1ogr,1phers (,ncludmg Auston Cra,1 and Wen~lao F Retana) never mcn110n ,n their wntmgs For the fir<I time, Ri1al d,d not !leek h1\ parcnis' pcrrm,...,on and bleswngs to go abroad, hccause he knew that they, e~l"('cially his mother, would disapprove 11. He did not bnng bu beloved Leonor into hi~ confidence ell her He had enough common sense to know that Leonor, being a woman. young and romantic at that. could not keep a secret. Thus Rizal"s parenb, Leonor, and the Sp.m,sh authonhes knew nothing of hi. decision to go abroad n order to finish his mcd1c,I •l11d1cs in Spain. where •he; profei.,ors were more liberal than those of the University or Santo Rb.al's S«Td Mlssloa. nus =1on which Rizal conceived with the approval or hos older brother Paciano was to observe keenly 1hc hfc and culture, language~ and customs, mdu~triC> and .ommcr<C, and 1to•crnmcn1s and laws of the furop<:.ui nauou, on order 10 prepare h,mse1£ ,n the mighty t~k ol hbcraung h orrr••«~•I rcoplc from Sp.imsh 1y1a1ony Tlu, Wti cvtdenocd m h" f..rcwdl leucr which was delivered to his parcnti ~only after hi\ dcpanure for Spain. As,dc from hegg,ng hos parenis· forg1vcnes.s for leaving the Ph,hppmc, v.1thou1 their pcrm,ss,on and blessings, he •.and 1n tlm lcncr. ' fomas. • Bui •• God "'' 001 made an)th,ng ui.elcss ,n 1h1s "<>rid, a1 all hc,ngs fulfill ohh&Jl1<1n, or • wlc on rht sublome drama ol Crco11on, I cannot crcmpt myself from lhis duty nnd small though 11 be. I to.> have a mission IO fill, as forc~am11I, S7 ~ IIIZJU.: UPI, WOIIQ MD -OfltMle allevi!hng the suffcri11&1 of my fellow-men. I rcaliu 1ba1 all_ this means sacrifices, and terrible ones. I imagine the pain _which I must give you, but I feel something that obliges •~d impels me to leave. I sltall strive with fare, and t shall w,n or lose... God's will be done. . This_ Rizalian secret mission was likewise disclosed by P~ciano in his letteT to his younger brother dated Manila Ma 20, 1982, as follows: 2 Y • Whe? the telegram 1nform1ng us or your departure was re~1ved 1n C!lamba , as it was natural, our p•1rcnts were grieved. es~•ally the old man (Don Francisco _ Z.) who became tocnurn, always staying in bed, and wccpiog at night and the consolation offered by the family, the curate, and strangers was or no avail . He made me go to Manila to find out wnh whet means you were able to undertake the voyage, On my return I assured them that your expenses were defrayed by some fnends of yours m Manila, hoping that th,, W<luld cal_m h,m N'?1w1thstunding. he remained always sad . Seeing this and feanng that his taciturnity might degencr~t~ lnro _a malady, l told him evcrytlung, but to ltim alone, bcll8m~ him to keep the secret and he promised to do oo. ~nly smcc then have I seen hiio a linle gay and return to his u<ual Wil)'ll. This u what occurred in the family. ..... It i~ said here that you will finish the medical cou rse Barcelona and' not at Madrid, To me the principal purpose o( your _departure Is nor 10 finish COUr$C but to \ludy other rhmgs of greater usefulness nr 1hnt 10 which you are more mdmcd. So I thmk. that vou ought to study at Madrid , 10 tr" Secret Departure for Spaln. Rizal's departure for Spain was kept ~ecrct to avoid detection by the Spanish authorities and the friars. ~ven his own parents did not know because he knew they, especially his mother, would not allow him t,, go. Only his older brot~er (Paciano). his uncle (Antonio Rivera father of L;eonor Ri_vera), his sisters (Nencng and Lucia) . the Val~nzueta family (Capuan Juan and Capi1a11a Sunday and their daughlcr Orang). Pedro ~- Paterno, his compadre Mateo Evangelista, the Atcnco Jcsuu Cathe~~• and some intimate friends, including Cher,goy (Jose M, Cec1ho) . The kind Jesuit pric~ts gave him letters of recommendation to the members of their Society in Barcelona. He used tbe name Jose Mercado, a cousin from Birian . S3 Before his secret departure, he wrote a farewell letter for his beloved parents and another o ne for his ,wcc1hcart Lcnnor Rivera - both delivered shortly after he sailed away. On May 3, 1882, Rizal departed on hoard the '\pan"h steamer Salvadora bound for Singapore With tears m hrs eye, and gloom in his heart, he gazed at the receding ,kyhnc of Manila He hastly took paper and pencil 111lll ske tched 11 a, II vanished in view Sina11pore. During the voyage 10 Singapore he cardull~ obseTVed !he people and things on board the ,lcamcr. Tht'r~ were sixteen passengers, including himself "five or "~ ladies. many children, nnd the rest gentlemen I le wa, lhc nnly Filipino, the rest were Spaniards, Briush. and Indian Negroes . The ship captain. Donato Lecha. from Astumb. Spain. befriended him . Rizal described him in bis travel diary a, an affable man, ·much more refined than hb other countrymen and colleagues that I have met". He was, however. peeved by some Spaniards (his fellows passengers) who ,poke ill of lhe Philippines, "to which they go for pecuniary rca,on," ' To while away the tedious boredom of sea voyal!C, Rizal played chess with hi~ fellow passengers who were much older than he. He defeated them many times, for he was a good ches_, player. On May 8, 11182, while the ,teamer wa.s a11pmnchm,l! Smga µore, Ri1.al saw a beautiful island Fascinated by its ,ce nic beaut} , he remembered "Talim Island with the Suson11- Dalaga" 4 The following day (May 9) the Sa/1-adoru docked at Singapore. Rizal landed, registered at Hotel de la Paz , and spent two days on a sightseeing, soiree of the c,ty . which was o cnlony o f England. He saw the famous Botanical Garden. the beautiful Buddhist temples. the busy shopping district. and thl' Matuc of Sir Thomas Su1nford Roffies (founder of Singapore). From Singapore to Colombo, In Singapore Ri:rnl rran,fcrrcd to another ship D1tmnnh, a French steamer. which ldt Singapore for Europe on May 11. It was a larger and cleaner vessel which carried more passengers. Among these paJ>SCngcrs were 13, 1ti~h. French, Dutch, Spaniards, Malays, Siamese. and F,hpmos (Mr and Mrs Salazar. Mr Vicente Pardo, and Jose Rizal) ' French S9 wa., mostly spoken on board because it was a French vessel and the majority of the pa=ngers were French-speaking. Rizal 'Ill<" red to convcr;e w11h his fellow passenger,; in French, but to h,s surpriste and embanaSMnent, he found out that his book l'"r<'nch which he reamed al the Ateneo could not be underMood, so that he had to speak 1n mixed Spanish-Latin supplemented hy much gestieularions and sketching on paper. By conversing ,f.ulv wnh the French passengers, he wa, able gradually to impro• e his knowledge or the French language. On May 17, the Djcmnah reached Point Grllc, a seacoast southern Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) . Riial wa~ unimpressed "'th" town . On his travel diary, he wrote: "Th~ general appear,1f Pomt Galle " p1cture$que but lnncl) and quiet and at -ame lime sad " 10.. n ,n The following. day the Djrmnah weighed anchor and resumed the voyage towards Colombo, the capital of Ceylon. After a few hours of saiJtng, she reached this cny on the same day. Rizal was enamoured by Colombo bcc:rusc of its scenic beauty and elegant buildings. He delightfully scribbled on his diary: wColomlx> is more beau11ful, smart and elegant than Singapore. Point Galic. and Manila . ..,, Fim Trip Tbniugh Suu Canal. From Colombo. the Djemnah conttnued the voy3gc crn!>l>ong the Indian Ocean 10 the Cape of Guardafui, Africa For the first lime , Riial sighted the barren roru.1 of Afnca. which be called an ~inhospitable land but famous-.' At the next >1opovcr - m Aden - Rizal went ashore to sec the sights. He found the city. holler than Manila He was amused to see the camels, for it was the first time he saw these animal~. From Aden, the DJemnah proceeded to the city of Sue?. the Red Sea terminal of the Suez Canal. Upon arnvaJ at Sue:t. Rizal disembarked and wenc sigh15ceing. like an ordinary tounst. What impr·essed him most was the beautiful mOQnJight which reminded him of Calamba and his family. It took the Djemnah five days to traverse the Suez Canal. was thrilled because 11 was bis first trip through this canal which was built by Ferdinand de Lesseps (French diplomat· cngincer). It was inaugurated on November 17, 1869. Ru.al At Port Said, the Mediterranean termin~I of the Suez Canal, Rizal landed in order to see _the_ interesung SJ&ht_s. He was fascinated to hear the multi-raoal mbab1tants spea~mg a b8:bel of tongues - Arabic. Egyptian, GTcek , French, Italian' Spanish, etc. Naples and Mandlles. From Port Said, the Djemrum proceeded on its way to Europe. On June 11, Rizal reached .1'!apl~s. This Italian city plea$cd him because of its busineSlt a~ttvll~, ~s lively people, and its panoramic beauty. He was fascmat~ _Y . the Castle of St· Telma • and other h1stonc Mount V esuv1us, sights of the city. On the night of June 12, the steamer docked at th_e French harbor of Marseilles. Rizal , after bidding farewell to bts fello_w. disembarked · He visited the famous d If, paSl>Cngers, C • Cha1cau · mpris where Dantes. hero or The Count of Monie ri.rto, was 1 · oned. He bad enjoyed reading this novel or Alexander Dumas when he was a student at the Ateneo. He st~yed two and a half days in Marseilles, enJoying every day of his S0)Oum. 8urcclona. On the afternoon of June 15, _Rizal left Mar~e•l~e. by tra,n for the last lap of h•~ trip 10 Spain .. He eras.~ pl ~ renec~ and stopped for a day at the fronuer town o ? ~u Here he noticed the indifference accorded by . the Sparush Immigration office" to tourists, in direct oon1ras1 with the courte~y of the French immigrntion officers. . . After the passpon inspection_al Po~-B_ou, Rizal oon1mued hi~ trip hy rail • finally reaching his dcstmat1on - Barcelona on June 16, 1~2. Riial's first impr~ion of Barcelona, the greatest city or Catalun,, and Spiun's second IJrgc•I c,t y, wa\ unfavorat>lc IIL thuJght that it wa:, ut•) w1111 <11r1y ulll inn, ,m~ 111h~"l~IIJ1'1_ rL,sidents, because be happen~d to s~ay upo:;1sst:~;~n a:11: <lin mn situated on an ummpress,ve narr . . . gy I "de" and the staff 30d guests m this mn were " town's most ug YSJ • • • nd md1ffcr.:01 tu him Later • he changed his bad ,mpi:ess,on a_ came to like the city. He round it to be really a _great city, with an a tmosphere of freedom and liberalism, and its people were o n-hearted, hospitable, and oourageous. He e?Joyed promped_mtr 3 lon~ l ..:t" ~•-bias the most f.,..,,..us ,trr'"t m1'~rc~lona ,..ra ,., In $'-"""'V $~"" ( 1882 t885t ~ Filipinos in Barcelona, some of whom "'ere his schoolmates_ m the _A1eneo, wekomed Rizal They ga,e him a pany at their favonte cafe in Plaza de Catalufla After 1he customary exchange of toasts. they told their guest o{ the attractJons of Barcelona and the custom,, of the Spanish people; 111 turnd be gave them the latest news and g~i~ m the Phihppmc~. . "Amo~ Patrio." In prog,css1>e Barcelona. Rizal -.rote a ~honaltst1c essay entJtled "Amor Patrio. (Love of Count!\), hJ_s firs~ article \O.nllen on Spain's soil. He sent this amcie to ius mend 1n Manila, Basiho _Teodoro Moran . pubhshcr of O,ariong Tagalog, the first Manila bilingu.il ne10.,papcr (Spanish and Tagalog). Rizal'~ "Amor Patrio, ~ under his pen-name Laong /.aan, appeare~ m pnnt m Du,riong Tagalog on August 20. 1882. It was published ID two texts - Spnmsh and Tagalog. The Spanish text was the one onginally written by Rizal in Barcelona The Tagalog text was a Tagalog translauon made by M .H del Pilar The ar!1clc caused qu11e a $Cn\811on among the readers rn the Phihpp1ncs because of its nauonatisuc flavor As ID his prize-win. rung linentud F1ltp111a. ·• Rizal m lus "Amor Patna•· urged h·s 1 compat~o~ 10 love their fatherland, the Philippines. Among other thmg.~. he wrote :8 '"°"' disinteresled Read hJStory Publisher Basilio Teodoro Moran. deeply impre"cd I>> ·'Amor Pamo," congratulated Rizal, and requested for more aroclcs. l n response to his request. Rizal wrote the second aruck for Du,riong Tagalog entitled "Los Vio)l!S" (Travel,) H,s third artic.le. entitled "Rtvista de Madrid" (Review of Madrid), which he wrote in Madrid on November 29, 1882, was rclurocd to him because the Diartong Tagalog had ceased pub1tca11on £or lack of funds Manila Moves to Madrid . While so1oum1ng in Barcelona. Rizal received sad news about the cholera that was ravaging Manila and the provmces. Many people bad died anJ more wen: dying daily. According 10 Pacinno's letter, dared Scptcmhcr 1~. 1882, the Calamba folks were having afternoon no, cnas tn San Roque and nocturnal processions and prayers so 1ha1 (10d ma~ stop the dreadful eptderruc, which the Spanish heahh Juthm1ues were impotent to check. And how strancc! The poorer and more mucrablc she the more we suffer for her, and the more she is tdoltted and adored; )CS, there i, real JOY ,n ,uUenng for her. Lift In Madrid. On November 3 1882. R11al cnrol~d HI the Universidad Central de Madnd (Central Un1vcr-ity of "1ad rid) in 1wo courses - Medicine and Ph1lowphy ,,nd Ll'tters Aside from his heavy studies in the un1vcr~itI. he ,tuJ1ed p~m111,~ and sculp1ure in the Academy of Fme Aru or San Fernan<lo took lessons m French. German. and Engh,h und,:r pnvate instructors, and assiduously pracuscd (enc1nl,! J11,I )hoo111,11 m the Hall of Arms of Sanz y Carbonell His thirst for know ~dge of music, he visited 1he an gallcnes and museum, and read Child, "'~ lo,c l)IAly; adolescent, we forgel it. youth. or_ someth!ng more posili,c and more useful; parent, the children die and time cr•dually erases our pain 1u,t as the air -or the sea <lowly effare,, the shores as 1he boat <iepans from them But. fo,,e of coun1ry can never be effaced. once 62 "heroic, the Ano1her sad news from the Philippines was lhe chally kttcr o f Chmgoy recounting the unhappiness o{ Leonor R,vcra . who was gelling tbtnner because or the absence of a lo,cd one . we seek our Klcal; dtsillUSK>ned, we weep and go ,0 que\l 1 II has always been wd that love is the most potent force bclund the most ..,bhmc de"ds; ,ery "'-eU, of all lo,cs . the love-of country is what produced the greatc:$1. the most After _the fash10n of the ancient Hebrews who offered '" the temple the fi,-.;1 fruit\ of tMir lovr, we ,n a foreign land. dedicate our fim aa:ounts to our country. enshrouded •monc the clouds and mi.o. of morn, alway, beautiful and poeuc, bu1 c,-er more idolized in propon10n as .,.e are llb<ent and away from it. . Under wbalcver aspect. whatever Its n3rnc. "'.e lo•e h~r (p,,rria) al"'ays 1u,1 as the child loves its mother tn the mids( of hunger and miM!ry ll>. ' it bas entered the heart. because ii carncs ,n itself the d1vmc atamp that makes 11 eternal and impenshable In one of his fellers (dated May 26. 1882). Paaano .id,i,cd 0 his younger brother to finish the medical course 1n MaJml Evidently. heeding hi~ advice, Riwl left Barcelona in th<' fall o{ 1882and establtshed himself in Madnd. the capital of Spam -IIQA&. UO(, I n -... S,,,,• 1-.t , . , books on all subjects under the sun, including military engmecring, in order IQ broaden his cultural background Rizal led a Spartan life in Madrid . He knew that he came to Spain to study and prepare himself for ,ervice 10 his fatherland . Accordingly, he rigidly budgeted his money and time. Ho lived frugally. spending h~ money on food clothing. lodging and books- ne,..er wastang a peseta for gamNin~. wine ar,:1 women His only extravagana: was mvestmg a few pesetas for a lonery t1ckc1 ,n every draw of the Madrid Lottery. He ,pent his leisure lime reading a nd wntmg at his hoarding house, attending the reunions of Filipino students at the hou!>C of the Paterno hruthers (An tomo_ Maxinuno, and Pedro). and praetiang fencing and shooting al the gymna~1um . At other hmc,. during the summer t11,1lights, he sipped coffee and frall!rni,ed wnh the ,tudcnts from Cuba, Mexico, Argenuna, etc at the Antigua Cafe de Levante On Saturday evenings, he visited the home of Don Pablo Omga y Re} who h\'cd with lus i,on (Rafael) anJ daughter (Consuelo) Don Pahlo had been cny mayor of Manila during the administrauon or the liberal governor general Carl~ \1a de la Torre ( 1869-I 871) and was later promoted vice-pres1denr of the Counctl of the P!11lipp1nes in the Ministry of Colon,~ (Ultramar). co-work.er m the Propaganda Mo1'ement, Eduardo de Lele, was madly m to,e with Consuelo and he had no wtSb to break their fricnd,1>1p becau!>< of a prcttv girl "l ~~ A,k M~ •or Verx," In 11!82 \hortly artcr his nrnval i~ Madnd. Rtzal Jomed the Circulo Hispano-Ftlipino ( I lti,p.rno-Philipp1ne Circle). a >0e1c1~ of Spaniards and Filipinos Upon the rc4ucs1 ,JI the mcmbcl"l of lhc; soocty, he 11,rotc a poem cr-r11lcd \f, v.-,1rn" (The) J\,k Me For Ver.cs) wluth he ·,noJlh d,~-1~ n.-d dunng the Ne,. Year's Eve recep11011 ul 1h, \laJnJ Fit11>1n1,, held tn 1h,· cverung or December 1 1 t.sl\.! 1-i ,h,.,ad p<>,111 I r<•u ,. Jut rhccry ufh" ar»ni11ng r,d,.,. h1..·,1r1 'l.1ii. Ill â–º , "'"'"'" vou11g man in fl Ul11 a fore•~ country. far iO~ i...a,~ I ... •t\ n, 1 It ~d} poem n >l ..", ,a..... dedteated 10 her. In 'n1s poem 11tled A [,a .\eti,mt, C. O v P \l\"3'-.'11) H en > : tt,ed 0 (To M,ss C O y P.). 'he expressed hi, adnura11on (or her. H e round wlace and JOY in her comp.1ny . H owever. before his romance with Consuelo could blo,,som mto a serious affair, be suddenly backed out for two reasons (I) he was still engaged to Lconoc- Rivera and (2) his friend and \SI,; Mt: FOR \ f.R.,n, Ye LS tmJ me now 10 ,1nlc tht· l)rC Th ll mute o1nd torn ,o r. ,nit ha, l"i•n And i·e1 I "ake <he Mrain. N, r .. ,n lhc Mu,c- one I oh io~1re• (\~JI, it ~ale, 1n accent• d1rc A, I m) ""'' tl-..:lf IU •nng, """''°' ,\n, A \.t• komaoee wi th Coosaelo Ortlga y Pttn, Rizal was not a handsome man In ph~iquc . he "'3S neither dashing nor impos• mg, for he was a shy small man - a few inches above five feel 1n height. But he p<>s.sesscd an aura of charisma due to h,s many-splcndored talents and noble chnracter which made him atrractive 10 romantic young women. No wonder the prc111cr or Don l'a.blo'~ daughteTS (Co~elo) fell in love wuh him 11 f,,llu\\, "'htn 11, ,ounJ s.t"emS, b\1t to fbna. IC)l al 1h °'' n low lamcnl, ,n 'Jd ,>0la11on pent. \i~ ,tnJI <.?I.ft l'tii...rc ""·u, ;i nt1lhcr foci nor Mng time ah •u, too true But that tune long ago has pa<t Whc,n upon me 1hc Mus< h,1t lndul~cnt ,m,1, und f11cnd,h1r'°• d ·< , Bui ot thal al!C no" all loo fe"' 11" 1houghi- 1h.t1 ,.,th me yet v,1II ,tay. A, 1n,m th&· houn, •lf tc~h""C' rl.a)· ,1,· I here hr11ter on mys1en<>u> ootcs. A,u.J 11t uu1 rt1 aJ, thi.: mcmlll)' OQl:b Clt mm,1 r, 1\ ,ncl fflU'-A ~ · A rlJnt I om that \Carel\ ~n,.. n \ \ .b lllfll 1rom o u t its E3stcrn bed \\her,· ,1II u1<>. nJ pcrl >me" ,bcJ AnJ hf"~ t,ut .-, ., drc:am ,, knn..,n llx- land tlut I can call mi own lh me forJt..>llC'n ne'er 10 be, W1"'rc 1hrillin, bird, 1bcor ,ung tauJht me, 6S JOSI IIIZAL LIH, WOIIKS AND WIIUTIN(II And ca$<"1ldts with th~,r rcdS<!less roar, And all •:ong the sprud,n& shore The murmun of the sounding sea. Whlle yet tn childhood's happ) day. I learn upon 11\ sun 10 smile, And 10 my breast there seems the wh~c Seething •olcanlc fire, to play, A bard I w11s. my w,,h always To call upon the fleeting ,.ind. "(iu lurth. nnd spread around us Dame, Frum ?One to ,one woth glad occlu1n1, And earth to heascn together bind'" But it I Jell, and now no more l ikc a tree th•t i, broken and ,crcM• n 110I gods hrinR the cchn clc11r Of songs that 1n pa.,t times the) bore: W~dc ...,:,s I crnss'd tu fomgn shore, Wuh horc of change 3nd other f:110, M) folly "-aS m.tdc clear tcx, late hu in the pla« or i(lkrd I ,uugh; The ~as re\'tal'd unto naught But m.tde death's spectre on me wait, All these fond fanc,c; that were m,nc All lo,·c, all feeling :di cmpmc ' Were left beneath the sunn~ ,kic,. Which u'e, that tlowery rcg,011 sh,nc· So pre,~ n11 more thut pica of 1hinc, • Fat wngs of love from out a heart llm cnldl} lk\ a thing apart: Since now ,,.,th t<>rtur'J ,nul r h.l\tt llnrestmg o'er 1he dcscrt \loa\lt And lofcless gon~ ,, •II 1he ~rt ~ilal a, Lover of Books. A favorite pastime ot 1{17a1 in M11dnd wa, read1'.1g . rn,tc.i,J or gambling ,111,J Otrtinv. w,1h "'omen. a~ man) youn!( Ftlopmo, did in the Spani,h mctropoh,, he st~ycd a1 home and read ,oraciou,ly until m,dmght Since early childhood, he liked tu rc:id . Rizal econom11ctl on h,~ hvcng <'~pen-..:,, and ,._, ,h the mc,ncy he <avcd , he pur<·ha,cd hook, fmm ., ,ccond• hand hool ~tore owned t>y a cenam '><·110r Ro~e~ lk was able 10 build a fair-sized pmat,· hl>rJr)' H" collection of books included The Bible, 66 Htbrtw Grammar, Livts of dtt Pres1dt'fllS of the Unittd Stau:J from Was/ungton to Johnsc>r,, Complrtt' Works of Voltairt' (Q volumes), Comp/tit Works of Horou (3 ,·olumes) , C.omplete Worlcs of C. Bernard (16 volumes). Hi.s1ory of tnt' Frtnch Rtvoluli.on, T11t Wanduing lt'w, Anc~nl Poetry, Works of Thucv1Jut,•,. 71it' Byzanhnt Empirt, The Charoctrr.f hy La Bruyere, Thr Rpwissanu, Unch Tom's Cob111 by Harriet Bcec:her Stowe, Works of Aluandtr Dumas, Louis XIV and Jiu Courr, and nlllllcrou, '-ooks on medicine, phtlosophy, language,, h,~10,y gcogaph) 1rts, and <cience5 Ru.al wa~ deep!)' affected by flercher Stowe', Unrlr Tom's Cal,111 and Eugene Sue's Tht W/llldtring hw. These two books aroused his sympathy for the oppressed and unfonunote people Rlzal'• Finl Visit to Parla (1813). D1mng his fir,1 1,ummcr vacation in Madrid Riwl went to Pan~, S<l)OUrning in 1hi~ gay capital of France from June 17 to Auitust 20, 1883. Al r,rst, he was billeted at the Hotel de Paris on 37 Rue d<' Maubange ; later, he moved to a cheaper hotel on I14 Rue de Renne, in the Latin Quarter, where it was cheaper to live Like all touruts. Rizal wu charmingly titillated h) the attractive sights of Paris, such as the beautiful boulevards (par• ticularly the Champs Ely1>$Cs), the Opera HoUM:. the l'luu: de I• CollQOrde, the Arch of Triumph. the Bois de Boulogne (magnificent park). the Madelaine ChuR:h, the Cathedral of Notre Dame, the Column of Vendome, the lnvalidcs (containmg the tomb of Napoleon the Great), and the fabulou~ Vcrsa1ll1\~ Unlike ordinary t6uri,ts, who-.e main mtcrest in •isiting foreign countries is to see the beautiful sights, to enjoy I hem,elve,, in night clubs and lheatres, and to shop for wurvcnir item,, Ri.t.al improved his mind hy observing clo,;cJy th,· Frc-nch of life and spending many hours at the museums, notabl} the world-famous Louvre; the botanical gardens, especially 1hc Luxembourg the libraries and art gallerit'!,, and the hosp11uls, ,ncludont the Lacnnec Ho6pital, where he obi.erved Or. Ni.:atsc treating hi, patients and the Lariboisiere Hospital, wh •re he observed the examination of different diseases of wumen """Y On the lighler side of his v1Stt m l'ari~. RWII was mistaken by the Parisinns a• a Japanese The pncei. of food. dnnks, thcalrc tickets, laundry, hotel accommodations, and tran~portation were " too high ror his slender purse so that he commented in a letter to his family: •Pari~ 1\ the co,liest capital in Europc." 11 R11.al u • Muon. In Spam Rizal CJUne m close contaet with prominent Spanish ht>cral and republican Spaniards. who were mostly Mason,, 111<:ludmg Miguel Morayta, statesman, proressor, historian, and wruer; Francisco Pi y Margal, JOumalist. Statesn1Jn, and former PrcMdent ol the shon-lived First Spanish Republic; Manuel Becerra, Minister or Ultramar (C.Olonies); Emilio Junoy, Journalist and member or the Spanish C.Ortes; and Juan Ru11 Zonlla, parh,imcnl:man uud head or the Republican Prog, c"1ve Puny in Madrid. Rizal was impressed hy the way the Spanish Mason~ openly and freely cnt1ci1..:d the government poltcies and lambasted the rr i.us, whoch could not ~ done m the Ph1fippincs. In due time, ,n March 111113, he Joined the Ma.onoc lodge ~tied Acacia in Madrid Hos reason for hecoming a mason was to secure Freemawnry's a,d in his fight against the fnars in the Philippines. 'iin," lhc fria~ u~cd the Catholic religion as a shield to entrench themscl,c, m p<>w,:o ind wealth and 10 per..ecutc the Fihpino patmm, he intended 10 utiliie Freemansonry as his shield to combat 111cm. Later he transferred 10 lodf.e So/1daridad (Madrid), where he hc,·amc a Ma,rcr Muson on November 15, 1890. Still later, on Fchruary 1.5, 1892, he was awarded the diploma as Master M~n by le Grand Orient de Franu in Paris. 13 A~ a Mason, R12al played a lukewarm role in Freemasonry, unlokc ~, II dcl Polar. G Lope, Jaena, .and Mariano Ponce who ,cry acti-c on ll,fa~onic affairs. His only Masonic wnting .. a, ,1 lecrure ullcd "Sc:1mce, \lirtue and Labor," which he deli\crcd on 18!!9 at Lodge Soltdaridad, Madrid. A pertinent portion of this lecture read~ "~ follows:•• w,-,, n,., duly of muJem m~n. io rny way or lhinking, is 10 work for lhe redemption of humani1y. because once m•n is dognofied lhcrc would be less unfortuna1e 8J1<I more happy men thJI " possible on rho~ lofc. Humnnoty cannot be redeemed so long as rhere are oppre<sed peoples, so loog •• there arc some men who live on the rears or many, so ii,nr ,.. there arc cmabCUlared minds and blinded eyes that en,1HeJ orhers 10 hve hke sultans who aJone may enjoy 68 beauiy. Humaniiy cannot be redocmod wtule reason OJ n_ot free while faith would want to impose iuelf on facts, whole wh~ are laws, and while there arc nations who subjugate othcn. For humanity to be able 10 111aln the lofty_ de.tiny toward which God guide$ it, it is om I ary that Within its fold !here should be no <lissensions nor tyranny, thar plagu~ do nor decimate ii and no gJOIIJ1S and runlci be heard 111 it$ march. It is necessary that its triumphant career ,nareh 10 the tune of the hymns of glory and liberty with a bright face and Min:ne roretteud . Hnaoclal Worrle!t. After R11.al', departure for Spam, things turned from bad 10 worse in Calamba. The harvests or rice and sugarcane failed on account of drought and locusts. On top or this eoonom,c disru.ter, the manager or the Domm1can-0wac:d hacienda ,ncrca!iCd the rental\ of the lands cult,vated by the Rizal £amity. This hacienda manager, a fn!quent guest at the R12al home, used to ask for a turkey from Don Franasco (the hero's father), who was a good raiser of turkey~. But there came a time when a dreadful peM killed most or the turkeys When the manager requested for a turkey, .~on Francisco had lo deny him because he needed the few swvtvmg turkeys for breeding purposes. Enraged by bis failure to receive 8 turkey, the vindic11ve manager nrbotrarily increased the rentals of the lands leased by Don Francisa> a.nd Paaano. Due to bard times in Calamba, tbe monthly allowances of Rizal to Madrid were late ,n amval and there were tunes when they never arrived, cious1ng much surfcring to h)m. At ~ne time Paciano was forced to sell his younger brothers pony to order 10 send money 10 Madrid. A touching incident in Rizal's life in Madrid occurred on June 24, 1884. Because he wa., broke, he WlU unable to l.ake breakfast that day With an empty ,romach, he attended hos class at the university, parucipated in the contest in Greek language and won the gold medal. In the cverung or the same.day he was able to cat dinner. for he was a guest &peaker 1n a banquet held in honor ,,, Ju ' una and Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo at Restaurant Ingles, Madrid. Rlzal's Salate to Luna and ffk'M&"' The banquet on lbe evening of June 25, 1884 was sponsored by the Filipino commun• '9 IOR RIUL llr&, ,W()Rl(I AND WIIITINOS In SuMy Sellin ( 1882 188!il ity to celebrate the double V1ctory of the f."ilipino artm in the National F.xPO,ition of Fine Arts in Mndrid Luna's Spo/iarium winnmg fttsl prize and Hidalgo's Chris1i11n Virgins Frf""~" 10 1he l'opulau SC<-ond pnze It was auendcd by prominent Spanish artist> newspapermen, and men-of-lcuers. btatcsmen, and Ftlipm0<- !\pcaking m sonorous C'11~1ilian, Rizjl held h,~ ,1ud1encc spellbuund. He saluted Luna am.I Hidalgo as the two glnric~ of Spain and the Phihpp,nes, wht>se arti~lic achicvem<-nts trnn, cend<Cd geogr.,phical fronuers and rncial <>ngms. for gcnim 1, universal "genius knl''-' no country, gcniu~ ,prou" cverywhcre,_genius i, hke hght, air 1he patrimony of ev<•ryhnd,· rosmopohtan like space, like hfc, like Uod." He ~lso a<,:iilcd with rdincd ~,ncasm the b,gotJ) and blindnc" of cc11au1 unworthy Spaniards (refcrrinj! lo the bad fnar, m the Phif1prinl•,) '-ho c,mld not comprehend 1he univcrsahty of gt•mu, !his magnifi~ot speech of Rizal w<1, grn,·tcd wtth ,,,1,1 ovaho11s, for ~l'ldom d,J lhe Spamard, hear ,uch an ,11,,uou from the ltps of~ brown F"ilipino '-hich wa, almoq pccll", '" nob,hty of thought, m Spam~h rhetoric in sin,c11t1 1,I kdml' and m sonorous eloquence, Its lull text ,, ~s follow,·" In lpcbkrng before )uu, 1 am nor >eared b} 1h,· k.11 that you ma) hstc-n 10 me w11h lul.tv.11rmnc:-"' l -.·111111.: '" Jlltn your cnth.uMa'im. ours, the st1mulu~ of ynurh. Jnd )ou cannot h<lp but be indul8cnl Sympathe1'1c- eflluvia ,aturat< the almospht:rc; fr-.atc:-rnaJ i.urrrnt, run •n ult clui:cth111, . generous ,oul, h,cen; ,nd consequcnllv I du no, le•r rur n1,> humhk pc-1~1tt nm dn I doubt )'OW bt:ncvulcnt.c Mt;n of gooJw,11, you ,rck uni) goodwill, an(l from clw hdgl11 where noble sen11men1s rc~idc. you do no1 p.,rcei,c p,:u ~ lnfln. you ,,,. I~ '-ik>le and you Judge Jhc ca.c. and -.,u extend your hand to one whn hke mi: Uc~trc, 10 Ju111 )OU 1n one ~inj!:Je thought. m uni: c;rnJ:th: u,prnirmn Un: >!f1,rv llf gemu\, the •plcndor 11( the ~uiherfond HC'fe i,. 1n fac.:t, the.: tt.t'-On \\<hy -...,c ,tfl" }!alht..·h.·<l In the- hktory of na1ion~ thrrc arc n.tmr-. ch.it h\· 1ht·u"~ ,.. '-'' ~•gnjf)· an achievement. th.at rc(all pah1011 and gn.· 11111..·,-<, names th,u, llkr m.egu. fotniulJ tvvh· r,fcu-wnl and ,nuliriJ.t th(M.1ghh, n·1me1, thal hcc,1m~· a r,1ct .1 !\Ymhnl nf Jl\:,1t·i· • .1 honl.l o( 1,,.e h<rwcen !he nJlmn,. The name~ nr I un,1 •nd 70 HldaJao belong co these; thctr gloncs 11lumme the rwo ellremes of !he globe _ the East and the We,t , Spain •nd the Philippines. In uttcrins them J hclien Tsee two lummou, an:t,es that, stamng from both n:giOnS, are going to be entwined thcirc above, impelled by the fc_elUlg of comm<!n · · and from that hcl•ht WA ong,n, .,.. unite two peoples with ecomal bonds, two peoples that sea and space separa1e lfl ,am. t " peoples in wluch the seed,, of dminion that men and the,r despotism blindly sow do not germ1na1e, Luna •m.1 H,d,l~o are Spanish u well as Philippine glories. They were_ lk,rn in the Philippines but they oould have been bum 1n Sr••n. be1:a~ genius knows no country• ~emus ,prouts everywhere, genius is hke hghc. a_,r, thee patnmony OI every• body, cocmopolilan like space, hkc hfc, hke God The patnarchal era in lhe Ph,llpp,nc, is w,uun~- The deeds of he, illustriom sons are no longer wa<lcd awa~ at home. The orien1al chrysalis is leavmg the cocoon Ilic morrow of a long day for those regions " announced 111 brilliant tines and rose-colored dawns, and cha! race• fallen ,DIO lethargy during the hiscoric night while the ,un rllum111c, :iiher continents. aga,n •w•kens moved hy the clc.1n, . pact that contact wich Weskm peoples produces, and she ::mands light , hfe , the eivlhza11on tbac o1 one ltmc they bequeath her, thus confirming the eternal law, nf """""ll evolution. of change. of periodicy • of progress You know llus well and you e,rufl in it To you i, Jue the beauty of the dia1n,,nd, !hat the l'hili p11t11c wc,ir,"' he ~-n:,wn . She produ«d the precious ston•s. C:urore gave tnem polish. An.d all of us contemplate proudly your work; we are the name, the breath. the ma1erlal furnt~hcd They imbibed o~cr there the poc:11) ul nacurc • nature grandiose and u:m"blc ,n tl'\. c11wclr,m, in n, t.'~"lu tions, in its dynamism; a nature. s-.eet tran<1u1l, and roclancholy in HS m1in1fcs1a11on constJnl. ,tanc, A n:uure >hac namps its seal on all that it create, and rroducc, Its children carry it wherever chey go Analyz.e if not 1he1r character their works, and howescr ,hghlly yuu may kno-. ch,1111copk you will sec it in everyching as forming 1he1r knowkd~,·, "' the soul thac presides over everylh,n~ as the spn ni ol I he mechanism u the sub,11,n1ial form, as !he'•''" m111<11,1l I, .. OI J>0$8ible noc lo reOecc on what one·, -rlf kol, ,1 i• po6Sable 10 be one thing and do something dsc The :0~ J()R RIZAL Lll'f, WOfll(I AHO "RITIN<A c-0ntradictic,ri1 an: only arr-,rut 1hcy ore only r>•••do•cs.. In El Spobanun,, through that c:anva, that ,s not mute, ean be heard the tumuh of the muhllu<.le, the shouting of the <laves, the melallrc creaking ol the urmm of 1hc corf"IC~, the sob; of the bereaved, the mUJmur> of prayer, with such viir:or illn<I rcolt!m • .1, one hcu,.., chc din or chundcr to 1hc rmdst of the crnsh of the c,Jturuct, or the 1mrrcss.,c and dreadful tremor of lhc earthquake 'Inc same nature tlwt engenders ,uch phonomen" i ntcr...,'-'nc, al\<, m thoS<.· 4;1rnlu:~ On 1hc oCI 11 . !, m lh<lalg_u·t. r,untrnR ct1<· purC"\>l ,,·nhm~nt lhrnh.... "k:il c~pn:,"um of md.incholy. hc:auty. and -.caknes, _ victun, of brure force. and it ,, ht :m,c f hd.,J_1•0 w11!1 horn under lht· hnlh,un ..11.un: of hat ,ky to rhe couiog 11 H\ M"a brt-\'/r, rn Che n11d,t ,,1 tire '-t!rcnuy 01 ,1, lake~. the poc:lr} of 11, ,allci,. and th..: 01,lJ~·,e,c hartntN1y of n. nwunt,-un, ,mJ r:111gc, h,r lh..at u.·.1..,on III LtuM '\ ..rt• the &lldJU"-·1. the cuntra)ts~ Ille rn,,rrt,und fijlhb, mystery and th, tern1,1, like the rncl'hcratmn of the tlark tcmpe<h nl the 1rnp1,,. the li11h1nmp nn,t the rn.um~• c.-ruJ,tlo11!'ri. ul thc.11 \.olt.:anot:s h>r chat rc:i,on Jl1dafi,:o 1rnll h.Jlhr , ml<1r, hJrnuin) fal111i, hmr1d11y. lr~c the Pluhf'ptnes m her moonhght nights on her tranquil dtff\, \\tlh h,·r hun1on, thut mvuc lo mcJllullun . \lOd where the 11111n1tr lulls And hoth. dc~pitc: ht,·111~ ,o dhunct m rhcm~lvc,. m appe3Iao,:e ..1 least. co1oc1de a1 ho11nm. a~ 111 our h,·11ns tJo Ill '(lalc 111 nmnhl<• ,lrffcrcmc,. 111 rcOectmg o~ lheor r•lcttc the splend1fcro11, r.t)> ,>f u11fnl,l1ny r.lnrv w11h which they surround thc:or Nau,c Land. hoth e,prc,~ lhc SJ>rfll nf our M><wl. mor.11. and 1>uh11cal Ilk. mankonJ sul>iectcd lo harsh tests. unredeemed mankmd; rc;l\on and usrorillion an an OflCn struggle ,.,,h preoccura1ions. fana11 Cl!\nt ,tn\l lnJU~fH.:c\, tlccau-.c.- scrmmcnh .md orinium. cut pas.sage through the lhi<:kc,1 wall,. lwc;iusc tn them all hnJ,cs have pores. all arc tran,parcnt. ,ind 11 rhc) lack pen. of lh,· f""'" doe,, nnl help them . lite J>Jl<·llc .anti hru,hc, will nt\l only dclogh1 the c~e 1,ut will ol,o l,c eloquent 1rihute, ff the Muther r..•«ho her child her l•n~ua11e on ""lcr ll1;1I ,he.- m..t) un,lc"'tJnJ lo, Jt'\'S. his. necessu,c--.. or h,~ \Orrow~. Spam, a, m •thcr, h:J4.•hc, ul"', htr IJt1~u..sgc 10 1hc Ph1bpp1,,,..., in ,p1tc nt lh!! orpP"\ltlOn of tho\e 1TT)'t1p11.: mtn .and p1gmu.•• who <k!\11111r to in~urc lhc.: v•('~cm. do not ~cc 1ht· futur~, <1ct not wrich lhi \.V11,<.4u1.·nu~, 1uch1u, 71 wet nu.-, corrupt Ind corrupton, ..,ho tend to extinguish Ill legitimate fcdinp, who perverting the hearts of the people, sow in them the gcnns of discord in order _10 reap later the fruit, the aconite, the death offuturcgcneranons. But, I forget those miseries• Peace to those who arc dead beca~ the dead •re <lead· they lack breath, soul, and worms corrode them' Lei us oot evoke their dismal memory; let us not hring their stench into the mrdst of our rejoicings! Fortunately, brothe~ are l•rser ,n nu!"ocr generosity and nobility are innate under the sky of !>pain, all of you arc: a patcnl proof of that. You have rc.,pcmdcd un11J1imously; you have helped and you would have done more if more had been asked of you. Seated 10 >hate our supper and to honor the tllusmous son, of the Philippine., you honor also Spain because you have done very well Toe boundaries of Spain are neither the AtlanlJc nor the Cantab· rian nor the Mediterranean it would be 1g110minious for the water to place a dam to her grandeur, 10 her idea Spalft IS there, there where her beneficent infiucocc IS felt, and though her Ong might d1,appear, there would remain her memory, eternal, impcnshable What does a ptcce of red a· d yellow doth matter. what do noes and cannons matter, there where no fusion of ideas, unity of principles. harmony of opinions e,ust? Luna and Hidalgo belong as much to you as to us; you love them and "'• sec m them generous hopes, precious examples The Filipino ynuth in Europe , ever en1hus1as1ic, and others whose hearts always remain young for the dism• 1cru1cdness and enthusiasm that charactcriu their actions, offer 10 Luna ~ n crown, • modest gift, small indeed for our enthusiasm. but the most spontaneous and the most voluntary of all the gifts hitherto pre,,en1cd to him. But the gratitude of the Philippines towards her 1lluslri• ous sons was nOC ycl $.Stiuied, and desiring lo give free rein to the thoughts that bubble ,n the mind, to ihe sentiment$ 1ha1 abound in the heart, and to the words that CiCBp<: from the fipi;, we have all come here to this banquet to )"in our wishes, in order to give form to the mutual embrace of two races 1hal love unc another and bite one another, morally, 'l()Clally, and •inlly united for a period of four ccn!uries, so that they m"y form on the future one single nanon 10 spirit, in their duties, m their views, in their privileges. 73 I dunk then 10 the health or our art1,11 uin• and fficblto, k&llmlatc and pu,9 pones o( rwo pec,pla' I drialt to the health of the l)el'$0DS who h.a•e lent them a hclpmg h111d on the dc)lorou, path or art I dnnk 10 Ille hcallh of the f'll.rp,nt, youth. 1-'Cnd hope or my 1'•11~ I.MJ, 1h11 lhcy may 1m11atc 1u<h pr«1ous cumrlc, so that Mother Sra,n, ll(>l1C1I011S anJ hcedtvl or 1hc ,.ctrarc or her prov1mes, 1mrlemcat 100n the rcfonns w has C<W11cmplarcd r,.,. a Iona tia,c "The furrow,. ready and the grov.nd is n()( ,1,nle! And I ll11nk finally for lhc h•pp,nc» or those parent, •ho, dcpri,cd of lhe 1cndcmc11 or 1hr1r children. lro-,a 111otc di>t..1 rcg,ons follo,o lbc• wilh .,,.,,,. <ye, •nd palptl•roni he •m Ju0<, .co\ and •p•cc, Mcr,r,,,ng on the al1u or 1hc common •~lfuc 1hc ,,.eel 111i<1 -, , . urc an the 1,..t,ght of ~re. prctaOUi ODJ 1uee1, ,,.w,cr &,.er, 1h•1 •rrnu1 along 1h11 whuc ltordcn or lhc gra•c C<-.1•••- '"°" Riul ln•ehtd In Studftlt Dunon.ltrallkwu, On No,cml-c.,r 20. 21, and 22, 11184, the serc:nc city of Madrid e~plodcd 1n hlooJ> no1, h~ the \tuJcnts of the Central l/mvc~uy. k1zal and 01hct I 1hpm11 11udcn11 par11c1p.t1c,J, toac1hcr w11h Cuhan Mex, can, Pcrmuin , and 'ipani~ students, 1n th, tu" ,,h Thn(i ,11.1.t,n1 dcmon!lrJllom were ~au.ed by tht' addrc.._, of Dr. Miguel Mora,13, rrolc,..:" of hi"oty, 11 the opc:n,"t: ccrcmorue1 of the academic ~c " >n No~mbc:r :n. an ,.h,~1. 11,, proda1n1cd 'the freedom of -.·,ence and 1he 1eocher" Such a hht,raJ view wa, C'Ulldemned I>, 1hc Caiholic "1shoJ>" of Sp&on who promplh ucommuno~lcd Dr Moray11 and 1ho~· who .ippl4udcd "" <pccch Anacred hy 1hc b1go1ry of the <'11holic hi,h,,ps , the umvcr ,,ty Sludcnu rose ,n violent <kmon,,tralloo) f'hc> noted m 1hc ctty 61rect\, ,hou11ng "Viva Moray11! Down with Bl'hOfl\! " Practiully all 1hc ,1ud<'nt, on •~nou\ colk&cs (I.a,., Mr.d,anc, Pht!owphy and Letters. c1c,) Jooncd lhc massive dcmon,1rat1on,, ancludln& R,101. Valentin Ventura, and other f"tJipanos Tht" poha; ar,J the •nn> lroopcr. tr1Cd to <upprc>1 the •ngry '1udenh , bu1 an ••m. Bloody fiaht5 raged ,n 1hc umYCf\llY hu,IJ/ngs ~n,1 1n the city streets. The studeni. armed v.,th clubs, <lone). and fists. fooaht the go•crnmcnt tom:s Many um•c:rut) professor. openly liUpponed I~ 1tudcn1 norers The Rc,·1or, who MI\O took 1he side of the 1tudcn11. was forced 10 resign and WI\ replaced by Doctor Crc-.., "a very unpopular man. dishkc:d by e,ef}hodv ", tbe appoin1mcn1 ol the nc"' Rr.ctur mtcn,ufacd the fu1y of the lt\ldcnt ckmonSlrators. Mo" ,1udent dc:n100,1rn11on$ con• vul•cd the c,ty, Recounting the tumultuou\ notan~~ to his famil) In a letter dared November U,. 18!<4 R,,.., ...,,J' When 1hc n,w Rcc:1nr went hi a"un,c olhcc nc•t ll;ay INo,,cmbcr 21 , 188-1 ZI lrch" ., trc 111u,b arntlll<d "'" -.ere ,till ICC'ln& red 1t •--a fl..~11 J .;JO( 10 return to c ~~ u IOllg H !hey did nN gm1 us sata>r•c:twn, and rcm.,, c 1hr Rector 11,crc ,.c,c repeated >bout> of •o.,,.n ,.,th L'ccu,' I wu there aku On th,U J.1y thtrc: •rrc nc• t.:11':uunh:n. !IC"' fighll, •-oundcd call<' hlo ..,' unrmomn<nl. c:u II "u, on 1h>1 .:.me .Ja, . 1hc 2bl, ,.hen., pol1<c hcu1<n•nt •nJ • Kettl ..,,.,cc m~n •antrd 10 sr1rr \'t111ura 1and mr hu1 h< and I oapcd T,.u FrllJ'lffOl ~fC 1alcn pn,.m,:r, 1 On the third d3\ , S1turdav 1hr .Und. IM nc,r. lk,·tor Crcus calkd 1hc ~ IO O..'alf'Y 1hc l DI\Cl>1I\ t 111< area.I d,s,uM ol 1hr prt,fo~on unJ 1hc rrC'.,t 1nd1£n,1t Mn af the ,iu&nu On 1h11 .i..v, h:eauw 1hr AJent ot lh, IJ"' •ere •lu,ng '"') much at me, and I do n.•t l""" "h'" I had 1n d "£111\C ffl)><'lr 1hrrc 1,mc, C'nt,·r. J 1h, • t.,..., Mprc woun,lcd , etc !\.IOJC' th3n Iii) gu3rt1, nu,-p,c,1 the Unl,rl'Sll) up •nd Jov,n , the) h3J 1hc11 run, an I t>urln 10 l!lc lfflurc lull 'The boulc-vard Ocl P,;HJ., ,...,. occupKJ by the cavalry. cannons, and soldarr. On lh" 11,1\ ,.,. ,,.,,,. not 10 ,ctum to 1hts d1ffl",1tflrcJ 1 1nl\~nlt)' , -.htt\ol U.n1t,r ,mros,t'd on n b) fon, .,,., 1 1 ,, .at. and an •h h "" :.tt '°"" i,i.,.,,, ••1. treated ., rcr\(1"\ ~11hou1 d1gn11, ;tntl -..c h.-•.-c ),V.~l•n ncll back unbl they I'" U> , mpktr !.IIL'f••1u>11 ,11,J reinstate th<- olJ Rector. rcmt. Crcvi •ho I\ a -i.11 rol\~ 1o the pt,ys,aan; ,.ho wantrd to e~i,c:I ham la'1m 1h,· ,,,.,,,km\ lof McJlCinc and Surgc.-yl for lacking ,n 11,gnal) •nd ><II rccpc,·1 n"' R«tor, 10 avnad 1hc Clllcall, 1nJ 111,ul1, ot lhe st11<1 ·n1s, 1c:a,c- and n,1crs the Univcr,ll) 1hru • occ1<1 door In the 1ankn All lhc P•r<" ol MadraJ o1ml 1n ihc 10 go 1 P'V"'"" t, \\: .-rt those ii( d,c '1rnktry ar ... 111 our f.1,,1, . th,.- l"O!'Jc aho ~•• on our &1dc, and the •tullcn1, of 1hr prov,n,,·, arc a.tlu·ran~ ho - A nch ~-in~ ·r ~rrrrc.J ten lho~.md d ''" t(I the ("\• Rttt'1r 10 b..1I OUI the amrn,on,;J <tuJcnb and all the pro(, , u, ire 1n f.--.etr of tht ,,u'-lcnl\, , ,u muc.h M• 1h1t tht)· take o 1 cau..: 1n 1hc1f\ I had lhf lu,k of no1 "'""'' ICR"l'Cd tcvucly aoo.,,n, the Gc»rmnw-•• c,ca I cane Mow, fk,r 111\.cn pul(')ncr. nor arre,trt.J dc,('Mt 74 7S I• ....,nv SP-'• (1882 18861 my two rolca as student of medicine and of philosophy and letters ... Whether it was luck or not, the cue is that there were wounded old men, women, children, soklien, strangers; I did not even have: to run .. . No Filipino was wounded, but Cubans and Spaniards many. Studies Completed In Spain. Rizal oompleted his medical course in Spain. He was conferred the degree of Ucentiate in Medicine by the Universidad Central de Madrid on June 21, 1884, The next academic year {1884-85) he s tudied and passed au subiecu leading 10 the degree o f Doctor of 'fedicine. Due to the £act. hnwever, that he did not present the thc$is required for graduation nor pa id the corresponding fees, he was not awarded bis Doctor's diploma . 1812-13 Untvcrsal History I ............................. Very Good G eneral L11cratu1 c ........ ,. , .. ,.... ,........ • Excellent 11183-84 u n,,ersal I hSIOI')' I " ......... ' . ....... ' ... Very Good Gene ral Literature .... ... ......... , ..... Excellent 1814-85 Unl\ ersal History 2 .................... . ...... . Excellent G reek ..nd Latin L11~raturc ···· ·····~···· F1tttllcnl (with pn1.c) G reek I ....... .. ... ........... .................... Excellent (with priit) His scholastic records in medicine at the Universidad Central de Madrid were as follows: 17 Hftb Year (11181-8.3): CandMatlea o1 Medical Courre la the Unlttl'IIQ olSantoTMedical O1nic I , .............. ,• . .............. Good Surgical Chnic I •.••• , •, ••.•••• .•, . •..••••••••••. Good Obstetrical Clinic .. . . ....... ,. ,, ........ . Fair Legal Medicine , ............... ................ . ExcelJcnt Sixth year (1883-84) Medical Cltnic 2 ...... ..... .................. . ., . . Surgical Clinic 2 , ......... . , • , •.... ...•........ Good Very Good Uc..dato In Mcdldâ– • awt.nlH on J - ll , IIIM wftla the râ– liac "Fair" Doctorm (1884-15) History of Medical Science .. .• ..... .... . ..... . Surgical Analysis ..... .. ... ......• ... ........ .... Normal Histology ..... , . , . .... ... ......... ... Farr Good &cellcn1 Doctor ol Medldoe (NOC a.......) Rizal also finished his studies in Philosophy and Letten, with higher grades. He was awarded the degree of Licentiate in Philosophy and Letters by the Universidad Central de Madrid on June 19, 188S (his 24th birthday), with the tatinJ of MExc:ellent• (Sobraalimt,e), H i s ~ Ra>rds in Ibis coune follow: II 11112.&l Spanish Language .................... . Excellent w/ a scholarship Arabic Language .... ,.......................... . Excellent w/ a i;cholar~hip At long last. Rizal completed lus studies in Spam By obtainmg the degre e of L1ccn11at( m Philosophy ~nd Lcllcrs. he hcc_amc qualified to be a profeSS';'r cf humanitJ~s m. any _Spanish univer• sity And by receiving his degree of IJ..1cen11ate m ~ed1cin_e '. he became a full-fledged phy!>ician, qualified to prac11se medicine. He did not bother 10 secure the post-,graduatc degre~ of ~oct':>r of Medicine because it was, together with the hcenuatc 1n philosophy and leucrs, good only fo_r 1cachmg purposes. _Bein_g a man o f high intelligence and foresight , he knew that with ~1s brown color and Asian racial ancestry no tJ:iar:°~ned university or college in the Plulippines would _aocept him 1? Its faculty_ st~ff. Thus he said, in his leller 10 his family wnllen m Madnd, November 26 . 1884: "My doctorate is not of very much value 1o me ... because although it is useful to a university pro~essor, yet I believe they (D ominican friars - Z) will never appo1~1 me as such in the College of Santo Tomas. I say the same 1hing_of Philosophy and letters which may serve also for a professorship. • to me.·" 19 but I doubt if the Dominican fathers w1·11 grant 11 ••••• 76 77 p.,,, to 8erli" ( 1885 1881) Chapter 7 Paris to Berlin (1885-87) After completing his studie,, in Madrid, Rizal went to Pans and Germany in order to spec,alt:ie in ophthalmology I le particularly chose this branch of medicine because he wanted 10 cure his mother's eye ailment. He served as assistant 10 the famous oculists of Europe. lie also conunui.:d his travcb and observations of European life and customs, government and laws in Paris, Heidelberg, Leipzig, and Berlm. In Berhn, capital of then unified Germany. he met and bc-fnended several top German <1eientis1~. Dr. Feodor Jagor, Dr. Adolph 8 Meyer. Or. Hans Meyer, and Dr Rudolf Vircbow. His merits as a scientist were recognized by the em1Mnt scien Lists of Europe. 1n Gay Par!$ 0885-86). Shonly after tenninating his studies at the ~ntral University of Madrid, Rizal, who was then 24 years old and already a physician, went to Paris 111 order 10 acquire more knowledge in ophthalmoiogy On lus way to Paris, he stopped at Barcelona to visit his friend, Maximo Viola, a medical student and a member of a ric~ f~ily of San ~iguel , Bulacan. He stayed for a week, during which lime he befriended Senor Eusebio Corominas, editor of the newspaper La 1>ubficidad and made a crayon sketch of Don Miguel Morayta, owner of La Pub/1cidad and a statesman. He gave Editor Corominas an anicle on the Carolines Question, then a controversial issue, for publicatfon. 1 . In November 1885, Rizal was living in Paris, where he soioumed for about four months. He worked as an assistant to Dr Louis de Weckert (1852-1906), leading French ophthal• ?1ologist, fr_om Novembe{ 1885 10 February 1886 He rapidly .improved his knowledge of ophthalmology, as revealed hy his 78 lane, to his parents on January I, 1886. "Wuh respe~t to the 11udy of the ailments of the eyes," he wrote , " I am do,ng well. I know now how to perform all the operation,; I only nccc.J to knnw what is going on inside the eye, which require~ much • prnct,cc". 2 Outside of hts working hours at Or. Wcckcrt \ chm,. R11,ll ,~loxed by visiting his friends, such as the family of the Pardo dt- I averas (Tnnidad, Feluc, and Paz), Juan Luna, and Felix Rc,urrcccion Hidalgo. Pa:t Pardo de Tavera wa, a_ preuy !!lrl. whn wa., engaged 10 Juan Luna On the album of th•~ g,rt Ru.ii drew a series of ~ketches on the story of "The Mon~cy anti the I unlc" At the studio of Luna. RtL;tl ,pent many happy hour,. I k di,cus.~ed w11h Luna, the great ma,tcr of the hru,h. ,a11m" problem~ on an and improved his own pamtm)( technique. I k helped Luna by posing as model ,n several pa1n11ng, In lus1.1, canva.~ "The Death of Cleopatra," Rttal puscJ '" an Li:vin,.,11 priest In another or Luna\ great painti~~,. " The Bto,1el Cm11 pact." he posed as Sikatuna, with fnntdad Pardu ,k T;l\vr.i taking the role or Legazp, Rlz.al as Muslcwn. Mu,ic pla}cd o111 1111por1.1111 p,11 t 111 ,,II Filip,no reunion, in Barcelona Madn~. P,111, und nthcr i'l1tc, or Europe. The Filip,nn contcmporancs of R11al ,·ould c11hcr play an rnstrument or smg. Especially, in the home ol the Pnrdn de Taveras and ,n the Luna studio. every i:c:un,on w," cnh,,:n,·d with the playmg or <inging of the kundimnn, and other Phtltp['rnl' melodies. Rizal had no natural aptitude for music. and th1, tw adm,1 led But he studied music becau,e nMny o! hi, -,choc:lmJt<·, ,,t the Atenco were 1ak111g mu"c lc,.,.,n, In u lctt,•r d,ttctl '""·,11h,·1 27. J87R. he told Fnnquc I etc that he "k,1rncd the ,ollcj!1'11>. the piano. and voice culture 1n one month .,n_<I ,, h,,11 ". 11<>"<''<' he confessed 1ha1 he could 1101 "ng well , ·11 vou c,1ulJ hc.11 me song," he wrote to Lele, ·•you would w"h you ~~re: 111 because my voice 1s like the hraymg of the asses . s.,.,,,, By sheer detennination and constant practice, Ri1..it c.tme to play the Oute fairly well. He wa, a nu1iM 111 ,anuu, nnprmnptu rcun,on, of Fihp111os 111 Pans. It 1s sa,d that he even wmp11,cd some songs, particularly Aliri Mang uihi (Any Race). o pa11ot11 79 1011g which assens that any race aspires for freedom, and a sad dania, I..a ~poruu:ion (Deportation), wluch he composed in Dapitan during his el{ilc. In Historic Reicklbfft. After acquiring enough experience as an ophthalmologist in Dr. Weckeu's clinic, Rizal reluctantly left gay Paris on February I, 1886 for Germany. He visited Strasbourg (capi1al of Alsace Lorraine) and other Germ.to border towns. On February 3, 1886, he arrived in Heidelberg, a historic city in Germany famous for 11s old un1versi1y and romantic surroundings. For a short ttmc he lived m A hoarding house with some German law students. These studc111, tu,,.... . t ''"" RiL<il was a good chess player so that 1bey made him a member of the Chess Player·, Club. He became popular among th~ German students because he joined them in their chess games and beer• dnnking, and watched their friendly saber duels. And there , bcncalh its azure sky. Where all my affections lie There from the weary pilgnm say, What faith is h,s ,n that land of OUT$! Go there and tell how when the dawn, Her ~arly hght diff1Ulng. Your pe1a1, liN flung open wide, I hs ,tcps beside chill Neckar drawn, You • hm1 >1lcnt by your side, I 'r<>• , St>rin, fl< rcnmol mu\lng ~ ,w hnw when moming',• light, All vour lragr~nce "ealing, Whi~pcr. 10 you •• on mirth, l'l>ylul song, ,,f I ove', deliRhl. He. tou. murmurs his love, leehn, In tht: tongue ho lcMntd Jl h1nh Alter a few days, Rizal transferred 10 a boarding house which was near the Universuy of Heidelberg. He worked at 1be University Eye H ospital under 1he directmn of Dr. Otto Becker, distinguished German opbtbalmologi~t. and altended the lectures of D octor Beclcer and Pror. Wilhelm Kuehne at lhe university. ThJt when 1hc gun of Kccmg,1uhl', he111.ht Pours oul it< ~olden flood. And w11h 1l'S ,luwlv w~nnong bght Give< hfe to , •It and gro,c anJ .-ood He 11,reets 1h31 sun here onl) upra,si~r . Which 111 his nan,c land 1s at 1ts 1.cmth blazing Dunng week-ends, Rizal visited 1he scenic spots around Heidelberg, including the famous Heidelberg Castle, the roman• lie Neckar River, the !heater, and the old churches He noticed that the German Catholics and Protestants practised ecumenism, for they lived 1ogctbcr in harmony and cordiality. One of the town churches was used "one-hair by the Catholics and the other half by the Protestants. tt And tell there of that day he ,tood, Nca, 10 • ,uin·d castle gra) By Neckar's "bank,. or shady wood. An<l plucl 'd )<lU from bc,ldc the way Tell , too. 1he talc tu you ,1<lclrc,~cd, And bow with tender care. You, hcnd,n~ lea,c, he press'd "'rwixt pni:c, \,r ,onh: \·olume ,,,rf "To tbt Flowus of Heidelberg." In the spring of 18116, Rita! was fascinated by the blooming flowers along the cool banks of the Neckar River. Among them was h1; ravonte nower - the lirdll blue "forgcl-me-nnltt Rc,1r then, O Oo,.ers. love·, mc,,...gc bear; Mv love 10 all 1he IO\ 'd ones there, l';a,e w my rnu111ry - !ru11ful l•nJ F~11h whcrton 11, son, m,,y \lan,I And \lrtuc for ,1, daughters' care. The beautiful spring flowers reminded him of the blooming flowe.rs at 1he garden of bis home in Calamba In his mood o f homesickness, he wrote on Apnl 22, lgg(,, a fine poem "A Las F1ore.r de Heidt/berg" (To the Flowers of Heidelberg) , as follows:• Go 10 my native land, go, foreign flowers. Sown by the lrllveler on his ,.,.y. 80 All thu,c hclo\'Cd ..:1caturc<i. gr~ct. Thnt still ~rC1und home', Jhur meet Am.I ~hen )OU come umn its shore. nus kiss I nov, lln you b<.-:,tO\\. f'ln•R where the winged brtcu, bl<1w. 81 .IOM IIIZAl.r u,1. WOIIU AHO """ITINDI P#'k TO ltrlln t 188!> t881J That borne on them it may hover o'er AU that I love, csreem, and adore. Flnt Ll'tttt to BlwwnlTitl. On July 31. ll!M R11al wrote hi~ Bur lhou&h. 0 Dowers, you come unro 1ha1 land And shll perchance your colon hold, • So w from this heroic strand Whose l<)il lirt.1 bade yoor uf: unfold Still here your fragrance w,11 cxpund Your soul !hat never qu11s the canh Whol.e hghl smiled on you l l your birth With Ptitor llllmer 111 Wllhdms"1d, Af1c:r writing "To rhc Rowers of Heidelberg." Rizal spent a three-month summer vacation at W11hclm,Cdd, a mountainous village near He,delherg. He stayed at the vicarage of a kind Pro1c,1nn1 pastor. Dr Karl Ullmer, who became his good friend and ndmitcr His plcusan1 personality and talents in language~ and sketching endeared him to lhc pastor's wife who wns " got,d cook. and 1wc, children, Etta {daughter) and Frilz (sanl. So debj!htful wash" slay al Pa,tt>r Ullm~r', ho1111' 1h01 Rizal felt 1hc pan~ of sadness when he ended his so1oum on Jun~ 25, 1886. He re1umed to Heidelberg, carrying wnh him beautiful mcmonc, nf lhc Ullmc:r frocnd,-h1p and hospitality The following day he wrote to Pastor l'lhncr expressing hh gr ,llitudc, a, follows; "I thank you very much once more. Ym1 may also receive. when you arc abroad, lhil same 1rea1men1 and fricnd,h,p a, I have found among you, 1111d ,f beini: n fore1gnc1. I can do no1h1nr, for you in 11 foreign counlry. I cao be of ~ome service lo you in my homeland, where you will alway, find a good friend. if I do not die, of course, The JOY of l>cong undcrs1ood b)' ocher people ,, ,o grea1 thar one cannot ea,ily forge1 it. You undcrsrood me Ion, m ,pue of my brown &km, which to many people ,s yellow. as that were puzzling (lf ab~urd u'\ ,r • Later. on M4y 29, 1887. Roni wrote from Munich (Muchcn) 10 Fnednch (h11,), son or PaMor Ullmcr. "Tell !he good Frau Pastor, your dear Mama. 1ba1 when I reach home, I shall write 10 her l shall never forget how good she. as well as your Papa,h'l(t been to me when I was an unknown stranger, 11,,1hou1 friends and recommenda1ion~ I <hall never forget Wilhelm~fcld wilh its hosp,1ablc parish house ..~ 82 German (which he had improved alter h" stay \'.Ith the Ullmcrs) to Profe!i50r Ferdinand Blumc111n11 U1rcc1m ol 1he Alcnco of Leitmentz, Au~tria. He h~d hc.ord of 1hi< Austnun cthnologJSt and bis interest m Phihppmc language, In his let1er, R1ul said:1 fi111 lellcr in I hne heard 1ha1 you arc ,tudyin@ our language, and rhal Jul 11 . P" mHl me 10 send ye valuahlc t>ook wnnen by my ,oun1ryman ,n our laniuage fhc .Spanish vcrnon "medroc, c bcc~u,c 1hr JUI l,uf 1\ ooly r nodc&I •vrilcr hul rhc T~alOjt part "i••od , an,J II " you had 1,lrcady puM1sht'd "°°1C ""or• ,ti preosel) the language "-r<iken in our prnv.rn:c: With th\~ letter, Rizal ,,•nt lhc honk which ht• menuoncd That book was cnhtledArrtmmrn (Anthmc11c) and wa, publhhcd on 1wo languages Spanish au1t.l I ni;.,log h)' 1loc llnl\cr 111 of Santo Toma, Pre,, in llior The 11111hnr wa< Kuf,no R olra,,11 Hernandez. a nattvc of '-anla Crul , l ~gun~ Rizal's letter from Hc1dclbfr~ ornpr "'"d Hlumrn1tt11. "-ho rCC1proca1ed by sending Rital a t•II 11 rwo '""11., It 111,1rl.cd the beginning of !heir long and foc4ucnt rnmc\ponden,o. ,,lso af 1hcir friendship thal Jasred all 1he1r live);. Rlumenlnll 1hc Auslrian, became the be,1 friend ol Rout. the hhpmu. Fiflh Ctntfflary olHddelbc~ Uni>ersily. Kizal wa, (orlunate to be !.OJOurning in Heidelberg when the l.•mou, l/ novcr-111 Hc,dclherg held i\s fifth ccnrcnai,· celdna1ion 1111 ,\upu,t,, IX>i(> II wa.~ three days beforr hi~ depdnurc and he w~s ,ad liet,tu,c he had come to love the beauuful mv and n, hu,p1t.1hlc people ,,r The following entry on his diary Jaldl Au)!u,t t,. 11\Kh describe\ the cclchrnuon of the f1f1h n111cn '" 1 â–º1 th, lamnu, llniver.ity af Heidelhertr" For iU fi(lh c~nttnary rbe J.tmou!t Ln1vln11, nf lk1tkl hf:tg c. kht1ucd i1, Fr\lu11g 1hulj morm11g. iut\l' " ' 111c:ndeJ I hkcd rhc poclure ~tier than lhe ur1~1nal it"II There \'.etc. ho.. evcr , many clcg.,nt ,rnd tmllo,1nt c,,.tum,.., llugmull<,, 1hc fomou, ,1udcn1 of llc11klt>cr~. "'·" drc,.,cd ~, I mlcmk 1he V1e1oroou,. l.ieherman, "" a gentleman ol 1he sevcnlcenth century, Grcgo,rc. wolf of Schw•hcn, clc . l.,l\l ,u~h• wJ, S,hlorsftst When will lh<Sc J,u<1ic,cnJn)cd ,n lh" p<l"liL un<I Hl , - ., ...,," 11_1_,1 JOla llliAL LIFI. WOIIU AND WllfT!Na buu11ful city come back? When 'frill the toreiprs return there? When $hall I return ahcr I shall have left? Inquire the fate of the molecules or water that the sun evaporates Some fall ~~ dew un Lhc bo.soms of the Oowers; others arc convened onto ,ce and 1now: othcB into mud or swamp or torrential cascade - they a re not lost but continue to live in nature. Wilt my wul have the fate of water - never being lost into nothinancM? In l,elp:rig and Dradm. On August 9, 11186, three Clays after th.e fifth centenary celebration of the University of Heidelberg, Rizal left the city. He boarded a tram, visited various cities of Germany, and arnved in Leipt,g on August 14, 1886. He attended some lectures at the University of Leipzig on history and psychology. He befnended Professor Friedrich Ratiel, a famous German historian, and Dr. IHnn~ Meyer, German antluopolog,st. pat scientists. He met for the firat time Dr Feodor Jagor, rclchrated German scientist-traveler and author of Travtl.s in ,,.~ Phil1ppints, a book which Rizal read and admired during h11 \tudent day~ in ManilA , Dr Jagor visited the Philippines in I!; 9-60, before Rizal ,vas bom. In !his book (published in Bertin ,n 1873), he foretold the downfall of Spanish rule in the Phihp1•111<'\ and the coming of America 10 Phillppme shores. Rizal h,1d a letter of introduction by Blumentritt for him. Or Jagor, in turn , introduced Rizal to Or Rudolf Virchow, 1.,mous German an1hropologis1, and the tatters son, Dr Hans \ 11~how professor of Descripnve Anatomy Rizal also met Dr. \\ Joc,1. noted German gcogrnphcr He worked in the clinic 111 Or Kori ErncM Schwciggcr, (1830-19(15) famous German oph1hJlmologis1. I.n '-'!1p1ig, Rizal ll'lln~lated Schiller's William Tell from German •~to Tagal~g 'SO that Fihpm05 might know the story of that champion of Swiss independence. Later, he also translated into Tagalog for his nephews and nieces Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tait's. Rizal became a member of the Anthropological Society, the Fthnological Society, and the Geographical Society or Berlin, upon recommendauon o[ Or Jogor and Dr. Meyer Hi\ memh,mhip m these sc1en11fic SOCteties proved that his ~cientific knowh!dgc wa, recognized by Europe's scientists. He was the llr\t Asian to be accorded ~uch honors. Riz.il found out that the cost of living in Leipzig was cheapest m Europe so that he stayed two months and a half in thij German etty. ~• corrected ~me chapters or bis. second novel and perfo~cd his daily phy\lcal exerc1~s at the cuy gymnasium. Because of ho\ knowledge of German. Spanish and other European languages he worked as proof-reader in a publisher's firm, thereby e.irmng sumc money. Dr Virchow, whn recognized R1zal's gcmu~, invited the latter 10 give a lectore before the Ethnographic Socic:ty of Berlin. In response to Virchow's invitation, Rizal wrote a scholarly paper m German, entnlcd Tagalischr Vcrkwut (Tagalog Metrical An) which he read before the socic:ty in April 1887. This paper was published by the society in the same year, and 11 elici1ed favorable comments from all scientific quaners. On October 29, he le[t Le1pag for Dresden, where be met Dr Adolph 9 . Meyer, Director of the Anthropological and Ethnoloi1cal Mm;eum He <tayed two days in the city He heard Mass in a Catholic church. Evidenlly, this Mass impressed him vccy . much, for he wrote on hi~ diary: "Truly I have never in '.'!>' hfe_ heard a Mass whcxe music had greater sublimity and mtonat1on. "9 Rlzal's Life In lkrlln. In Berlin, Rizal was not a mere student or a curiou~ tourist . He lived in this famous capital of unified Germany for five reasons: (1) to gain further knowledge of ophthalmology, (2) 10 further his studies or sciences and langu.oge~. (3) to observe the economic had political conditions of the German nation, (4) to associate with (amou~ German scientists and scholars, and (5) to publish his novel, Noli Me In the morning, of Novemt>er I, Riial left Dresden by irain reaching Berlin tn the evening. ' Rizal Wd"9ffled In Berlin's Sdentiric Circles. Rizal was enchanted h~ Berlin because of its scientific atmosphere and the absence of race prejudice. In this city, he came in contact with a. Tangere. Rizal led a methodical and frugal life in Berlin. By day, be worked as an assis1ant ,n the clinic of Dr. Schweiggcr, eminent German opthalmologist. At night, he attended lecture& in the University of Berho. IS '°'5E IIIZAL: LIFI, WORKI AHO IIIRITI- At his boarding house. he kept himself in phy,ical trim by daily exercises and practised speaking German, French. aod Italian He wanted to master French so that he may be able 10 wnte II as wdl a, in Spanish. He took priva1c le~'IOn~ under a prof=or of French. Madame Lucic Cerdolc in order 10 master the id1oma11< 1ntncacie6 of the French language. Aside from perfecting h,, academic stud1c\, he performed d•ily exercise, in , a Berlin gymnasium to develop his hody He ~at his le,,urc momenis louring the ooun1ry,1dcs around Berhn, observing kcenl} 1he customs, dresses, home< nnJ occupalwrn, of the peasants. He made sketches of 1he thing, he saw . He alsu enjoyed pmmcnuding along Unter c/1•11 l. 1n1ll'n, the mos1 popular boulevard o f Berlm, sipping beer 111 lhl.' {ily'< inn,, and 1al1Jng whh the fnendly Berliners. Rizal on Gmnan Women. One or hts important leucrs wntlen while he was m Germany wa~ 1ha1 addres~d 10 h~ ~ISlcr, Trinidad, dated March 11, 1886 ln thi~ letter, Ri1al expressed his high regard and adnura1ion for German womanhood. The: German woman, said Rizal to his sister. is senous, diligcn1, cllucated, anll friendly. 111 She is not gossipy, frivolous. and quarrelsome like the Spanish woman. She i, not p.irhcular about heau1iful dresses and Cl<pensive jewelry. though ~he cou Id dress nicely like any other woman in the world Rfaal regre1ted that m the Philippines, 1he women are more intercsled in how they dress than in how much 1hcy know He praised, however. the delicacy of• feeling, 1hc fine manncrl>, devotion, and hospitably o( the Filipino women, especially 1hosc in lhc provinces who arc not yet sophi,11ca1ed. If only they ca.n cultivate their intellect by cducution and by taking murc interest in worldly affairs, remarked Ri:ial. they can command lhc respect of all men. Accordingly, Rizal advised bis sister, Tnnidacl; "Now that you are s11II young you should s1nve to read, read, Jnd learn You must no1 allow yourself to he conquered hy indolcnc<· because It COMS SO little 10 C&>t II off " 11 G~nnan Cll!itom~. AMdc from the German women Rizal admired 1he German custom, which he on,crvcd well It mu;.1 be noted that he was a keen obscr,;er of the cu-iom\ uf lhc: peoples m all the countncs he v1s,1ed. 86 The Chrinmas custom of the Gcnnan, delighted him mo5t Of this Yuletide custom, he wrote: "On Chri~~ma~ eve, ~he people take from the bushes a pine tree, selecting one which must not only be str&gh1, but also must have leaves that ~o not fall In spring, T mean that dry leaves arc not leaves a! all ID th1:1 rticular case but arc a kind of small needle It ,s adorned :th lanterns, papers, lights, dolls, candies, fruits e_tc.; and shown prepared) 11 nigh! to the children (who had. not seen II Around this tree ,s made the family ob!lervance bc~~f Another interesting German custom observed by R11al " sclf•introducrion to strangers in a social gathenng. In Germany , when a man attends a social functJon and finds that there ,s nobody 10 introduce him 10 the 0lher gue~t>, he how, h,s head 10 the guests, introduces himself and ~hakes the hand~or everyone in the room . ACCQrding 10 the German code or e1,quette. 1t l,l; bad manners tor a guest 10 remain aloo~, and wait for hi, host or hostess to make the proper introduction Rlzal's Dark.est Winter. Rizal ~pcnl winters in many temperate countries. The winter of 1886 in Rer(in wa~ h,~ dar.kest wmter Ounng this bleak winter, he hved m poverty b«ause no money arrived from Calamba and he wu, tl;u broke. n1c diamond ring which his sister, Saturnina, g,.-e him was in lhc awnshop. He could not pay his landlord He had lo _scnmp, p ti only one meal a day. And that datly meal cons1s1ed or and water or some cheap vegetable soup I !is clu1hcs were old and threadbare. He washed them' himself because he could not afford to pay the laundry. :c:cf Out in far-away Calamba, Paciano 1ried desperately _10 raise knew his younger brother was in a dire fmanc,al d h ~es money. He . situation in Berlin. But the croP5 had fa, 1cd u~ 10 I c rav_., or the locusts. The sugar market collapsed. :•me wa~ of lhc essence, but poor Paciano was delayed ID ratstng the necessary funds. Meanwhile, Ri:t.al starved in Berlin and sluvcred with wm1ry Id. His health broke down due to lack of proper nounshment. ~e began 10 cough. and he feared that he w~ goi~g to be ~•ck with tuberculosis. Never had he suffered such physical blows of penury, so that his soul cried out in despair. 117 wom.cn. Rizal was disgusted at such fiippancy. He wru. more , ,iqustcd to see that his companions, instead of working seriously on the novel, wasted their time gambling or flirting with Spanish tcllnntas. • Chapter 8 Noli Me Tangere Published in Berlin (1887) The bleak winier of 1886 was memorable in 1he lire of Riz.al for 1wo reasons: first. II was a pamful eplSOde for he was hungry s,_ck, and despondent in a ~lrange city and, seoond. it brou h,m great JO)', nftcr enduring $0 much ~uflcrings. because t,s fi~t novel Nol, Me Tangrre came off the pre1,.~ in March, 1887 Like the_ lcgendar) S~ta Claus, Dr Maximo Viola, his fnend from Bulacan_. nmvcd m Berlin at the height ot his despondenc and loaned him lho needed fuod, to pubhsh the novel )' h; !dea of Writing a Novel on the Ptiillpploa. His reading of Harr1~1 Beecher Stowe's Unck Tom's Cabin, which portrays the brutabucs of American slave-owners and the pathetic conditions of the unfortunate Negro slaves, inspired Dr. Rizal to pre ar,c a novel that _w ould depict the miseri~ of his people undefthe lash of Spanish tyrants. He was then a student m the Central Umvc~11y of Madrid In a reunion nf Fi!•pinos in the Pa1crno residence in Madrid on Jan~ary_2, 181\4, Rizal proposed the writing of a novel about the Ph,hppmes by a group of Filipinos. His proposal was unanimously approved _by_ those present. among whom were the Paternos (Pedro. Mwom,no, and Antonio), Grne,uno Lopez Jaena Evansto Aguirre, Eduardo de Letc, Julio Llorentc, Melcc,~ Figueroa, and Valentin Ventura. Unfortunately, Rizal's project did not materialize Th compa~nots who were expected 10 collaborale on the novel :::: 1e ~nythmg. The novel was designed to cover all phase~ 0 1 •ppme hie However. almost everybody wanted to write 'lf'p;7 88 Undaunteo by his fnends' in<ilffcrence, he determined to ,.,ttr lhc novel alone. The Writing of t!M Noll. Toward the end of 1884, Rizal begun wri1ing 1hc novel in Madrid and finished about one-half ol 11 When he went to Paris, io 1885, after completing his studies 111 the Central U111ve1-,,1ty of Matlrid, he continued writing the novel, firm,hing one-half of the second hull. lie fin,~hcd the l,1s1 fourth of the novel ,n Germany. He wrote rhe las1 few chapters of •he·No/i 111 W"belmsfeld in April-June, 11186. In Berhn during the wmter tlays of February 1886. Rizal made the final rev1\1ons on 1hc manu~ripl of the Vol,. Sick and pcnrulcss, he ~aw no hope of ha,in!( u published, 60 that in a momentary fit of desperallon, Ile almost hurled 11 ,nto the names. Years later he told his good friend and former das•matc . Fern,1ndo Canon: ~1 did not llelicvc thal the Noli Me Tangcre would ever be publbhcd when I wa~ in Berlin. broken-hearted, weakened, and Ji,.;ouragcd from hunger and dcpnva11on I was on the point of throwing my work into the fire as a thin11, accursed and fit nnlv 10 die. Viola, Savior of the Noli. In the midst of his de-;pondency Jnd m,~ry, Rizal received a telegram Crom Or. Mruomo Viola 1 wh<l was coming t<, Berlin Th,s friend of RIZnl was a scion of a rich family t>f San Miguel. Bulacan. When he arrived in Berlin ,ht,r1ly before Christmas Day of 1887, he was shocked to find R11..1I II\ tng in poverty and deplorably sickly due 10 lack of prnp,·r n<>umhmcnt Ll11<>n ><·cing hi~ talented friend', predicament, Viola. being loaded wi1h ample funds. gladly agreed to finance the printing cost of 1he Noli. He also loaned Rizal some cash money for livini; expense, 1hu, ,t came to pass that Rizal and Viola happily cclebrntcd the Christ ma~ of 1886 in Berlin with a sumptuous feast After the Christmas season, Rizal put the finishing touches on his novel To save printing expenses, he deleted certain 89 Non M4i T.,..re Publllll'ted -, Bettin t 1887) pasaages in his manuscript, lncluding a whole chapter and Salome." "Elia On February 21, 1887, the Noli was finally finished and ready for printing. With Viola, the savior of the Noli, Rau w~nt. to different printing shops in Berlin to survey the cost of p~n~ng. After a fe"'. days of inquiries, they finally found a p~ung shop - Berliner Buchdruclrrei-Action-Gesselscbaft · which charged the lowest rate, that is, 300 pesos for 2,000 copies of the novel. . Rb:al Su~ted • Fnt,ehy Spy. Ourins the printing of the Nol,, ~ rare m_aden~ happened to Rizal. One morning the chief of pohce Berlin paid a sudden visit to Rlial's boarding house and requested to see the latter's passport. Unfortunately, Rizal ~uld not produce a passport, for he had none - in those days 11 was possible to travel without a passport The police chief then told bun to secure a passport within four days, otherwise he would be deported 2 Immediately. Riial, accompanied by Viola went 10 the Spanjsh embassy 10 seek 1hc help of the Sp3nish ambassador. the Count of Benomar, who promised to attend to the mauer. But the ambassador failed to keep his proause, for it turned out that he had no power to issue the required passport At the e,cpiration of the four-day ultimatum, Rizal presented . bi~lf at the office of the German police chief, apologizing for his fatlure to obtain a passport and p01i1ely asked the tatter why he was be·_de~ed when he had not committed any crime. The pobce chief m;formed him that he had received intelligence rcpoi:is that _be ~Rizal) had made frequent visits to the villages and little towns in the rural areas, thereby arousing the German government'• suspicion that he was a Frc,:ich spy, inasmuch as be entered Germany from Paris, where he resided for some yean and was apparent.ly a lover of France, whose language and cvlturc be knew so much. At that lime the relations between France and Germany were strained on account of Alsacc-Lorraine. !O . Riul, in fluent Gennan language, e,cplained to the police ~cf ~e was ?ot a French spy, but was a Alipino physician and 10cntJSt, particularly an ethnologist. As an ethnologist, he visited 90 die niral areas of the c:ountrie~ he visued to observe the customs hfeâ—„tyles of their simple inhabitants Favorably impressed with Riial's explanation and fascinated by his mastery of the Gcnnan language and personal chamma, the police ch,d was uh.tied and allowed him to stay freely m Germany 1111d Printing ot tM Noll Finished. After the inc1Jcn1 ol hi, •hortcd deportation as a suspected French spy. Ri1al, with the help of Viola, supervised the printing of the Nol,. Day by day. they were Bl the printing shop proof-reading the pnn1cd page~ On March 21, 1887, the Noli Me J'a11gcr, c.ime oft the press. Rizal immediately 1>Cnl the first copies of the printcJ novel to his intimate friends, including 8lumcntritt. Dr. Aniomo Ma . Regidor, G : LopeiJaena, Mariano Ponoe. and Felix R. Haddlgo. In his letter to Blumenlntt, dated March 21, 11187. he s:11d "I 1m sending you a book It ,s my fir~, book, though I h11vc already written much before it and received some prizes in literary competitions. lt 1s the first impartilll and bold hool.. on the life of the Tagalog.~. The Filipinos will find 11 the h1Mory of the last ten years. I hope you will noti~c how d,rterent are my descriptions from those of other writer&. The govcrnmcna and the man1 will probably attack the work , refuting my nrgumcnl\, but I trust in the God of Truth unJ in the pcr;ons who have actually seen the sufferings at close range. I hope I can aru.wer all the concepts which have bc~n fabricated to malign u~ ' ' On March 29, 1887, Rizal, in token or hi~ apprecmuon nnd gratitude, gave Viola the galley proof) of the Noli carefully rolled around the pen that he used in writing ii and a comphmentary copy, with the following insenption: ~To my dear rnend. Maxtmo Viola, the first to read and appreciate my work Jusc Raza I " The Tide or the Novd. The utlc Noll Me Tangue a, a Latin phrase which means "Touch Me Not." It is not originally con• ceivcd by Rizal, for he admitted taking it from the Bible Rizal, writing lo Felix R Hidatdo in French on March S, 1887, said: "Noli Me Tangere, words taken from the Gospel or Sr'nt Luke, signif> "do not touch me ... In ming 1hc Dablic.il source, 'Rizal made a mi~take. II should be the Gospel of St John (Chapter 20, Verses 13 10 17) According to St. John. on the Fust Easter Sunday. St. Mary Magdalene v1s11cd the Huly 91 Sepulcher, and to her Our Lord Jesus, Just ~ n from the dead, said: accndrd 10 •> F11hc-r, bu1 10 10 my brethren, and ny unto 1htm, I ~nd untn mt F•1hcr, and )OUr f'11hc-r; and 10m1God Ind your God • "Touch me llOI, I am 110t ~• TM Aulhor'1 Dtcllcall1,n, Rizal dedicated h~ Nol, Mt Tan~,~ 10 1he Philippines - "To My hlhc:rland. • •fadedlc11ion runs 15 follnws. Rc,orded ,n the hlSl<>r) o( hum-, •11ffcrmcs b I anctt 10 m 1l1gn.in1 • ch•rntc1 11111 lhc lcMI toud\ tml.lllet II and •"•lrm 1n ,1 lhc Wrpcsl pains Thus, bow many llmcâ– , "he" ID lhe midst of modcra ~IJOCb I ..... Wished IO call lh« bcfote me, now 10 -pt.II)' a,c 1n MCmona, t<> con,p,arc lh« w,1h othu coun1,,..,, 111111 lh)' dou ,magc prc~n1,:d nwlf showinc • ,ociat canur li•e to 1hac - other• -•'IIC Ocsinng lhy well~re ,.~ich u ou, own , ud ix 1>«1 1rca1men1, I "'ill do w,1h ~ •ha I tlw: â– 'l<ocn11 dia wnb 1hc,r I.IC., exp(Jllng them on lhc Skpo o( lhc lcmplc 10 th.ti every one •ho came 10 invo•c the Divw1y ""&ht cffcr llw:m a remedy And 10 1h11 end, I ..,g s•n•• to reproc:lutt Illy a>ndarooe f&1tbfully, d1>tnmm11kms. I will n11t 1 .,.n ol 1hc w~ lh•• C<!••n lhc ,.,,, u,·nria111 la 1ru1h cvcrythin1, cvca nmty 11.M:lf, llnc:e, M lhy i,n I 1m con,c,<IUI 1hi1 I â– ho 111flc1 frum 1hy ddc,u and weakacllCS. ,.,,hou, ,,...,.i. ol tlle wso1J,M The novel Nol, Mt Tanitre a:>ntains 63 ch~p(e~ and •n cprl•')lue It becjn, w11h a rettpbOn Jiven hy Capitan T1ago (Sanua•o ck 106 San10&) 11 hr~ ti.owe 1n Calk Anloague (now Juan Luna S1rcct) on the last day of <x:tober. TI11s rc«pt11•n or dinner was given in honor o( Cnso,uomo Ibarra , a young and rich Fihp1no who had JUSI rc1umed a(ter seven ycan of 5ludy in Europe . Ibarra was 1hc only son o( Don Ra(acl Ibarra , fncnd of Capitan Tiago, and a fiancc of beautiful Maria Clara. sul'f)t>M:<I daughter of C1p,1an 111go, AfflOfll 1he gu~•~ dunng lhc receptron "'ere Padre Damaso. a fat Franascan fnar "'ho had been pamh priC$1 for 20 year, of San Die10 (Calâ– mba), lbarra·s oatJve town; Padre Sybila, a youn1 Domlrucan pansh priest of BUIOndo; ScAor Guevara, u '1 lldrrly and lund heu1cnant ?' the Guardia C1v1I, Don _T ,b.urc'.o • llspaJa!la, 1 hogu, Sl)llnl\h phyMt1an , lame, and hcnpccktd llulband of Dona Vioonna •nd several ladirs lharra, upon hrs arnval produced • favorahlc ,mpres<ron among the gu~ts. except Pa.Ire Dan,a..o , ,s_ ru~ to him In acoordance w11h a German cu,1om, he ,nrroduccd h,m~ell 10 the ladies ,.ho.,. l>urong the dinner 1he con,cr\~IOon <cnlrrcd '"' lharr.,·~ 100,cs nnd travels at>roaJ Padre Oam,-..l wa, m hJd mO<>d bccau'IC he: got a bony ned, and a hard ,.,ng of the chK~cn 1/nola lie tned 10 d1!.ncJ11 11,,m,1', rcm,ook, Aller J,n,., , lham lclt Cap11an T,.,. u house t n r, i. t h" hc•tcl On the wav, 1hc kind Locu1en.1n1 Gucv• , 1old .h,m the ,ad c,nry nf his f.ilhcr~ Jeath on S.rn O1c1,o [),,n Ra ,.. ,. ho lather , wa. a rich and brave m,n II~ dc~•·mk<l ,, hclpk,, boy from the bru1alo1y of an illi1rra1c Span,,h cu collec1or uihrng the laucr anJ a«idcntaUv lrlhng h1m .1>on RJfael "''" fhrown m pmon. "'"~•e he d,cJ unhap1l1ly . lie \\<a~ burred on consecrutcJ pounJ, hu1 h,. encm,o, accUStng him •' t..,·, , hue1ic, had hi\ hod) rcmn>ed from the cemetery. On hcan111t about his f.11hcr'1 ud <tor). lharra 1h1nlcd Che kind Spanish bcu1enant an,1 1<1 finJ 001 the truch ahoul hr father\ dcalh ,.,..,~,I The lollov.,,ng morning, he "irlcJ Mu11a Cln,.,, hn ch,ldl""': ,..,ccthean. Muia Clara 1c:o\1n11h ,kid 1fu1 he h,tJ fory,111cn her hccausc the girls m German) ,.ere t,caulllul. Ibarra rcpl,cd th ,1 he had nc-.r forgoucn her Aller the romanti<: rcunk>n ,.,th Mana C1ar.1, lh,ur.J • c nt 1n San l)1ego 10 ""' hrs ta1hcr\ 11ra•c II w,,, All S,11111' l),oi At ihe crmelcrv, 1hc Jril•c.Jiggcr told lharr., 1ha1 lhc corpse nt Don Rafael was rcmoHd b) orJc:r of 1h,· pan,.h l'"""t 1o be buncd ,n the Chrnci,c ccmctc,y. bu1 the corpse: wn, heavy one! 11 wa, a dark rain, n1~ht -0 11141 he (the gra~•d•ggerl <imply threw the corp-,c mlo the lake . ..,,1 fbarTI angered by the r,ave-drucr'\ ·ul) H : left the cemetery On the way, he met PJdre SJhi, I rJnc1,-;an pa11!Jl pn«t of San Diego . In a ~!Jl. lhll~ra poun~·cd on 1hc pnut , demanding rcdr.-s. for de\«ratin1 hrs father \ mon,11 rcma1M ,1 Padre Salvi told hrm that he had nothing to do with it, fOT he w.a., 001 the panY! prie!t at the time of Don Rafael's death. 11 wa., Padre Dama-.o, hi, predecess.or, who wa.s responsible for it Convinced of Padre Salvi's innocence Ibarra went away In his town. Ibarra met several inter~ting people. such •~ he wue old man, Tasio the philosopher. whose ideas were too advanced for his time, so 1ha1 the people , who could not understand him, called him wTasio the lunatic;•· the progr-ive &chool teacher. who complained to Ibarra that the children were losing interest in their studies because of the lack of a proper school houw and the d1scourag1ng annude of the parish friar tO\llard, both the teachmg of Spanish and of the use of modem methods of pedagogy, the spmeless gobu11adorcillo, who catered to the w1Shc, of the Sran~h pari,h friar; Don F1hpo I.mo, the tenieme-mayor and leader of the hbcral faction in the town; Don Melchor. 1he cap1am of the cuadrllleros (town police); and the former go~rn.,dorr:,llo~ who were promment auzens - Don Basilio and Don Valentin A mo,1 tragic story m the novel is the tale of Sisa, who was formerly a rich girl but became poor becalliC she manied a (t.!mt.~,. and a wastrel at that. She became crazy because she lo,1 her two boy,. Bullio and Crispm, the JOvs of her ,..,.etched life . These boys 11,ere saautana (sextons) m the church working for a small wage to support their poor mother Crispin, the younger of the 1wo brothers, was accused by the brutal sacristan mayor (chief $CXton) of ,tcahng the money or the priest. He was tortured in the convent and died Brr<iho. with hi, brother'• d)'ing cm:~ nngmg m bis ears. escaped. When the two boys did not return home, Sisa looked for them everywhere and. in her great sorrow. •he became msane Capitan Tiago. Maria O,ua, and Aunt Isabel (Capitan Tiago·s cousm who took care of Maria Clara. after her mother's death) armed m SJn Diego. Ibarra and h,s fnencb gave a picruc 31 the lake Among those pre$Cnt 1n 1hi, picnic. were Maria CIJ.ra and h..-r four girl fn,·nd, " the rncrl) Sinang, the grave Victoria, th .. he;1u11ful Ida,. and the ·hou ;htful '-icneng,~ Aunt 1,~bcl , dtJpcron ,,( Mana Clar~. Capit<Jna Tika, mother of Sin.mi:. A11dcn.,, fo,1er ·s1ster o f Mana Oar , Atbir , ,i,.- ex • lhcolopcal ,tudent who wa\ in lme -. ,,h Siriang; a nd :b ·, and 94 fnends One of the boatmen was a th named Elias. strons and silent peasant An incident of the picnic was the saving of Elias' life by f.has bravely grappled with a crocodile whi~ was caught In the fish corral But the crocodi.le struggled furiously so that '"" could not subdue it. Ibarra Jumped int.o the water and kllkd the crocodtle, thereby saving Elias. lben,. Another incident, which preceded the above-mentio~cd ne.ar-trag,c crocodile incident, was the rendering of a ~~Uful 10n~ hy Maria aara who had a sweet voice. Upon the UISIStent rcquc,ts of her fnends. she played the harp and sang: THE SONG OF MARIA Cl.ARA -~wee, ue the hours in one's native bnd, Where all is dear the sunbeams bl«s; ufc-giving breezes sweep the nn,nd, And death is softcn'd by love's caress "Warm k&SSCS play on mOther's lips, On her fond, tcadct breast awakening, When round her neck the soft ann sbps, And bnght eyes smile, all love partaking. "Swee.t ,s death for o,x:'s native land, Where all is dear tlK sunbeams bless. Death is the br~ that .weep« the strand, Without a mother, home, or love's car= " After Maria Clara's song and the crocodile mcident, they went a$hore. They made merry m the cool, w~d m~~d°'; Padre Sal,,, Capitan Basilio (former gobemado~llo ~d Smang s father). the alfu~z (lieutenant of the Guardia Civil) a nd the town officials were pr~nt. The luncheon was served, and every• !><kly cnJOyed eating. The meal over. Ibarra and Cap1UV1 Basilio played chess, while Maria Clara and her friends played the "Wheel o f ~hancc." a game based on a fortune-telling book. As_ the girls were cnJoytng their fortune-telling g~e, Padre Salvi came and tore 10 ptcces the book, saying that 11 was a "" to play such n gam~. Shortly thereafter, a sergeant and four soldiers of the Guardia Civil suddenly arrived. looking for Elias, who was hunted for (1) assaulung Padre Dama,o and (2) throwing the alferez into 9$ - IIIZAI.: Ll,I. I I O I I I C l - ~ - a _111udhole. Fonunately Elias bad disappeared, and the Guardia C1~ went away empty-handed. Durins the picnic al~, Ibarra received a telegnun from the Spanish authorities notifying him of the ap~roval of bis donation of a schoolhouse for the children of San Diego. Th~ next day Ibarra visited old Tasio 10 consult him on bi~ pet pro1e_ct •~ut t~ schoolhouse., ~e saw the old mac. 's writings were ~tteo tn hie~oglyph,es Tas10 explained 10 him that he wrote •~ h1eroglyph1cs because he was writmg tor the furure genera~ons w"? would unden;rand them and $ay, "No1 all were as.lcep m the mgbt of our ancestors!~ Tasio was pessimistic about the pro1ect of lbarra to build a schoolhouse at his own expense. However. the construction or ~e schoolho_u<e conhnucd under the supervision of the architect called Nor Juan M~nwhile San Diego wa~ merrily preparing for it5 annual fiesta, in ~oaor of ns patron saint San Diego de Alc:ala, whose feast day 1s the 11th of November. On the eve of the fierui hundreds of visitors arrived from the nearby towns, und ther~ were lau~hter, music, exploding homb~, feasting and moro-moro. The m~s•c was furnished by five brass bands (including 1he famous PagsanJan Band owned by the e.scribano Miguel Guevara) and three orchestras. In the. morning of the fiesta there was. a high Mass 10 the d1urch, officiated by Padre Salvi. Padre Damaso gave the long sermon, 10 which he expatiated on the evils of the times that were caused by certain me11, who having tasted !lOmc education spre.11d pernicious ideas among the people. ' After Padre Damaso's sermon, the Mass was continued by Padre S~v,. ~has quietly moved to Ibarra, who was lmeehng and. praying by Maria Oara 's side, and warned him to be careful durlllg the ceremony of the laying of the cornerstone of the schoolhouse because there was a plot to kill him . Elias suspected that the yellowish man who built the derrick was a paid stooge of lbarra's enemies. True to his suspicion' late_r in the day, when Ibarra, ln the presence of a big crowd' went down into the trench to cement the cornerstone the derrick oollapsed. Elias, quick as a flash, pushed him aside thereby " uvmg hi~ We. The yellowish man was the one crushed to death hy the <battered derrick. At the sumptuous dinner that night under a decorated kiosk, i.ad inciden1 occurred. The arrogant Padre Damaso, spcwog 111 the presence of many gu~t.s, insulted the memory of Jbarra's fathc, . lbarri, Jumped from hi, sent, knocked down the fat friar w11 h his fiq, and then seized a sharp knife. He would have killed the lnar. were II not for the 11mely intervention of Maria Oara. 11 lbar attack on Par.Ire Daniaso produced two results: (1) hi, 11)...1g,.11cnl to Man~ Cl:,ra wa, brolen and (2) he was ,·11c,,mmur,catcd Fortunately, th.- hheral-minded governor gen• cral vi.,.tcd th,· town and befnended lbarra He told the young man not to wurry lie persuaded Capitan 1iago to accept Ibarra '" ,on•m 1.1w .,nd prumi,ed to see the Archbishop of Manila to hft the han of excommunication The ficsia over, Maria Clara became ill. She was treated by the quack Spanish physician, fiburcio de Espadafia, whose wife, a va,n and vulgar native woman, was a frequent visitor in Cop,10,i T,ago·, house This woman had hallucinations of bein& a superior C-11-<aillan, and. although a native herself. she looked down on her own people as mfcnor beings. She added another "de" to her husband's surname ,n order to be more Spanish. Thus she wanted 10 be called "Ooctora Doria Victorina de los Reyes de De 1".spadana." She mtroduced to Capitan fiagoa young Spaman!, Don Alfonw Lmarcs de Espada,ia, cousin of Don fibumo de E~padana and ~odi>OJ1 (lf Padre Damaso's brother-in• law Lmares was a penniless and jobless, forrunc hunter who came to the Ph1hpp1ncs in search of a rich Fihp,no heiress. Both. Dona Victorina Jilli Par.Ire DamaS(> sponwrcd his wooing or M,,ri.i C!,tra. hut lhc latter did not respond b.-cau,;e she loved lbdrra A touch of comedy in the novel was the fight between two lud,aom ,c:norns - Dona Consolac,on, the vulgar mistress or the Spanish alfercz, and Dona V1ctonnaJthc Oamboyantly dressed wife of a henpecked Spanish quack doctor Both insulted each other ,n gutter language. and, not satisfied with their verbal warfare, they squJTed off 10 come to blow, The timely arrival of Padre Salv, stopped the fiitht, much to the rcl(rct of the curious Olllookers 97 ,...;J ... , ........ ,, w• The atory of Elia, lib tllat of S..., a tale of pa~ 111d ~dy. He related it to Ibarra . Some 60 yc:an ago, bis sraodfadier. who waa lhca a )'OWII bookkeeper in I Spanisll c:ommemal firm ill Manila, was wronaly ICCUled of bunun& the finn'1 wardlo111e. He wu floaed 1n public and wu kh in the lllrcct, cnpPled and almoct dead HiJ wife, who was prtan•nt. beged for .._ aod became a prost,lutc ID order 10 suppon htr lick husband and tht1r son Aher a,vma birth tu her Kwnd too and the death of her hUlbend, 1he fled, with her two r.on,, to the mountams. Years later the lint hoy became a dreaded tuhqin named Balat , He tcrronud the pruvuic:es. One day he was caught b) the authoritic:. Hi1 bud wu CUI off and WH hufll from a tree branch in the forest. On ~CUI& this aory object, the poor muthc:r (Elias' sr•ndmother) died. Bal1t'$ younacr brother, who was by nature k1ndhcanl'd, llc:J and bcamc: a truucd lahorcr In the ho11$C ol a nd1 man 1n Tayabas. He fell in love with the ma<tcr's d;au&hlcr The girl\ father, eora&C'd by the rumance, invcm1a1cd h11 pa.1 and lounJ out the truth The unfonunate lover (El1ii' father) wa~ ~ni 10 jail, "'hilc the girl gave birth 10 t11rw, a boy (ai.u) and~ girl . Theu nc;h arandfa1her (father of their mother) look care of them, keeping .«rel their sc:andalou1 origin. and reared them Di nch children Ehu WU cdllQlled JR !he 1C$Ull College 1n M.1nila. while bis <iucr 11udied 1n La Concordia College They hved happily until Olle day, owina 10 «rt111n dispute 0\lcr money maucrs, a di11an1 rcla11~e e•p(l5e(I their shameful birth They wcte ~ d . An old male scnran1, whom they UKd 10 abuse, wu (or~ to testify in CQIUl and the truth came out that he WU dicu real father. Elias and hiJ sister left Tayabas 10 hide their shame in 1110tbc1 place. One day the uster d1sappeucJ. Elias roamed from place to pl"'"e, lookina for her. He heard later 1ha1 1 g,rl ans'IVcrutg to his saster's dexnpllOn, WI$ found dud on the beach of San Otego. Sin.;e then, Eliu lived a vagabond fife, wandering from pr<Winoc to pr0\111cc unrtl he met 11,.rra. lbtun•, cncmiu left no stone unturned 10 bnna about hu ruin. They engineered an 11tack on the barrt1Cb of the Guardia Civil, at lhc ume time wuruna lbe GI/on to alert h1S men that ti i ... , They dtceivcd the attackers by teling chem 1h11 the ma-.• at, l fa,kil , · J I he n..,, . l h at ..... lermrnd wu Ibarra . So ....._n ... mt 1urvt>1n& at111d.cn ,.ere caught Ibarra wa, Mn med lnr I he ca ta$rrophc Elin learning of th.am', arrCSI, b111ncd all lhc pap<"rs 1h11 • . fn,·nJ an d !ICI , .. n11~h1 mcnmmurc h" ,,a rra· ~ huusc 011 foe ., IIlhcn ..,. h I d lb csaipc lie anu >JIIU he ,.en! 10 pmon nnJ c pc arra 1un,pe,I mtn • t-a11u h>3dod with ra, utt (,:r11u) lh,nra al rhc hou.c or Cop,t,m 11&£0 10 ~y 20<1Jhvc '" M.tna na In the ,earful la,t scene hc1..een the two lo,;rrs, INrra f,orv,c Mu,a Clar., "'' &l\1n11 up h1\ letter~ ,,, h er '" rh.- s,,.111,".h authonli~ v.bo u11h1cd Ihe m iu CVIde~ r. h"· 0 ' ii M · • Clara revealed thal thost: le11crs wl'rt: euhan~e part, art frum ' her late mot he1 , ,-,. n.c. Alba. ,.h,ch I'• · t ,lu ,. 1,h I leu.:r aa•c her . l·r<>m lhl\ ltttcr, Ahc k:trnc<I lhltt ie:tl lather wu, ";;•x:'1 •"••m• r h,·, Padre Damaso After h1dd1ng MJnl Clara brC'1"cll . 11,arra ,..rurncil lo •he banca He and Flia, paddled up the Pas•~ R.-c.r ,.,,.,.,ud Laguna de Ba A poh.:c boat, ,.11h lhc Guar<ha C '"I on hoa1il . pur~ucJ them ~, lhcu han.:a reached the la._c Ehu told ll>arra 10 hide "'>li<:l' boar wa, mr11.1t..1nr the ..._ t,,,n(.'a, ,h,. under I I,c zu<o Ir A •, th•• ,.. Ehu um d into the "'atcr and s,,,am ,,.1111> hJv.4rJ . ,re. ,iJs In w:. he d1vcncJ the a11en11on ol the ,ulJ,cr. pcr\On , thcreb) gl\ing Ibarra 1 <hancc IO •CSClif on "" The soldtcr fircJ al the ,wim1111ng Hra\, •ho wa, h,1 ,ind sank The waler turned red l>cc-ausc nf hi\ blood Th< '.lold1i:n., ihinkinr 1ha1 the) had killed the llceini lt>arra rcturncJ "' M•mla lhu~ lt>arra was able 10 escape . Eh," woundc:J, rc-.t<-btd the ~ore anJ >,1agr<'r<-d tnhl the fnr~I, met a boy, Bar.,ho, :,'h<l Wk, ""' ptnf, :•HI hi$ m,.,ther''I Jeail b<>dy He roW Jh.,,hn '" m,tlc n mr, on v.h1ch their bodie~ (his and Sl\1's) .-ere lo he burned lo ash~ h "'b (hri:.tma~ ce\C and lhc moon glumcd !.t)fll) in th< '- ) 8!\lhU prq,ar,·d rhc • funn ..t p)rC A, hlc•s hrcath s~,,~~I hi$ t,n,ty F. 11 3 , 1,,.,~,·d rowaril 1hr ust ant.I murmu 1< ii •, ,.,,hour seeing lhc ilav.n bn[l,htcn o,er m) na11,, land \ •~• -..ho h.t\C ,1 lo \.4!l . ~'c1comc it - unJ fnr1tC"I fllll lho,t· w ,o ha,·c f.tlkn dunng the mght.I" SC'10uslv lie 'l:,'. The novel h111 an epilogue which recounts what happeqcct to the other characteri. Maria Clara, out or her loyalty to the memory of Ibarra, the man she truly loved, entered· the Sanca Clara nunnery Padre Salvi left the parish of San Diego and hecamc il chaplain of the nunnery. Padre Damaso was transferred to a remote province. but the ne.1u morning he was found deao in his bedroom. Capilan Tiago, the fonner genial host an<I generou.~ patron of the church, became an opium addict and a human wreck Dona Victorina, still henpecking i,oor Don Tibur• cio, had taken to wearing eye-glasses because of weakening cy~1gh1. Lonaros, who failed to win Maria Clar:i's affe<.1ion, died of dy.entery and was buried on Paco cemetery. The alfrre:. who suecessfully repulsed the abonive anack on the barracks, wa< promoted major He returned to Spain, leaving behind his shabby mistress, Doiia Consolation. The novel ends with Maria Oara. an unhappy nun in Santa Clara nunnery forever lost to t.'le world, fh~ "Noll" 8 ~ on Truth. The Noli Me Tangue, unldce many worh of fictinnal literature. was n true story of Phahppone condmons during the last decades of Spanish rule. The places, the characters. and the s11ua11ons really existed. "The facts I narrate there." ~aid R11,al, "are all true and have happened; I can prove them ." The characters - Ibarra. Maria Clara, Elias, Tasio, Capitan Tiago, Padre Damaso. Padre Salvi. etc. - were drawn by Rizal from pcr,on~ who actually existed dunng his times. M:uia Clara was Leonor Rivern although in real life she became unfaithful, unlike the heroine of the novel. and m.arried an Englishman. Iharra and Elia\ represented Rizal himself. Tas10 the philosopher wa, hh elder bmther. Pnciano. Padre Salvi was identified by R1zahs1s as Padre Antonio Picrna"ieja, the hated Augustinian (mar in <.avue who 1>·as killed by the patriots during the Revolu, tiun Cup,um T,ago was Capitan Hilano Sunioo of San Nicolas. Dona Victorina was Dona Agustina Medel. The two brothers Basiho and Crl~pm were the Crisostomo brothers of Hagonoy. Padre Damaso was IYJllCal of a domineering friar during the days of Rir.al. who was arrogant, immoral, and anti-Filipino. Mis.sing Chllplff or tlw Noli. In Ihe original manuscript of Noli Me Tangere. there was a chapter entitled "Elias and Salome~ 100 h follows Chapter XXIV "ln the Wood,,". 'Thi~ pankular J"l'I nn f-.hu\ and Salom~ w:ll> dclctcd hy R11al SQ _that ,1 was I "'' ludtd on the printed novel. His rea,;on for domii so "."as llnatdy economic By reducing the pages of the manuscnpl. h, cost uf r,rinting wuulJ corrc\pondangly be rccluccd The 1 , 1111, ,h,1r1cr non, as follow, ." hut bv the plac1J 1:,1-c, SJl01rn: a wu1,omc gul In .,. ru,.a • h I n :t c till l '\tl . r,\, tl·u1-.. "'-,tt on :t t,,11111'1'<1 ~uu an ~-:"'1 ll \ I , <;h,· "-a< 1 1 1, ' ·' , • . I h,, ,,u ""h,r, She was ,,.,iung. for 1 1in, tr, am\.1-. l~ out, Iu, " I••'e the llowach· thdt ~""" w,td not aurawng mme h . •x attcn• I 1 11 I 111,1 •t.incc but who!\-.: hl:,1u1) ,.. I cvealct 1w ..: n "''- t.:. ·• !! l" ·' fully When ,he lw.ar,I footstep,. ' h C I.II d ,1· \Ide h•r t , '" ~ the bamboo stairway "her" l:'h,1, ,mod carrymg of '"""'"od and a hunth or banana, wh,ch he placed .1 " 1e.,ghng ,)ulug to the girl ,n th\.'. nor w h I Ic. he h~ndcd • 1 n 4. ·'~\111 '" : ;:,•,•:.~jlc . ,a. d ,md pen\lve to ~alome nouced her to,er w." . . She ,.,hit ncd h the ''"'"'le ham a<k1~~ :i~lttt ihc guts at t,~d ber (iuard,a Civil sokhcr; disturbed. lookmg_ or . . w om on a a mood that there were many beautiful girls. among h W,I\ ';..,~n.i Oura, the ,wccthcart of a nch young mun who had 111~1 returned from Furnpe tte t::•cHe Afterward~. Eha~ mo..:. preparing to leave. Spcak_ing i_n ~ .an '\Oft ,·mcc. h e sa,•d·• "Good-bye ' · Salome. The sun h t> setung, h took t won't uppear good for ibe people to know t at mg t over . ~,c here • I le paused for a moment. then conu~ued. "But y11u :e l>ecn Cl)1ng. Oon't deny ii with yoursm1le. You ve been crymg. <;he wa< cryini:. for w~>n ,he would leave thi< houw where . Sh. explained "It as not right for me to hvc alone. , h c grew up c · . s Ill be able go 10 hv,: "',th my relatives in Mmdoro • oon . to ray the ,kh1 111) mother left me when ~he died. to g1v.~ up thi< house an "'hich one was born and had l(rohwn up 1s · · "''11 ,omethong more 1hJn g,vong up one's beang· /\ typ oon .. ,0111c, a r.~shct, and evcr)thing wall go to the lake ru •>11· as remained ;ilent for a moment; then ht: held her honds, dnd '·"ked her· "llavc you heard anyone spea k 1·11 0 f you'' Have _ d I ,;o~ctimes worried you'/ Not that either'/ Then. you are t11e of my friendship and want to drive me away .. • 101 She answered •No, don't taJk like that. I am not llred 0 f )'Qur friendship. Ood knows that I am satisfied with my lot. 1 only destre hcallh that I may work. I don't envy the rich the wealthy. but. . • ' •But what?" "Well then," Salome said , looking at him tenderly· -At lent when I'm gone, live here. stay ID this house. It will make you remember me; and I will not thmk •Nothing. I don·, envy them as long as I have your friendsl\ip. • '"Salome," replied the youth 11,ith bitter sorrow. "You know my cru.el past and that my misfortune rs not of my own mak· If not for _the fataJity that at limes keeps me thinlong. ~~~ bitterness,_ 1f 11 11,ere not that I don't want my children 10 suffer what my SISier and I suffered, you would have been my wife in the eyes of God But for the sake of thss very love, for the sake o~ llus future family, I have sworn to end with myself the !11•sfortune that ~ have been inhemin& from father to son, and 11 _ts better that JI ~ be so, for neither you nor I would W1Sh 10 hear our children lament our love, which would only bequ~th them misery. You do well 10 go 10 the house of your rela~•es. Forget me, forget a Jove so mad and futile. Perha you ll meet there one "'ilo is not like me.• ps ¥Eliast exclaimed the girl reproachfully. "Y_ou ha~ m,sunderstood me. ln my words, there is no ~plaint apmst }~U. T•ke my advice, go home to your relative~. . Herc you have no one but me, artd the day when I fall mto the bands of my pursuers, you wilt be leh alone for the rest or your W-e. Improve your youth and beauty 10 gel a ~ood hu~band, such as you de&erve, for you don't know what JI IS to hve among men .• ''( was thinking that you might go with me ·• S·•lo d softly • me ""1 ¥ •·Alas." reiomed Elias sb~king bis head. "lmp<XSiblr ,md more 'iO than ever .. I hawn t yet found whar I cam, h seek - 11 · ·s 1mpov,1 · bl e .,. , ,00 oy I forfe11ed my hbcn~ ·•c ere 10 f:lias !hen namteJ wt:ar happened earht!r at the picmc rhat morning. how he ~as saved by lbaru frorn thc')lw~of • e rocod,le To ~how his gra111ude, he VO"'Cd to repay the- good deed doneb) Ibarra , even 10 the extent of ~acnficing his life He explained 102 . ., anywhere be would go, even 10 Mindoro, the past would llill be ducovcred, JOQner or later. 10 that dbtant land that tlk hurricane had carried my hut to the lake. When my lhuu!\hh tura 10 these shores, the memory of you and of mv hou.sc will appear 10 me together. Sleep where I have slept and dream 11 Wlll be as though J were beside you." "Ob," exclaimed Eha5, waving his hand in Je,pc.ralion . "Woman you11 make me forget " Ahcr discogaging himself from her tend.-r embrace, he left with a heavy bean , following the lonely path lined wiu. the shadows of somber trees in the twilight. She follo"'eJ him .,, itl her gaze, IJ5tcning sadly to !he fading footsteps ,n th<. g,11h, rwi: darkness IUzal'• Friends Pnbe the Noli. TI1e friends of Rizal h.11lcd the novel, praising it in glowing colors As 10 be expected , R,zal's coenues condemned it. Rizal anticipated the VJmolic alta~b of his enemies, who were sore to be told the truth of tl1c1i ev1: ways. As he told Blumcntritt "The government anJ th<.· fnars will probably attack the wort. refuting my ~tatemcnts , t,ut I trust in the God of Truth and in the persons v.ho have a~luJII) . •i seen our su frennp. Of the numerous oongratulatory lenen received hy Riza from his friends about the Noh, that from Blumcntnu was significanL "First of all," wrote Blumcntrill," ao.:cpt my cordial congratulAtions for your beautiful novel about customs which interests me enraordinarily Your wort . as "'e Gennans SI) has been written with the blood of the heart, and so the heart also speaks. I continue reading 11 with much interc~t and 1 ,hall beg to ask you now and then for an cxplanatJOn when I find words unknown to me; for mstance. the word filtbu.scuo must have certain mearung in the Phihppmes Lh,u I du not r,!1J "' the Spanish of the Peninsulars nor in that or the Spani,h rcnplcs of America." "I knew already." contkiued Blumentntt, -,hat you were a man of extraordmary talent (I had said it to Pardo de ·1 a,cra. 103 / ~ _,"'"-----·-....·-· and tbk could abo be seen from the maneloua short time ill which you bave acquired my difficult and rough mother toope)· but in lpitc of this, your wort has c.xceedod my bopes Uld OOOlldcr myself happy to have been booon:d with )'OUI' friendship. Not_ only I but also )'OUr people can alto be called lucky for i haVJng m you • IOn and a loyâ– J patriot. U you will mntmue thus, _you can become ooe or tbase great men wtlo will exen a defintt<' 1nOuenoe on tbe spuituâ– I development o( your people•.• ln London, Dr. Antocio Mâ– Regidor, Filip,no patnot and lawyer who had l'>een exiled due to h11 complicity in the Cav11e Mobily of U1'72, read aVldly the Noli and was very much imp· c11ed by its author. On M.av 3 be felicitated Rizal , saying: •If the Qui•ote_ ammonala.es ,ts author hc,-ause 11 CXJ)O$CS to the world the adment. of Spain, your Nol, Me Tongue w,11 bring you an equal glory With your modesty •od your voracious and able appraiul. yuu have dealt a m<nt.l blow to that old uce full of b l e ~ and decay Eve') Filipino patriot will read your ~Jr. With avity 11od upon d1scovenng m every lme a vuacioua idea and m every 11\!0rd a fitting advice, he -..ill be irupired and be '"" reprd your book u the muterpiecc of a Filipino Mid the proof that thOle who thoogbt us incapable of prod\lCing great mtcllcc:ts arc mistaken or l)ing•.~ ,w, • •• • • Chapter 9 Rizal's Grand Tour of Europe with Viola (1887) After the publlc:at,on of the N<>l1, R.i:tal planned to viS1t the mporunt plKCS in Europe. Dr Maximo Viola ~ed to be 1111 1 traveling c:omparuoo. 1 Rizal had received Paa.ano • rcm1ttan0e of p 1.000 wtuch wu forwarded by Juan Luna Crom Pari,: He immediately paid Viola the sum of P300 which the 1:lller kindly loaned so that the Nol, a>uld be printed. Having pa,d bis debt, lUld with adequate fund. ,n Im pocket. he ""lb readv to see Fa.rope before returning to Calaml>a . Finl , he and Viola Yisitcd Poudam. a city near Bertin, which Fredenck the great made famous. TM T_. Bep. Al dawn of May 11, 1687, RJZ.al and Viola two brown-skinned docton on a roanung spree, left Berln1 hy It was an ,deal season for travel Sprina was in the au· and all over Eu.rope the flowers were blooonng, the meadows ""uc tunung green, and the v,llage• ..ere hwrumng with aCbvity. Accord.mg to Viol.1 , the luggage of Rizal included all the letten he had rcce,ved from his (Riul's) family and fnends. Thcudestm.a.tion was D resden, ..one of the best cities i.D Germany" tntln , 104 o, dt~L IYzal and Viola tamed for some nme tn Dresden.. Their vu.it comaded with the rcgie>nal floral expo51t1on. Rizal , ,..ho was interested in botany, studied the "numerous plant varieties of extraordinary beauty and size". They vblted Dr. A,hlpb B Meyer, •ho was o•cl)Oycd to see them !n the Museum of An . •h.tch they Abo vuncd , Rizal was deeply unpre• ucd by a painting or .. Prometheus Bound" and recalled seeing d reprcscntauon of the same idea tn an art gallery in Pans. UH JCIN IIIZAL: UFI. WOIIQ MDWIIITINCII Atcet•• Grn Tour of fvrope WI"" Vida t 1•1> While stroUing a1 the scene of the Aoral Exposi11on they ~:~ D{:t Jago~. U~/earing of their plan to vistt Lctt~critz for the ifiomer:ice, D hoslovaki~) in order to see Blurnen1ri11 . l'!t t_une, r. Jagor advised them to wire Blurnenui11 of their con11 ng because the old professor was r d" ·· o a nervo~ ispos1non and he might suffer a shoc:k at their sudden vistt Tescheo (now Decin, Czechoslovakia) was their next stopover after leaving Dresden. Rizal and Viola sent . • a wire 10 Blu-c 1 11 "' n r, , as per suggestion of Dr Jagor First Mee-ting with Blwnentriu. At 1:30 p.m. of M·iy 13 I~. !he train, with Rizal and Viola on board aroived 'at ra~~o;dd st11ti~n Leitm~ntz, Bohemia. Profes~~r Blume;1111 w a receive their wire, was a1 the station. He was car ·, n penetl sketc.h of Rizal which the la lier had prr\lou,I him,_ so tb?t he could identify his Filipino friend, He j,trml . ' Y received R12al and Viola. g' a. ,h. ,t ' ..en~ For the first time, the two great scholars - Rizal and Blumentrill - who came lo kn<>w each othe r b Y corresponuence ., • • 1 P.erson Th~y greeted each other ,n nucn1 German' umentroll was a kind-hearted, old Austrian pmfcw:>r U s~em_g the talented Rizal for the first time. he immediately h,m mto heart. loving him 1,s 8 son. :t '" 1::~ . Profc~sor Blumentrill, the genial host, helped Rizal and V1oi:: g:t a room _at Hotel K,et,s, after wbich he hrnugh1 them to s.. o_me and_ introduced lhem to his wife and famil The tw~ Fthp1no tounsis spent many pleasant hours at the hi~c of their kind host. They stayed in Leitmeritz from May 13 IO M 16, 1887. ay ~utlM _M~ries or ~itmeria. Rizal had beautiful ~e~ncs of h,.s v1s11 to Leitmeritz. He enjoyed the warm bospttaltty of the Blumcntritt family. The professor's wife R~ was a ~ood cook, and she prepared special Austrian dishes which RizaJ h~ed velJ'. much. His children were Dolor«:$ (called Dora or 0 orota by Rizal), Conrad, and Fritz. h ~lumentriu proved 10 be a great tourist guide as well a, a ~!p1ta~le host: H~ _showed the :.ccnic and historical spo1~ of be ltmentz to hl5 visitors. One afternoon he invited them 10 ,1 er garden where the bes1 beer of Bohemia was served. At ; 106 ••r table there was a lively discussion among the drinkers about die advisability of having the railroad paSlo through a neighboring town One of the men in the group was the burgomaster (town mayor) of that town, Blumentntt knew the burgomastc1. w that he •pproachcd the party and delightfully introduced his two Hhpino friends. Rizal talked in fluent Gennan, for which reason the burgomaster and his friends were amazed. The burgomaster •~ked R.iial how long II took him hl learn German. And R,wl rrphed "Eleven months, 5ir~ The burgomaster was further 1mazed. and in great admiration, he lauded lhc .. privileged t11lent" of Rizal. Blumentritt embraced Rizal, telling lum that lrw Germans could~peak well their own language e~ R,wl could, On another afternoon Rmil ancl Viola were invited 10 a meeting of lhe Tourists' Club of L.e1tmeritz. of which Blumen1ritt was the secretary. Rizal spoke e,rtcmporancously m llucnl German to the officers and members, praising A\c>lria', 1dylhc scenes and its ho,'J)itable, nature-loving, and noble people. The audience wildly applauded him, for they were enchanted bv hi, eloquence and nuency in German. Rizal, desiring to commemorate ht> happy hour, nt 1hc Blumentritt home, painted a ponrait of th,• kind pmfc"or and gave it to him. Blumentritt was pleased with the gift. It was during his vi.<it to L.eitmentz when Rizal mel another renowned scientist of Europe, Or. Carlos C.zcpclak. Blumcn1ri11 brought him 10 Ctcpctok's home. and Rini h.td :i nic'c com·crsation with this Poli<h <cholar Blumcntrilt ·alv> introdn~ed Rizal to Professor Robert Klutschak. an eminent na1urah~1. On their las1 nigh1 in Lc,tmemz, Rwl Jll<l V1nla. 10 rcc1p roc:a1e Blumcntri11', ho,p11altt)', tendered ,1 han4uc1 ,1 f111<·wdl dinner - in hi\ honor at their hotel On May 16, al 9:4~ A . M. , Rizal .ind Viola lch I ,·11m~nt1 by train. Blumen1ritt. his wife. and children were al 1lw r;11lr.,ad station to see them off. and they all ,hcd 1curs 111 p,1<1111~ .,, th,· train slowly departed. Rizal carried .111t0 h,s grave the bcautihil mc11,11r1<·, ol 111, visit to Lcitmeritz. In a letter to Blumcntrit1. written ,n V1l'nn;i on May 24. 188?. Rizal expressed his and Vi,,1.,·, cnnl'c rn l,>r the illness of Dora, the profcs~or•~ h11k tlJu!(hlcJ ·\",I., ,111,1 107 JOR IIIZM.: LIFE. WOIUCI M 0 - 1 1 - ! ,"_thus wrot~ Rizal, "are very sad because our little mend Don sick. We still remember her little blue eyes; we hear her mcny laughter, and we see her liule teeth. Poor Dorita! I saw her run arter us when the train Wb leaving! With all my bean I wish her prompt recoveryff 2 lS In another leuer, wrinen in Brunn, Austria, on May 19, 1887. lhree days after leaving Leumeritz. Raal wrote to Blumentnlt "I ~all malce my good fnends of Leameritz the objects or my thoughts and I sJ,31J say (If myself: You are not alone Rizal in a small corner of B~bem,a I here are good, nol,le, and friend); .cul,- who lik~ you; think of them, consider them as if they were ,.,th y_ou, a, ,r they saw you; they will rejoice over your joys, ;,.nd w,11 weep over youT suffenng . Please kiss the children for me, express my greetings 10 your wife, and to your good (~the~ and _the_ fnends in Lc.itmeritz. I am at bean an ulhabitant 0 Le1tmentz Just ~ you yourself are a Filopino in sentimenu. I believe Austna will always live in my hear1·• ) [n the ,;ame lette_r, Rizal told Blumentritt that he forgot his diamond stickpin at his room m Hole! Krebs . Prague. After Le1tmeritz, Rnal and Viola visited the historic aty or Prague. They carried letters of recommendation from Blume~tnU to Dr. Willkomm, professor of natural history in the Uruversuy or Prague. The good proressor and bis cbanning wire and daughte~ welcomed them and showed them the cit • lustonc spots. Ys Rizal and Viola visited the tomb of Copernicus, the ramous astronomer; the museum of natu:ral history; the bacteriological labora1_one~. the famous cave where San Jua.n Nepomuceno, the C.uhohc saint, wa~ 1mpnsoned: and lhe bridge from which this samt was hurled rnto the river. After saying good-bye to Professor Willkomm and his family the_ two tounsts went to Brunn. According to Viola, •nothin ' of tml)()rtance happened- in this city. g Vienna, On May 20, Rizal and Viola amved in the beauttful city of ".1en_ n a, ca~ital of Au.stria-Hungary. Famous in song and sto_ry, th~ etty fascmated Rizal because of its beautiful buildings, retig,ous unagcs, haunting waltzes, and maJestic charm. Vienna was truly the ·Queen of the Danube", Rizal and V'10la, armed with a letter o f recommendation Blumcntritt, met Norfenfals, one of the greatest oovetisu In hurope during that time. This great Austrian novelist was fnnrably impressed by Rita), and years later he spoke highly 111 Rizal, -Whose gemus be so much admired". In Vienna, Rizal received bis lost diamond stickpin. It was found by a ma.id m Hotel Krebs and was given to Blumentritt, m tum, forwarded it to Rizal in Vienna. •ho. Rizal and Viola stayed at Hotel Metropole. They visited city's interesting places. such as churches, museurrtS, art i!-•llcrics, theaters, and public parks. They met two good fncnds of Blumentritt - Ma.sner and Nordmann, Austrian scholars. 1It, Danllbiaa Voya~ to UntL On May 24. Ri:r.al and Viola left V,cnna on a river boat to sec the beautiful sights of the Danube River. As they traveled along the famous river, RizaJ observed keenly the river sights - the barges loaded with products, the flowers and plants growing along the riveT banks, the boats with families living on them, and the quaint villages on the nversides. We parucularly noticed that the passengers on the river boat were using paper napkins during the meals, which was a novelly to him. His fellow passenger, Viola. commented that the paper napkins were ·more byg,eoic and econonucal than cloth napkins". Fro• Untz to RbelafalL The river voyage ended in Llntz. They traveled overland to Salzburg, and from there lo Munich where they sojourned for a short time to savor the famous Munich beer, reputed to be the best in Germany . From Munich, they went to Nuremberg, one of the oldest oltcs of Germany. Among the s,ghts wluch they saw m tlus aty ,.,·ere the horrible torture machines used by the Inquisition Rizal examined ca.rduUy these torture machines. He and Viola were impressed by the manufacture of dolls which was the biggest industry of the aty. After Munich, they viSlted Ulm. The cathedral of tlus aty was '"the largest and tallest in all Germany". V'aola related that he and Rizal climbed its many hundred stq,s. He rested twice on the way to the tower and {ell dizzy from the strain upon reaching the top. Rizal, on the other hand, ascended without resting and was not tired when he reached the top.4 108 10, - Ill~: LIFI, - I C I MO WIIIT,.,QI El UMrol which says that ii is not consisrcnr en, except di ity to be exhibited side by side with animals with plants. human I have Ill done everyth'mg ..,,..;ble to preventha1hc and .-d" a of this degradation of men of my race, but 1 vc ispl 1 ~ c d Now one woman died of pneumon,n. The ' · ____., 1·n I barroe,a (rustic house made of ll()T'OIS were ho......, z·)· And £1 Resumen bamboo, gi-ass, and tree branch•~ JliU make.s i:nean jokes ab<ou1 nl Froin Ulm, they went to Stuttgart, Baden, and then Rheinfall (Cascade of the Rhine) At Rheinfall, they saw the waterfall, "the most beautiful waterfall of Europe" . Cros-11n1 the Frontier to Switzerland. From Rheinfall, they crossed the frontier to Schaffhausen, Switzerland They stayed in this city from June 2 to 3, 1887. 1bey continued their tour to Basel (Bale), Bern, and Lausanne. Geoeva. After sightseeing in Lausanne, Rizal and Viola left on a lillle boat, crossing lhe foggy Leman Lake Ill Geneva . Tim Swiss city is one of the most beautiful cities in Europe, V1Site<! by world tourist~ every year. The people of Geneva were linguists. speaking French, Gem1an, and Italian. Rizal conversed wi1h them in 1hese three languages. Aside from visiting 1he tourist spots. Rizal anrl Viola weni boating on the lake . In lhis aquatic excursion, Rizal showed his rowing prowess which he acquired during his boyhood days in Calamba. On June 19, 1837, Rizal treated Viola 10 a blow-out It was his 26th birthday. According to a Fil.apioo custom, he celebrated his birthday with a ~umptuous meal Rizal and Viola spem fifteen delightful days in Geneva . On June 23, they parted ways - Viola returned to Barcelona while Rizal continued the. tour to Italy. Rbal Resents EllhibltJon of lgorou !n 1887 Madrid E-xposi- tlon. While Rizal, accompanied by Dr. Viola, was happily touring Europe, an Exposition of the Philippines was held in Madrid , Spain. Upon reaching Geneva (Switzcrla nd). he received sad news from his friends in Madrid of 1hc deplorable conditions of the primitive Jgorots who were exhibited in this exposition, some of whom died, and whose scanty clothing (G-strings) and crude weapons were obJCCts of mockery and laughter by the Spanish people and press . Being a champion of human dignity. Rizal was outraged l>y this degradation of his fellow countrymen 1hc lgorots of Northern Luzon. In a leuer to his friend, Blumentriu, dated Geneva, June 6, 1887, he said:' 'My poor compatnors (lgor<>ts - Z.) who arc now being exhibited in Madnd an: mocked by Spanish newspap- llO "° In anotner letter to Blumentritt, dated Geneva: _Junc.. 11187 Rial said he was in favor of holding an exposition, ~'1; u , exhibition of odd individuals, showing our count,~."1cn nat an . "t 10 entertain the idle inhabitants o f Madrid I le: ft\ a h~~:i:/reiterated: •we want an ind11s1rial cxpo~nion . hut ~mt exhibition of human being,s who are co'."pclled to ,'.'.'e outdoors and die of nostalgia and pneumonia or typhus. a: ::::Oost Rhal I0 Italy From Geneva Rizal went to Italy. He v,s,ted . v' · and Flo'r.incc . On June 27, llll\7. he 1unn, dMR1lan, City" and a lso s-allcd the "Chv of reache ome, the~•~•E,ternal " the Caesars" H as thnlled by the sights and memo ries of the H crn;il Cty. ie::ribing to Blumemftt, the "grandeur thal wa, Ro me . he wrote on June 27, 1887. T am in Rome! Everytlnng I >tcp on ts the dll.$t of heroes Here I breathe ihe same air which the Romon hcroe> ~ave b~cathcd. t salu1c e•ery sia1ue wilh ,,.vcrcnce, and "' . of a small ,slnnd ' it ~ccm< lh,,1 t •'"' me a humbl c nauvc C I th . in ~ sanctuary. I have already seen the ap1to ,um ~ Ta ,an Rock, lhe Palaunum , the ~orum _Rumunu~,. th<_ Am";itheatrc etc. Everything here •< glnnou, except f d cafe singers. I do nol corer lhcsc (C-J c, I :c:s~n I louhe 10 bear their French songs or sec modc"TI ' ndustries My favorile pli,ces arc lhc Amphithcn1re and th,• ~oman F~rum; there I remain seated for ho~r<. contcmp~Jt: in eve 1hing and rcs1onng' hfc to ihc ruin< ·, I h,'.". g visited ry aome ch urchc.• and museums • hke the. ( Jp11,1lanc also h h Museum and the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore. w ,c is also gnndJose. 29th the Feast Day of St. Peter and St. Paul , 0 J une for the , first time the y at,can, • o f 1he 1h c "C11y Rizal n visited · d P~" and the capital of Christendom. He was deeply ,mpresse . • ,he· t• ~e the magruficen1 edifices, particularly of St. Peter's Church p rare worts of an, the v~t St. Peter's Square, the colortui apaldGduarhdsVaod the atmosphere of religiou, devotion that perva e t e a11ean. ~,rery nig)tt, alter sig)ttsceing the "hole day. Rizal returned to h1> hotel, very ured "I am tucd ~ a dog .. he .. Blum•nt · "'- I • , wrote to "~ nn, ..u1 will sleep a, a god" • r ~fter a ,.-eek o_f wonderful SOJourn ,n Rome, he prepared ., ehum 10 the ~hiltppincs . He had already wrinen to his father h,at e was coming borne . 10 .. .. .. Chapter 10 First Homecoming, 1887-88 All the alluring beauties of fotetgJI countries and all the beautiful memones or h,s soiourn in alien lands could neither inake Rizal forget his [atherland nor turn his badt IO bis own nationality. True that be srudicd abroad, acquired the lore and languages of foreign nauon\, and enjoyed the friendship of many great men or the Western world; bu1 be remained at heart a true Filipino with an unquenchable l<m: Cor tbe Philippines and an unshakable determinauon to dJc in the land of his birth. Th~. after five yean of memorable a>;ourn iD Europe, he returned 10 the Philippines in AugUSl 11181 and pracuaed medicine tO Calamba. He Jived the quiet life of a country doc:l«. But bis enemies, who resented his Noli, penec:utcd him, even tlueateomg 10 kill him Oedsion to Rdurn Hmne. Because of the publication of die Noli Me Tangue and the uproar it· caused amoog the friars, Rizal was warned by Paciano (his brother), Silvesare Ubaldo (bis brother-in-law), Chengoy (Jose M. Cealio), and odacr frimdc 001 10 return home. But he did not heed their warning. He was determined to return to the PhilippmC$ for the followiQg RUDGS: (I) to operate on hts mother's eyes; (2) IO ecrve his people who had long been oppressed by Spanish tynnts; (3) to fiad out foT himself how the Nol, and his other writings were affec:2ing FilipUlOS and Spaniards in the Philippines; and (4) to inquire why Leonor Rivera remained silent. In a letter 10 Blumentritl, written in Geneva ()"I June 19, 1887, Rini satd: "Your advice that I live in Madrid and oootinue to write from there is very benevolent but I cannot accept it. I cannot endure the life in Madrid where everytbillg is a voice in a wilderness. My parents want to me, and I WaJJt to tee 112 113 ~ ""'~' Lin, - - - AIIIIO W1111- ..... ....,_.,."O (1118'"111181 ~~ITI ~~-iJAUUm~ life I desire to live In my country by the side my""" Y• nbl now I am not Eu · d 1· of Madrid I alw l'k ropunize 1ke the Filipinos • ays t e to return to the country ohny binh". 1 lo Rome, on June 29 1887 R'zal iannouncing his h . ' • 1 wrote to his father he wrote "I sh ,7mefnung. "On the !Sth of July, at the latest": to the of Aa cm ark for our country, so that from the IS th ugusr. we shall <ce each other'' 2 30th Marsr:::::~l 3' FTrip to Manila: Rizal left Rome by train for On July I ~.:.cnhch pon, which he reached without mishup. 00 • ' • e bo11rded the steamer D' Ii h steamer which brought htm to E ro fi temna . t e same were abo 1 50 . u pe ive years ago. There l Chin u passengers, includirig 4 Englishmen, 2 Germans. ese, 2Japanesc, many Frenchmen, and t Fllipino (Rita() 1 spea: :~nwa ~;he only one among the passengers who could = y J1 gungcs, so that he acted as interpreter for his -mpamons 1;1:ussteamer ~a~_ en route to the Orient via the Suez Canal saw !Ins h1>1oruc canal for the second time lht fi i Rizal ::t~' . 'Jf when he ,ailed 10 Europe from Manila in ·1882 • a , ,. played chcs~ with rcllow passengers an-d engag~d 11 Iive1y conversauon ID many I in others played on lhe piano an~!~:;10~~~ P'7'engers sang; the weather became rough and some of Rizal's booerk caving Aden, sgOlwet. At Saigon, on July JO h , Haiphong hi h . • t trans,err~"tl lo another steamer w c was Manlla•bound On Aug t 2 h left Saigon ror Manila. us , t ~ .reamer t'::!/ 0 was 0 ~8:~;:is~i;:~•st;eoy;igc from Saigon 10 Manll.i soundly the whole night. Inc calm '::°:~llwas. fuldt ...and he_slept • umme vy the slivery moont·1 ht & • was 8 magniftCent sight 10 him. Raa1Near midnight o_f Augu~t 5, the Haiphong arrived in Manila went ashore w11h a happy he rt f h beloved native soil. He stayed in alhe o~t e ,once more t~od his visit h · f: • ct Y ,or a short llme to ~ends. He found Manila the same when he ler1 five the h 1,0. '!bere were lhe same old churches and buildtngs me O es in the roads, the same boats on h p . . · and lhe same hcary walls surrounding the city. t e as1g River• ia:!rs. 11• as u Happy Homecomlna, On August 8th, he returned to C,damba. His family weloomed htm affectionately, with plentiful tr.1rs or joy. Writing 10 Blumcntnn or his homecoming, he said· "I had a plea.sant voyage. I found my family enjoying good health and our happ1oess was great in seeing each other again. l11ey shed tears of JOY and I had 10 anhwer ten thousand qucs11ons •I the _ samii time" • The rcjoicing-.s or R;zal\ return n,cr, hi, ram,ly hernme worried for his safety Paciano did not leave him dunng the hn.t days after amval to protect him from any enemy assault. II" own father would not IN him i o nut alone. le,1 something might happen to him . In Calamba. Rizal established a medical dime. Hi> fmt pa11en1 was his mother, who wa, nlmo.r bhnJ He treated her eyes, but could nc,l perform any surgical operation hecau~e her eye cataracts were not yet npe. News of the arrival of a great doctor from Germany spread far and wide. Pa1ienh from Manila and !he province~ flocked lo Calamba. Rizal, who came to be called MOoctor Uliman·• bec.iuse he came from Germany. treated their ailments and soon he acquired a lucrative medical practice H,~ professional f<!es were rea,onahlc , even gratis tu rhe poor. Within a few mo111th6. he was ahle to earn P900 as :1 phy,,cian By February. 1888. he eameda total of P5.000as medical fellfi Unlike many successful medical practitioners. Rizal did not selfishly devote all his ume to enrichmg himself. He opened a gymnasium for young folks, where he introduced European spons. He tried to in1ere<t his townmates in gymnastics, fencing and shoonng so as lo discourage .he <.ockfigh!S and gambling ' Rizal suffered one failure dunng his ,.IX monthi. or soiuurn in Calamba - his failure 10 ~c Lco no1 R1vern. I-le 11 ,cd 10 l:l" to Dagupan, hut his parent< absolutely forl>ade him to go hecau-.e Leonor's mother did not like him for a son-in-law. With a heavv heart, Rizal bowed 10 hts paren1's wish. He was caught w11l11n the iron grip of the custom or his time that marriage, mu,t he arranged by the parent:; of bo1h groom and bride . Storm onr the Noli. Meanwhile, as Rizal wa, peacefully living in Calamba. his enemies plolled his doom . Aside from practismg medicine, ancnding 10 hb gymnU\oum. which he established, and taking pan in 1he town's civic affairs. he painted la tum, lost no time in fou,uding it to the governor gc.nenl. several buutiful landscapes and trahsbtcd the German poema of Von Wlklcrnath mlo Tagalog. A rew •eeks after bis arrival, a storm broke over bis novel. One day Riul received a lcuer from Governor General Emilio Terrero (18&5-l!ll) req~ing him to come to Malacaiim Palace. Somebody bad whispered to the governor's ear that the Noli c:unta,ned St.ibvcr,,h,c idc-" , Ri~ "'ent to Manda and appeared at Malacanang. When he w:1\ tnfnrmrd b\ Governor <ieneral Terrero of the charge, he denied II. explaining that he merely upO<;Cd the truth. but he J.,d not advocate ~ubvers111e ideas. Pleased by his explanation and runou, al>oul the ronuovcrsinl book. 1hc governor general ~ked the author fix a ropy of the Noli w 1hat he could read 1 Rizal had no copy then because the only copy he brough1 home wa given 10 11 mend. However, be prorrused 10 secure one for the governor general R.i 7al •"Kiled lhe Jesu,t fathers to ask for the copy be sent ~em. but they would not pan with II The Jesuits. especially his former professors - Fr. Francisco de Paula Sanchez, Fr. Jose Be~"!'·. and Fr. Fc<kr100 Faura .,.ere glad 10 see him. He bad _a spmted d1scussion with Father Faura, whu ventured an opm,on that ~C\'erything io II was the truth", but added: ~You may lose your head for 11··. Fonunatcly, RJzal rouno a copy m the hands or a fnend. He wa~ able to jtCI 11 and gave it to Governor General Terrero The go"e~nor general, who was a liberal-mmded Spaniard. knew that Rizal s hfc in jeopardy because the friars ..,ere pu"'erful. Fm 11ecun1y mea,urc, he assigned " )0ung Spanish ltcutcnant Don Jose Tavtel de Andrade. as hodyguard of Rizal This hcuten~ ant belonged to a noble Camily. He was cuhur~d and knew pamtmg. aoJ oould ,pcalt English, French. and Sparush. w..,. Gove.rnorGcneral T~rre.ro read the Noli and found nothing WTong _ with II But Rizal s enemi~ were powerful_ The Archbishop o~ Manila, Msgr. Pedro Payo (a Dominican) sent a ~y of th< ,\of, to Fa1hcr Rector Gregorio Echavarria or the Univcr..,ty of Santo Toma,, for examinauon by a commiuee of the faculty The committee. which was composed of Dominican prof=rs, submitted •ts ~pon to the Father Rector who 1mmed1a1ely 1rarum1tted n 10 Archt,;shop Payo. The an:hblSbop, 11, This report of the faculty memben of the Uuiversity of Santo Tomas stated that the Nou was "bm:tical. 1lllpOIIS. and aa,odaJ0\1$ lll the relig,ous order, and anti--patrlotic, subversive of public order, injunous to the government o( Spain and its functioa in the Philippine Islands in the political order".• Governor General Terrero was dissatis6ed with the report of the Dnmimcans, for be knew that the DomirucaDs -,,.ere pre1udi<:ed against Rizal. He sent the novd to the Permanent Commission of Censonhip wrucb was oompmcd of priests and la)men. The report of this rornrnissioo was drafted by its head, f'r Salvador Font, Augustinian cura or Toodo. and suhmmed 10 the governor general on December 29 It fom,d the novel 10 conrain subversive ideas against the Cburcb and Spam, and recommended "that the importatJon, reproduction and circulation of this pemiaous book in the island& be abwlutely prohibited", When the newspapers published Font's written report of the censorship oommis.ion, Raal and Im friends became apprcbens1v~ and uneasy The enemies of Rizal exulted in unholy aJec: The banning of the Noli only served to make it popular. Everybody wanted to read it. News about the great book spread among the masses Whal the bated Spanish mutcn did not like, the oppressed masses liked very much Despite the governmenl prohibition and the vigilance of the cruel Guardia Civil many Filipinos were able to get hold or copies of the Noli whn:h they read at nighl behind closed door, lllank, 10 Governor General Terrero , there were nu m11'4 imprisonment or ma~ execution or Filipinos. He refused to be ,numidaled by the friars who clamored for hanh measure:. agaimt people caught reading the novel and its author. Attackers of the Nol/. The battle over the Nol, took the form of a virulent war of words Father Font printed his rcpon and distributed oopies of it in order lo discredit the contro...crsial novel. Another Augusttnian, Fr. Jose Rodriguez, Pnor of Guadalupe, published a series of eight pamphlets under the general heading Crustion.es de Sumo lnJetts (Questions of Supreme Interest) to blast the Noh and other anti.spanish wntinp. 'These eight pamphlets were entitled u follows. 117 .ION IIIZAL; LIFE, WOflU AIID -ITINOI I Porqu, no loJ It, d, Them?) t,"r (Why Should I no, Redd 2 Guard0tndttllos Porqu,>(S.,wareofThcm Wh)•J 3. Y-qw - d1u usll!d th lo pnte? (And Whal Can Yuu Tell Mc of Plague?) rorqu, triunfon los 1mpu,s' (Wln Do the fmpmu, Triumph') S. Cru =d qu" de '"IJS 110 hoy purtatono.' tDo You Think There h Reau, !'.u Purg,uor) !I. 6 Hayo nolta1 u,fitm"' (I, Th~, or I, There N< lfcll• I 1 Qut It partU o 1m,d d, ,sr l1h,fo.1' (Wh•t l)o You Thmk o f ~ Libel,>) 8. Confa10,r o cvndma, •n' (Co,,Jc"5ton or Damnat1on'!) Copies of thes~ anu-Rual pamphlets v.riuen by Fra~ Rod ngucz were '!Old daily in the church~ after \fa!>l>. Many Filipino, were fon:e~ to buy chem 1,. order not ,., di~plc ....., tho frior, but they did not bcbeve what their author ,ait.l v.nh hy<r,•ncal fervor Repc:rCll$..'JrOm of the Morm over the ,\nl, reached Spam. It of th• S.:n;itc uf lhe Spanish. Cones by various senalo~ part1C1Jlarly Cicncral fosc de Salamanca on April I, 11:,88, General Luis M de Pando on Apnl 1_2: and Sr. Fernando Vida on Jun-, 11 1 he Spanish academraan of Madrid, Viccnre Barr~ntcs -.. ho fomwrl) ~~red high govemmenr pos111ons m 1hc Phrlrppinc,, llllt~rl) cn11c,2-,d the Nut, m an artido: published ,n La fa{NUlll Jt,,,frma (a newspaper or Madrid) m Janual') 11!9(1 was ~eroely attacked on the sc,sion h~II Ddcnden of the Noli. I he mU<:h maligned ,",'o/1 had ir, gallant defenders who fe.irlc,,.~h came our to prmc the m,- 111 of Lhe novel or 10 refute the arjlumcnrs of the unkind :illad.,•r, Marcelo H._del Prlar, Dr An1uo10Ma Rcgrdor, Gr...:iam, fAipa Jaena, Mana no Ponce. and .,thcr r 1hp1no n fornu..i, ,n foreign lands, of co~~· mshed to uphold rhe 1ru1h, of th.: v111, 1.,,11.., Sa~hcz: ~•zal s ravorite tea,her ar the Atenco, dcfcnt.lcd and praised II tn pubhc. Don l>qo,mundo Moret. former \1m,,tcr of the Crown, Dr Migu~I \fnrnyra. histnnJn and ,1a1c,m.,n, and Professor Blumen1ri11. scholar and educ tor, r.:ad and fikcu the novel. 118 A brilliant defense of the Noli came from an unexpected Gama, a Filipino Catholic pnc:st«holar, a theologian of the Manila Cathedral, and a Taplog translator of the famous Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis. Father Oarc:ia, writ10g under the penname Ju,to Desiderio Maplan,a, wrote • defense of the Noli "'hich was published in Sin1apore as an appendix to a pamphlet dared July 18, 1888. He blasted the arpments of Fr. Rodriguez ~ follows: IO\UCC. It was by Rev. Vicente I Rizal caaoot be an "ignorant mlln·, u Fr Rodnguu alleged. because he a graduate of SplllllSh un,-.n.111cs and - a reciptenl of ,cholas, ,e honon. 2 R.iw docs no! attack lhc Clllrrdl and Spain, as F1 Rodripu claimed. bcausc what Rizal auadted in tbc .Vo/1 were tbe bad Sparush o!fiaal> and no1 Spam •nd tltc bad and corrupl friars and not the Church. 3. Father Rodnguez said that those whn read lbc 'Vol, 00lllffll1 1 mortal sin, su1tt be (RodrigueLJ had rud the oovel. therdon: he: aloo comn11u a mortal "n Later, when Rizal learned of rhe brilliant defense of Father Garcia of his novel, he cried because hrs grautude was overwhelming.• Rizal, himself defended hJS novel against Barrantes· attack, in a letter written in Brussels , Belgmm, in February, 1880. In this letter, he exposed Barrontcs· ignorance of Philippine attain and mental tilishonesty which is unwof1hy of an academician.' Ban-antes met in Rizal his m.ister in satire and polemics During the days when the Noli was the target of a heated controveny between the friars (and tbcrr minions) and the fnends or Riw, all oopies or it were sold out and the pncc per copy soared to unprecedented level Both friends and enemies of the Noli found it extremely difficult to secure a copy. Acoordmg lo Rizal, in a letter to Fernando Canon from Gene,... June 13, 1887, the price he set per copy was five pc$Ctas (equivalent to one pcso), but tbc price later rose to fifty pesos per copy Rbal ad Tfflel tie Alldrade. While the stonn over the Noli was rasinJ in fwy, Rizal was DOI molested Ul Calamba. Tius IS due to Governor General Terrcro's generosity in assigning a bodypud 'to him. Between this Spanish bodyguard, Lt Jose Tmel de Andrade, and Rizal. a beautiful friendship bloomed. 119 - - • u ..._ _ _ _ ,,_ Together, Rizal and Andrade. both young, educated and cultur~, made walking tours or the verdant countrysides. discussed top,cs of oom~n int-t, and enjoyed fencin&. shooting, huntmg and paanllng. Lt. Andrade became a great admirer of the man he was ordered 10 watch and protect. Years lateT, he wrote or i:«zal -Rizal "'.as refined, educated and gentlemanly. The ~obb1es 1ba1 most 101eres1ed him were hunting. fencing. shooung paintmg, and h1lung ... I well remember our excursion to Mount Makiling, not so much for the beautiful "cw . a, for the rumors and pernicious cffecu that re<ull from it There was one who believed and reponcd 10 Manila that Ru:,I and I , at_ the top of the_ mountain, hois1cd the German nug anJ proclaimed ns sovereignty o,er the Philippine\ I ,magmcJ 1ha1 such nonsense emanated from the friars of Calamba. but d,d not take the trouble to make 1nqumes about the mailer" 0 What marred Rizal's happy days m Calamba w11h Lt. Andrade were (I) the death or his older smcr Ohmp,.. , and (2) the groundless tales circulated by his enemie~ that he -s -a German spy, an agent of Bismarck, a Protesuint. a Mason, • witch , a soul beyond salvation, ctc 11 Calambe'1 Av-i- Tr~c. Governor General Terrero in0ucneed by eertam facts in Noh Me Tangere, ordered a gov: ernmeot investigation of the friar estates lo remedy whatever ,niquiti~ rmght have been pTesent ,n oonneclJOn with land taxes and with tenant relation~. One or the £nar estate,, affected was the Calamba Hacienda which the Dominican Order owned since 1883. lo complianoe with the governor general's orders, dated ~ecember 30, 1887, the Civil Governor of Laguna Province directed the municipal authorities of Calamba to investigate the agranan conditions of their locality. Upon bearing of the investigation, the Calamba folks solicited RtZal'~ hdp in g;uhcnng the facts and listing their gnevanees against the hacienda management , so 1hat the central government might institute certain agrarian reforms. After a thorough study of the conditions in Calamba. Riul wrote down his findings which tbc tenants and three or the offiaals of the hacienda signed on January 8, 1888. These findin~, which were forrnaUy submitted 10 the government for actJon, were the following:•? 120 fltfn ltocuew ••• C\887-IWI 1>01 1. The bacM-nda or the DQGllnican Order comprised ooly the lands around C.lamba, but mo the town or Calamba 2 1be profiu o( lbc Dol1llllican Order continually u,crca.cd becaUJC of the arbitrary Increase of the rentals paid by the tenants 3 1bc hacienda ()'O,'tler never conuibuted a single ccn· uvo for the oelcbrauon or the town fiesta. for the cducauon or the children, and for the improvement o( a&riculturc. 4 Tenant, who had spent much labor in cleann& the lands were dispossessed o( s:ild lands (or flimsy reasons S. I ltgh rate> o( interest were charged the tenants fo, dcla)cd payment of rentals, and when the rentals could not be paid, the naaenda managemtmt confiscated their caraba<l!.. tools, and homes. t'arcwdl to Calambll. Rlzal'b exposure or the deplor-.ible condlltoM of tenancy ,n Calamba infuriated funher his enemies The friars exerted pressure on Malacailan Palace t•1 eliminate hmt. They asked Governor General Terrero to deport him. but the lat1er refused because there was no voltd ~rge Jgainst Rizal in court. Anonymous threats against Rizal's hfe were received by his parents. The alarmed parents, rclauvcs and friend,, (including Lt Tavicl de Andrade) advised tum 10 go away, for his lire was in danger. One day Governor General Terrero summoned Rizal and "advised" tum to leave the Philippines for lu.s own good. He was giving R,z.al a chance 10 escape the fury or the fnars' wrath. Thi> time R12al had to go. He could not very well disobey the governor general's veiled orders. But he was not runnjng like a coward from a fight He was courageous. a £act whtch h,~ worst enenucs could not deny. A valia nt hero that he was, he w;is not afraid of any man and neither wa> he afraid 10 die. He was compelled 10 leave Calamba for two reasons: (I) his pre,;ence in Calamba w :b jcoparJizmg the sa£et) Jnd happiness of his !Jn11ly anJ tncnJ, and (!) he could fighl bc t1er Ju, enemu:s and -..:r-c hi\ c,,u111ry·, cau-..: with j!rcater efficacy by writtng in foreign countrie<> A Poem for Lipa. Shortly before Ri1al left Calamba in 1888 hi> friend from Lipa requ~ted h,m 10 wntc a poem in commem- 121 ol"&Uon o f the town's ckutton to a '1111 (01y) by ~,nue of the Bec:crra Law of 1888 GI..Jly, he wro1e a puem ded1et11cd 10 the industnous folks of l.1pa This wa~ 1he "Htmno Al Traf>o1a' (Hymn 10 Labor). He fin, hed u and sent 11 to Lipa before h,s depanure from Calamba h runs lb foflo..,, 11 HYMN TO l .-\BOR ClfORUS: For •"'1 country 1n ..u . F,>r our count') on puce The F,hp1110 wtll he read) , Whole he h•e• and ,.hen he doe, ME"I As SOOD as the b>t IS IUlled 1"1lh loi.hl Forth lo lhc fickh to pl°"' the him' Snxz ,t ft: WOfk "h!lt '1.U(Um~ the man. The mochcrland lam~y and the h<llnt !lard though the ,.,,1 may pro•~ tu he, Implacable the •un â– l>mc For motherland, our """c:s a!ld bahts, ,,...,. be UJy '°ltb •'llr ~ ,e WnES. Courageously set ou1 to work Your home \S Mfe v,,11h â– fa11hful v,,1fc lmplantin& in her ch,ldrcn, io.c f'or wudom, land 111d V1r'IIXJa> bfc . Whca mpnfaU brinp ui to our re.i . May '""1ing fommc suard our door, 8ut i.t cruel fate should harm her man. The wife would toil on as before GIRLS: Hall• Had' Q,.c pn,ae to WOfk' The co.ntry's vtpr and her "'ulth , For work lift up )Our brow serene It II your blood, your life, your hc•llh If any )'Olllh pr01cs11 his love His won shall prove ,f be be good Ill nu., man u..c .,ho Simes and l<>th Can !ind the .,.)' to feed h" bn,oJ BOYS: Teada m thee the budcsl , ..b For down thy trails we 1am our ~ct That when our country calls 1omorr°"' Tby purposct "'< may complete And may our ciders say who sec u, Seel How "'1>flhy of thctr s,rc~I No mcensc can clllt our dod one, ulr.r a brave ..,,, who a.pores• .. .. . Chapter 11 In Hong Kong and Macao, 1888 H ounded by powerful enemies, R izal was forced to leave his country for a second time in February 1888. He was then a full-grown man of 27 yea.rs of age, a practising physi(ian, and a recognized man-of-letters. The fim time he went abroad in June 1882, be was a mere lad of 21, a youthful student in search of wisdom m the Old Wodd, a romantic idealist with bcauliful dreams of emancipating his people from bondage by the magic power of his pen. Tm1es had changed. Rizal at 27 was an embittered victim of human iniquities, a disillusioned dreamer, a frustrated reformer. TIie Trip to Hong Kooa, On February 3, 1888, after a short stay of six months in his bclo,ed Calamba, Rizal left Manila for Hong Kong on board the Zafiro. He was sick and sad during the crossing of the choppy China Sea. He did not get off his ship when it made brief stopover at Amoy on February 7. For three reasons: (l) he was not feeling weU, (2) it was raining bard, and (3) he heard that the city was dirty. He arrived in Hong Kong on February 8. During his stay in Hong Kong, -a British colony, Rizal wrote a letter to Blumcntritt, dated Febru~ 16, 1888, expressing h is bitterness. This letter runs as follows: At last l can write freely. At last I can express my thougbis without fear of censorship from the chief! 'Ibey forced me 10 leave my country. Half sk:lt l left the house. Ob, dear Blumentritt, you haft oo idea of my minor odystey. Without the aid al my fricad Lieuleoam Taviel de Andrade, what would beoome of mel Without the sympatbi.es of the Governor General, the directors of the civil administration and ciY11 government, I would now be In somc dungeon All the provincials and tile archbishop went daily to the Governor General to complain against me. The Syndic nf the Dominicans wrote • denunciation to the alcalde chat at night they saw me bold secret meetings with men and women on top of a hlU. It is true I went wallang al dawn to a hill accompanied by many men, women, a.nd child,cn, for the purpose of enjoying the coolness of the morning. but always esconed by the lieutenant of the Guardia Civil who knows Tagaloa. Who ,s the coMpiratorof secret sessions that will hold them in the open air among women .a nd children? I allowed the accusation to reach t.he Governor Gener-al so he could sec what kind of enemies I have My countrymen offered me money to leave the islands. They asked me to do so not only for my own interest but also theirs, bccau.e I have many friends l\Jld auiuamtamees whom they would have deported with me to Balabag or the Marianas Islands. Thus. half skk, J bade a hasty farewell 10 my fomily. I am rt1um1ng to Europe by way of Japan and the United StatC<. We should see each other again. I have so much to tell you. In Uong Kong, Riuil stayed at Victoria Hotel. He was welcomed hy the Filipino tesidents. including Jose Maria Basa. Balbino Mauricio. and Manuel Yriam: (son o f Francisco Yriane. alcHlr.le mayor of L.lguna). A Spaniard. Jose Sair12 de Varanda, who was a former secretary of Governor General Terrero. shadowed Rizal's move• menl in Hong Kong. It is believed that he was commissioned by the Spanish authorities 10 spy on Rizal . "Hong Kong," wrote Rizal to Slumentritt on February 16, 1888. "is a small. but very clean city. Many Ponuguese, Hindus, Engli~h. Chinese, and Jews live in it. There are some Filipinos, the majority of whom being those who had been e xiled 10 the Mananas Islands in 1872. They are poor, gentle, and umid. FormcrlY. tMy were rich mechanics, industriali~ts, and finan• CIC!fS. ,.z 11S In Hone KMt And Mac.ao • 1881, VWt to ~ . On February 18, Rizal, accompanied by Bua, boarded the ferry steamer Kiu-Klang for Macao. He was tu1prued to see among the passengers a familiar figure - Sainz de Varanda. Macao is a Portupc.e colony near Hong Kong. ~The city of Macao,tt wrote Rizal, in hls diary, "is small, low, and gloomy There are many junks, sampans, but few steamers. It looks sad and is ·almost dead."3 In Macao, Rizal and 811$& stayed at the home of Don Juan Francisco Lecaros, a Filipino gentleman married to a Ponuguei;e lady. He was rich and spent his days .;ultivating plants and Dowen, many of which came from the Philippines. During his hi,o-day sojoW'lll in Macao. Ri7al visited the theatre, casino, cathedral and churches, pagodas, botanical gar• den, and bazaars. be also saw the famous Grotto of Camoens, Ponugal's national poet. ln the evening of February 19, he witnessed a Catholic procession. in which the devotees were dressed in blue and purple dresses and were canying unlighted candles. On February 20, Rizal and Basa returned to Hong Kong, again on board the ferry steamer Kiu Kiang. Experie- ta Hoag Koag. During his two-week visit in Hong Kong, Rizal studied Olinese life, language, drama, and customs. He wrote down in his own diary the following experi• ences:• I. Noisy celebration of the O,incsc New Year which lasted from Febfl)ary 11th (Saturday) 10 13th (Monday). Continuo1U explcxions of firecrackers. The richer the Chinese. the more 6reaackers he exploded. Rtul himself fired many firecrackers at the window or his hotel. 3. The marathon lauriat party. wherein the guests were served numcr0IU dishes. such as c!ned lrui~~. geese. shrimps. cenlury eggs. shark fins. bir,d ne~ts, white ducks . chicken with vinegar, 6sh heads. roasted J>IS-1, tea. etc. The l011gest meal in the world 4. The Dominican Order was 1hc richest religious order in Hong Kong. It engaged actively in business II owned more than 700 houses for rent and many shares an foreign banu h had millions of dollar,. dcpo,itcd in the banks which earned fabulous mterests. 5. Of the Hong Kong cemetencs belonging to the Protestants, Catholics, and Muslims, that of \he Pro1cs1>an1s was the most beautiful because o r its wcll•groorncd pl•n•~ and dean pathways. The Cathohc cemetery was most pomp• ous. with ,ts oma1e and expensive mausoleums and cx1ravag antly carved scpulchcn1. The Muslim ceme1ery wa\ lhc simplest. containing only a hnle mosque and tombstones w1th Arabic 1nscriptioM. Dtparturt From Hong Kong. On February 22. 1888, Rizal left Hong Kong on board the Octanic, an American s1c11mcr His destination was Japan . He did not like the meals on board , but he liked the ship because 11 was clean and efficiently managed. His cabinmatc wa, a British Protc~tant mis."onary who hnd laved in China for 27 years and knew the Chinese language very well. Rizal called him ""a good man".' Other passengers , with whom Rizal cunversed in their own languages, were two Ponugucse. two Chinese. several Bmi,h , and an American woman Protestant missionary. • • • • • 2 . Boisterous Cluncsc theatre . with noity audience and noisier music. ln the Chinese dramatic art. Rizal observed the following: (I) a man astride a slick means a man ridinc on horseback, (2) â– n actor raising his leg means he is entering a house. (3) a red dress indicates a wedding, ( 4) a girl about 10 be married coyly covers her fau with a fan even in the presence of her fiana:. and (S) a man raiS1ng a whip signifies he is about 10 ride a horse. 126 121 reasons: (1) he could economize bis living expenses by myin1 at the legation and (2) he bad nothing to hide from the prying eyes of the Sparush authorities. Chapter 12 Romantic Interlude in Japan (1888) Ono of the happiest interludes in the life of Rizal was his sojourn in the land of the Cherry Blossoms for one month and a half (February 28- April 13. 1888). He was enchanted by the natural beauty of Japan, the charming mannen. of the Jnpancse people, and the picturC$(1UC shrine\ Moreova, he fell m love with a Japanese girl, whose loveliness infused joy aod romance m lus sorrowmg bean. Her real name wa& Sclk,'1 Usui. Rual affectionately called her O-Sei-San. fate, however, cut short his happy days in Japan He had to sacrifice his own happiness to carry on his work for the redemption of his oppressed people. Rl.zal Arrives la Yok~. Early in the morning of Tuesday, February 28. 1888, Riz.al arrived in Yokohama He rcgistCTCd at the Grand Hotel. The next day he proceeded to Tokyo and took a room at Tok)O Hotel, where he Stayed Crom March 2 to 7 He was impressed by the city of Tokyo. He wrote to Professor Blumen· trill: ~Tokyo is more expensive than Paris. The walls are built 1 in cyclopean manner. The streets arc large and wide. " Rizal in Tokyo. Sbonly after R.izal's arrival tn Tokyo, be was "•sited at his hotel by Juan Perez Caballero, secretary of the Spani<h Legation. The latter invited him 10 live at the Spanish LcgatK>n. Rizal. being an intelligent man, realiz.ed that the Spanish d1plomatic -authontJes were instructed from Manila to mooitor his movements m Japan He aa:epted the invitation for two 128 On March 7, ruzat checlted out of Tokyo Ho tel and lived at the Spamsh Legation He and Perez Caballero became good fnends. In a letter to Blumentrin, be described the Spanish diplomat as Ma young, fine, and excellent wnter" and ffan able diplom:at who had tra,eled muchff 2 During h,s first <.lay m Tok)o, Rizal was embarrassed because he did not know the Japan= language . He looked like .a Japanese . but could not talk Japanese. He bad a hard time shopping, for he could nor be understood and the Japanese children lau!?hcd at h,m Thu\ he wrote to Blumentritt. "H ere you ha,e your lriend, Rizal the wonder of the Japanese, who ha!. the !ace of a fapanoe but docs not speak Japanese. On the street~. when I go shopping. people look at me and 111-educatcd children laugh because I speak such a strange language. In Tokyo very fcv. person,, speak English, but an Yokohama many spealt It Some bcl,cvc I am an Europeanized Japanese who docs not want to be taken as such.ff) To a,·oid further embarras-ament, Rizal decided to study the Japanese language. Being a born linguist, be was able to speak it within a few days. He abo~tudled the Japanese drama (kabulr.i), arts. mu~c. and judo (Japanese art of selr-<lcfensc) He browsed in the museums. libraries, an galleries, and shrines. He visited Meguto, Nikko, Hakone, M1yanosh11a, and the charming vdlages of Japan . Rizal and tlw Tokyo Musidans. One cool afternoon in March. 1888. R12al was promcn:ading m a street of Tokyo near a park. It was a beautiful spring afternoon. There were many people at the park As he approached the park, Ri.zal beard the Tokyo band playing a classical work of Strauss. He was impressed by the superb performances of the Western music He stopped and listened m rapt attention. He thought ~How admirable was the rend,uon I wonder how these Japanese people have assimilated the modern European music to the extent of playing the buutiful musical masterpieces of the great European composen so wcll! 8 1J9 ICIM IIIZAL · ~i,1, WOIIKI MD WIIITI - The band stopped playll!g. The musicians descended Crom the band~IJlnd and walked around for a rest. some began 10 converse. To R.izal's a~az~mem. they were talking in Tagalog He approached llhem, tnqumng m Tagalog: "Paisaoo, raga sa.an po kayo?" (Compatriot, where are you from?) . 'JhC musicians were equally surprised anJ delighted 10 meel ~1m. They tmd him they were Filipinos and lhat the principal instruments m the band were Japanese. but they were playing · only the secondary instruments. Rlw's lmpraslon o/ Japan. RIZal was favorably impressed ~y Japan He WI\$ a keen observer, 1a~ing cop1ou~ notes on the hfe, CU£1oms, and culture of the people. He was no silly. lighl• headed tounst who merely enJOys attractive sights that appealed only 10 the senses. The things which favorably impressed Riz.il in Japan werc: 5 The beauty or the country - its nowers, moun1ain, . streams~ and see.rue panorama~. 2. The deanllncss, ,x,hteness, and industry of the Japanc,e people 3 The picturesque drci,s and >l'nple chorm of 1h,· Japanese women There were very fow thieve, in Japan so that the housces remained open day and nigh1, and tn the hold moo, one could safely leave money on 1he table 4 5 Bc~ars were rarely seen ,n the rity streets, unlike ,n Manda and 0 1her Cll1cs. However, there 1s one thmg which he did nol like ,n Japan a_nd that wa.'I the popular mode of tran'lportation by mean, (>f nckshaws drawn by men . Hi'I o;ensitivc wul recoiled at seeing h_wnan bem[tS working hkc horses. pulling the carts called ncuh .. ws He felt d1'1gu~1ed at the way a human being was employed like a horse 6 Romance wltll O-SCi-&ln. One spring aflernoon. a few days after he had moved to lhe Spanish Lejlation in the Azabu district of T?l..yo, Rizal saw a preuy Japanese girl walking past the legation gate Bemg a man with an eye for feminine beauty, he was attractc;d by her regal loveliness and charm. He craved to meet her - but how? 130 lliz:al made il'lq111ries among 1he legation employees and l~mcd from one of them (a Japanc'l'C gardener) that she wa'I Seiko Usui, who lived in her parents' home and that she used to pass by the legation during her datly afternoon walk. The following afternoon. Riz.al and the Japanese fardencr waited at the legation gate and watched for the girl. A~ she approached , he took off his hat and politely introduced himsell. as the custom io Germany. At that time, Rizal's Japanese was sttll very poor so that the gardener came 10 his aid and explained to the girl that the young man was a physician from Manila who was a guest of 1he Spanish Legation. was Seiko-san was mildly amused al the gallant gentleman from the Philippines who spoke in halting Japanese. She replied m English. for she knew that language and also French . The tw<l then conversed in both English and French - the language barrier was thus eliminated. Since that first meeting. Rizal and O-~i-San. as Riial called her, met almosl daily Together, they vis11ed lhc mlcre,ting \pots of the city - the lmperial Art Gallery. the Imperial Library, the 111uversities, the Shokubutsu-en (Botanical Garden). the city parks (particularly H1biya Park) , and 1hc p1c1uresquc 5hnncs. Both found happmc,s in each other', cxunpany. R1LUI was then a lonely physioan of 27 year.. old, disillu,ioncd hy his frustrated romance with Leonor Riv,::ra and embittered by Spanish injllSlices at home. 0-Sei-San wa~· a lonely samurru's daughter or 23 years old and had nc,cr yc1 experienced lhc ecstasy'Of true love Affinity of intcre~I in the arts paved 1hc way for their romance. Rizal saw in lovely O-Sei-San the qualilic, of his ,deal womanhood - beauty, charm , mo<lcMy, and 1ntclhgcncc No wonder, he fell deeply in love with her O-Sci·Siln reciprocated his affection, for it was the first time her hearl palpllatcd wnh joys 10 sec a man of gallantry, dignity. councsy. and vcf\al1lc talents. O-Se,-San bel~d Rizal m muny ways. More than a sweelheart, she was his guide. interpreter. and tutor She g11ided him in observing the shrines and ,·,llages around Tokyo. She improved his knowledge of Nippongo (J apancsc language) and Ill Japanese hiaitory And she interpreted for him the Kabuki plays aod the quamt customs and mores of the Japanese people. O-Sei-San 's beauty and affec11on almost tempted Rizal to ~Ilk down in Japan At the same time. he wa., offered a good JOb at 1he Spanish Legation 1f he wen: a man of lesser heroic mould, of le.scr will power, he would have lived permanently ,n Japan - and happily al 1hat with O-Sei-San; but then the v.orld, in general, and the Phihrpines, in particular, would have los1 a Rizal . Rual oe 0-..<;d-San. Rizars great love for 0-Sei-~n is attested hy 1hc hero's diary. On the eve of his depanure, be wrote in ht~ diary: 8 • Jaran bas enchanted me. The beautiful scenery, the flowers, the trees. and the mhabnanis - so peaceful, so councUU>, and"° plca,ant 0-Sc, San, Sayonan, Sayonaca! I have a happy golden a,onth; I do not know if I can hd•c another one W-.e that tn all my life. Love. money. fnenJsl- r pprcc:;.,tion. honor\ thc.c have not been 'l"'"' wantrnjl To think that I am leaving this life for the uncertain, the un, ,,own There I "a• offered an eas) way to liw:. he-loved ~nd .,;,teemed To )•>u I dedicate the final chapter of these rncmom of my )•'Uth No woman. like you. has ever loved me No ,.orn.,n hkt ,nu l>in ever ,amficed for me L&lt_e the Dower of the ch...tl11 that fall, from the stem fre,h and •hole without falhng leaves nr -..uhout w11hcnn!!-W1lb p0(:try sull despite 11, f 111 lhu, you l<11 'lcnbcr ha~e you lost your puri1y nor ha,,· lhc dchc:•tc r--1111, of ynur innocence faded Sa)onara. Sa\onara• You ,hall new:r rctum to k.now that I ha,e once more thou11h1 ,,f )ou '111d 1ha1 your image ll\tS in my memory; and undoubtedly. I am .Jway, thinking of you Your name livcs in 1he sight of my bps, yow image acoompanics and animJtc, •II my th<1uph1s When ,hall I retnm 10 pass :u,o1hcr d1nnc .,,,cmoon hkc that m the temple or Mcguro? When ,h.all the ,weer houn. I 'PCJII with you return! When shall I fin.I 11><-m ,,.ectcr. more t1•11Cju1I more plea,'"g? You the color of the camell,a. its frcsltncss. its elegance. Ill Ah' las! desccnd.anl of a noble family, faithful 10 an unfonunate vengeance you are lo-ely bite . evcl)tbwg has cndcdl Sayonara, Sayonara• With lltis tenderly tragic entry farewell to lovely O-Se,-San. 9 in hi~ own diary, Rizal bade Sayonara, Japan. On April 13. 1888, Rizal bvarded the Be/11.i<". an English ~teamer at Yokohama bound 101 the Unncd State,. Ht! left Japan with a heavy heart fo, he kntw 1hat he would never again sec this hcaunful ~Land of the Chcrr, Blossoms" and his beloved O -Sc1-!>an. 1 rul). hi, SOJoum in Japan for 45 day~ wa~ one of the happte!t interlude, ,n h1 ltfc 0 -.St-i•San Aner Rl.zal', l)q)artun. A, cvcrythir .g or e~nh has 10 end. the beautiful romance between Rizal and O-Sei-San ine"1tably came to a dolorous endmg. Sacrificmg bi> per:.onal happiness, Rizal had to carry on ht~ libertarian OUMton in Europe, a«ordingly. he resumed his voyage. leaving behind the lovely 0-Sei-San. whom he passionately loved. Bmlceo-hcartcd by tbe depanurc of Rizal . the firs1 man to capture her bean, 0-Sei-San mourned for a long ttme the loss or her lover Eventually, she became resigned to bcr fate, ehcrishing uni, death the nostalgic memori"s .,( her romance witb Rizal.'0 About 1897, a year after Rizal's exea;itioo, she married Mr. Alfred Charlton, British teacher of chemistry of the Peers' School in Tok.yo. Their wedlock was blessed by only one child - a daughter named Yuriko After many years of teaching, O,arlton was awarded by the Japanese govcmment With an imperial decoraltoo - Order or Merit , 5th Class. He died on November 2, 1915, surv1Vcd by O-Sci-San, whose real name wa, Seiko Uwi. and their daughter Yuriko. This daughter later manied Yoshiharu Takiguchi, son of a Japanese senator. Mrs. Cbarltoo {O-Se1-San), as a widow, lived in a comfort• able home 1n Shm1uko district, Tokyo. She survived World War II. but her home was destroyed in 1944 by the U.S bombing of Tolcyo. She died on May l, 1947 at the age of 80. She was buned in her husband's tomb at Zo.higawa Cemetery. A Japanese inscription on their tomb reads as folio-· Alfred CbartlGo, Stll Order _, Mnit, 81111 .... Sdko 133 - IIIZAL: UR. WOIIQ MID WIIITINCIS Voyace A - die hdflc. Despite his sorrowing heart, Rlu1 enjoyed the pleasant trans-Pacific voyage to the United influenced him to fortify his own crusade for human nghts in hli own country. States. On board the shlp, he met I sem i•F1lipino fanuly - Mr. Reinaldo Tumer, his wife Emma Jackson (daughter of an Englishman, their children, and their maid servant from Pangasinan. •0 On December I, 1888, afteF a last warm hanJ,ha~t and bidding each other "goodbye," Rizal dnd Tcttho parh.:tl w,1~, - never 10 meet again Rizal remained in I .ondon 1n comluct historical researches on Mora at the Bnli~h Mu,eum . "11,k Tetcho relumed to Japan. One day one of the children, a bright young boy, asked Rizal: woo you know. sir, a famous man in Marula named Richa17 He wrote a novel, Nofi Mc Tangen, wYcs, h1jo, I am Rlchal," replied Rizal. In 1889, shorll> af1cr h1;, rc1urn Japan , he puhlishn l h 1~ travel diary which contained his 1mprcsN1uns of R11al ,,, lulhw,, 1 •Mr R11al -..a~ a c111zen ol Maml,1 ,n the Ph1flpr111,•, 10 A~ aboul 27 to 29 Young as he was. he wa, p1<1fkicn1 on In great joy the boy rushed to h~ mother, informing her that the famoll$ man is their fellow passcnge~. she {elicilated Rizal, feehng proud tba1 they were travelling with a celebrity. seven languages. " Rizal and Tacho. Another passenger which R1Zal befriended on board the Belgi, wa~ Tctcho Sueh1ro, a fighung Japanese ..It was 1n SIS Bdgt<' that v.o firsl met. I c1tm1: h 1 L nl!l,111,I by way of Amcn'3 wilh him F,·tr since I lud hl·en 1111~1 coursing with h1m." journalist, novehsl, and champion of human rights, who was forced by the Jaoaoe&e government to leave the country, just as Rizal was compelled 10 leave the Phllippm~ by the Spanish authori1ics. Al the beginning of the voyage from Yokohama, Tetcho was miserably alone, for he knew only his own Japanese language and so he could no1 communicate with the ship officers and the passengers Learning of his prcd1camcn1, Rual, who knew many foreign languages, including Japane~. hcfriended him and acted as bis m1erpre1er during ·1he1r long trip from Yokoha111,1 to San Francisco, aero~~ the U .S. 10 New York until they reached London, where they parted . RJzal and Tctcho were kindred spirilS. Both were valiant patrio1s, implacable foes of inJUStice and tyranny. Both were men of peace us,ng their trenchant pen~ as formidable weapons to figbf for their peoples' welfare and happiness Riul told Tetcho the s1ory of his life', mission 10 emancipa1c his oppressed people from Spanish tyranny and of the persecutions which he and his family suffered from the Vllldtctive Spanish officials and bad friars, causing him 10 nee 10 foreign countnts where be could freely carry on his libcnanan activities. During their mt1ma1e acquaintanceship of almost eight momhs (April 13-Dccember I, 1888) Te1cho came 10 admire Rial, whose patriotism and magnificent talents greatly fa!\Clnated him and 134 .. R,'%31 '4'"3!> an open-hearu:cJ nt.m lie wa nor h.ur ,phi • ting. He was an accomph,hed, ttood .11 p1c1urc , k,llful on exquisite wax work, especially." ··1 arrived al London late 1n Mav, ll!IIX I le nporJnl• stayed •t "King Henry's Ro,d." 1hen ,novrd 10 Rrn>m 51, of Parliament Hill Road I 1n1ended 10 stay here unul Fchruary or March, bul unfortuna1ely London had been shrouded fl)' fog since early Oc1ober I havr • shghl •line". and it appeared 10 be very hard for me to spend the com1n11 winter here. J decided 10 go home, and scheduled In k•,c London on December lhe FiM<t "On December 1hc Fin.I, I got up c•rly, 11 "'·"•fine sunny day, after uncomfonable days of fog and ram "lbc, sun rose as if ii congratulated my lucky departu1c lor home J took a farewell of my people and al 9• 3(1 A, M •hc_n I was going down the Parliament Hill Road. I met Mr R1,:al coming up 10 my hotel. I callcd him 10 nde wrlh me on 1he coach. Mr, Riial came from Manila. He ha.s a good command of seven different foreign languages at lhe age of only IWCnty-sevcn. . He wa.s a frank and daring fellow, fond of vari~ a_rts, especially good at dcarin&,, - llfZAL· LIFE. WOIUCS _ __ After 1he publication of his travel diary, Tctcho resigned his posttlOII as editor of Tokyo n~w,,papcr, Clto)'a, and entered pollllcs. ln 1890 he was eleclcd l\• member of the lower hour.e of the Fini Imperial D1e1 (Japane~ parllamen1), where he CJtnicd on h1, lighl for human righl~ The following )Car (1891) he published a poli11cal novel tilled Nankai-n<>-Dothoran (S1orm Over The Soulh Sea) which resemble~ Rizal'• Nolt Mr Tang"re in plol Three years later (11194) he publl\hcd another novel entitled O-unabara (The 81~ Occ.1n) v.h1ch wn \tmtlar 10 Fl 1-"1/Jbustu~mo. While st1U a member of 1he Imperial D,ct Tetcho died of heart attack in Tokyo 1n l·cbruary. 11!% (i.-n mon1hs before Rizal'~ execution) He WI\$ then 49 ycdrs old Chapter 13 Rizal's Visit to the United States (1888) R11.1I lir~t saw America on Apnl 28. 1888. I hs amval in this grc;&I counlry wa. marred by racial prc1ud"' • for he r.aw lhe d1c,cnmma1ory treatment of the Ouncsc and the Negroes by 1he wh11e Amcncaos. I le kept no1es of what he ob~rved during his 1rip from San Francisco to New York. where he 100k a "11p for England From hi• notes and his lcuers to hi\ fncnlh, we get a 11,calth of firM-hand 1mpr~~1ons of Amenca , some ofwhtch were rJthcr unfavorable but true Rizal was a man of truth, and he wmte v.h.at he had "-'Cn and ell'J)Cnenccd Arrival in S..11 Fnndlc:o. 111c Mumer BelgK, with Rizal on l>oard, docked at San Franc1scb on Saturday momin&, April 28. 11181l All p;oiSengen were not allowed to land . TilC Amencan hcahh au1bon11c1 placed lhc slup under quaranune on the ground that 11 came fro m the fur Ens! where u cholera epidemic was alleged to be ra1t1ng Rizal was surprised because he knew there was no chokra epidemic at that 11me in the Far East. He JOll-1 the other pa,wngers in protesting the un1us1iliablc action of the health au1hon11c1 i The Amencan consul in Japan had given the ship I clean bill of health, and the Bntish Governor of Hon.g Kong ccrttfied to the ahsc~ of cholera cases in China 1 lie soon d1"1Covcred that lhc pbcing o f the ship under quarantine wa, mot:r•ated by politics. The •hip WI\ carry,na 643 Chmc~e coohe, 1 At 1hat time pubhc optmon on the Pacific coast wa, agnins1 cheap coolie labor bcCJtusc the coohc, from Chma 11;erc d1Splac1ng while lallOre!"l 1n railr,rnd construction camps. To win 1hc votes of the wb1tcS in Cahfomia (for election was near), 1hc administration ,mpeclcd 1he entry of Chinese coolies 136 137 - IIIZAL.: LIi'., WOIIICI - W - Rizal noticed that contrary to quarantine regulations 700 bales of valuable Chinese silk were landed without fumigation, that the wp doctor went ashore without protest on the pan of the heahh officers, and the customs employees ate several times on board the supposedly cholera-infested ship. dclcrts ,ritbout planls nor trees. Unpopulated. Lonely place. Bare mountains. Saods. A big extension of whale land. like ctwt. Far from this desert cao be seen ,omc blue mo11ntoin, II was a fine day. It was warm, and there was stiU snow on the top o( 10me mouni.,ns. Afler a week of quarantine, all first-dass passengers, including Rizal, were permitted 10 land. But the Ctunesc and Japanese passengers of the second and third-class accommodations were forced to remain on board for a longer quarnntine period &om place to place. We are near Ogden 1 believe with a Rizal In San Frandsro. On Friday afternoon, May 4, 1888, the day he was penniued to go ashore. Rizal registered at the Palace Hou:I, which was then oonsidered a first-class hotel in the city. On I his day. he wrote on his diary:• I lodged in Palace Hotel; $4 a day with ba1h and everything included. Stockton St .. 312. I saw the Golden Gate . .. On Sunday the stores ore closed . The best Street in San Francisco is Market Street. Rizal mentioned tn his diary the name of Leland Stanford, who was a millionaire senator representing California In the U.S. Senate at that time . This senator was the founder and benefactor of Stanford University at Palo Alto, California . Also reoorded in Rizal's diary was a street - Dupont Street - in China1own which 1s Grant Avenue today. Tuesday, May 8. 1lus is a beauhful morning. We sl<lj) good aystcm of irrigation this place oould be cultivated We are at Utah state, the 3rd J\Btc we paMCd over In approach ing Ogden tbc fields are seen with l>orses, oxen. and trees. Some small ho!UCS are :se<:n from a d:a!!tance From Ogden to Denver, The clock ,s set one hour ahead or time We are now beginning to see 0owers w,;th yellow color on the way. The mountains al a distance are covered 11,11h ,now. The banks of Salt Lake arc more beautiful than olhcr thing, we saw. The mules are very big. There are mountains ,n the middle of lhc lake like the island of T•hm ,n Laguna de- Bay. We saw three Mormon boys at Farmrnton , There were sheep. cows. and horses in the meadows., '11us region is 001 thickly populated A Oock of ducks in the lake Children greeted us at Salt Lakt Ciry In Utah, the women serve at the table . •. We changed min at Ogden, and we will not have any change untal Denver. In Provo I ate much for 1St. We are passing between 1wo mount.a,n, lhroup,h a narrow channel. In Oakland, he boarded tine train for hi~ trip across the continent. He took his supper al Sacramento for 75~ and slep1 in his coach. Wednesday, May 9. We are passing through the mountains and rocks along a river; the river is poisy ond its no,se gives life to the lifeless territory. We woke ~p at Color•<i?· the Sth state we crossed over. At 10:30 we chmb up • oentun height, and this is why snow is sun ll.long the way. There are many pines. We pas;sed through runnels made of wood 10 protcet the road against snow. Icicles in these tunnels are very bright which gave majestic effect. The porter of the Pullman Car, an American, is a sort of thief. Colorado has more trees than the three states we passed over. There are many horses. Early the following morning (May 7), he awoke and had a good breakfast at Reno, Nevada, now glamourized .by Amencan high-pressure propaganda as "The· Biggest Lillie City in the World." Rizal's diary recounts his travel observation as follows: 5 Monday. May 7. I saw an Indian attired in semi-European suit, and semi-lndi.an suit, leaning against a wall. Wide Thursday, Moy 10. We woke up in Nebraska The country is a plain. We reached Omaha, a big ci1y - the biggest Jlnce we left San Francisco. The Mlssoun River ,s twice as wide u the Puig Rivctr in i1s widest part . It is marshy .. . The train passed over the Missouri bridge for 2 and 11z 1111nutes; the train goes slowly. We are now in fllinoi,. Riul stayed in San Fran<:isco for two day,·- May 4 to 6, 1888. The President of the United States at t~ar° lime was Grover aeveland. AcroutheAmerlcanCoodne-ot. OnMay6, 1888- Sunday, 4:30 P.M. - Rfaal left San Francisco for Oakland, nine miles across San Francisco Bay, by ferry boat 138 v.,;t To The Unhad St.,_, (1888) Fnday, May 11. WcwokcupnearOilcago. Thcooum:ry 1s cultivated. II shows our neamcta to Chicago. We left Chtcago al 8: 14 Friday night. What I observed in Cbica3o is 1hat every cigar &tore bas an Indian figure, and always <liffcrent, (2775 Washfogton Street, Boston, Mis5 C.O. Smnh). Saturday, May 12. A good Wagner Car-we were proceeding 1n a fine <lay. The country is beautiful and well P<'f)Ulaled We shall amvc at the English 1eni1ory (Canada - Z.) in lhe afternoon, and we shall soon sec Niagara Falls. We stop for sornc lime to sec the polnls tb4t arc beautiful; we wenl 10 the side below the Falls, I was between two rocks and this is the greatest cascade I ever saw It IS DOI 50 bcauhful nor SO finc IS lhc falls ill Los Banos (sic Pagsanjan- Z.); but much bigger, imp06• ing • • • The cascade bas various falls, various pans. We left the plaec at night. There is a mysterious sound and persistent echo. more Sunday, May 13 We woke up oear Albany. This is a big city The Hudson River which runs along canies; many hoa~• We crossed over a bridge. The landscape is beautiful; and it IS not inferior to the best in Europe. We are going along the banks of the Hudson. Thcy are very beautiful although • little more solitary than 1i-e of the P11$1g . The Hudson is wide. Beautful ships. Sliced granite rocks were paved al0e1g I.be railroads . . . Thcre were beautiful h1luscs between trees, Day fine. Our grand tranlicontmcmal lrip ended on Sunday, May 13, at 11:10 A.M. Rm! la New Yon. On Sunday morning, May 13, Rizal reached New York, thus ending his lrip across rhe American oontincni. He stayed three days in this city, which hec called the "big town". He visited the =ic and historic place:s. He was awed 11.nd inspired by the memorial to George Wash.ington. Of chis great Amencan, he WTote to rooce: "He is a grcar man who. I think, has no equal in this oountry" .6 Riul's Impression ol America. Rizal had good and bad impressions of rhc Unired Stales. The good impressions were (I) lhc mhlerinl progress of lhc oounlry as shown in the grcar cilics, huge farm,. nourishing industries, and busy factories; (2) 1he drive and energy of the American people; (3) the natural beauty of rhc land, (4) 1he high Mandard of living; dnd (5) the opponuniues fN heller hre offered 10 poor imm1gran1, One h~d 1mrrcs~mn Ri,al had of America was the lnck of racrnl eq11ali1y. There existed racial prejudice which w;1s incon• sistent wilh the principles of democracy and freedom of which the American, talk so much bur do 1101 prac1tsc. Thus he wrote to Ponce : "They do nm have true civil liberty, In some ,1a1es 1he Negro cannot marry a White woman. nor a White man a Negress. 11,ured againsl lhc Chinese leads 10 diflicuhy for Other Asintic, whn, like 1he Ja1>anese, are mis1.1ken for C hinese hy the ,gnornnt , and therefore being disliked, 100".8 In 1890, 1wo years after Rizal's visit to the United Slates, Jose Alejandro, who was 1hen studying engmeenng 1n Belgmm, roomed with him on 38 Rue Philippe Champagne, Brussels Aleiandro hod never heen in America, so that one day he a~kcd Rizal: ··what 1mpress1ons do you have of America?" "Amcnca," answered Rizal, " is the land par excellence of freedom hu1 onJy for the whites".• ••• • • On May 16, 1888, he left New YOfk for Liverpool on board 1he City of Rome. Acoordiog to Rizal, this steamer was "the second largest ship in the world, the larges! being the Great Ea stem". 7 He saw with thrilling senution the colossal Srarue of Liberty on Bedloe Island a$ his ship steamed out of !New York Harbor. 140 141 In London f 1888 1899) Chapter 14 Rizal in London (1888-89) After visiting the United States, Rizal lived 1n London from May, 1888 to Mtrch, 1889. He chl>!'C this Engl1~h cuy to be his oew home for three r.-asons: (1) to improve hts knowledge of the English language, (2) to study and annotate Morga's Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, & rare copy of which be heard 10 be available in the British Museum, and (3) Loodon was " safe place for him to carry on his fight against Spanish tyranny In London, he engaged in Filipimana studies, completed annotating Morga's book, wrot~ many an1cles for Lu St>/ldoridad 1r1 defurn.c of his people against Spanish critics, penned a famou~ letter 10 1he young women of Malolos, carried on his voluminous correspondence with Blumcntnll and relative~, and bad a romance wuh Genrude Beckett. Trip AcrooiS the Atlantic. The truns•Allantic voyage of Rizal from New York 10 Liverpool was a pleasah1 one. He won many mends of different nationalJties on board the palatial City of llomc because of his friendly nature and his abihty as a linguL,1. Rizal entertained the Amerie&n and European pa\,cngcn. with his marvelous skill with the yo-yo as an offen\1vc weapon The yo-yo is a small wooden disc anached 10 a stnng from the finger. It is used by Filipino children as a toy. Out Rizal manipu• lated it as a weapon of offense, 10 1he grea1 Km111emen1 of the foreigners. 1 On board the steamer were some American newspapermen on their way 10 Europe. Rizal discussed w11h them 1he currcn1 social and political problems of mankind, nnd found them 10 ~ inadequate in geo-polilics. He could not enjoy their companion ship because tt,ey w:re in1eUec1ually inferior to him. 142 Rizal arrived at Liverpool . England, o n May 24. 1888. He stayed one day in this pon city, spending the night at the Adelphi Hotel. "Liverpoot», he wrote to his family, "is a big and beautiful city and its celebrated port is worthy of its great fame. The entrance is magnificen1 and the customhouse is quite good".' Life In London. On May 25, 1888, a da) after docking, at Liverpool, Rizal went to London. For a shon time, he siuycd as guest al the home of Or Antonio Ma. Rcgidor. an c,ilc of 1872 and a prac1ising lawyer in London. 3 By the end of May, he found a modest boarding place at No. 37 Chalcm Crc..ccn1. Primrose Hill.• He wus u bourdcr of the Bcckcll fnmily ' 'The Becketts were Mr. Becken. organist of SI. Paul's Church. Mrs. Beckcll (his wife), 1wo sons and four daugh1ers. rile o lJc~I of the Beckett sisters was Gertrude, cal led "Gc111c" or "To111c" by her friends. The 8ecket1 home wa~ 10 R11.al convcnien1ly locah:d. II w:i, near the public parks and was wi1hin easy walking ,h,tancc I<> the Brithh Museum where he expected 10 do much rc,c,1rd1 wo1I.. Rizal came 10 lnow Dr. Reinhold Ro,1 11,-. 111>1,111.111 111 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs nnd an au1ho11ty on M,11.iy.111 languages and customs, Or. Rost was impr~•sscd hy Ri7;il's 1,:.irn, ing and character, and he gladly recommended hun 1<1 lh.: authorities of the British Museum I le culled Rizal ".i p.:.,rt of a man" (una per/a de homhre) ' Rizal spent much of his time in the British Museum J)<lnng over the pages of Morga·s Sucesos and other rare tustoncal works on the Philippines. He frcquenll)' visited Dr Regidor and disw, sed wi1h him problems pertaining 10 Philippine affair... He spent Sunday~ in the house of Dr Rost, with whnm he bad many pleasant discussions on linguistics. Mc al<;() played cricket (popular English game) and boxed with Dr. Ro~t ·s """ News from Home, Good and Bad. Both good and bad nc-., from home reached Rizal in London Of 1h~ had news, w, re the injustices committed by the Spanish authoriues on the Filipino people and the Rizal family. Among which were ns follows. 1. Persecuuon ol Lhc hl,pmu patriots "ho signed lh< • Anll•Fn3r Pct1hon of 18$8" whkh wa, prc,crn«l hy Doroteo Cones. prommen1 Mason and lawyer. to Jose 141 Ceoteno. Ovi1 Go\'emor ot the Province ot Manila. on March I, 1888 This petition - lllped by about 800 palriand was ect\l&lly written by M H . dd PIiar II wu addn:sscd to the Queen Regent of Spa requestin& the expulsion of the frian, including An:hbishop Pedro Payo (Dom,ow:an)' of Manila 2. Persecution of the Calamb1 tenants, includin& R.ozal's ramily aod n:lativcs. for their courage to petition the government for agrarian refonm , 3. Furious 11tacb on Rizal by Senator.. Salamanca and Vida in the Spanish Cones ud by Desen,;ailo6 (Wenocslao E Retana) and Quioqwap (Pablo Feeed) ,n Spanish neW5pa.p en. 4. Rizal' bro1hcr•i1>-law Manuel T Hidalgo, husband oC Saturmna. was exjled by Governor General Weyler to Bohol without due process of law. S. A Cricnd of Raal, Laureano Viado, 1 medic:al student 11 the Un,venaty of Santo Tocnu, was arrested and jailed m Bilibid Pnson because 00pic$ of the Noli were found in Ills boUiC. One good news cheered Rizal, and !hat was Rev Vicente Garcia ·s defense of the Noli llPfilSl the attaclcs of the frian He heard this good news from Mariano Ponce. He was deeply gratified by the rouragcous action of Father Garcia. a venerable Fihpino canon of the Manila Cathedral. Later, On January 7, 1891. he wr01e to Father Garcia. expressing his pcnonal thanks. In this famous letter, be said:M We young Fili~ •e trying to make OYer a nation and must not halt in our onward march, bu1 from woe 10 time tum our gaze upon our dders We shall wish to read in their countenances approval of our actioos. We are a,u. ious to learn of the Phtlopp,nes' put wluch we need to understand in order to plan intelligently for the future. We want to kno• all that our a.nccston knew. and then add our own ~1ud1CS to 1he11-s Thus we shall progress the faster because ..-c can go on from where they left off Annotating Morp's Book. The greatest achievement of Rizal in London was the annotating of Morga's booll:. Succsoa de las Islas Fibpinas (Historical Events or the Plulippme Islands) which was published in Mexico, 1609. He spent many days io 144 ··--·-- the reading room of the British Museum pon.ng over the pqcs of this booll: and laboriously reading the old histories of the Philippines. such as those written by Fr Chirino, Fr. Colin, Fr. Argensola. Fr. Plasencia, etc. Of all wnnen histoncs published dunng the early years or the Spanish regime, that of Dr Morga was, in his considered opinion, the best In a letter to Blumentritt, dated September 17. 1888, Rizal said. MMorga's work ,s an excellent book; it can be said that Morga is ., modem schobrly explorer He dOQ not have the superficiabty and exaggeration which an: found among Spaniards today he writes very simply. but one has to read bei-..-cen the line~ ... For about ten months (May 1888-March 18119), Raal was deeply immersed in his historical stu<hcs in London During which time his compatriots m Spain were waging the cnisadc for Ph1lipp1ne reforms. At one Lome, Mariano Ponce, whom be had never )Cl met and who was then tivmg 10 Barcelona, urged him 10 edit a newspaper which would defend the Filipmo interests from the scurnlous attacks of their Spanish dctracton. He refused Ponce's request because he was busy. MToday." he wrote to Ponce on October 12, 1888, Ml am dedicated day and night to certain studies. so that I do not want to edit any newspapct'". 10 Sllort Vlsil to Paris and Spain. Early in September, 1888, be v1s,ted Pans for a week, in order lo search for more lustorical materials tn the Bibtiotheque Nationalc. He was c:ntenaincd in this gay French metropolis by Juan Luna and his wife (Paz Pardo de Tavera), who proudly showed7lim their liuJc son And.res (nickname Luling) After poring over the old boob and rnanuscripl in the Bibliotheque Nalionale . he retumcd to London On December 11. 1888. he went to Spain, visiting Madrid and Barcelona He contacted his compatriots and surveyed the poliucal situation with regards to the agitation for Philippine: reforms. For the first time, he met Marcelo H . dcl Pilar and Mariano Ponce. two litans of the Propaganda Movement He exchanged ideas with these new friends and promtsed to cooperate in the fight for reforms Cbrlslmu in Loodoe (18811). Ru.al returned 10 London on December 24 and <pent Christmas and New Year's Day with the Bccketts. He experienced a delightful Chnstmas Eve, his lâ—„S - RIZAL Ll,.,WOIIKIAHD""'._ fint on English !IOil. That night he wrote tu Blumentn11: ··11 ,s now Nodle-Buena (Chri,tmas Eve), it ,s the holiday I like best to celebrate. It reminds me of the many good days not only of my infancy, but also of history. Whether or not Christ was born exactly on this day, I do oot know; but e~act chronology •~ immaterial to see the joy of thi~ night. A great Genius was h<1rn who preached truth and love. He suffered on account of His mission, but bcc:aus~ of Ht~ ,ufkrings the world had ,mpruvcd if no1 saved. Ho.,. it shocks me to i.ee people mIsu.<c Has n.,mc to commn many crimes· 11 To ht< friend. Blumcntrill. Rizal ~nt •< C'hn,1ma, i:•fl ., buM of Emperor Augustus which he had made Thi, <'mpcror wa~ lhe ruler of che Rom.in Empire when Jcsu, C'h"'1 .,.u, horn in Bcchlchem To another friend. Dr. Carlos C'n·pclak (Poli,h scholar). he gave as Chros1mas g,1'1 a bust of Juhn< Ca.:,~r RiLal', landlady. Mr,. Beckett. knowing of l11, intcrc,t 111 mag,c. h,m a, C11r1,1ma, ~ift II h,wl cn111k,I /lw I 1/,• ,111,I Advenrurrs of Vi1/enti11,• Vn\, tltr I mtr,/oqw</ R11,1I w;i, deltgh1cd 10 reCCI\<' lh1s hook. for h~ hJ<l J!rcat udm 1ratinn fm this llm,,h nugiti.tn "ho W,I' l,unou, Im his ,cn1nto4u"m. !l""' ltlul Recomts leader or Filipin~ In £urope. Whlk- hu,y m his his1urical ,iud,cs m I ondon. Ri,.il learned 1h01 1hc hlipino, in Barcelona were- planning 10 csiablt<h a pa1nolic ~oci,:tv "'hich would cooperate ,n 1hc crusade lor reforms Th!S soc1c1y called Asoc,acion f ,, Sofidflri,illd (Soildarldatl As,uci:,tion), wa~ tnau• gurated on Dcccmher 31, 11188. with the fnllowmg office" Galicano Apac,hlc. president. Gr~ciano Lopez Jaena, vice-president; Manuel S,1n1<1 M,111,1. ~ecrctary, Manano Ponce, treasurer. and Jose Ma Pangnn,han. accountan1. By unanunous vote nf all the members, Rizal was chosen honorary president. l ho~ was a recognuion or his leadersh ip .1mong all Fihpi,10 pacnm, in Europe. A, the leader of ht~ countrymen in Europe. R11nl wmcc ;1 le11er Jdtlrc,;set.1 to 1he member,; or the Asaciacion Lo Sohdaridad on January 28. 1889. ln this lener, lte expressed hi. thanks for the hr,nnr uf 111.iking him honorary president and gave the following a,1, 1cc 12 I In ynung auuc,Jtions the spiril of 1olcrancc ought 10 prevail when h cnn..:e,ns tnflcs 1ha1 do n01 atrec1 the 144 hl~l-- eaentiaJ put of a thing; in !be ~ . !be conaliatO'}' 1endcncy ought to dominate bcfor-e the tcodency to oppose. No one ,hould rci;cnt def~• When any opinion i5 rcjedcd, itJ author, m$lcad of despairing and withdntwing, should on the contrary wait for another ocea&toa 1n wluch JUStke may be done him. The indlvid1111I should pve way to the welfare of the society. 2. A great deal of integnl)' and much good will. No member should expect rewards or honors for what he does, He wto docs lus duty in 1he eirpcctation of rewanlt, 1s ~ly disappomted, because almost no one believes ~mself sufft<:icnlly rewarded And ,o that there may not be d1scon tented or ill-rewarded members, ii is advisable for each one to do lus duty Just for ,u own .akc aml Al bes! expect to be lacer treated uniustly, because m anomalous countncs, injustice is the prize for those who fulfill thetr duties Thrift, thrift, thrift. Seriousneu and equal JUSIJCC for all Rizal I.lid TM La Solidaridad Newspaper. On February 15, 1889, Graaano Lopet Jaena founded the pa1rin1ic ncwsp~per called La Solidaridad m Barl-elona, where he was 1hcn re~1d1ng. This was a fortnightly periodical which served as 1he organ of the Propaganda Movemenl. Its aims were as follows. (I) to work peacefully for political and 50<:ial reforms; (2) 10 portray the deplorable conditions of the Philippines so that Spain may remedy them; (3) to oppose the evil forces of reaction and m.:d1evalism: (4) to advocate liberal ideas and pr?~css: and (!i) I~ champion the legitimate aspirations of the Fihpmo people 10 hfe. dcmoc• racy. and happiness. Two days after 1he bu"lh of f..,a Solidandad, M.li. dcl Pilar wrote 10 Rizal in London: • At la,1 our ltulc ncw~papcr wM born. It is democratic in its opinoon, hul very much more '" m the organii;ation of its Slaff. One should sec how ed11or Graciano writes, correcu proofs, directs 1he prinung, dtsmbmes the copies, and even takes them 10 the mail. Nan,ng [Mariano Ponl'c Z .j. the manager gathers 1he data, edits, correct~ the prt>llf\, wri1es the leads, pr~pares the corre~pondcncc, and al,o distributes the oopies. I am the only idler, though the "~"~pap.:r hud me Preoccupied during the period of it, conccp11on und. htrth,•• tor which reason I am behind in my correspondence wit h you , tl 147 .Illa aauu.: UFI, WOIIICI AIIIOMIITIMCII R.iza1 congratulated Lopez Jaeoa and h.is associates in foundmg La Solufun4ad As evidence of bis approval and cooperation, he prepared an,d~ for the periodi<:al which were subsequently published. In his letter to Lopez: Jaena, he advised him that great care should be taken ,n publishing only lhc truth in La SultJ,mdt1d "Be careful". he admom<hed, "not to publish euggeratk,n, or h,·, or imitate others. who avail them~lves of dishonest means and of vulgar and ignoble language to attain their ends. Sec that the periodu::al 1s ju.M. honest, and truthful so that its opinion ma) alwa>, he respected It is necessary that we show our enemies that we are more worthy than they. moraUy and humanly speaking Should we tell the truth we shaU have won our l'ausc because reason and JUSllce are on our side. There i~ no need for kna,·erics~ 14 rU'SI Artlck in La Solldaridad. Rizal's first anicle which ll_Pl_)Cared in l,a So/i .ndad was entitled Los Agricultorcs F1hpino. ( Ille F1lipano Farmers). It was published on March 25, l~q. sn d.tys after he ldt London for Paris In 1h1$ inittal article. be depicted the deplorable conditions in the Philippines which cause the backwardness of the country. He wrote:'' l'hc: hlip,llQ f..rmc:r ha,, to struggle not only agau,s1 peny tyrant< aft<! robbc" Ag1UDS1 the fil':II, defense indeed 1s penmlled: against the latter. noc alwayn After the noods. locusts, fires. bad harvcs1s, and the lile. the r..,,,..i,r cap11.al,S1 hu 10 deal with the constable wh<> t•kes awn (ton) him his laborers for person.al..,....,.,.,, = e pubhc works. rcpajr c>f roads, bridges. &Dd othcn; "'"h th< ,,.,1 gu~rd who IUTCSts lhern for ,.,,.,... reasons, sometime, for r1<ll catT)'IR~ with them their per.anal cedu!as (certif,catc.) for not salu11ng property, for being suspicious penon, •lf for no ruwn whatsoc,cr. and they manacle them 10 clean the banaeks and thus compel the capitalist to live on better tcrm, w,n. the cluef and. If not, they take away bis c...-ubaa&, oxen, ,n ll)<le of many proli:IU • At t,mo 11 i, not the conSlable or the avil guard who opposes so mduectly the mmisur of c:oloniQ An official of the ooun m of tu pr0"1naal government, dtl5ltimed wuh the tanner, urgently "'-fflmonl this or that laborer, if noc two or three. The unfortunate man UDdertakes a trip 148 of IWO or thtcc day,, uneasy and dtsttmdul, apa,dl his savmp. arri-u, presents hmuelf, waits, returns I.be oeirt day u,d · waits. lio.ally 10 be asked w,lh a frown ud the loot of• Judge. abstruse and unknown lhinp. He is lucky 1f he comes out free from the questioning, foo' not infrequently after it, he is seat to jail from wbich be comes out later aJ stupid as before ... " • Wl"ilblp in I .oadoo. While busy m research studies al the British Museum, Ru.al recc.-ed news on Fray Rodriguez' unabated a11aclt on his Noli In defense, he wrote a pamphlet entitled La Vision de/ Fray Rodriguez (The VISioo of Fray Rodnguez) which was published in Barcelona under bi> nom-dcplume D,mas Along. This opus i~ a ... ore dep1Cbn,: • spirited dialogue between St. Augustine and Fr Rodriguez. St. Augustine told Fr Rodriguez that be (St. Augustine) was commiss,oned by God to tell him (Fr. Rodriguez) of his stupidity and mfonn him or lus penance on earth that he (Fr. Rodrigue:i:) ,hall contmue t:> write more stupidity so that aU men may laugh at him . In La Vision de/ Fray Rodriguez. Rizal demonstJ atc:d !WO thin&-': (I) his profound knowledge of religion and (2) lili biung satire. In London, Ru.al wrote the famous •Lener to the YOUllg Women or Malolos· (February 22, 1889) io Tagalog .16 He penned it, upon the request of M .H. del Pilar to praise lhc young ladies or Maiolo$ for their courage 10 c:.stablish a school where they could learn Spanish. despite the opposition o r Fr Felipe Garcia, Spanish pansh priest or Malolos The main points of thts letter were: (I) a Filtpmo mother should teach her children Love of God. fatherland, and munltmd: (2) the Filipino mOlher should be glad. like the Spartan mother, 10 offer her sons in the defense of the fatherland; (3) a Filipmo woman should ltnow how to preserve her digruty and honor; (4) a Filipmo woman should educate herself, aside from retaining her go()d racial virtlJCs. and (5) Faith is not merely reciting long prayers and weanng religious pictures, but rather 11 1s liVJng the real Christian way, with good morals and good manners Dr Rost, editor of Trubntr's Rtr:ord, a journal devoted to Asian sn,dies, requested Rizal 10 contribute some articles. In response to his request, the la.Iler prepared two articles - (1) 14' In L ~ ~Specimens ofTagal Folklore" which was published in the JOumal m May, 1889; and (2) '1wo w1em Fables", publ~hed in June 1889." ' The lint anicle consisted of Filipino proverb$ and puzzles, as follows: 11 I Pronrt.ial Saylnp Malakas ang bulong sa stga11,. Low "orck arc ,trong<r than IOQd ,,,ords Ang laki s.a layaw unmiwa'y hubad. A petted child is gcner aUy naked (i.e. poor) Hampas ng magulang ay nwtataba. Parent's pum,hment make, one fat. fbang hari ibang ugah. New king new !ash,on Nagpuputol ang kapus, ang labis ay nasduru~tong What i, shon cut~ off a piece f'Olll itself. what is long adds anothet on (the poor gel poorer the nch rn:hcr) Ang na~b, ng tap<,. •Y .. yaug hrnbpu>. I le "h<> finishc, his words fiods hunself want mg Nangangako ha bang napapako. Man promises while ,n ncctl Ang naglalabd ng muahan, matllllk ma'y mababa" He who walks slowly, though he may put tu, ruo1 on a thorn, will nOI be bun very much (T,gal, mlhtly_g,, barefooted) Ang mann•al• sa s.abi'y walani balt u sari!,. He who bcheve> ,n talcs has no own mind Ang may ismuksok sa dtogd1ng, ay rnay utmgalain , He who has put something bct"c~n th~ 11,all, m..y allcNard,, look on (thesavm~ man may afteNard,, be cheerful) The w.ill of a Tagal hou,e is made of palm-leaves and bambc>o, so that 11 <•n he u<cd a, a cupboard Walang mah,rap &mngin na pan, non~ nagtutulogtulug;in The fflOS1 dlffiodt 10 rouse from slcc:p 1s Che mJn who pretends 10 be: .ulcer,. Labis sa Yhta, kapu. ,a gawa , I oo work lnait) word,, too little HiJjon~ tulog ay nada<Wa ng anod The ,tecp,ng ,hnmp i, car• ned away by the currcn1. 150 fl888 'ltl91 Sa blbig oabubuli ang ,sda, Inc fish " c.tught Uuou~h tile mouth 11.l'lluies lsang butil na palay >1k1p ~a t>uong baha}. One m:c « >rn hlb up all the house. -The hght. The nee-com ,.,,h the busk IS ycllowuh. Mlllapang ako sa dalawa, duwagakosa i.sa. I •m bra,e apm\l two, coward ag,wul one The bamboo brid[!C When the bridge is IMdc of ooe bamboo ""'Y II" 1fficul1 to pass a-er; but -..hen it's made or ,,.,o or n1orc 11 ,s >Cr) CM) Dala ako ni>•• Jala ko ,iyu, He earn,< m-,, 1 CjIT) h,m Tbe shoes lsang halong malahm puno ng patal,m , A deep well llllcd wnh steel blades. - Tbe mou1h RollUlDC10 with Gtttrude 11«.kttt. RtLal had a romantK mtc:r• iude with the oldest of the three Beckett sister, - Cicrtrutl,· Ciet • tie, as she was affectionately called. was a hu~om Engli,h gnl., ,th t)ro..n hair, blue eyes, and rosy ~ks. She fell in lo~e .,_,,h R=l On cold winter mom,ng, she had a ,unny sm,k !or him d1.1ttc11ni gaily like a humming bird Dunng the family ,lk- '"" v•r• ticularly very happy because Rizal was wuh them and ,he g.avc: him all her attenuon. And m rainy days when Rizal <tayed a1 home. ~e helped him by mixing h,s co!ors for pamtmg or ll<<"tcJ on prcrJr• ing the clay for sculpturing. I'"""' Rizal. being a man of normal <"mot,on, found c~h,laraltng)Oy in Gertrude's company. Their fnendsh1p dnfted toward> rnman~e Rizal affectionately caJJed her "Gcthc," tn rcc1prOCJ11on, ,he fondly called him "Pettie "As their Oination wa~ fa,t approach,n£ the point of no return, Rizal suddenly realiwd that he could not marry Get tie for he had a mission 10 fulfill in lik With iron will, he suppressed the passionate }earning ol h" heart. and <leaded to go away so that "Gc111e" ma) forg<'I him '" Before leaving London. he finished four 'ICUIJ'lural "'nrk< (I) Prometheus Bound, (2) "The Triumph of Death o~er Life. (3) "The Triumph of Science over Death," and (4) a compos11e carving of the heads of the Beckell sisters. The last-named carving he gave as a farewell gift to the Bedtell sisters. He packed ..The ISi Triumph of Death our Life" anti "The Tnumph of Science over D~ath" _and sent them to his friend, Profe$$0r Blucmentritt in Lc11mcnlZ. ' Adios, l,ond?n. Suddenly gn March 19, 1889, Ri:tal bade goodbye lo the lund Beckett family (particularly Gertrude) and left London for Paris. He wns sad as he crossed the English Channel for he chcnshc:d so many beautiful memories of Londou. •••• • • 1S2 Chapter 15 Rizal's Second Sojourn in Paris and the Universal Exposition of 1889 Paris in the spring of 1889 was bursung with gatcly and excitement becau~e of the Universal Exposition. Thou..'ll!nds or visitors from all comers of the world crowded every hotel, inn, and boarding house. Everywhere in the metropolis the hotel rates and house rents were soaring skyhigh, Rizal, fresh from London, was caught in the whirl of gay Pari!>lan lifo Despite the social parties and the glittering lights of !he city, he oonunued his fruitful artistic, literary, and patriotic labors. He published his annotated ed111on of Morga 's Siu:tsos; founded three l'ihpino societies, the Kidlat Club, the Indio~ Bravos, and the R.D.L. M ; ;rod wrote Por Ttlefono, a satire against Fr. Salvador Font. Diffkulty of Finding Quaners. In March 1889, it was extremely difficult for a vjsitor to find living quarters in Pan~. The approaching Universal Exposition of 1889 which was scheduled to open on May 6, 1889 attracted thousands of tourists so that all hotel accommodations were taken. To the great disgust of Rizal, the cust of living spiralled high be<:ause the French landlords. taking advantage of the great demand for living quar• tel"'-. raised the rents of their rooms. ~or a short time, Rizal lived in the house of his friend Valentin Ventura, at No. 45 Rue Maubeuge, where he polished hlS annotated edition of ~!JrKa's book He transferred his rC$idencc several times , moving from one hotel to another , from obe boarding house to another. ..,_ IIIZAL: u,. WOIIICIAHDWRITINCS Finally, be lived in a little room, together with two other Fihplnoe - Capit.tn Justo Tnnldad former gobemadorcillo or Santa Ana, Manila, and a refugee from Spanish tyr.anny, and Jos. Albert, a young student from Mam la. 1 Lire ia Pvis. Although tire in Pans was gay, w,th sparkling me~me~L and jo~us social parties, Rizal continued 10 be busy m bis senous purswts. Hours were 100 precious for him 10 waste. He spent them frugally and fruitfully. He used mvst of his time in_ the reading room o( the Bibliotheque Nationalc (National ~1br_al1'.) _check.mg up his, ~tOriCJll annotations on Morga ·s book. in his livmg quarters wnung letters to his family and rncnd,, in the gymnasium for his daily physical exercises, and vis11ing his friends. In his spare hours, Rizal used to dine at the homes of his friends, such as the Pardo de Taveras, the Venturas, the Bousteads, the Lunas, etc, He was a good friend of the three Pardo de T~veras - Or. Trinidad H . Pardo de Taver11, physician by vocation and philologist by avocation. Or. Felix Pardo de Tavera, also physician by vocauon and an artist and sculptor by avocation. and Paz Pardo de Tavera, wife of Juan lun;, These Pardo de Ta_v eras were the children of Don Joaquin Pardo de Tavera. an exile of 11!72 who escaped from the Mananas and lived in France On June 2~. 1889, 11 baby girl was born to Juan .Luna and Paz Pardo de Tavera . She was their se1:011d child, the first was a boy named Andres, whose pet name was Luling. H er baptismal godfather (ninong) was Rizal, who chose her name "Maria de la Paz, Blanca , Laureana, Hermenegilda Juana Luna y Pardo de Tavera. "2 . In his letter .to ?is family in Calamba, Rizal gave an interestmg accounl of h,s life in Paris. One or these letters (dated May 1.6, 1889) r eloted:3 My dady life In Paos is spent in the following manner. one or rwo hours in the gymnuium and in fencing, ,hrce or four hours 1n the library, the rest I use up in writing and visiting friends ... Every other night from 8:00 10 11:00 we meet in a cafe where we play chess. On Saturdays r am Invited to eat at Luna's house, on Sundays at Mrs. Juhana·s. 154 'Ind on Fridays I vn,t 1he lamil) of lioU>tcad (al,11 J hhp1111,1 where sometimes I take tc11 In another letter to his family, wn11,·n on 'kp1,•mt, , 1 I 1889, he said: "We Pihpinos ga ther four time, a '"''-'~ .11111 we sing the kundiman , we eat sotanghon. odobo. ct.:. Un Wednesdays in the house or Dono Tula on Thursd.,y~ 111 thl' h,h,..: of tfidalgo , on Fridays m the huu,e of M.idam Bou,tc.id 1>11 Saturdays in the house of Luna. on Sundays m the ht)u,c ot Ooi\a Juliana " 4 RJzal and Paris Expos.itlon of 1889. Like any ordinal) Fihp,no tourist in a foreign land , Rizal was fa,cinatcLI hy the Un,-cr,:il Eltposition of Pans which opened on Mny 6. 1AA9 The g1c.1lc,1 attraction of this el(position was the Eiffel To,.,,cr. 9114 feet high which was built by Alexander Eiffel, cclehrntcd I rcnch cngmcor Rizal and his friends attended the opcnmg ccrcmunic, and saw the cutting of the ribbon by President Sad, c.,rn,,1 ,,r 1hc Third French Republic. Paris was jammed w11h tho11,.ind, ol tourists coming Crom all part~ of the world. Dail) 1hc I ,on drew a vast crowd of 200.000 persons or more 'I''"" One of the features of the r.xpositinn "'"' the 1111crn:i1111nal art competition, in which Felix R.. Hidalgo, Juan Luna, Felix Pardo de Tavera, and Rtzal participated. Hidalgo\ p;,11111111,? was awarded second prize, the paintings of Juan Luna nncl F. P,11 do de Tavera each obtained the third prize, ";bile Riz.11', cnlly (,1 bust which he modelled got no prize. 5 This bust wa, 4u1tL gnod to qualify for the exhibition, but not good enough to ,qn an intcrnetionul prize. Kldlat Club. On March 19. 11189. the s:imc cl;i1 when h,· arrived in Paris from London, Rizal org,tn i1cd hi~ 1,,11,11110, (compatriots) inlo a society called Kidlat Club. Amoni; rite members were Antonio uml Juctn luna. Grcgnno '\iivikr,1 Fernando Canon. Laum Dimn)uga. Juh\, Llor,nk <,111II~• 1111, Pualu , and Baldomero Roxas. ,ne Kidlat Club was purely a :,0cial s-m~ty nl ;, wrnpOrJr)' nature. It was loundcd h> Rizal ~•mpl) 1<> hnn~ tog.,lher th~ young Filipino\ 111 the Frend, capital "" lh.11 1hcy couhi "'"Jny their sojourn in 1hc cit> during the duration or 1hc l1111v..-r:,.1I Exp()Sition. Thus he told Blume111ritt m a letter datcd March ISS - 111""1., un. WOfll(S ANO WIUTIN08 19, 1889. "Today we have fonned a KidJat Oub. Kidlat in Tagalog means •lightning· and for the same reasons this club will last only during the Exposition We have thought of it and formed u in one hour. It will disappear also like ligbtning.',6 lndlos Bravos. In tberr sightseeing tour of the exposition grounds, Rizal and the members of the Kidlat Oub were amazed to sec the Buffalo Bull show which featured tlie Americon Indians. These red-skinned Indians were proudlv ridtng their sturdy ponies, elegantly dressed m their native attire and wearing their war feathers and paints. Riul was enchanted by the dignified and proud beanng of the American Indians. He told htS friends; ·Why should we resent bemg called Indios by the Spaniards? Look at those Indios from Nonh America - they are DOI •~barned of their name. Let us be like them Let us be proud of the name Indio and make our Spanish enemies revise their c'lncep11on of the tenn. We shall be Indios Bravos!' Thu. was born a new 60Ctcty of F1hpmo patriot.~ in Paro. the Indios Bravos (Brave Indians) It replaced the ephemeral Kidlat Oub. Its members pledged to excel in intell~~1ual and physical prov.ess m order to Wlll the admiration of the foreigners, pan1cularly the Spaniards They practtsed with great enthusiasm the use of the sword and pistol. Rizal taught them judo, an Asian an of self-defense, that he learned in Japan R.D.L.M. Sod,,ty. Another society founded by RtZal in Paris dunng the Universal Expmition of 1889 was the mystcriou, Sociedad R O.L.M (R.0.L M Society) Many biographer,; of R,zal do DOI menrioa it. In fact, us e><isteocc and role m the crusade for reform., arc rcall} emgmattc. Of the numerous leuers wnucn by R1lal and h,s fcllov. propagand,~h. only rwo men• boned thi~ ,;ccrct !>Oeiety. a, follows: (I) Rizar, Leiter to Ins.Mana Basa. Pans, September 21, 1889 and {2J Rizal's Letter 10 Marcelo H. dcl PIiat. Paris, NO\ICmbcr 4, 1889.' Accordtng to Or. Lconao l..opez-R12al, grandnephew of the hero, the socicl) has a ~mbol o r countersign represented by a circle divided into three parts by two semi-circles having in the center the tntcrloclled leuers I and B meaning Indios Bravos, and the letters R .O L.M. placed outside an upper, lower, left and right sides of th«e circle . .aThe letters R.D .L.M arc belie\led IS6 10 be the initials of the society's secret name Redoiaon de lo: Me1/a,<1., ( Rnkmpuon <>f the t.-1.ilay,) So much m)>tc1y ,utrounJcd the R D L.M. bec.iuse Rizal ng1dh guarJcJ 11, \Ccret c.,,1cncc EV1den1ly. it was patterned after Frecma'°nry h hJd various de!!rees of membership, "with the members not knov.,ng each other." Onl) a few of R,zars trusted friend, bccJmc member- of the R O.l. M namely Grei:,>rin Agu,kra. Jose Ma. Basa Julio Llorente. Marcelo H. del Pilar Man, no Ponce, Baldomero Roxas. and Father Jose MJn.t Chungco (hhpino pricM) The aim ul 1ht "'cre t ,ociet). as stated hy Rizal was "tbe propag,Hion of all useful knowledge >Cienufic, artistic, literary, etc - in the Philippines •· E•~dcntly. there was another a,m that IS, the r1edcmpt1on of the Malay race It must be noted that Ri,al WJ\ inspired by a fJmou, book cn11tled Max I lavclaar (18(,()) written tr,, Multatuli (pseudonym of E 0 . Dekker. Dutch Juthor). llus book c,po,,ed the m1&erable condiuons of the oppre,scJ Malay 111hab1tants of the Netherland> Ea~t Indies under Dutch ruk A d1sccmm11 stud, c,f the a,·ailable Rm1liana documents and Ri?.al's actuation, ,bow that the R.D L.M. had something 10 dtJ v.11h the \lal,t} race A, Or Lconc10 Lopez-Rizal cogently Mated. R1t.th ,·olon11.11oon pro1cc1 in Borneo w~ •not merely 10 have .i pla,-e where F,hp,no~ could Lm: and v.ork v.;th more ltberw a, well as lrcc thcmsch·es from the opprc~1ve conthuons Philippine:,. . hut tor wmethmg cl-..; murc 1mpor1.in1, m which " 1<> hJH'. freedom of acti<>n It> attain the aim, of the R. D I M . ,.h,ch the Redemption of the Mala) ,rn: mean, . Ran.: " R11.il. ,,ruin)! 1<1 Blun1c111r111 ffl>nt H,>nj! k.onit on Fch1u.1r\ ,, IINl, «vc.,kJ h,, in1cn111•11 "' he a leader of frcc,f11111 if mn ,n the Ph1hpp1ne,. then in other lands ~In Borneo," he 1t1ld l\lumcntrlll. I ,lull nvt he a planter (pl,mt.tJor) hut the kaJcr 1c,iuJ1llo) 111 th,· pl.tntcr, who arc thinking oi cn11gra1mg there wnh me I foci n.,uercd hy the tdCJ that I can suit serve mv countr~ with my pen. You Imo" very "ell that always. at all 11mc,. I am ready 10 serve m} fathcrlanJ not onl) ""h my ~n. hut al-.o ,.,th my hfe whcnc,cr my fatherland would demanJ this sacnlice But as I see that I am getting o ld . my ideals and 151 Stoond So,foulft '" ,,.... A,,d ~ UntwtNf E•pOll1JOA or 1889 J0K IIIZ:AL Ll,t, WOIIQ AHO WIIITINQf dreams are fading; 1f it is impossible for me to give freedom 10 my country. at lcai.1 I should hke to gi•e II to these noble compatriots in other lands ·• 0 of the Phllippmes written by the early Spanish wrtters, being MXUrate in the narration of events, unbiased an Judgement. and unmarred bv childish fantasies. Moreover. the contract for his Bornean coloni1.ation included such provisions as the right or the colonlStS 10 buy the lands. the free w.c of the seashores. and 1be unusual long term of lease for ?99 years, "a penod of time long enough for mony gcncrJUons to form a nation and to consolidate iti status" and lo reahzc Rizal's dream of redttming the Malay race Rizal dedicated lu.s new edition of Morga to the Fiiipmo people so that they would know of their glono\15 past. His dedication is as follows: Aaootated Edition of Morga Published. R1zal's outstanding achievement in Paris was the pubhcauon in 1890 of h1~ ann01ated edition of Morga's Suusos, v.hich he v.role ,n the: Bnu~h M useum. It was pnnted by Gamier Frercs The Prologue wa~ w ritten by Professor Blumentritt. upon the request of Rizal lo lus Prologue. Blumentntt commended Rizal for h1, fine h1storital 1"Cholarsh1p H owe,cr he frankly censured Riz.tl for two things "'hich revealed Rizal\ errors. namely (I) Rizal comrw1s the error of many historians in appr;mmg the e, ents of the pai.1 in the light of present !.landard, and (2) R,zal's attacks on 1he Church were unfair and un1u,uf1cd becau'C the abuses of 1hc fnan should not ~ construed to mean that C.11holic1,m is bad. Thw. Blumentnll said. 11 Inc !ugh e$l1mat1on of ) our notes ( Rua I , Jnno1a11nn< Z ) doe, not rrcvent ft'K• from c.:onfc~~inp that more- th.an once, I obscf\cd that you part1cira1c i~ the crro1 uf man, mndcrn h1S1unans. who JuJ,c c,.:n1, of centurmg ,n the hih1 of concept, 1h31 corr"'f'<"'d 10 comcmrurnry ,tk.. , Thi< <hould no1 be:. The h1s1onan should not ,rnputc tn the 1ncn of the !(1th century the "'1ck honLnn ,,r td..:o1, that mo\c P•"· th\.'. 1'1th l'Cn1Ur) The ~i.:,m~-J roinl with ,, hu;h l ,un nnc m ,1l!rc.:m~nt h.J.., to du "'"h .,.omr- of wiurfulmm...1uon, .1£;.&.Hl'-I ( t•lhuhu,m I ?x·ln:vc that not 1n ;chg1un ,..,, m the ..... iJ...-1 method and the ,,h,"C\ of m.-n~ pric:--1, ,11,ll:h.l \\C loolr,. fo1 th1,,.• on.gm ,.f rrran\. evcnt.s 1.imentahlc for rd,1?1,,n. for S ..un anJ lnr the p>ud name ut the EuropcJn r.iu: "°'~· 1'ot\\1lh,1and1ng 1hr two blcmhhc, ul Rual, 11 ,, ;i splendid p,cce of hi,1oriograph) . R11.1I unm,t ,ll<·d Jnd puhh,h,·d M.1rga ', S11cesos because it was the best of 1hc ma11y h"h>rit.>, TO l1fE FILIPINOS lo the N"'1 Mt Tong,rr I otartcd to ske1ch the presc:nl state of our Fatherland, lbc effect wlucb my ancmp( produced made me reab.zc, before proceeding to dc,clop before yoor eyes other pictun,s 10 follow. the; necc,"ry of lirsl givmg an understanding of the past m order the better 10 Judge the prestnl 111d measure the path trucn,:d dunng the three centuries Born and reared ID ignorance of oor past hke ..imos1 au of you: without ~ nor autbonty 10 ,peak ol ,-har we ha,·c not sc:cn nor studied I deemed II n«~•) 10 invoke the testimony of an illustnous Spaniard who ron1ml led the dC$1tn1es of the Plubppmes at the begmnmi of 11> new era and pcDOnaily witnessed the la\! day, of our •R<1cn1 nationality. Ii 1s. then,fore. lhe sh.ldow of our ancestors' ciotlizauon wluch the author now shaU call before )OU. I transmit to you foilhfulty his words w1thou1 chungmg them nor mutilanng them. adapung. onlv in so far as flO"<oblc , to mockm orthography â– ncl mlroduang grl!atcr dcamcs. 1n the rather ddective punctuations of the ongmnl. to f..c1ht.i1c its reading. The oflice. the na1tonality. and the virtue< of Morga together with the date and tb!Jmonie,, o! hi,, cuntcmporarics, Sparuarck for the mO'lt part. C\lmmcnJ the: ,..,,k to your serious consideration. If the book succeeds in awakemng m you. 1be con,c,ou.,,. of our past binned from mcmol'} und ,n rttul~in& what bas been fal'lfied and calumniated then I s~I 001 ha•e labored ID •atn, and with th,s basis. sbght though 11 be. we can all devo1e ourselves to the study of the future ne5.1 In this hmorical "'Ork , RaaJ pro, ed that the Filtptnlll> were already civilized before the advent of Spain ihcy had clothe~ government, laws. writing. literature. religion, arts. sciences and commerce with neighboring Asian nations. Rizal thus bla.,ted I S9 - llllAL, t..U•(. WOIIIC.I , . _ WIIIT1- the historical heresies of the Spanish writers who claimed that the early Filipinos were savages and were of low mentality. Commc,nl on Morga'• Publlcadocl Dak. The mle page of Rizal's annotated edition of Morga reads: MParis, Libreria de Garmer Hermanos, 1890. ~ From thi; printed date, all biographers of Rizal came to assert ,hat his edition of Morga was published in 1890. However, there is documentary evidence to show that Rizal's ed,uon of Morga must have come off the press in 1889-not 1890. On October 12, 18119, Blumcntriu wrote to Rizal from Le11meritz, saying: ~1 have just received your magnificent edition of Morga. This edition with your erudite notes will glorify your name." 12 Rizal himself, in his Lener 10 Dr. Baldomero Roxas from Paris , December 28, 1889, staled: "Today 1 sent to Lipa four copies of Morga . L111er I will send some mote " 13 From Barcelona, Mariano Ponce wrote 10 Rizal on December 31. 1889, saying: •J received the book Sucesos. Many thanks. I have read only Blumentriu's prologue. Truly excellent Plea~e ~end me immediately nl>out ten cop1c; that 1 can send to the Philippine~ hy the first mail lhat is going there ~u The three letters cited above - from Blumentnn, B. Roxas. and M . Ponce- are incontrovertible proofs that Morga's Sucesos by R,23.1 actually came off lhe press in 1889. Otherwise, how could lhc~ three friends of Rizal read 1he book before 1890? Rizal as Historian. Rizal's research studies in the British Museum (London) and m the Bibliotheque Nationate (Paris) cnnched his historical knowledge. His splendid annotations to Morga·, book showed his familiarity with the basic principles of h,~toriography As he once told Isa be lo de los Reyes· ·• A historian o ught to be rigorously imparted. . . I never assert anything on my own authonty. I cite texts and when I do, 1 hove them before me." 1 s Hi~ km1wlcdge of foreign languages enabled Rizal to read historical documents and books in the languages in which they were originally wntten. :For instance, he read P1gafct1a's famous First Voyage Arou11d 1hr World m ltnlian; the historical works of Marsden, Raffles. Lord Stanley, and Wallace in English; the writings of Blumentritt. Jagor, and Virchow m German; the ll>O books of M. Jacquet, J. Mallat, and A. Marche in French; and the works of T.H. Pardo de Tavera, Pedro A. Paterno, Miguel Morayla, and Pi y Margall in Spamsh By his extensive reading of archival sources and books in foreign countries, he acquired wide knowledge not only of Philippine history, but also the history of European colonization in Asia Aside from his excellent onnotallons on Morga's book, Rizal wrote other works which qualify him to be a real historian Among th, m were the two historical commentaries written in London, Mu-yr (December 6, 1888) and Tawaljs, of lhn Batuta (Janu(uy 7 18119); Filipinas denrro de C,en Anos (The Ph,hppmes Within a Centmy), published in La Solidandad in four is.-rues on September 30, Ocmber 31. December 15, 1889 and February 15, 1890; Sob,,. la lndolL•nt,iJJ dt lol Filipinos (The Indolence of the Filipinos), published in La Solidaridad in five successive issues on July 15, July 3J, August 1, August 31, and September 1, 1890; La Poli1,ca Colonial on Fil,pinas (Colonial Policy in the Philippines), no date; Manila r11 ti mt$ de O,rirm/,r(', 18n (Manila in the Month of December. 1872). no dare; Hisroria de la Fam1l1a Rizal dt Calamba (HLStory of the Rizal family of Calamba), no d.1te and l,os PutbloJ drl Arrh,pitlalJO lnd1co (The Peoples of the Indian Archtpelago). no date. The Philippines Within a Cnitary. In this article Rizal expressed his views on the Spanish colonization in the Philippines and predicted with amazing accuracy the tragic end of Spain's soscrcignty m Asia I le portrayed at the hcginning of h,~ an1cle the glorious pnst of the Filipin.., people, then described their economic stagnation and unhappiness under the harsh and bungling Spanish rule. Toward the last paragr.iphs of the article, he peered into the future and warned Spain of what would happen to her colonial empire in Asia if i.he would not adopt a more liberal and enlightened policy toward the Philippines. Significant passages in this historical essay are as foUows: '" To recapitulate: the Philil)l'ines will remain Spanish if they enter upon the life or law and civUimlton, u thc righl• of thcu- inhabitants are respected, if the Olher rights due them arc gianted, If the liberal pohcy of the government is carried our without tncltcry or meanness, without subtcr· futC$ or false interprctitions. 161 JOII IIIZ"1. Ll,-E, WOIIIIS AAD WIIITINCIS Otbe""-.se, ,r an ancmpc is made 10 sec In lhc: Islands a lode to be cxploued, a resource to sallSfy amb,11ont, shutting 11.S cors 10 all cries of =son, lhc:n, hD"-cver ercar may be the loyalty of the Flhp,M$, 11 will be impossible to hinder the opcnuons of tbe =xorable laws or hostOI') , Colonies cstabbsbcd to subscrve the policy and commerce of 1he .overeign country, all c,entually become 1ndependcn1 Ir tbc Ph1hpp111C$ secure their independence after herooc and stubborn confuct, they can rest assured that nci !her England nor Germany, nor France, and sllll less Holland will dare 10 take up what Spain hus been unable 10 hold Perhal>' the great Amencan Repubfic, wh°"' in1erc,1s lie in the Pacific and who had no hand in the spol,ation of Afnca may some day dream of foreign pt>'->C~oon This d not imro«ible, for the ~ample ,~ contagious, cO\elousncss and a mbirion arc among 1hc mongcsl ,,ccs . . VCI') likel>, the Phohppuaes will defend wilh mexpress.blc ,alor th< libcrt, -.cured at the price or w much blooJ and sacnfice With the new men that "ill spring from !heir so,I and w11h 1hc reoollccti<>n or their past. they ...u p,,rhaJ" •in,e I<> en1er rrccly upon thc wide road of progress. and all will lab<>< together 10 strcng1hen their btherland Then 1he mtne$ .,.,11 be nude to give up their gold for rellevong diMrc« iron for v.eapons, copper, lead and <<>al J•crh•J."I 1he country will re'1'e the maritime and mercantile life for wh,ch the islanders .re fo~d by their nature, abthty, and uuuncts, and once more free. like 1he bird thut lca,eH it~ cage, like the Hower that unfolds 10 the air. will recover the pruune virtues that arc gradually dy,ng out and W\11 ~g•m bc...ome uddoctcd to peace - cheerful. happy, JOYOlll, hospitable and daring. The lndolffltt of the FUlpinos. This other essay of Rtzal is also a prestigious work or b1Stoncal scholarship. It 1s an able defense of the alleged indolence of the Filipinos. In lhc ~pon1 of a real scholar, Rizal made a critical study of the cause.~ v.hy lus people dtd not wock haJ'd during the Spanish regime. His main thesis was that the Filipinos are not by nature indolent. Long befocc the coming of the Spaniards, he r,!intcd out, the Filipinos were industrious and hard-v.orking· 1 They were •1:ry active in agriculture, industnes, and commerce. The Spanish 161 s.conc1 $o1owtft In Peril And The: U..lwnal EirJ>O'lt,on Qt 1889 con quest of the country brought about a decline tn econunuc activities because the Filipinos bad abandoned their pre-SpJn"h industries and worked less than their ancestors Such dccl111c 1n economic: life was due to certain causes: (I) the nati,c r~vult< and other internal disorders which follo..,ed the es1.:.t,h~hmen1 of Spanish rule, (2) the wars whtch the Fihpmos fought for Sp.1111 against the Dutch, Ponuguese. English. and ~ther enem1e, : (;\) the frightful raids on the coastal towns and vtllage of Cbml oa n Philippines by the Muslim pirates of Mindan3o and Sulu: t-1) the forced labor whtch compelled thousands of Filipino lat"""" to work in shipyards, roads, bridges, and other public wurh, resulting in the abandonment of mduSU)', comm~rce, and ag11e ullUle; (S) lack of sumulus to worl harder bcxau.'ie 1hc pcopk could not enjoy 1he fruirs of their labor: (6) govcmmen1 ncfk• 1 and indiffereooe to agriculture. industry. and commerce; (7) 1h,· bad example shown by the Spaniards in d«:l>ptsing manual lul><•r. (8) the teaching or Spanish m15.~1onanes 1h01 1t ,, ca\lcr f,,r •' poor man to enter heaven than for a nch man, hence the hhpmn , prefer not to work and be poor so that they could ea.,1ly enter heaven after they die, (9) encouragemen1 and l'"'l'•j.\alo••n ••I gambling by the Spani<h authoriti~; and ( I~) ~y~1cm of Sp,nu,h education c!id not promote economJC enterpn!ie anJ acuv,11 h•• . as Rizal asserted, the education of the n..111ve v.a, ·•f1u111 h1, birth until he sinks into blS grave b brutalo,in1t, dcp1c,""' and anti-human~ and "deprives him of bis. di11ni1y- lt is true, admitted Rizal, that the Filipmos arc c.i,y I-?"'"!! and do not work-so hard because they arc "'isc cn,,ugh to ,ul '"' themselves to their warm, tropi.:.il climate The~ dn 1101 h.,.,· to kill themsel,cs working hard in order tn li,c h.:<·au-.· 11;11 re gives them abundant har,;esls by working le>., than lhu,, 111 temperate and arid countries. "The lac1.· expla1n.:d R11,1I ·,, that m tropical countries violent v.ork " nol -• t.\'"'" 1h1111• •• 11 is death, destruction, annihilation Naiure kno," 1h" and h i.,· a just mother has therefore made the Cdrth more lcn,k . .,nJ more productive, 11, a compcn~uon. A!' hnur, v.url. u1~1.kr II .,1 burning sun, in the midst of pernicious ,n~ucn.:e;. ,pnnj.\•ni: ft •111 nature ,n acuvit}. is equal to a day'!> labor ma 1cmpcr,11c d,m.,1-,. ti 1s, then, JUSI that the earth y1ellb a hundredfold' tntunatlonal As.sodallon uf Filipinulugisls. l'al.mg Jdv,,ntJgc of world auention which wu then focui.ed a1 the Unovc:r.,11 Fxpn,. 163 ition of 1889 in Paris, Riul proposed to e5tabbsh an -1n1ernational Associa11on o( Fihpmologis~• and have 11s inaugural convention in the French capital He first submitted this idea 10 Blumentnll in a letter dated January 14, 1889. and the latter gladly supponed tum. He wrote the prospectus of this 1n1cma11onal association. According to his prospcctu,, the aim of the a~SOCtation is "lo study the Ph;tippinc,; from the ,;cientific and historical point of view ~ The officers were as follC'ws: •• Prc:•idcnt ...•. . Dr Ferdinand Blumcntrill (Austrian) \ ice-President ...... Mr. Edmund Plauchut {Fttncb) Dr Reinhold Rosi (Aoglo-Ocrman) . Dr. Antonio Ma. RegidO< (hhp1no-Spani5h) C'oun.scllor .. . Dr. Jose Rizal (Filipino) R11al scheduled the holdtng of the inaugural convention of the lntemauonal A<-<0eiat1on of Filipinologists in Paris in August US89 He prepared the agenda and invited renowned scholars tn Pumpc, ,uch j \ Dr Reinhold Rost, Sar Henry Yule, Dr. Feod<>r .lagor. 11r A B Meyer, Dr. H Kem, and Dr Czcpelalt, to tal.e pan an the pro,::eedings. 1• Unfortunately. their inaugural con,cnuon J1d not matcrialuc because the French government d1.,.<1uragcd the hoh1in!! >f «mkrcnccs by pri~ate organiZ3tions during the ocriod of the international c,position. Proje<:t for Filipinn C'olll'ge in Hong Koog. Another magm• ficem prOJCCI of Rizal m Pari~ which also fizzled out was his plan to establish a modem college tn Hong Kong. He wrote 10 h1\ fnenJ. Jose t.hna Basa. about lh" mancr. According to R11.1I. this college aims ..,o troin and educate men of good family and financial means m accordance with the demands of modem tin,..,,. ,nJ cucums1ancc~·· A nch Fihpano resident tn Paris, Mr. M.1114 1u Cuna11an. from Mexico, Pampanga, promised to help him raise P40.000 as initial capital for the college Inc curnculum COIISISICd of Ille following subjects: rlatunl Law - Ovil Hygiffle. Ma1bcmatics - Pbysial md O.Cmistry - Nahlral H',s.. tory - Geogapby - Politic:al Eooncany. Uruversal History - Plwippinc History - Logic, Rhetoric, and Poetics. Ethics - Law - Study ol Religion - ~portmmt - Spanish - English - Fttndl - Gennan - Otmeae Tagalog. Gymnastics - Equitation - Feadng - Swimnuag MIUK: - Orawmg - Dancing. - Unfortunately, this project of Rizal to establlsh a modem college in Hong Kong did not materialize. However, yean later, during bis exile in Dapitan, he actually founded a school [or boys, in which he put into practice some of bis splendid pedagogJCal concepts . "Por Tddoao." We have mentioned before that Rizal defended his Nolt from the slanderous attack of Fray Jose Rodnguez by penning a satirical booklet entitled Lo V-uion dcl Fray Rodriguez. In the fall of 1889 he wrote another satirical work entitled Por Telt!.fono as a reply to another slanderer. Fr. Salvador Foot, who masterminded the banning of 1us Noli Por Teiefono was published in booltlet form in Barcelona, 1889. Rizal received the printed copies from Mariano Ponce, as revealed by his letter 10 the latter, dated Paris, August 13, 1889. This satirical pamphlet under the authorship of MDimas Afang- (one or Rill.t's pen-names) tS a witty sanre ,.,bich ridteules Father Font It describes in comical vein a telephone conversation between Father Font who was in Madrid and the father provtncial of the San Agusuo Convent in Manila. lnodenully, Por Tekfono demonstrates not only Rlzal's spark.ling wit, but also his prophetic inStght. lts operung paracraph reads as follows,10 In lhe year 1900 the Philippines for the 6rst time was connected 10 the Mcuopolis (Madnd-Z.) by means of Ille tclephOIIC laid out by an Anglo-Catalan compeny c:allcd TIie Tram-Oceanic Telepbooc Company, so wdl-known in its bfflC for llS truly bold ideas. 16S - . ; IIIIAI., LIFE, WOIIU AHO l'IAITINOI By 1his open mg paragrapn, Rizal predic1ed much ahead of his times that people cou Id carry on overseas telephonic conversations. It is amazing how he could have foreseen 1his phenomenon , which we enjoy now. History shows tha1 the first radio-telegraph signal~ received by Marconi acro,s the A1lan1ic wa, in 1901 - twelve years afler the publication of R izal's Por Tele/ono. C_h risl_m as In Paris. December :?5, l8KCJ wa~ t1 wintry d.t) tn.'f>ans. Rizal and Jose Alben. who were living frugally in a ,mall room occupied by Caph.an Justo Trinidad, planned 10 have a sumptuous Ch~stmas dinner. They i,crapcd enough money 10 celebrate Yuleude. They prepared a Christmas dinner wi1h fried chicken , rice and vege1ables. This dinner proved 10 be Rizal's last Christmas dinner in Paris Shortly after New Year, Rizal made a bnef visit 10 l...\)ndon Biographers do not know the purpose of this visit ll may be due 10 two reasons: (1 )10 'c heck up his annotated edi1ion of Morga's Si,cesos with lhe original copy in the 8r111,.h Museum and (2) 10 see Gertrude 'Beckett for the last time . By the middle of JIIJluary 1890, he wa~ back in r,iri,. lie oomplained of a terrible headache . At that time an epidemic of ~ucnz.a was raging in Europe. Fortunately, he v.as nol stricken with flu. Chapter 16 In Belgian Brussels (1890) On January 28, 1890, Rtzal left Pans for Br~cl~. capital of Belgium. 1 Two reasons impelled Rizal to leave Paris, namely: (1) the cosl of living in Paris was very high because of the Universal Expos11ioo and (2) the gay social life of the cny hampered bis literary works, especially the writing of his second novel El Fi/ibi,stuismo. H is Criends, including M H . del Pilar and Valentin Ventura, were of the belief 1ha1 he lcfl because he was running away from a girl jus1 as he lcfl Ll>ndon 1 When he told them that the reason for his leaving Paris wa, economic because his money was dwindling, Ventura generously invited him to live with him in Pans without paying rent. He could not accept Ve ntura's invitation. for ho had a high scn,;e or J1gnity and would not accept charity from any man . Life in Brussek. R izal was accompanied by Jo•e Alben when he moved 10 Brussels. They lived in a modesl boarding house on 38 Rue Philippe Champagne, which wa~ run b) two Jacchy sisters (Suzanne a nd Marie). Later Albert left the city, and was replaced by Jose Alejandro, an enginecnng student In Brussels, Rizal was busy writing his second novel which was a continuation of the Noli. H e was never idle even for an ho ur. Aside from writing its chapters, he wro1e articles for / ,u Solidaridad and letters to his family and friends. Being a physi• clan, be spent pan of his lime in the medical clinic. For recreation, he had gynioasucs at the gymnasium and target practice and fencing at the armory . Thus he wrote 10 Antonio Luna : " I go to the clinic, I read, I write, I go to the gymnasium and to the armory. Speaking of shooting, I am sending you a targe, containing ten bullet holes; it was seven and a half meters from me . al twenty-five meters I can put all my shots into a twenty-cen• timeter target."' "' 167 - - IIIZAL LIFI. - . . MO ,nunHca Speaking of Raars frugality Jose Alejandro, h1S roommate Bru!i.Scls, said: "In Brus,-ch ,.e took our meals in a house and Rizal on one occasion sugRested that we eat pamit We "'.ere spending so mucli a day and so we spent one day's appropna11on for 1hc purchase of the n.:cessary ingredients. It seems, ho,.ever, that he committed an error in his calculations this ttrne for we \pent two day's appropriation and the pansit came out more th;m what we intended to have. ln order 10 remedy the error "C were rompelled to have pJn,11 for lunch and supper for two days .... 7. "O1ferenaas" (Dilference1), Sepcembcr 15, 1889. . in Artidf'\ Publia!Md in I.a Solidaridad. Dunng his WJoum in Bras.sets. Rual wrote articles for Lo Solulandad tn defense of hi. opprei.-.cd pcopk and to point out the cvtls of Sparush rule m the Ph1hppmc,. Amon~ these article, which appeared 1n the patnotic periodical were: . I "A La Orlcnsa" (To l..t DdeMa), Ap d JO, l!l!i9 lb" •a, a reply to an an1t-Filip1no .. ritin, or a Span,sh author Pa1nc10 de la Eocooura wluch •,us publ~bed by L,, n,ftn.u, on Much 30, I XX'l l "I" Vcr<i.>J Para Todos.. (The Truth For All)', "fay 31 , llils9 Rizal's defcns,: al,lm,t the <;Jl'lm•h charges that the natt•e l<>cal uff,n:lls .,ere ignorant and dcpra,ed. 3 ··Vocente Sam,ntc, fra1ro Tagalo," June 15, 1889 In tht< ank"le. R11..1 ••JW>Sc ·. Barr.1n1e> ignorance on the: 1 aizalo,t 1bcatncaJ art 4 "l na Profanac:,on· ( A Pmfanatmn). Jut, 11 11189 auack agam,,t the (n.ar. for den, mg C'hri>llan bunal tn Man•no I lerll\N on Cal,1mha b•cau,c h( wa, a brother,,n '"" ot Ril.il Hert>osa , hu<l>and of 1.u:,a, died or chnlcra on Ma) Z.l IHI,~. A h111<r 5. Verdad~-s Nuevas (1'cw Truths). Jul} 31. 1889 8 "lncon<c<jucnc125" (lnwnsequcnccs), No-ember JO, 1889 A defense or Antonio Luna against the atltlck of Pablo Mir Deas ,n the Barcelona newspaper El Pu~blo Sob,rano ·uanlo y R"a," (Teal'\ and Laughter), No,embcr A denunaatton or Spanish racial preJud,cc against the bro.,-n F1hptnos 'l m IAA'> Rozal menuoned 1n tlus orucle ho" the audience. com~ d "'°'"Y of Span,arJ, and mc&UtO>, Slopped applaudmg wh<:n he received fin• prize ,n the literary contest Ill 1880 bcc.iu><c of ht> bro.,,n color 10 • lngra111udc," (lngratttudc). J•n\W}' IS, 1890 A reply t<> Governor Qencr•l Valeriano We)ler "'ho. while -.siting Calamba, told the people that they "should not allow them,dsc, Ill be de<=<:1vcd b) the vain promise, of their unJrnttful son, " Ntw Orthogl"aplly ol Tagalog l..anguace. In <ptle of his European education and his knowledge of foreign languages, Rizal loved h» own native language. He was the first to advocate the 1'thpinwu1on of ,ts orthography. For instance, the Tagalog letters k and w should be used instead of the Spanish c and o. Thu.< the Hispaniud Tagalog word salacor (peasant's head-gear) should be wnnen salalcot and the Hisparuzed Tagalog term arao be changed into a,a..,. A~ early as 1n September, 1886, when he was in Leipzig, R i1al adopted the Fibpinizcd Tagalog orthography in his Tagalog translations of Schiller's Wi/1,elm Tell and Andersen's Fairy Tales .,nd again he u~cd 11 1n his first novel Nolt Me Tangut (Berhn, A rcrli to V,trntr Bello.. San<11c,· lc11cr published ,n La 11187) Patrru Madrid oe~aper , "" July 4. ls,~'I. which a,,cncd 1hat the !?fant111~ o( reform> ,n the Plulippines ,.ould rum lhc ··~ ,cdul al'<I ma1cmal rule" of 11><, fri;u-,. While he was sojourning in Brussels. his article entnled "Sol.re la Nueva Ortografia de ta Lengua Tagala" (The oew Orthography of the Tagalog Language) was publtshed 111 Lo Solidaridad on April 15, 1890. In this article he latd down the rules of the new Tagalog orthography and, with modesty and sincerity, he gave the credit for the adoption of this new ortbog· t, Crud.tid" (Cruclh ), Augu,1 15. 188<I A bnlliaot d~frn~ of Blumc,ntrin from the sa,mlk>us anack, or hi, cntmte\ 168 A reply 10 a hi-d aniclc entitled "Old Troths" pul>lishcd m I.A PalTiD on August. 14, 1889, which ridiculed those F1hp1nos .,.ho asked for refonns '" . . . . IIIZAJ..: Ul't. WORKS ANO WIit ~ raphy to Dr. Tnnldad H . Pardo de Tavera, author of 1he celebrated work El Sanscriw en la ungU11 Tagala (Sanskrit ,n 1hc Tagalog Language) which was published in Paris, 1884. The gambling Filipinos in Madnd were angry when lhc) learned o f Rml's moralizing. They derisively called him "Papa~ (Pope) instead of "Pepe•. put this on record," wrote Rizal. "so that when the histO()' o{ this ~nbography is '!aced, which is already being adopted by lhe enlightened Tagalists, 1ha1 wba1 es Caesar·s be given 10 CaC$ar. This innovation is due solely 10 Or. Pardo de Tavera's studies on Tagalismo. I was one of its most zealous propagan- Bad News from R-. Leners from home which R1ul received in Brussels worried him. The Calamba agrarian trouble was getting worse. The nanagement of the Dominican hacienda conJinually raised the land ren1s until such lime 1ha1 Ri1;il') fathei- refused to pay his rent. Other 1enants. mspired hv Don Francisco's courage, also refused to pay the unreasonable rents. :1 disl$. "' Rizal Critk:lus Madrid Filipinos ror Gambling. In Brussels, Rizal received news from Juan Luna and Valentin Ventura 1ha11he FIiipinos in Spain were des1royin& the good name of their na1,on by g"dlllbling too much. These two compalriots in Paris urged him to do some1h1ng about 11. Accordingly, Rizal wr0I!! 10 M.H. de1 Pilar on May 28. 1890 to remind the Filipinos in Madrid 1ha1 they did no1 come to Europe to gamble. but to work for their Fatherland'~ freedom . His lener runs as follo,.,-s: 0 Lu~ in Pari, complains of lhe gambling of 1bc Filipinos m Madrid, so does Vemura. They say that, according to 11ew. from 1be Ph1hppincs, lbc: parents arc very mucfl dis• custed. . . I am afraid "'C ore serving 1bc friars' J<:bcme There is nothing al home to remind 1hem that the f"tlipino does nOI come 10 Europe to gamble and amu~ him~lf bu! to ,i1or1< for his liberty and for 1hc dignity of his race• It 1s nOI necessary to leave lhe Philippines 10 gamble, for there they abeady gamble very much. If .,c ,.ho arc ~allcd u~n 10 do somelhin&, if we in whom the poor people pl•~ lhe1r modest hopes, spend our time in lhese things precisely when lhc years of youth should !IC employed in M>mclhing more noble and lofty for lhc very reason 1ha1 youth is noble and lofty, I fear much tha1 "'c are ligh110g for a useless 1Uusion and tha1, instead of being worthy of hbcrty. we arc worthy o( slavery. ,,. I appeal 10 1hc patriotism of all Filipinos to gi•c the Spanish people proo( 1ha1 we are sopenor to our misfortune and lha1 neither arc we capable of bcmg bruta!tud. nor can our noble sentiment, be deafened wnh the com,p1ion of customs. The Domm1can Order filed a swl ID court to dispossess 1he Rizal fanuly of their land,, ID Calamba. Meanwhile the 1cn3n1s including the Rizal family, were persecu1ed Paciano and 1he brothers-in-law· Antonio Lopez (husband o f Narcisa) and Silvestre Ubaldo (husband of Olympia) were deported w \iincJoru Another brother-in-law. Manuel T Hidalgo (hushand o f Salur• nina) was banished for a second time to Bohol The sad news from home depressed Rizal. HJS bean bled to know the sorrowful phght of lus parents, brother, and b rolhcr..in-law. From Brussels, he wrote to his shier SoledJd un June 6, 1890:7 I have caused much harm to our family, but al IC4St th<r~ remams to us (be comolation of knowing tha1 the: mouvc is not ditgraccful nor docs u hUffllba1e anybody. On the con1ra.ry it raae, us up and l!JYC5 us m<>!c digni1i in the eyes of our ,-cry enemies 1hCJl1$eh,es; 10 fall with lhe bead high and lhc brow serene Is 1101 10 fall, at "' 10 1numph T'bc sad thin& is lo fall with the sta,n of dishonor M0<c0\cr I may be what my enemies desire me to be, yc1 never an accusadon are Ibey able to burl against - which male, me blush or lower my forehead, and I hope lhat God will be merciful eoough with me 10 prevcn1 me from comnutt,ng one: of those faults wluch would mvolve my family rr-t1-1 el O..tli. ln his moment of dcsp;air Rizal had bad Areams during the nights in Brussels when he was restless because he wu always thinking of his unhappy family 10 Calamba Although he was not superslitious, he feared 1ha1 he "'ould not live loog. He was not afraid to die, but he wan1ed to finish his ICCOlld novel before be went to bis grave. 171 This morbid presentiment of early death was divulged by 10 M. H dcl Pilar, in a letter from Brussels dated June 11, 1890, as follows· "Sad presentiments assault me though I do not give them entire credence. lo my childhood I bad a suangc belief that I would not reach thiny years or age. I do n0t know why I thought, this. There were two months during which almost every night I bad no other dream than that my friends and relatives were dead. I dreamed that I descended by a path • multitude o f persons seated. dressed ,n white, with white faces, <ilent and rurrounded by white light . There l <aw my two brethren. one of them already dead and the other one still ahve. Although I do not believe in these things and although my body ,s very strong and I h;ivc no illness and have no fear, I am pTeparing myself for death and for any eventuality "Laong Laan" (Ever Ready) is my true name. For this reason , I want to finii.h at all costs the second volume of the Noli and if II is possible I do not want to leave unfinished what nobody else could contmue. . Do 001 believe that I arr. depressed or sad; every t"'o day, I go 10 the gymn~1um and pracuse fencing and ,h<'>Oting but who can tell any m1sfonune that may come7"8 him o~ Prq,aration to Co Home. In the face or the sufferings which afflicted his family, R,wl planned 10 go home. He could not stay in Brussels writing a book while his parents. relatives, and friends m the distant Philippmes were persecuted. Upon heanng that Graciano Lo~z Jaena was planning 10 go to Cuba, he v.rotc to Ponce on July 9, 1890. opposing Graciano's plan or acuon. He said that Graciano should not go 10 Cuba 10 die or )Cllow fever, mstcad be -ought 10 go to the Pl11hpp1nc, 10 allo" himself 10 be killed m dcfen~ of his ,deals" Adding Rizal said "We have only once to die, and if we do not die well, w--e lose an opponunity which will not again be pr~nted to us ...v In another teller 10 Ponce, dated July 18, 1890, he expressed his determination 10 go home, as follows, 10 I want to go back to the Philippines, and allhough I know 11 would be danng and imprudent, what docs that nuucr• The F,!Jpinos arc all very prudent, and that ,s v.-hy our country is eoing the way ,he is A• it seems to me that we arc not mahllg any progress by following prudence, I 171 am going to look for . - i - padlwayl 'The only thing that can det ain me is a doubc wbcthcr my parcnta agree. I am afraid to disturb their last years. In case they should objccl to my hocncoomiog, I "'ould wort for a bvebhood in some other part of the world. All his friends, including Blumcnlrill, Jose ~ - Basa, and Ponce. were horrified by Riz.al's plan to return to the Philippines. They warned him of the danger that awaited him at home. Decision to Co lo Madrid . Rizal ignored the dire warning of h,~ fncnd,.. No threat of danger could change bis plan. Something, ho\loevcr, happened that suddenly made him change his mind It was a letter from Paciano whjch related that they lost the case against the Dominicans in Manila, but they appealed it 10 the Supreme Court IJI Spain, hence a lawyer was needed to handle it in Madrid Accordingly, Rizal wrote to M H . del Pilar on June 20, 1890 retaining the latter's services as lawyer. He further ulformed Del Pilar that he was gorng to Madrid, m order 10 supervise the handling of the case. In another leuer 10 Ponce, written at Brussels, July 29, 1890. Rizal announced that he was leaving Brussels at the beginning of the following month and would arrive in Madrid about the 3rd or 4th (August) 11 "To M y Muse" (1890). It was against a background of mental anguish m Brussels, during those sad days when he was woTried by family disasters, that he wTote lus pathetic poem, "A Mi... " (To my Muse). Thts poem lacks the exquisiteness of .. To the nov.ers of lleidelhertC and,~ le~ poh,hed than '"To the Filipino Youth,- but it is passionate in feeling It runs as follows· 12 TO MY MUSE !molted no longer is the Muse The lyre is out of date: The poc1$ 11 no longer use, And youth ti$ inspiration now imbues With other form and st-ate. If today our fancies aught Of •erse would 511II require . Helicon"s hill remains unsought; And without hec,d we but tnqwrc. Why the coffee, 1s not brouaJ,t. 173 In lbe place of thought sincere That ou·r hearts may reel, We most seize a pen of seeel. And. with venc and line severe Aing abroad a Jest and jeer. Muse, that in the past inspired me, And with song,s of love but fired me; Go lllou now 10 full repose, For tocloy in sordid prose l must cam the gold that hired me. Now must I ponder deep, Meditate , and struggle on; E'en sometimes I mull weep; For be who love would keep Great pain has undergone Like other women - Segunda Katigbak. Orang Valenwda. Leonor Rivera, O-Sei-San, Gcttic Becke tt , Consuelo Ortit(II ) Perez and 1be Nellie Bous tead - Su1annc fell in love w11h Rllal S he cried wheti he left toward the end of July, 1890 for Madrid. slopping for a [ew days in Pari~. One by one they nave passed o n. All 1 love and moved among; Dead or murncd - from me gone, For all I place my hcan upon By fate adverse arc stung. 0-o thou, too, 0 Muse, depan. Other regions fairer find; For my land but offers an For the laurel, chains (hat bind, For • temple p.risons blind. But before thou luvest me, speak: Tell me with thy voice sublime, Thou couldst ever from me seek A song of sorrow for the wcalt, Delia.nee 10 the tyrant's crime. Romance with Petite Jacoby. Two dungs brought some mea• , urc of cheer to the despondent Rizal, IS he was preparing for hi.s trip lo Madrid. First WIS the summertime festival of Belgium, 174 with colorful costumes. fantastic floats, and many days of mcrnmcn1. Second wa, hi, romance with Petite Jacoby, the pretty niece or his landladic~ Rizal was so charming and dignified a gcntl~man that Petit.: Susanne was attracted to him. He was lonely ma strange country and Leonor Rivera was so far away. Naturally, being a normal Y0\1118 man, he found certain bli\.~ in the company of a prctt, Belgian girl. He might have Oincd w11h Petite Susanne. but he could not stoop low to a deceptive amorous relations hip. Aed are the days of case, The days o( Love's delight ; Wllen flowers .iill would please ' And give to ~uffenng souls surcease From pain and sorrow's bbghL • which was celebrated in carnival style - Although Rizal was m faraway Madrid . Su1,111nc c,,uld not forget him. <;he wrote to him in French " Where arc y1111 now? Do you th,nk <>I m< <>n,c in ;, while? I am reminded or our tender con,c"ations. reading your lettter, although 111s oold and ,nd1lfcrcn1 I lcrc III ynu1 leucr I have ,omcthing which mnk,s up for )'our Jt>,.:ncc How pleased I would be 10 follow you. 10 tra\'el wnh 1ou who arc always in my thought, You wisn me oll ~inch of luck, but forger 1hJ1 m th,• absence of a beloved one u tender heart c,mnot feel happ)' A thou~and thing) -;crvc 10 distract your mmd , my friend; but in my ca,e, I am sad. lonely. alwa)'S olone ..,,th my thoughts nothing, absolutely nothing 1clkvc, rny ,or row. Are you coming back? That's whal I want and de,,irc most ardently - you cannot ;-efusc me I d.o not despair and I hm11 myself 10 rnurmunng agmn,t time which run) ~o fost when 11 carries u\ toward" ,cr~•r:lt1on. but goes so slowly when it's bnngmi us to11e1her I feel very unhappy thinking that perhaps I mitthl never sec you again. ''It"'" Goodbye! You know wlth one word you can m•kc me very happy. Aren't you going lo write 10 mc 1 ••••• I 17S • t .......,,,_Malrld(1W,.-U Chapter 17 Misfortunes in Madrid (1890-91) Early in August. 1890, Rizal amved in Madnd. He tned all legal means to seek juMicc for his family and the Calamba tenants, but to no avail. Disappointment after disappointment piled on h,m, unlll the cross he boTe seemed msuperable to carry. He almost fought two duels - one wnh Antomo Luna and the other with Wenccslao E Retana On top of his misfortunes, Leonor Rivera married a British engineer The infidelity of tbc girl, witb whom he was engaged for eleven years, broke bis heart. With resilient strength of character. he surv,-cd I.be bitter pangs of love's disillusionment and continued his mission to redeem his oppressed people. Fallun to Gtt Jastke for Family. Upon ,1mvaJ in Madrid, Rini immediately sought the help or the Filipino colony, the Asociacion Hispano-Filipina, and the liberal Spnmsh newspapers (LA Jusrie1a, El Globo, La Republica, El Resumm, etc .) in securing justice for the oppressed Calamba tenants, including his family I Together with M II . del Pilar (who acted as his lawyer) and Dr. Oominador Gomez (secretary or the Asociacion Hispano-Fllipma), he called on the Minister of Colonies (Senor Fab,e) in order to protest the injustices commiucd by Governor General Valeriano Weyler and che Dominicans against the Calamba folks. Nothing came ouc of Rizal's interview with Minister Fabie. As El Resumm, a Madrid newspaper which sympathized with the Filipino cause, saJd: WTo rover the cars, open the rurse, a.n d fold the arms - this is the Spanish oolonial policy~ 11, More terrible news reached Rizal in Madrid as be was waging a futile fight for justice. From his brother-in-law, S i l ~ Ubaldo, he received a oopy of the e,ectment order by the Dominicans again!ll Francisco Rizal and other Calamba tenants. 3 From his StStcr, Saturnina, be learned of the deportation of Paciano (Rizal), Antoomo (Lopez), Silvestre (Ubaldo), Teong (Mateo EleJorde}, and Dandoy (Dr. Rizal's relative) to Mindoro, these unfortunate deportees were arrested LO Calamba and were shipped out ot Manila on SeptembeT 6, 1890. He further learned from Saturmna's letter that their pa.rents had been rorobly ejected from their home and were then bvmg in the house o f NaTasa (Antonino's wife)• ln his despcra11on. Rizal sought the aid of the liberal Spanish statesmen, who were former members of the Mimstry. indwhng Becerra and Maura Again, he was dwippointcd, for these statesmen merely gave him honeyed words of $)'fflpathy, and notbmg else. Blumentnll in Lc1tmcritz hearing of his friend's plight, urged him to !>Cc Queen Regent M.t.na Cristina' (then ruler or Spain dunng the minority of Alfonr.o XIII}. But how oould he see Her ma1es1y? He had neither powerful friends to bring bi1D' to the quct:n ·• pr~nce nor gold 10 grease the palms of influential courtic~. Rital'&Eu.logy to Panganiban. Barely bad Rizal settled down in Madrid. when he experienced another disappointment. This was the doleful news that his friend Jose Ma. Panganiban. his talented co-worker in the Propaganda Movement , died in Barcelona on Augusc 19, 189(), after a hngenng illness. He deeply mourned the passing or th,~ 81col hero Wuh a sorrowing heart, Rizal took up his pen and wrote a great eulogy 10 Panganiban as follows·" Panganiban . l~t ua:llcnt comp..,.ion of labor and d,fGculty. that amiable friend and countryman beloved, bas 1u,1 descnbell 10 the tomb a.i the early age of 27 years. We JU\! caught his last ,.hispcr. uw him expire m OW' arm.,, as 11 were. and it v.cms as if we are listening 10 his phrases satura1cd ,.,th energetic patnOIISm, 1nspued by the purest love or his native land , 177 J0R llllAL . LIFE, WOIIICJ AHO WIIITINCI His was a despcralion to di< far. very far from the native soil. separated from hts family. rn>in h" decpc,t affections. and in the flower of his you1h. in hi, rosiesl lllu.tons and hopes, wiw,n a rosy future was in stghl . . . Thal is why "" IMI words were or loving re.mcmtm,nce or his idolized Fntherland, were II heanfch farewell to 1hc Pluhppmes. And ,r we still take into account cenain event~ or hi\ hfc con,ccratcd to a most vehement love or hi;, nauve land. ,. c un,lc Naad lhc sorrow hi, hcan mu,1 have fell to ;.cc buried with him legitimate hopes. ardent desires, and ju;c a,1,ira1tons Augu\l 19 ( lll'!CJJ, wa, d day of mourning 10 numcrou, Fihpin<>< in Furopc. And wh11t a lat.ti m 1nr1dencc <ln tho same month and day or the ye:,r 1us1 pa$>Cd we had 10 dcplo1c 1hc death ,,r :innthcr l.1c11J und c'tlunlr)m.,n, Feliciano (Jonnie, Til'nbang A sad fate! Pan1'an,ban. endowed wilh uncommon talent. wilh pr.-llegcd 1n1elhgcnec, anJ with 1ndcfo11gable indu:ilry, \\.1:-. onr of 1ht ~crcd, lcgjumat~ hore, of h,~ 11nlonuna1c countr. lna1 head has been buncd m the llu,1. thJt v1goroc, mtelhgencc ha, been prematurely ended. Fihprn ..,, how unfortun:ur thou .o.rt' Aborttd Duel With Antonio Luna. Towartl, 1he entl of Augu~t. 1890, R1zol attended a wc1ul rcunmn ol the hli111no, ,n Madrid As was customary in 1hcsc w,cekly reunion, of 1hc paLSano;, "-lRC was served. After drinking so many gl;1'>.scs. the guests became more loquacious and lhc conv~rsauon~ Ouwcd freely One of 1hem. Antonio Luna hecamc drunk the choice of weapons. Logically , he would have to choose th~ sword; in which case, Rizal'~ life would be in jeopard) The Filipinos wer~ shocked by the u1c1den1 They 1r1cJ 10 pacify Ri:wl and Luna, pointing out to both thut ~uch :i duel would damage their ca11se in Spain. Fortunately, Luna, .. hen he became sober. reahzed that he had made a fool of himself dunng his drunkeD state. I k apologized for hi, bad remarks about the girl. Rizal 1mmcd1jld) accepted hi< apology , and the two became good friends again • Rhal Challenges Retaru, lo Duel. Rizal wa,. by natur~ . neither hot-tempered nor pugnaciom. But when the honor of his people, family. women, or friends was besnmched, he never hesitated 10 fight even if be were risking bis own hfe. On another occaMon. he challenged another man 10 a duel - Wcnceslao E . Re1ana, his bitter enemy of the pen Retana, a talen1ed Spani<h !iCholar, was then a press agent of the friars in Spain. He used 10 attack the Fihpinos. including Rizal, in various newspapers 1n Madnd and 0 1her c1tic~ ,n Spain One day he imprudently wrote an (lrticlc m I.a f:poco, an anti-Filipino newspaper in Madrid. asserting that the family and friends of Rizal had not paid their rents so that they were e1ec1ed from their lands in Calamba by the Dominicans. Such an insult stirred Rizal 10 action. l01mediately. he sent hi~ seconds to Retana with his challenge to a duel . Ocily Retana'\ blood or his apology could vindicate the good name or Rtzal's family and friends. Al that uine, Luna wa\ bitter because of h" fru~tratctl romance with Nelhe Boustead Deep in his heart , he was hlaming Rizal for his failure 10 \l>m her, although Rizal had previously explained to him that he h1d nothing 10 do ah<)u1 11. In u fi1 or jealousy, which his alcohol-befogged mind could nol control, Luna uttered cer1ain unsavory remark~ about Nellie . Because he believed that d1scrc1ion 1s the belier parl of valor, and, more 5010 save his own skin, Retana at once pubh,hcd a retraction and an apoiogy in the new,;papcrs. His seconds had warned him that be had no chance what50evcr against Rizal on a field o f honor, for Rizal was his superior in both pistol and sword. 9 Rizal heard ham. His b.igh sense of chivalry co11ld not tolerate apy slur against the honor of any woman Angered by the slanderous remarks, hechnllenged Luna, his fnend, IC>O duel 7 The incident silenced Retana ·s pen agains1 Rizal. I-le developed a great admiration for the latter. and yea rs afterward he wrote the first book-leng1h biography of the grcate~I l'ihp,no hero, wtiose talents he came to recognitt and whose martyrdom he glorified. 10 Rizal was a better pistol shot than tuna But the latter was his superior as a swordsman. Luna, as the challenged party . had 178 179 fnfiddlry, of 1..-- Rhera. In the autumn of 1890 Rizal was (eeting bitter at so many disappointments be encountered in Madrid . One night be and some rnends auended a play at Teatro Apolo, and there he lost his gold watch chain with a locket contaunng the picture of Leonor Rivera. his beloved w,ectheart . The los, ot the locket proved 10 be a bad omen . Early 1n Decemlxr. 1890, Wllh the cold win~ or winter sweeping acr~ the shivering city, Rizal received 3 leuer Crom Leonor, announ..:1ng her commg mamage to an Englishman (the choice of her mo1her) .,nd •~king h1, forgiveness This letter was a great blo..., to h,m He ... as stunned. his eyes dimmed wnh tear&, and ltis heart brol.e.11 Several agonizing weeks passed before he could confide to h1~ hc~t fncnd. Blumenmu. In his reply to R1z.al dated February 15, 1891 , Slumcntrin «>nooled him. 53ying: -Your la•I letter filled us "'uh sadness; after all the nusfortuncs that have befallen you , no,. your bclo~ed ha!. abandoned )OU. M} wife cannot undc.-tan.l how a wom;,n whom 3 Riul has honured w11h his love would be able to abandon him; she is disgusted wi1h this girl. I m)>elf feel 11 deeply, but only on your acx:ount, ro~ I know how you1 heart 1, pained, hu1 you arc one of th~ heroes who conquer pain from a wound inflicted by a woman. because they_follO\\' higher ends. You ha"e a courageo115 heart, and you arc ,n lo e ,.,th 3 nobler woman. the Motherland Fihpina> 1s hke one: ,r tho>e enchanted pnnce"scs ,n 1hc Germi,n IC!Jends. who i, a captive of a hornd dragon. unul she ,s freed by a valiant kmght ". 1 ' Thee.: month• later, Blumcntnn sent another comforting lcucr \J)Utg . I am grie,ed with all my heart that }OU have lost the girl to .,. horn you were engaged, bu1 1f she was able 10 renounce a Rizal , she did not possess the nobility or your spirit. She 1s hke a child who cast away a dianiond to seize a pebble . In other word,, she is not the woman for RIZal". 13 Riul-Dd Pilar Rlvalry. Toward the closing days of 1890 there arose an unfonunate nvalty between Rizal and M. H. del Pilar for ,upremacy Rizal, the most talented Filipino or his time, was until then the undisputed leader of lhe Filipinos in . , Europe. On the other hand, 0.:1 Pilar, the fearless lawyer-1ournah<1, was gaining pr~tigc 111 'l.fadrid for h,s vigorou, cd1tonals in Lo Solidoridad, which he came to own He had purchased this fortnight!) penodical from Pablo Rianzarcs, 11s first proprietor, and had replaced Graci;in,, Loper Jaena .;s ih c,.htor As leader Rizal tried to imbue hi< eompainot< w•th h,~ own idealism for he helievcd that to gain pre,ti~e for the Propaganda Movement and to "''" the respect of the Spamsh people the} must ~"'~ high standarJ, of morality. d1g011y, and spirit of sacrifice. Unfortunalcly. hi, 1dc.1hsm wa, 001 shared b} cen~in fnvolous countrymen, who loved wine . women , and cards Consequently. Rnars leadership ded,ned. Some of h~ former adrrurers, who ,upponcd his k~dcr-.h1p 1urned agam<t him because thev resented h1, interference in their private live, rl,ey l•ecame supporters of Del Pilar. The cd11onal policy of L.a So/idandad under Del Pilar's management enhanced the cle.svage between Rllal and Del Pilar. .ttiul and h1s close friend\ obicctcd to 1he periodical', cditonal pohcy which was occasionally contrary 10 Riz.al's pohtical views To avert the break-up hetwccn Rizal and M.H del Pilar, the F1hpin~ m Madrid, numbering about runety. met on January 1, 1891, New Year's Day. to patrh up their diffcrcn,-c, and to intell'lify the campaign for refonn It wa5 decided in thi~ meeting that a leader called Responsable, be chosen to direc1 the affairs of the FLlipmo community and 10 detcnnine the ednonal policy oC Lo Sohdarrdod Del Pilar opposed the proposition that the periodical be placed under the control of the Responsable on the ground that II w~ a private cnterpnsc, however, he was w,lhng to pubh,h aniclcs that would exprc~ the aspira11011~ and demands or the Filipino people Owing to Del Pilar·s opposition. the proposition to place L.a Solutandad under the control of the Responsable was aban• doned. The meeting proceeded to the business of elecung the Responsable. h was agreed that the Rcsponsable should be elected by a tv.'0-lhirds vote of the Filipmo community . R b.al Abdlcaus His Ludership. The elechon 1001: place dunng the first week or February, 1891 The Filipinos were d1vtded 1010 two hostile camps - the Rizalistas and the Ptlanstas. 181 JOA lltlAL, Ltoe. WOIIO AHD WlltTtNOI Passion ran high, mfiam ing animosity and disunity in lhc ranks of the compatriou. From the very beginning, on lhe first day of the vohng, Ri:ial was winning, but he could not obtain the required two-thirds vote 10 be proclaimed Responsable On the second day of balloting, the result was again indecisive - Rizal won but the votes cast for him did not rct,ch the required two-thirds. The situation was becoming explosive and criucal On the third day, Mariano Ponce appealed to his countrymen with stirring eloquence 10 vote for Rizal. Some Pilans1as, ev,denily, ),ceded his pica. For the voting that day resulted in R1ial's victory. Having obtained the necessary two-thirds vote, he became the R&Jponsoblt. Chapter 18 Biarritz Vacation and Romance with Nelly Boustead (1891) But Rizal graciously dechnctl the coveted position. I-le was a man of honor and dignity, with a high >ensc of deltcadein, which many politicians in all countnes and in all ages. seldom possess, so that he did not relish bemg a leader of a divided people. Ile knew that some or his compa tnots who ,upponed Del Pilar despised or disliked him. So he preferred 10 abdicate his ieadership rather tham be the cause of disun11y and hiuemess among his countrymen. Adl05, Madrid. R12:el wrote a bnef note thanking his com• patriots for electing him as Rcsponsable. Sadly, he packed up his bags. paid his bills, and boarded a train leaving for Biarritz. As h1.s train pulled out of the railway station. he gazed through its. window al the city of Madrid, where he was happy during his first sojourn (1882-85) but unhappy on ht\ second visit (1890-91) II was the last time he sow Madrid H i< agonizing heart bade goodbye 10 t'he metropolis, of which he had wnucn years ago: 14 Madnd Is one of the gayest t111cs of the 1110rld which combines the ,piril of Furopc and the East. which has adopted the orderhness, the convenience, the boo ton of c,v1hzcd Europe without d1\da,ning, w11hout rcpclltng. the brilliant col<iu. the ardent pa&\ion,. the pnmi11vc custom~ of the African tribes, or the chivalrous Arabs whose traces arc still rccogn,zable everywhere, in the look, ftchng.<, and prejudices of the people, and even in their laW11 182 To seek. solace for his disappointments in Madrid. Rizal took a vaca1ion in the resort city of Biarrill on the lahuluus French Riviera. He was a guest of the rich Rou~u::,d fom, lv ,ti its winter residence - Villa Eliada. He had befriended Mr Eduardo Boustead1 nnd hts wife and tw<> <!harnung Jau~hlers (Adelina and Nelhe) in Paris in 1!!119-90. He u,t'd 10 fen~< "llh the Boustead siste~ at the studio of Juan Luna and 10 allend parties at the Boustead Pansian home. 11 wn, in Biarn11 where be had a ~rious romance with Nclltc and finished the la,1 d1ap1er of his sccund novel, El Filibusttri,mo. • With the Boustuds in Biarritz. When Ri.lal arriwd in Riarrilt at the beginning of February, 1891, he was warmly welcomed by the Bousteads, parucularly Mr. Bou,1ead who had 1aken a great liking for him because of his remarkable talent, A, ,, family guest. he was treated with friendline,s and ho,p11ah1y by Mrs. Boustead, Adelina , Nellie, and Aunt Isabel (Mrs. Boustead's sister). The one-month vaca1 ion in Biarritz worked wondcn. for Rizal. The scenic beaches filled with touri$lS from all pare< of the world, the refreshing breeus of the Atlantic ocean. and I he festive atmosphere of lbe cuy cheered his despondent spml and made him forget the bitter mcmones of Madnd . His ,orrow,ng bean began to sing once more with joy and his health improved wi1h remarkable swiftness. Writing from Biarrill to Mariano 183 I - IIIZAL: LIPI. - U MO MIITIOIQI Pooc:e oo Fcbniary I I. 1891. be said: " I have put on much weight ancc I a.rrived here; my cheeks arc no longer sluunken u before for the relUlOn that I go to bed early and I have no cares " 2 Ro,nantt wleh Ndlic llouttcad. BtarnlZ, Wlth llS romantic gardens, delightful villas, and panoramic beauties. is an ideal scttmg for romance. On an emouonal re bounce, Rizal havmg lost his beloved t.eonor. came 10 entertam con,,derable Mtlect,on for Nelhc, the prettier and younger daughter of his h<>SI. He found her to be a real Fihpina, highly intelhgent. vivacious in temperament, and morally upright He wrote to lu~ mtimate friends, ucc:pt Professor Blumentnll, of h1~ love for Nclhc, also called Nelly and !us rntent,on to proJ>05C mamagc to her As early as on February 4 , 1891, M. H dcl Pilar teased him about changing the "o" m Nol, to an "e", which means Noh to Nelly l Five days later. Toma1 Arciola t<>ld Rizal·" In your !tiler you talk rcrca1edly of Bouucad who can be a madamt M a madtmOJ1<'1le Several 1,...,, here since last year I have bt,,n told about thl> young WOlllan who. accord,na 10 your teller 1• ahu • F~1pino. !'hey 1old me that she 1s highly c:ommendahle for her thorough cduc:ati"'1, bee very bcllubful moral and physical qual111cs, and in adda!IOO. for hcinc • Flilp,n<> On lhl> oc:casioo llnd all the lll'IIC you arc there expoocd to th<- warmth of the 1rc1tmcnl and 11tent1onJ of that f11111ly, may I we the hbcny £or malung the foll,,.,ing rcflcetlOftt Through you your11elf, I Ir.now th11 you arc now free from your engagement m the Philippines On lhe other hand , while oond1llons there arc nOI altered, your pcrmanena: in our country ,s not ad-.ublc, and even d it were so. they '"""Id never leave you ,n peace 11 your home. ConscqllCtltly, by m•rry1ng there, I rear thu instead of happineu. you would only hnd b111erne-s and trouble. And whit i,, U~ remedy'.? .. Sec i( Made mouclle Boustead suits you, ooun her, and marry her, and we arc here to applaud such a guod act Antoruo Luna, who had pre"1ously loved and lost Nelly, encouraged R17.al to woo and marry her From Madrid. he wrote to Rizal, sayin1r~ W1lh respect to Nelly, frankly, I think there is n04hin1 bcllOCCn us more lh¥ll one of !hose friendships et1Li,ened 114 by bc1n1 fdlow countrymen It scema to me that 1h<:rc 15 no1h1na more. My "ord of honor I had been her fiancc: , we wrote to cad! 01hcr I Like her because I knew how wonhy \he was. bul c,rcumstancc:, be )Ulld our control made all that happineu one chernhcd ev1pora1e She is l()Od; she is naturally endowed "'"h quat,110 admirable m a )oung "'"""n and I believe 1h11 \he .,,,II bnna h.lppnc~ n<>1 nnly 10 )OU bul 10 any Olher man "'ho " worth) of her I congratulate you .as one congratulate, a l11cnd Congrau11la- uon,1 W11h 1hc encouragement of h1, clo,c friend~. R1,al courted Nelly ...,h<l, in turn, rec1proca1cd h" alfe,11on. Unfonunatc:ly, the,r romance bcnealh the l,,vely 81arntl moon did no1 have a happy fairy I.lie finale Ri,al's mam:ig,· prt•po~I failed for two reasons ( I) he rctu,cd IO give: up h" Catholic faith and be converted to l'rotestanmm, a, Nelly demanded, and (2) Nelly's mot her did not ltke Rt2.1I .s a son m· law Nl'II~ ttnu,tead b<:mg a good Pmtc\lant wanted R11al 10 esp<>u"· Protcstanti= hefore their mam.1,e Riull . be•nr a man of firm convict1on, refu~d Although he became a Ma~n. he rema111ed loyul t" the Cs1hohc rchgicm, the raith or hi~ clan. Ycal\ l111c:r, when hewn, hving in exile in Dapitan, he rcfu1ed Father f'ahlo Pastclb' accusation 1ha1 he was a Protc\lant as folJo,., .. As to bcmg a ProteMant .. , If Your Revercn~c only knc .. whJl I had IOSI for Olli .iccep11ng Pro1c,tan11sm, )OU would not say ,uch a thing I lad I not alwny, ,~.._pectcd lh< religious idea. had I held religion as a matter of convenience <>r an art getting along in thii hfc, inMcad or being a poor exile, I would now bc a n~h man . free and covered with honon ,.,, ,,r Nell) ·s mother, hkc the mother I cnnor Rivera. had no wish to entrust her daughter's happmc~s lo a man who was poor m matcnal thongs, a phys1c1an without a pa)1ng clicntelc, a wnter who cumcd nothing from hi~ pen, and o rcfmmcr who was pcrsec111cd by the fria" and government official, in Im own cuuniry ,It hough they could not get ma med, Rizal aod Nclhc parted as good friend~. When ,he learned thal R11al was leav,ng Furope, she <;ent him a farewell lcucr, ~ying: MN ow that you arc leaving I wish you a happy trip and may you tnumph in your undenakmgs. and above all. may the Lord loo!( down on you with favor 135 - IIIZAL: LI,.._ W O I I Q A N O - 8 .-rih tnwludlll Attd R°"'91'1101 Wich ...IIV louttHd 1190 and guide your way giving you much blessin~. and may you learn to enjo/1 My remembrance will accompany you as also he became financially independent, he CJCpccted w mal.c a more vigorous campaign for his country's redemption my prayen.~ From Brussels , on May I, 1891 he notified the Propaµ11d.1 authorities in Manila to cancel lus monthly allowance and dc,·01.: the money to some better cause, such as the educa11~n of ,1 young Filipino Student in Europe His notification ,,..a, rnm.tinc,1 in a letter addressed to Mr A L. Lorena {pseudonym OeoJato Arellano), as follows u Through Ille kindness of J.A., I ~1,-cd your kiter ul 13 February wilh a draft or PIOO lhAI lhC PropagJndu " sending me for the months or January and Fcbruar- and l thank you for such anenllOn. In Otder to avoid tnercasu,g 11S attcn11on• I behe,e m, rctu-cmcnt 1s necessary. I will «labh<h. myself and cam "" living. My chosen place IS either in the Ph1hppines. llonr Kong, or Japan. beca~ l:wope seem> 10 me a pl•cc ,, cnle and I am hereby notifying rh.. Prnpa~anda or rm intention so that n may make ns dCCISion With the PSO that 11 send me monthly II could <I • something bc11er, which 11 to lkfra) the cost of 1he cdu,Jlt<>n of another younc man who b nol ,n rhe same ,itu.tll<'n .,, I am. Though such an amount LS su.ffiacnt 10 live oo rn an, pw:e in Europe. 11 1S not enough for one "ho '"''""' to 11CCOmpli$h somethins and lo carry oul 1be plans 1hat he may cherish. Consequently. I have asked Fnend Basa to furnr<h me wuh the funds for tn) return. so thar l c•n ,rart unnn!(" small fortune. If at last. after the end of a re... vears, I become finaoaally mdcpendcnt, I shall he able 10 undenalu, a more ,.,go1ous and cffecme campaign than th.It I h:wc been doing until now El Flllbastr I o f'lnllhed ID Blarritz. Frustrated ,n romarn.,e Rizal found consolation Ul writing. Evidently. while wooing Nelhe and enjoying so ·many magnificent moonlight nights" w,th he_r, he kept working on his second novel which he began tn write in Calamba in 1887 On March 29, 1891, the eve or his departure from Biarritz to Paris, he finished the manuscript of El Filibusterismo. Wriung to Blumentritt on that date, he said:• I have 6mshcd my book! Oh, no. I have 001 wnnen in ii my idea of revenge apmst my encm,e. bur only "'ha1 is for the good of those who are suffenng, for the nghts of lhe Tagal0g race, though brown and may nor have good features• Surely. l v.1II lave tomorrow for Paris, and from 1tw-rn I don't know •here I am going. To Paris and Back to Brus.wls. As he had written 10 Blumeotrin, Rizal bade farewell to the hosJ>lta.ble and friendly Bow,teads (parents and daughters) on March :JO, L891 and proceeded to Paris by train. He stayed at the home of hrs friend, Valentin Ventura, on 4 Rue de Chateaudum. From Paris, he wrote to Ins friend, Jose Ma. Basa. ,n Hong Kong, on April 4, expressing his desire to go 10 that British colony and practise ophthalmology in order 10 earn his living. •0 Moreover, in this letter. he requested Basa to advance him the amount for a first dass steamer ticket from Europe to Hong Kong. By the middle of April, 1891, Rizal was back in Brussels. where he was happily received by Marie and Suzanne Jacoby (his landladies) and, above all, by Petite Su.:anne (1he Belgian girl wbo loved him) . ~ 6-wn Ille l',-opa1and• MotttnenL Since abdica1• ing his leadership in Madrid in January, 1891, owing to the intrigues of his jealous compatriots, Rizal reured from the Propapnda Movement. or reform crusade. He desired to publish his SC<X>Od novel, to practise his i:nedical profCKion, and later, when 186 ,,r .Rizal Stopped Writin& for I.A Solidaridad . Simultaneous wnh his retirement from the Propaganda Movement. Rita! ceased writing articles for La Solidaridad. Many of his fr,ends in Spa,n urged him to continue writing for the patriotic pet"iodical. becau~ his nticles always anracted considerable anenuon m European countries. M .H . dd Pilar himself realized the need for Raal's collaboration in both the Propaganda Movement and in the l .A Solid4ridad newspaper because the enthusiasm for the reform 187 - IIIZAL:'t.lfl. WOIIICI ,,_ Mirr.a crusade in Spain was declining. On Auguat 7, 1891, be wrote to Rizal begging forgiveness for any resentment and rcquesling him (Rizal) to resume writing for the La Solidaridad. Min short,n he ~aid in his letter, "if you have any resentment, I beg you to put it aside; if you consider me at fault, and this fault is pardon• able, forgive me ... We would much like lhal you resume writing for it; not only would we stn:ngthen IA Solidaridad but we would defeat the friar iotrigJJc in the Philippines. nil In his reply to Del Pilar's letter, Ru:a1 wrote denying any resentment and explaining why he stopped writing for La Solidaridad as follows:•> I am extremely surprised at your letter, telling me abou1 resentments, disagrccmcnis, and recoodliauons, etc. I believe it is us,:lc,s to talk about what does not exist, and it bas existed, it ought 10 have evapo~ted in the past. I think like you do, that there being oothing, one ought not to waste time 1allting about it ,r tr I stopped writing for 1,,, So/idari,.lwl, ii was because although it is not so cheerful, at least it is more profound and more perfect ... ln case I do not receive money, wiU you ask them to send me money for the printing of my book? If not, I wiU be leaving this place and be with you. " 1' Two weeks later, on June 13, Rizal informed Basa: "I am now negotiaung with a printing firm and as I do not know if it will be printed here (Belgium) or in Spain, I cannot send it to you a.~ yet. In case it is not published here, I will $Cnd it to you by the nex1 mail. Only three chapters are left to be corrected. II is longer than 1he Noli, first part. 11 will be finished before the 16th of this month . If by chance anything happens to me, I leave its publica1ion 10 Antonio Luna , including its correc1,on ... If my Noli (sic. Fil, - 2.) is not published , I shall board a urain on lhe following day when I receive your letter with the passage-money; but if my book is publi~hed I shall have to wait until ii comes o(f the. press." 15 • ♦ • • • or several reasons: 1st, J need time to work on my book; 2nd, I wanted other Filipinos 10 wort also; 3rd, 1 considered it very important to the party 1ba1 there be unity in the work; and you arc already at lhe top and I also have my own ideas, it is better 10 leave you alone to dir'ecl the policy such a.~ you understaod it and I do not meddle in ii. This has two advantages: II leaves both of us free, and it increases your prc,11gc. which 1s very ncccssaJ'y, in111much as men or prcsuge are needed in our counlry. This does not mean 10 sav that I n4'ed nol work and follow the course of your "'ork I am like an army corps who, 11 a needed momcnl, you v.111 sec &rrivc to descend upon lhe nanks or the enemy hcforc you . Only l ~k God 10 give me the means 10 do 11 . I f1~l11 for 1he nation, lhc Phihppin0$. Revising the Fili for Publication. In Brussels Rizal worked day after day revising 1hc finished manuscript of El Filibustuismo and readied it for printing. Apparently, the revision was mostly completed on May 30, 1891. On this date, be wrote Jose Ma. Basa: "My book. is now ready to go to press; the fim twenty cbaplers are already corrected and can be printed and I am recopying the rest. If I receive any money you will surely have it in July. I am writlllg II with more ardor than the Noli and 188 ,., El Filibu1HHl1mo Publllhed In Gh•f'lt ( 189 U Chapter 19 El Filibusterismo Published in Ghent (1891) Days flew swiftly for RiLal in Bru~ls hke flying arrow~. Day in and day out. he was husy revising and poli\hing the 11lJlnuscript of El Fllibusterismo so that II could be ready for the press. He had begun writing 11 in October, 1887, while practising medicine in Calamba I The following year (1888). in London , he made some changes in the plot and corrected some chapters already wrillcn. 2He wrote more chapters in Paris and Madrid, and finished the manubcript in Biurnt, on March 29. H!<Jl. 3 It took. him, therefore, three years 10 wnle h,s second novel Privations In Ghent. On July 5, 1891, Rizal left Brus&cls for Ghent, a famous universi1y city in Belgium. His reasons for moving lo Gben1 were ( I) the cost of pnnling in Ghent was cheaper lhan in Brussels ond (2) 10 csca~ from the enticing attraction of Petite Suzanne. fn Ghent, be mel two compatriots, Jose AleJandro (from Pampanga) and Edilberto Evangelisu (from Manila), both studying en&tnccnng in the world•famed University of Ghent . Owing 10 his limited funds, Riul lived in a cheJp boarding house, with Jose Alejandro as room-mate. Theirs wa.~ a very frugal life, subsisting on the barest necessities. To economize further, they prepared their own daily breal<fa~t in their room. Years later Alejandro, who became a general during the Filipino-American War of 1899-1902 and an engineer, recounted in his memoirs their hard life m Ghent. as follows:• In Gben1 we hved in a room paying so much for our lodging and brcnkfasl Rizal asked me ·•11ow much would the room cos1 us without the breakfast?"' J,o I talked to the landlady and she 1otd me that ~he w,,old reduce the rent so much if wi1hou1 brcakfa.-1 . Rit.d made his calculations and concluded 1ha1 if we made our own breakfast we could save something,. He bought tea. sugar. alcohol and a box of biscu11i. Upon arriving •1 the huu,c be opened the biscui1s and counted and divided them equally between U5. He !old me 1ha1 we owned so many biscuit, each and that , by div,ding the number of biscuit< by 30 days, we would have so many biscuits for each breakfast. The first day, because of my personal pride. I contentLd myself with my ration And so with the folluw,ng day, Bui on the third day, I told him that my ration was not cnou11,I\ for me. lben he answered ... You may borrow from your ration for tomorrow". Thru frequent borrnw111g I ate 111> ult my shares in IS days, while he rigorously limucd himself to his daily ra11on. The Prlntlng or El t"Wbusterismo. Shortly after lus arrival in Ghent, Rizal searched for a printing shop that could g,vc him the lowest quo1ation for the publication of hi\ novel At lasl . he did find a publisher - F. MEYER-VAN LOO PRESS. No. 66 Viaandcrcn Street - who wa~ willing 10 pnnt his hook on instalment basis. He pawned his jewels in ~>nlcr tel pJy the down payment and the early partial paymen1s durin!( the printing of I.be novel. Meanwhile, as the printing was going on. 1{1zal hccamc desperate because his funds were running ,low and the money he expected from his friends did not arrive. He hud received some money from Basa and P2()0 from Rodriguez Aria, for 1hc copies of Morga·s S11ett.ws sold in Ma11ilt1 Bui 1hc,c fund, were also used up, and much more were needed to pay the printer Writing 10 Basa from Ghent on July 1891. Rizal \aid •·1 have already pawned all my jewels, I live in a small room, I eat m the cheapest restaurant ,n order to econom1Lc a11d be able to publish my boolc; SQOn I will huvc io slop ils publication ,r no money comes . . . ." 5 On Augus1 6 , the prin1ing had to be s uspended. a~ Ri1,al feared, because he could no longer give the necessary fund~ 10 the printer. On this date. he wrote 10 Bai.a ih llong Kong: .. As you will see in the enclosed clipping. 1hc printing or the s.:cond part (sequel to the Noli - 2 .) is advanced, and I am now on 191 .-111ZAL: LIFa, WOIIICS-WRm NQlt page.112. Because no money is forthcoming and 1 owe everybody and I am broke, I will have to smpend tbe publication and leave the work half-finished". 6 Vffltura, Savior of !Ju! Fill. Rizal's Calvary in connectio• with the printing of the Noli was repeated in the Fm's prin11ng. His funds ran out in Ghent, a similar calamity tbat he experienced in Berlin in the winter of 1836. Once more he felt the dolorous grip or despair. In a moment of bitter disillusionment, he almost hurled the manuscript of the Fili t'ltO the flames, just os he almost did the Noli in Berlin. "1 do not know: Rizal told Basa in woeful mood, "if the money which l expect does not arrive by tbe next mail, I will give up the book and all, and 1 will embark to live and work for m)'llelf . . . Al times I £eel like burning my manuscript. But then I think or you, and I know that there are many good men lik.: you. good men who truly love their country" 7 When everything seemed lost, help came £rom an unexpected Valentin Ventura m Paris learned of Rizal's predicament and immediately sent him the necessary funds With his financial aid, the printing of the Fili was resumed, IOW'CC. Tbe fill Comes Off th e Press. At last, on September 18, 1891, El Filibusterismo came off the press. Rizal, now a very happy man, immediately sent on tills date two pnnted o/es to Hong Kong - one for Bosa and the other for Sixto Lopez. To his friend in Paris, Valentin Ventura, who generously loaned him the funds needed to finish the printing o[ !he novel, Rizal gratefully donated the original manuscript and an autographed pnnted copy. He sent other complimentary copies to Blumentritt, Mariano Ponce, G Lopez Jaena, T.H. Pardo de Tavera, Antonio and Juan Luna. and other friends. fllipino patriots in foreign lands and in the Philippines praised the novel to the skies. The members of the. Filipino colony of Ba recIon a published a tribute in la Publ1cidad, a Barcelona newspaper, eulogizing the novel's original style which ~is comparable only to the sublime Alexander Dumas" and may weO be offered as "a model a nd a precious jc«el in the now decadent literature of Spain". 9 191 El F1hDuU•rlwno Publlttwd In Ghent 111911 The libcrnl Madrid ne~papcr. t:I Nufvo Regimen, senalizcd the novel in its issues of Octohcr, 1891. Practrcally all copie~ of the t1,..,t edition (Ghent edition) of £/ F,l,busremmo were placed m wooden boxes and shipped 10 Hong Kong, hut almoM aU the boxc~ were confiscated and the OO<>h "-CCC lost So it C,UIIC lo pa\., that the hook immediately hecarne rare , and the few avail,tole Ghent copic~ were sold at ,cry high pnces, reaching as high as UK) pesetas per copy. Oedlcatul lo <lom-Bur-Za. [·v1de111ly, Rrtal in all the year~ uf hi, ,1u,ltc,, truvcl, . and laho" 10 lorct!(n lands. had not ft11)!,1llcn the m;ir1yrdnm 1•f hllhc" (n,mc,, llurg•"· ,md ZJlll• oru which Pac1,1no rcla1cd to h1111 wh~n he "·'' a mere IJd m C'alamha He deJ,catcd t:I Fil,/msrer,smo 10 them. His dedtt-alion read, "' follow,. To th,• mc:mury of 1ht: pric"r~. Don M,,riunu liumc1 (XS }C;lr< old), Dnn Jose 8ur11os (30 yea" old), and Don J~c,n10 Lumoru (JS )Cars old). E•ecutcd in Ba,:umbayan Field 11n 1h,• 2K1h nl lchruary , IK72 The Church. hy rcfu<mg to dep,radc )OU, ha< placl"<l ,n doubt lhc crime that has been impured In you; the Govern• mcnl h~ ,urmundlng your trials wtth mys1uy and shallows, Clluw, the t>cliet 1ha1 !here was 'l<lme error, cmnm111cd ,n ra1al momen1,; and all lhe Ph1lipp1nes. by worsh,ppmg your memory ~n,l eulhng y11u mariyrs, ,n no sense recognizes )our culp:ihihry In <O far. lhcreforc , a< your c<>mplicny ,n the Cavuc mutiny ,snot dearly proved, as you mav or may nul have l'>oen p.atriois, •ml a, you may 01 may not ha,c cherished sentiment< for 1us11cc and for hhcrty, I have the right 10 deuic.He my work to )'OU as victJms of the evil which I undc, rnkc ro combat. And "'hilt we wait cxpccrantly upon Spain some day to m.11>rc your good name and cea~ 10 be nnM•·erable for yuur death, let thc,;c pages serve as a lardy "'rc•th nf d11cd lcu"c' over your unknown tomo:., and let 11 he understood Iha! every nne who without clear proofs artacks 1our memory stains his hands m your bl0<>d' Never in the annal~ of mankind has a hero wriucn such a sublime ,ind touching 1nbu1c to other heroes a) Rizal. To straighten h1)IOncal record,, however. we must rectify Rizal'\ hi,1oncal maccuracie) in hi~ dcd1ca1ory note . First of all, the martyrdom of Gomez, Burgos. and Zamora occurred on l9J -IIIZA&., Ll,._ _ _ W _ February 17, 1872- not on tbc 28th. Secondly, Father Gomez was 73 years old - not 85, Father Burgos was 35 years old - not 30, and Father Zamora was 37 ynrs old - not 35. The WARNING is found on the other sick of the dedication. It is as follows: The author's corrections are seen throughout the manuscript Only a few pages have not been revised by Rizal. 'Ibey arc going to wute their hmc "'ho .,ould atuck this book by holding oo to triOes, or who from other moll\"fi, would try to disc(>ver in 11 more or less known phy>1ogn()mics. True 10 his purpose or exposing the disease. of the patient, and, ill order not to divert himself nor dt>en the reader. wbllst he narrates only real facts •h1ch happened recently and arc absolmcly authcnuc 1n subnanee, he ha.s d1Sfiiured his characters so that they may 001 tum to he the typ,cal p,ctures some readers found in his first book. Man passe,; htS vices remain, and to 1CCCntuate or ,how their effecu, •.he pea or the writer aspires Two features m the manu.script do not appear in the prin:cd book, namely; the FOREWORD and the WARNING These were not put into print, evidently, 10 save printing cost. '-'rip(ion oa Tide Pqe. The title page of Fl Fi/1bt<ttUl!Jmn contains an inscription written by Fcrdnand Blumentnn. Thi~ TIie Manmcripl ud th« Book. The original manlHCript of El FrlibUStl'rismo in Rizal's own handwriting is now preserved in the Filipiana Division of the Bureau of Public Libraries, Manila. It had been acquired by the Plulippinc Government from Valentin Ventura for PI0,000. It consists of 279 pages of long sheets of paper. The FOREWORD appears just before the dedicatory page in the manuscnpt II runs as follows: 10 We have w often been fnghtened by the phantom of filibustensm that from only a nu,:se's narrallOn 11 has become a ~twe and real being who,e name alone (in dcpov,ng us of our \Crtnity) maku us commit the peatcSt myths in order not to meet the !eared reality. Instead of Oeeing. we shall look at ,u face, and ,.,th determined, 1! inexpcn, hand we wll raise the ve,I 10 uncover before tbe multitude the mechanism of its skeleton lf. upon see,ng it, our country and its eovemment reOect, we shall consider ourselves happy no matter whether they ceR11ure us for the audacity, no nutter whether we pay for it like the young student of Sais who wished to pcncratc the secret of the priestly tmposurc. (On the other hand, if 1n tht face of reality, instead of being soothed, one', rear is inaeased and the trcp,dation of another is aggravated, then they wtll have tO be ~ft in the bands of lime which educates the living, in the hands of fatahty which weaves the destinies of peoples and their governments with the faults and errors that they are commimng ••cry day.) E11ropc, 1891 n.Alllllor 194 inscription, which 1s not found 10 many pubb,hcd English translations. is as follo-..-s: 11 It can easily be ,upJJO""d that a relic I (f1 h!,u,tem) hJ, secretly bewitched tbe league of friar-zealots ancl retrogrades so that, unwnungly !0Uowu1g his 1n<t1cmen1,. the} should favor and foment that pobcy which pur.un on~ "'le cn,f; 10 spread ideas of rebellion throughout rhe lcng1h and breadth of the land, and 10 convtn« every ~ bp,no 1ba1 there as no salvahon cxccpt through sep.uat,on f1mn the Mother Country. Fttdlnand Blummtntt Synopsis of FJ Filibusterismo. Tins novd is a ~qucl to the Noh. It has lmle humor. lci.s ,dcab,-m, and le!.!. romance than the Nolt Mr Tangu,. It" more rcvnlutionary. more tragic than the first novel. The hero of E,/ Filibusterismo is a nch Jc...,dcr named Simoun He was Cri50Stomo Ibarra of the /1.oli, who, with l:.l1a,. help, e$C8ped from the pursuing soldiers at Laguna de Bay. dug up his buried treasure, and Oed to Cuba where he hecamc rich and befriended many Sparush of!"icials. After many years. he returns 10 the Philippines, where he freel~ moved around. He " a po,.erful figure not only because he 1s a nch Jeweler, but also because he is a good friend and adviser of the governor general e ,n•---..- ,,_ '" Outwardly, Simoun is a friend of Spain. However, deep in his heart, he is secretly cherishing a terrible revenge against the Spanish authorities. His two magn,licen t obsessions arc (I) to rescue Maria Clara From the nunnery or Santa Oara and (2) to foment a revolution against the hated Spanish masters. The story of El Filibustl!ri.snw begins on board the clumsy, roundish shaped steamer Tabo, so appropriately named. This 6teamcr ,s ~ailing up,trcam the PaMg from Manila to Laguna de Bay A mo11g the pal>SCngers are Simoun, the rich jeweler; Doiia Victorina . the ridiculously pro-Spanish native woman who is go,ng to Laguna in search of her henpecked husband. Tiburcio de Cspadai111, who ha\ deserted her; Paulita Gomez, her beautiful niece; Ben-Zayb (anagram of Ibanez), a Spanish journalist who writes silly articles about the Filipinos; Padre Sibyla, Vice-Rector or the University of Santo Tomas; Padre Camorra, the parish prie•t of the town ofTiani; Don Custodio, a pro-Spanish Filipino holding a high position in the government; Padre Salvi, thin Franc,-n friar and former cura of San Diego; Padre Irene, a kind friar who was a friend of the fihpino students; Padre: Aorentino. a re tired scholarly and patriotic Filipino priest; lsagani, a poet-nephew of Padre Florentino and a lover of Paulita; and Ba~ilio. son of S,sa and promising medical student, whose medical educahon i\ financed by his patron, Capitan Tiago. Simo\ln. a man of wea!th and mystery. is a very close friend and confidante of the Spanish governor general. Because of his great influence in Ma\acaiiang, he was called the ·Brown Cardinar· o r the ·· mack Emin~nce" . By using htS wealth and his poli11cal influence, he encourages corruption in 1he government, promote~ lhc o ppression uC the masses, and hastens the moral degradation of the country so that the people may bcoome despcrnh: and light Ile smugglci, nrms into the country with the help of a rich Chinese merchant, Quiroga, who wants very much 10 be Chinese consul of Manila. His first attempt to begin the armed upr1~111g did n<>t materialize because at the last hour he hear-, the ~ad news that Marin Clara died in the nunnery. Jn his agonizing moment of bereavement, he di(! not give the signal for the outbreak of hostilities. After a long time of illness brought about by the bitter loss of Maria Oara. Simoun perfccu his plan to overthrow the 196 ()lwnt 08811 government. On the occasion of the wedding of Paulita Gomez and Juanito Pelaez, he &ivcs as wedding gift to them a beauuful lamp. Only he and his confidential a.o;s()QalJ:, Basilio (Sisa 's ,;on who joined his revolutionary cause), know that when the wick of his lamp burns lower the nitroglycerine, bidden in 11s secret compartment, will explode, destroy,ng the house where the wedding feast is going to be held and killing all ·he p,uests, includmg the governor general, the friars, and the government orlicial~. Simulu111co1L,ly. all the government buildings in Manila will be hlown by Simoun·~ followers. As the wedding fca~t begins, the pocl lsagnni, who ha< been rejected by Paulita bcc.<use of bis liberal ideas. is standing outside the house, watching sorrowfully the merriment inside. Ba~ilio. hi, rncnd. warns him to go away because the lighted lamp will soon explode. Upon hearing the horrible secret or the lamp, lsagani reali1.es that his beloved Pauhta was in grave dangec_ To save her life, he rushe~ ,nto the house. seizes the lighted lamp. and hurl> 11 into the nver, where rt explodes The revollut,onary plot was th~ diSCQYcred. Simoun WI$ cornered by the soldiers. but he escaped. Mortally wounded. and carrying his treasure chest, he sought refuge ,n the home of Padre Florentino by the sea. The Spanish authorities. however, learns of his presence in the house or Padre Aorentino Lieutenant Perez or the Guardia Civil inforn,s the priest by letter that be would come at eight o'dock 1ha1 111ght to arrc.~I Simnun Simoun cJudcd arrest by talung po,son. A5 he ,,. dying. he confc.ses to Padre Florentino, revealing htS true idcn1i1:y h,, dasiardly plan to use his wealth to avenge himself, and his sinister aim to destroy his friends and enemies. The confession of the dying Simoun is long and painful. fl is already night when Padre Florentino, wiping the sweat from his wrinkled brow, rises and begins to meditate He consoles the dying man, saying: "God will forgive you, Senor Simouo. He ,knows that we arc faUible . He bas seen that you have suffered. and in ordaining lhat the chastisement for· your faults should come as death From the very ones you have instigated ,,,. .1011 RIZAL: LIPI, WORU AHO WRITINOI to crime, we can see lfu infinite mercy. He has frustrated your plans one by one, the be!t conceived, first by the death of Maria Oara, then l>y a lack of preparation, then in some mysterious way. Let us bow to His will and render htm thanks!" Watching Simoun die peacefully with a clear conscience and at peace with God, Padre Florentino murmurs: "Where are the youth who will cons~rotc their golden hours, their illusions, and th<:ir cnthusiBlm to 1hc wclfore of their native land? Where arc the youth who ,.;u ~ncrously pour out their blood to wash away so much shame. so much crime. so much abomination? Pure and spotlc" muM the victim be that the sacrii;ce may be acceptable! Where are you, youth, who will embody 1n )Ourselves the vigor or hfc that has left our vein,, the punty of idc,is that has been contaminated in our brams, the fire of enthu~1asm that hu been quenched in our h"JlrtSI We await you, O youth! Come, for we await you!" Padre Florentino falls upon his knee~ and prays for the dead jeweler. H e takes the treasure chest and throws 11 into the sea. As the waves cioi,e over the ~inking ch~t. ht lnvol.es: "May nature guard you 1n her deep abyss,,~ among the pearls and coruls of her ctcmut scus When for !.Omc ht1I) and sublime purposes man may need you. God will m I Ii< wisdom draw you from the bosom of the waves Meanwhile. there you wlll not work woe, you will not d"tort jw.ticc, you will not foment avarice!" There are other characters in El Filrb11s1crismo There is Cabcsang Tales, who is dispossessed of his land in Tiani by the friars like that of Rizal's father. In desperation, he becomes a bandit chieftain named Matanglawin. I-Ii, daughter Juli, sweetheart of Basilio (Sisa's son), kill~ heri;clf rather than he dishonored by Padre Camorra. There is Macaraig, a rich stu~en t and leader of. the Filipino students in their movement to have an academy where they oould learn Spanish. There is the bigoted Dominican friar-professor, Padre Millon, who teaches ph~ics in the University of Santo Tomas without scientific expcnments. Ooc of his ,tudents, Placido Penitente from Batangas, becomes discontented with the poor method of instruction in the university. And there is Senor Pasta, the old Filipino lawyer, who ,,. refuses to help the Filipino students in chcu I" 1,1wn cu th~ government for educational reforms Other characters in £/ Filil>ustemmo Jrc T.indam· 'id,> grandfather of Juli and Cabesang Tales· tac her , Mr Am~nc.111 impressario who owned the side,how at chc fcrt:t (f,ur ) 111 (J111.q,11 exhibiting an Egyptian mummy: Sandoval. .i Span"h ,1ud,·nt who supports the cause of the Filipino studcnc, 1,, propaµ.,t<: the teaong of Sparush: Pe~n. om.· of the Fihpmo students who agitates for the ccachmg of Spanish. C'at,cs,ma And,ing. th<. mother o f Placido Penitente: Pepay; the prcttv dar1t·c:r ;ind mi,tress of Don Custodio; Padre Fernandez. a g,w><t Dl>mm1<:.in friar and friend of lsagani. Don Timoccu , the [.ichcr ,11 Ju;i1111n Pelaez: Tano. lhe son of Cahe~ang Talc, :ind hmthcr nl iuli . and Ch1chay, che ~ilvcr~m11h who made the hri<l.il ,·.11 nnµ, f,,1 Paultca Gomez. As m the Noli the characters tn Ii./ F1/1bw,temmo were drawn by_Rizal from real life. For in,can~ , r,,drc Florcntmn w," l'ath<"r Leonl'io Lopez, Rizal's friend and prie~t of C'nlamha: 1'a~.,ni the poet was Vicente !lustre. Batanguerio friend of R11al 111 Madrid and P.auli1a Gomcl. the girl who ln~ctl h,,g.1111 but married Juanito Pelaez, was Leonor Rivera ''Noll" ana, "FIii" Compared. The two nnvch of Rit.11 v:1rv in many respects, although they are writlen by lhe ,.imc author and arc supposed to be deahng with the same ,tory and have the same characters. The Nolt is a rom11ntic novel , 11 " a "work of the heart" - a "book of feeling"; it has freshness . color, humor, lightness, and wit. On lhe other band, lhe Fili is a political novel; 11 1s a "work of the head~ - a " book of the thought", it contain; biucrncss. hatred, pain, violence. and sorrow. The original intention of Rizal was co make the F,/1 longer than the Noli. As printed, however, it is shorter than the Nol, It onntains 38 chapters as against the No/i's 6-1. Rizal had to cut the Fi/1 drastically owing to lack of funds. The friends of Rizal and our Rizahsts mday differ ,n opinion Nolt or the Ftlr. Rizal himself considered the Noli as supenor 10 the Fi/r as a novel. thereby agreeing with M.H. del Pilar who had the ~amc opinion. 12 as to which is the superior novel - the 199 JOSI: RIZAL: LIFE._._, -IINCA Retana, R.iul's fml Spanish biographer, also believes that the Noli is superior to the Fili.•> However. others - includin& Blumentritt, Graciano Lop~ Jaena. and Or. Rafael Palma'• - are of the opinion that the Fil, is superior to the Noli. Lopez Jacna, in a letter 10 Rita.I dated October 2, 1891, said: "El Filibusterismo is a novel superior 10 your Noli Me Torige-re, as much for its exquisite delicate. literary style, ns easy and correct dialogue, its clear ph(aseology. vigorous and elegant. as for its profound ideas and sublime thoughts" 15 However he was not satisfied fully with the Fili as a poliucal novel because its -end is not a wonhy climax to a worlc w beautiful-. Accordingly. he advised Rizal to write another novel which would give a definne SQJution to the country's problem so that "the coming of the beautiful day of our redemption" may be hastened. The issue or which is the supenor novel - the Nol, or the Fili L\ purely academic. Both arc good novels from the point of view of history Boah depict wiah rcalbtic colors the actual conditions of the Philippines and the Filipinos during the decadent days or Span~h rule, both arc mstrumenlal in awakening the spinl of Filipino naaionalism; and boah are responsible 1n paving the ground for the Philippine Revolution thaa brought about the downfall of Spain. Neither the Noli nor lhe Fili is superior to one anoaher. As Mariano Ponce apaly told Rini, after reading the Fili: "It is, indeed, ocellcnt, I ,-an say nothing of your boolc, but lhis: It is really marvelous like all the brilliant productions of your pen. It i, a true twin or 11.e Nolt' .'h Rlzal's Ualiaisbed Tbird Novel. Even before Lopez Jaena suggcsac<.l 1he wming of another novel, Rizal had already in mind to pen a third novel. On September 22, 1891. four days after the Fili Qme off rhe press, he WTote to Blumentriu: "I am thinking of writing a third novel, a novel in the modem ~cn,c of lhc word, but tbl!. iimc polilics will not find much space in it, but ethics will play the principal role. I shall deal mainly with ahe habits and customs of the Filipinos. and only two Spaniards, lhe friar curate and the lieutenant of the Guardia Civil will be ahere . I wi!.h to be there. I wish to be humorous, satirical and winy. to weep and to laugh, to laugh amidst tears, that is. to cry bitterly".'' 200 Oo October 18, 1891. Rial boarded the steamer M~lbournr in Marseille, bound for H ong Kong. During the voyage he bc&an wririn~ the ahird novel in Tagalog which he intended for Tagalog readers. In Hong Kong he continued it , but for some rcru.on or another he d,d not finish 11. The unfinished third novel htt> no 1i1lc. It consists ol 4-1 p,1~cs 01 cm ,c 21 cm ) in Rital\ h~ntlwriaing ,till in mknuscripl form. 11 b pre!><:rved in the Nalinnal L1hran Manila . Tht stor} of this un11mshed no,c! begins v.ith the ,;.,Jemn bun al of Prince 1 agul,ma, son of Sultan Zaidt of I ~m:11< un Malap:10 -na 13..st<>. ,l bi!( rocl,. on 1hc hank of ahc ras111 River. Suhan Za,dc. w11h h1> royal famih antl rcwin~r,. " ·'' 1aken pnsoner by the Spanmrd; during the war, on 1hc Moluc~:,, dlld broughl 10 Manila TI1c old ,ultJn, h" ch,lthcn . and 1..11u.. cr, were ,,romiscd good areatment. hut lhc Spaniard, forgol 1hctr promi...: and lei ahem die one by one in m1Sel) The hero of the novel was Kamandagan. a dc><.'cndant of LaJ..an Dul,t, IJsl king of Tondo. I le plotted to regain the loi.t frcctlurn ol h" faahcrs. One day he ,.wed hi~ ,..,o hcauaiful granddaughters. Mahgaya and Sinagtala. from the lustful Spaniard; - 1hc cum and the encomcndcro or Bay. Laguna. It 1s said that Rizal was fortunate not 10 have fim,hed this novel. hccau,c It would have caused greater sc,tndal an<.l more Spani,h vcnitc-ance on him. '" Ri,al'~ Ocher Unfinished No•els. Rizal had other unfinished novels One of them is entialed Makamisa, a novel in Tagalog. It " wr,11cn in a hght sarcasuc style and is inoompletc for only two (·h,1p1crs are fini>hed The manuscnpt con~ist, of 20 page~. J4 1 cm. x 22 cm Ano1hcr novel which R1wl started 10 wriac was cn1i1led l>u1mm1 . It •~ unlin,shed. wruten in Imme Spanish. He wrote 11 dur111g h" exile in Dapitan to depict 1he to""n life and customs l he m.1nu,cnp1 consists of K pages , 23 cm . x 16 cm. '\ n<,vcl in Spanish abnul 1he life in Pili, a town in Laguna, " al>o unllmshed The manuscript consists of 147 pages. 8" x 6 ;;• , w11hnu11111c Among the characters are tht! folluwing: Padre Ag.iaon, a Span,&h friar; Capitan Paochong end Cap,tana Barang; Cecilia, their pretty daughter; Jsagani. lover of Cecilia; Capitan l81 JOIE AIZAL LIFE, WOAKI AHO WAITINGS Crispin. political nval of Panchong; and Dr. LnpcL ~ rrec thinker Another unfinished novel of Ri-rol, also "t1hou1 11tk ,, about Cristobal, a youthful Filipino student who ha, rcturncJ from Europe. The manuscript consists of 34 pages. 8 1/~· ~ 1>11," Among the characters are Cnstobal. who ha, ,tud,cd rm 12 year~ in Europe: Amelia. his swecthean; Capirnn R;1mnn 1hc father of Cristobal; a Dominican friar: a Franci~an fnar. :ind • Span,~h lieutenant of the Guardia Cavil. The heginnings of another novel arc contained III two notebooks - the first notebook conia,n, 3 I wrincn p:igc, , Vi,5 cm . x 22 cm. and the second 1'.! wrincn pages. 2'.! cm , 17 .cm Through the mouth of rhe celesual characters. th.c author deM,ribc~ the deplorable condition~ t)f the Ph1lipp111c, I h" unfini,hetl novel is wriuen -in Spanish. and the ,tyk " irun,c .. • ♦ • ♦ Chapter 20 Ophthalmic Surgeon in Hong Kong (1891-92) After the publication of El Filibusterismn, Ri1ol lef1 Fumpc for Hong Kong, where he lived from Novemher. lt\91 to June, 1892. His reasons forleaving Europe were ( I) hfo wus urihcaratile in Europe because of his political difference, w11h M II dcl Pilar and other Filipinos in Spain' and (2) to he near his idolized Philippines and family. Before sailing ror Hong Kong. he notified Del Pilar that ho was retiring from the political arena m Spam in order to preserve unity among tht' compatnots and thlll despite their paniog of ways, he had the highest regard for him ' Farnrdl to Europe. On October 3, 1891. 1wo v.ccks after the publication or the Fili, Rizal left Ghent for Pans, where he atayed a few days to say goodbye tq the l..unn~ . the Pardo de Taveras, the Venturas, and other friends·. He proceeded hy train to Marseilles and on October 18 he boarded the steamer Md• boum~ bound for Hong Kong. He brought with him a lcllcr of reoommendalion by Juan Luna for Manuel Camus. a comp:.triot living in Singapore. and 600 copies of the Fili. The trip was delightful, ~heavenly", in Rizal's own opinion. Writing to Blumentritt on October 22, 1891, he Sllid: "Smee we left Marseilles, we have had . . . magnificent weather. The sea is calm, placid like glass, the sky blue. the air fresh and invigorating. Truly it is a heavenly trip".' Ibere were over 80 first-class passengers - mostly Europeans, including two Spaniards who were go,og 10 Amoy. Ri2al wu the only Asian among lhem. As usual, he amazed his fellow-passen gers because of his knowledge of many languages 101 l03 °""---••llo"t1C.... 11•t-1mt his still in sketching. He befriended many missionaries llalia.o Franciscans, French Jesuits, and a bishop, Msgr. Velen• tcri - all going to Olina. With one of them, Father Fuchs, a Tyrolcse, be enjoyed playing chess. Speaking of this priest, be wrote: to Blwnentritt: "He is a fine fellow, n Father Damaso without pride and malice".• and Rial_. the Cofffflan ladles. An incident happened 10 Rizal on board the Melbourne during the trip to Hong Kong. One evening at dinner time the passengers were having their meal in lhc dining room . Rizal , being the only Asian. was eating alone al one table. Near him was a bigger table occupied by some German ladies who were gaily eating and gossiping abaut lhc lone Asian male who was quietly taking his meal. Rizal, who was 0uent in German , understood what the 1allta1ive German ladies were saying about him, bu1 he simply kept silent, letting the ladies enjoy their gossip. Suddenly the fast running steamer encountered a heavy sqw,11 and the door of the dining room was blown open. Nobody among the passengers who were busy eating stood up to close the door. A lady said to her companions in German: "If this man in front of us were a gentleman he would close the door". Upon hearing her remark, Rizal, without saying a word, rose and clOl<Cd the door, after which he resumed his seat. He then conversed with the German ladies in perfect German Of course, the German ladies were very much embarrassed, and thereafter they treated Rizal with admtration and respect. despite his brown skin, for he ' was a cultured gentleman. Anivfd in Hone Kong. Rizal arrived in Hong Kong on November 20, 1891 . He was welcomed by the Filipino resident~. especially his old friend , Jose Ma. Basa. He established his res,dcna: at No. S D ' Aguilar Street, No. 2 Rcdnaxola Terrace, where he also opened his medical clinic. On Dcccmhcr I, 1891. he wrote his parents asking their permission to return home. On the same dale, his brother-in-law, Manuel T . Hidalgo-, sen.I him a letter, relating the sad news of the "deponation of twenty-five persons from Calamba, including father, Neoeng, Sisa, Lucia, Paciano, and the rest ofus". Hidalgo also Slated in his letter that he wa.~ prq,aring a letter to the 204 Queen Regent of-Spain explaining tbe Calamba situation in order to secure justice. "If the Queen will not listen~, he said, Mwe will write to Queen Victoria of England appealing for protection in the name of lrumanity . . ." 5 Hidalgo's letter clearly revealed the despair and sorrow. of the Rizal family. Dr. Rizal in Hong Kong, w dose to Manila, wa.~ desperately sad, fof'he could not succor his persecuted family and relatives. Famn,- Reullioo In Hoag Kong. Before Christmas of I 891, be was gladdened by the arrival of his father, brother, and Silvestre Ubaldo (his brother-in-law) in Hong Kong. Not long afterwards his mother and sisters Lucia, Josefa, and Trinidad also arrived. His mother was then 65 years old and was almost blind. She had suffered so much from Spanish brutality and injustice. The year bcrorc ( 1890) she was arrested on the ni,my charge that she was not using her surname " Realonda" and, ~pite her advanced age and blindness, she was forced by a cruel Spanish officer of Lbe Guardia Civil to walk from Calamba to Santa Cruz ( capital of Laguna). Fonunatrly, the Spanish governor of Laguna, who happened to be a gallant cavalier, pitied her and kindly set her free. 6 The Chnstmas of 1891 in Hong l\.ong was one of the happiest Yuteude celebrations in Rizal's lire. For he had a happy family reunion. On January 31, 1892, he wrote to Blumentrin, recounting their pleasant life in Hong Kong, as follows: ~Here we are all loving together, my parents. sisters, and brother, in peace and far from the persecutions they suffered in the Philippones. They are very much pleased with the English government" .1 Ophll'lahnic Surgeon ia Hong Kong. To earn a living for himself and for his family, Rizal practised medicine. A Portuguese physician , Dr. Lorenzo P. Marques, who became his friend_ ~nd admirer, helped him to build up a wide clientele. In recogmt1?n of Rizal's skill as an ophthalmic surj!eon, he turned over to him many of his eye cases. In due time, Dr. Rizal became a ,uccessful ano well-known medical practitioner in the British oolony. He had many patients, including British,, Cbioese, Portuguese, and Americans. He suc:ies c:eafully operated oo bis mother's left eye so that she was able to read and write again. Miele from being an eye specialist , he was a general practitioner. Writing to Blumenlritt on January 31, 1892, he said: "Here I practise as a doctor and I have . . . here many sidt or influenza because there is an epidemic . Through the newspapers I am infonncd 1ha1 this sickness is also causing ravages in !Europe. I hope you and your esteemed family will be spared. ln our house, my mother, my brother-in-law, and one of my sisten. arc s.ick . Thank God, 1hey are out or danger~.• On March 7, 1892, he went to Sandaka<1 on board the ship Menon to negotiate with \he British aulhorites for the establish· mcnt of a Filipino colony. He looked over the land up the Beng,kok.a River in Maradu Bay which was offered by the British North Borneo Company. His mission wa.s successful . The Brimh authorities or Borneo were willing 10 give the Filipino colonists 100,000 acres of land, a beautiful harbor, and a good government for 999 years, free of all charges. n By April 20. he was back in Hong Koog. Some friends of Rizal who were in Europe gave him moral and substantial aid in his medical practice in Hong Kong. From Biarriti, Mr. Boustead, Nellie's father, wrote to him on March 21, 1892, praising him for practising his medical profession. Or, Ariston Bautista IAn, from Paris, sent him a congratulatory letter and a book on Diagnostic Pathology by Or . H. Virchow and another medical book entitled Tra11t D1agnosriqu" by Mes, nichock. 9 Don Anlonio Vergel de Oios, also from Paris, offered him his services for lhe purchase of medical books and instruments which he might need in his profcSSion . 10 Jacna, Blumentritt, Or. Bautista Lin, etc - e nthu5iu,tically endorsed his Borneo coloniiation project. Lopei Jae na expres,,.:d his desire to join the colony. Writing 10 Rizal o n May 26. 1892, he i.aid : ··1 have a great desire of joining you . Reserve for me there (Borneo) a piece of land where I can plant suga rcane. l shall go there..• to dedicate myself to the cultivation of sugarcane and the making of sugar. Send me fur1her details ... ., Rizal possessed the qualities of a great ophthalmic surgeon. Had he devoted his lifetime to the practice of medicine he: would have become one of Asia's eminent ophthalmologists. In the words of Dr. Geminiano de Ocampo, distinguished Filipino ophthalmologist: 11 He (Rizal) had all the qualities that would make an ideal opththalmic surgeon - a keen and analytical intellect, lightneSJ of touch and artimy of a painter, 000rQge and imperturbability, a· broad and deep knowledge of medicine and ophthalmology, and last but not least, he had been properly and adequately trained by master ophthalmic •ur aeons. ~ "ok-1:atloie Project. ln the face or the bleak outlook of the Calamba foiks under Governor Valeriano We11er's terroristic regime, Rini conceived the establishment of a Filipino ooloay in North Borneo (Sabah). He planned to move the landless Filipino familiea to that rich British-owned island and carve out of its vil'!lin wildness a ~New Calamba- .12 Rizal's friends 1n Europe - Juan and Antonio LuAa, Lopez One of Rizal's brothers-in-law, Hidalgo, the brave Batanguello, objected 10 the ooloni:talion project. "This idea about Borneo,- he told Rizal , "is no good. Why should we leave the Philippines, this beautiful country of ours? And besides what will people say? Why have we made all 1hese sacrifices? Why should we go 10 a foreign land without first exhau11ing all means for the welfare of the country which nurtured us from our cradles? Tell me that!" 15 New trends of events in the PbiliPi>U1eS gave R12.al a new hope for realizing his Borneo project . The infamous Weyler, whom the Cubans odiously called "The Butcher," was relieved of his gubernatorial office. A new governor generaJ Eulogio Despujol, the Count of Caspe, announced to lhe Filipino people a fine program of government . In the belief that Governor Despujol was sincere in his beautiful promises of a better government, Rizal sent him a letter of felicitation and offering his cooperation. 16 The governor general, violating the simple rule of Spanish courtesy. did not even acknowledge receipt of his letter. After vainly waiting for three months for a reply to his fin! letter (dated December 23, 1891) Rizal wrote a seoond letter 2(17 0111,Mmlc â– •- In HOftf K°"' 118111 18f21 dated Mardi 21, 1892 ano ga,e it to II ship captain to be sure it would reach Governor Despujol's hand. In this seoond letter, he requested the governor general to;ermit the landlC$S Filipinos to establish themselves in Borneo. 1 Once more Despujol did not give Rizal the ~courtesy of a reply" lnstca~. he notified the Spanish con,ul general in Hong Ko_ng to tell Rizal that he could not approve the Filipino immigration to Borneo, alleging that ''the Philippines lacked laborers" und ··u ""' not •l·ry pa1rt('>11c to go off and cul11vatl' torc,gn soil" Writings in Hoog Kuna. N<>twith~tanding the pressure of his medical practice and h,s Borneo coloni1at10n project. Rizal ct>ntinucd his writing,. He wrote ~ Ang Mga Karapatar, Nang Tao," which is a Tagalog translatic,n of "The Rights of Man" proclaimed hy the French Revoluhon in 1789. About the same time (1891), IJe wrote "A la Nadon Espanola'' (To the Spanish Nation). which is on appeal to Spam to right the wrongs done to the Calamba tenants. Another proclamation, entitled Mga Kababayo11'" (To my Countrymen), was wrillen 1n December, 1891 explaining the Calamba agru, an situation. ··so Rizal contributed articles to the Bnush daily news-paper, The Ho11g Ko11g TC'legroph, whose cduor, Mr. Frazier Smith, was his friend: ~opies of this newspaper entered the Philippines so that the F1hpmo people were able Lo read Rt.:al's articles. The vigilant Spanish censors soon dtscoverc<.1 the spread of R1zal's tdeds and immediately banned the Hong Kong ncwsp~pcr On March 2, I 892, Rii:al wrote "U11a Vi.lira a l/J V.ctona Gaol" (A Visit to Victoria Gaol), an account of his visit 10 the colonial prison of Hong Kong. In this article be contrasted the cruel Spanish prison system with the modem and more humane British prison system. To elucidate his pet Borneo colonization project. he wrote an article in French entitled "Colonisation du British Nonh Born~o, par de Familles dtt lies Philippints'" (Colonizauon of British North Borneo by Families from the Philippine Islands). He elaborated on the same idea in another article in Spanish, 0 "Proy«to de Coloniwcion del British North Borneo por Los 208 Filipinos" (Project of the Coloniutlon of British North Borneo by the Filipin~). Jn June. 1892, he wrote " l...o Mano Rojo" (The Red H~nd) which was printed in sheet form in Hong Kong. II dc·nounccs the frequent outbreaks of intentional fires m Manila. The most important writing made by Rizal dunng his Hong Kong sojourn was the Con,mut11>n of the Liga Fihpina. wh!ch was printed in Hung Kong, 1892. To deceive the ~pant~h ~uthoritie~. the printed copies carried the false 1nformattC1n !hat che printing was done by the LONDON PRINTIN~ ~RESS, No 25, Khulug Street, London The idea ~f ~stabl1>hm11 the Liga Filipino (Philippine League), an assoc1a1ton_ of patnouc Filipinos for civic purposes. was originally_concc,v~d by Jose Ma. Basa. but ,1 wa~ Rizal wrho wrote 11s c:on~t,11.mo_n ~nd realized iu cstahlishment Copies of the printed _Liga con1t11~11on were 'lent by Rizal to "Domingo Franco, his fnend ,n Manila. Otcl5ion to Return to Manila. In May, 1892. Rizal made up tus mind to return to Manila. This dcc,s100 was spurred by the following: (I) to conrer with Governor I?espujol . rcgu~d~ng hil Borneo coloniiauon project; (2) to estabhsh the L1ga Fihpma in Manila; and (3) to prove that Eduardo de i:,e1c was wrong in attacking him in Madrid that he (Rizal), being comfortable and safo in Hoog Kong, had abandoned the country 's ~use. Lete's attack. which was printed in l...o Solidaridad on A~nl 15, 1892, portrayed Rizal as cowardly, egoistic, opponunu11c :-- a patriot in words o nly. Rizal vehemently protested to Del Pilar, the editor of La Sclidaridad, saying: "I am more convinced _1ha1 ,Letc: , in writmg the arucle, was too hasty, and you pc_rm11ted yourself 10 Ile carried 11wny Fnend or enemy. 1t the a~_,cle ha\ harmed me, it would harm more the intcre,;ts or the Ph1hppincs. Who knows, however. if after all it was for th.! best; 11 _has shaken me awake, and after a long silence I enter t~c field anew .• J am going to activate the Propaganda again and ror1ify the Liga". 1" To Ponce, Riz.al confided on May 23, 1892: "I am very sorry that Del Pilar allowed the article to be pubhsh~ because it will lead many to believe that there is really a schtS.m. among us, I believe thlt we can well have little. misundcn,ta_n~hng and pcnonal differences amonc ourselves, without exhibiting them 109 °"".........._ -IIIIAL Lll'l,WOflKIANDWIIITINCII in public. . . As for myself..• . I always welcome cri1icisms because lhey improve lhosc who wish lo be improved'', 19 Latt Rona Kon1 uutn. Relauves and friends of Rizal opposed his decision to return home because ii was like bearding lhe lions in their den. His sis1er Trinidad 1earfu.lly warned him 10 desist, •ror here 1hey will kill you•. 20 Nol even the fear of dea1h could de1er Rizal from his decision. ?n June I 9, 1892, he spen1 his 31st binhday in Hong Kong. Ev1den1ly, he had a premonilion of his death for the following day, June 20 he wrote 1wo letters which h~ sealed inscribed on each envelop "10 be opened after my dea1h:,, and gave them to. his friend Dr, Marques for safekeeping. In the pages of history there is scarcely a parallel for 1hese two sealed leuers, which were vinually Rizal's polil1cal testaments. The first leucr, addressed TO MY PARENTS. BRETHREN , AND FRIENDS. is as follows. 21 . The affcct~on 1h11 I have ever professc,d for you wggc~,s lh1$ step, and hme alone can tell whether or 001 it is 5ensible. The outcome judges things according to the consequences; but whether ._t he result be favorable or unfa-orablc, 11 may alway, be said lhat duty urged me, so if I die in doing ii it will not mancr. ' I realize how much suffering I have caused you yet I do nol rcare1 whal I have done. Ra1her .• if I had '10 begin over again I should do just the same, for what I have done ha1 been only in pursw1 of my duty. Oladly do J go 10 expo5C myself to peril, nol as an expiation ol misdeeds for in this matter I believe myself guiltless of any, but to complete my work and so 1ha1 I , myself, may offer the examples of which I have alway, preached. A man ouaJit 10 die for duty and his principle,. t 1,olJ f,ast to every Idea which I have advanced as to the condition and future of our couintry, and shall willingly die for it, and even more willingly sacrifice all to secure justice: and peace for you. With pleasure, then, I risk life to save so many innocent J!Cl'i0n1 - 50 many nlca:s !1lld nephews, 10 many children of friends, and children loo of o t.h cD who arc nol even friends - who arc suffering on my account. What am I? t~o In Hona 1(0•1 ll8lll 18112l A bachelor, prlCllcally wilhou1 a family and 1uffiocnlly undueived u to life . I have had many disaPl"'intmenu and the Mure before me is gloomy, and will be gloomy if light docl 001 illumlnale II w11h the dawn of a btller day for my native land . On the Olher hand, there are many persons. filled with hope and ambi11on, who perhaps might be happier if 1 were dead, and 1hcn 1 hope my enem1cR would be 5Alisfied and stop persecutin& so many enllrely innocenl people. To a certain exlent their haired is justifiable as 10 myself, and my parents and relatives Should file go agalnsl me, you w,U all underatand lh~l I shall die happy In the lhoutht that my death will end all your troubles. Return 10 our country and ma:, you be happy In It. Till the hut moment of my life I ,h.1ll be thinking of you and wistun& you all good fonune and happiness. The second letter, addressed TO THE FlLIPINOS. is as follows:Z2 The step which 1 am taking, or 1a1hcr am Jhou1 If\ tal<c, is undoub1cdly risky, and 11 as unnecc<qry 10 '•) 1ha1 I have considered it for some lime. I understand 1ha1 almc~ every one is opposed , 10 It. hut I knu., al,o 1h31 hardly anybody el$C undcrs1ond1 what i1 In my hear& l cannol lave on seeing so many suffer UDJU..l perscamon on m) accounr. I cannot bear 1he s1gh1 or my ,us1crs and lheir numernu~ families 1rea1ed like crimlnall l prefer dealt> and cheerfully shall relinquish life 10 free 50 many innocent persons from 1uch unius1 per1ecution. I appreciate the fact lb.II al prc..:n1 1hr future nf nur counlry sravita1es in some dearcc around me, that at my death many will feel tnumpbant, and thus, many arc now wishing for my fall. Bui whal of it? I hold dulic, of c1>1\l\C1c11<c above all else . I have obligatioM to the families who suffer. to my aged parents whMc sight stnkes me 10 the bean. I know lhll I alone, only with my dea1h, can make them happy, returning them 10 their nali,·c land to a peaceful hCe al home. I am all my pa<ffll$ have. but our country hJ, many more sons wh1• can take my place and even do my work better. Besides I wish to show those who deny us lhe boon of patriodsm that we know how 10 dle for duly and principles. 211 -lllZAL : LJ.._ _ _ _1111 • What matten death, tf one dies for what one IO\'U for natNe land and bcina- held dcu? • If I lhou&tit that I ' wue the only l"CIOUfCe lor the comu111111t~n of a policy of progreu in I.be Philippines and wen: I convmced that my countrymen were goi1lg to malte u~ of my services, perha1J6 I should bc:aitale about taltina this step: but then: uc others who can take my place, who can do my serv,cc1 that arc not utilized, and t am reduced to inactivity. Always have I loved our unhappy land, and I am sure that J shall ~ntinuc loving it till my lasl moment, ia case men prove uniust to me. My cueer, my life. my happiness - all 1 have sacririced for love of it, Whatever my fate I s~all die blessing it and longing for I.be dawn of i!S redemp- 11on On June 21, 1892, Raal penned another leucr in Hong K:ong for Governor 0cspujol, incidcnt&lly bis third letter to that disoouncous Spanish chief executive. In this letter. he informed the governor general of his coming to Manila and placed himself under the protection of the Spanish govemmcnt. b On the same date (June 21st), R.tzaJ and his sister Lucia widow of Herbosa , left Hong Kong for Mani". They carried~ spcaal passpon or •safe-<X>flduct~ issued by the Spanish consulgeneral an Hong Kong. Rizal Falb Into Spulsh Tnp. hnmcdjaiely after Ri.i::al'a departure from Hong Kong , the Spanish consul-general , who issued the govcm_mcnt guarantee of safety, sent a cablegram to Go,crnor DespuJol that the ~ictim •ii, 1n the trap~. 2• On the sumc day (June 21. 1892) a scc,et case was filed in Manil.a against Rizal and his followers •fo,- anti-religious and anti-patriotic agitat10n... 2_, The dcce1tful Despujol ordered his secretary, Luis de la Tone, to find out if Rizal was n3turalized as a German citizen, a~ wab Nmored, so that he might take proper actM>n against one "who had the protection of a strong nation•. 26 Meanwhile , Rizal and bis sister were pc-fully crossi:n& the Ouna Sea. They were fully unaware of the Spanish d u plicity. ~ Chapter 21 Second Homecoming And The Liga Filipina Rizal's bold return to Manila in JW\e, 1892 was his second homecoming his first holl)CCOmmg from abroad being in August, 1887. It marked his re-entry into the bazardoias campaign for reforms. He firmly beheved that the fight for Filipino liberties• bad assumed a new phase; it must be fought in the Philippines not tn Spam. '"The battlefield is in the Philippines,• be told countrymen in Europe, "There is where we should meet , There we will help one another, there 1oaether we will suffer or triumph perhaps•. 1 Two month& later , on December 31, 1891, he reiterated this belief in a letter to , Blumentrltt, Ml believe that /.A Solularidod is no longer our battlefield; now it 2 is a new stNgale... the fi&ht is no longer in Madrid•. ln going home to lead anew the reform movement, be was like the biblical Daniel bearding the Spanish lion In its own den Arrival In Manila with Sllttt, At noon of June 26, 1892, Rizal and his widowed ,ister Lucia (wife of the late Mariano Herbosa) arrived in Manila. A meticulous diarist, he descnbed his second homecoaung u follows:> I arrh,ed at Manila on 26 June (1891), Sunday, at 12:00 noon. I was met by many canbinecrs headed by a major. There were in addition one captain and one sergeant of the Veteran Ovil Ouard. I came down onlh my luuaae and they 1n1pected me al the cuatomhowe. Flom there I went to Hotel de Oriente where I occupied room No. 22, facing the churcb of Binondo·. In the afternoon, at 4:00 o'dock, be went to Malacallan Palace to seek audience with UM Spanilb peroor aeoeral, 213 , - . lll~AL, UPI, WOIIU AND "~ITUIDa Gener.I EuJogio Despujol, Conde de Caspc.' He was told to ;:mereturned back at that rug~t at 7 00 o'clock Promplly at 7:00 p.m. to ~alacanan and was able to confer w11h Go,erno; :n~~. '::!;;rJol, who •~reed to pardon his father but not the IS Yand told him 10 return 00 WednC$day (June 29)., . Aft~ ~ brief mtcrv1ew with the governor genera he: ~ted h15 a,steu in the city- fi~st Narasa (Sua, wife of Antonio Lopez) and later Nenc:ng (Saturnina, wife of Manuel T. Hidalgo). Vllltlq Frlfflds In Ceatral L foUowm da ( . IQOII, At 6:00 P.M of the • .8 y .June 27), R.iz.al boarded a train in Tutuban Sta1ion and VISlted h11 fnends ,n Malol~ (Bulacan). San Fern~ndo (Pampanga), Tarlac (Tarlac), a.nd Bacolor (Pampangu) ~ He wa, welcome~ and lavtSbly entenamed at the homes of his friend\ ~ /nend,, were good patnou, who were his supporters '" re orm crusa~, and he. took the <>pportunu> to ~1cc1 them pe:rso~ally • nd discussed the problem~ affcctin1 their people. S ~•1 returned b} tram 10 Manila on the next day June 28 o c1oclt ,n the afternoon . Whether he k • • was shadowed b . ne.., 11 or not. he at y go,ernment spies who watched carefull> his every movement . The ~Omei he had v1SJu:d were raided by the Guar~a C1v1I which sc12ed some copies of the Nolt and F:t d some • sub•e"1ve pamphlets , , an . ,s v1;i1 . 10 his . ter Rizal friendOther · Clntuvlew, "'Ith OnP'1Joi • Af 5 entt:al Luzon. he had other interviews with Go,enor G _enera cspu1ol. These interviews were vividly recorded h diary, as follows: 7 ' " ,~ !'b On Wednesday (June Z9 - Z) at 7.30 I -..w th, ExcellellC)'. I dtd not sucaed lo have the penalty of ex,le hlled, bul he me h""" lo my $ISie~. As . ·r· Wllh ••gard •~ atoded was lhc fcaS1 of St Peacr and S1 Paul o ur in1cr.1cw ,._ e at ,,.,15.1 was to come agam the following <by at 7 ,30 &••• TM foUowmgday, Thursday (lune .JO). we talked aboui the q,-uon of Borneo. The ,eneral wa. opposed 10 11 very much opposed He . , lold me 10 come ~ck Sunday ' On Sunday (July 3 - Z .) I returned. We talked aboua suodry !lungs and I thanked htm fo, having hllcd the exile or my mien. I told him that my father and brother would amve oo lhe 6nt boat. He asked me if I would like lo ao abroad to Hona Kong. I told 1nm yes He told me to re1um on Wednuday. "'the FDIPPldtna Up li'Ulplna. On the evening of Sunday ,July 3, 1892, following his morning interview with Go,ernor General Despujol, Rizal attended a mcctin& of the patriots at the home of the Chinese-Filipino mestizo, Dorotea Ongjuneo, on Ylaya Street, Tondo, Manila. Among those present were Pedro Serrano Laktaw (Pand.ay Plra), a Mason and school teacher, Domingo Franeo (Ftllpc uol), Muon and tobacco shopkeeper; Jose A . Ram05 (Socorro), ensnver, printer, owner of Bazar Gran Bretaila. and fint Wonbipful Master of Nilod, fint Filiptno masonie lodge; Amb~io Salvador, gobcmadorcillo of Quiapo and Mason; Bonifacio Arevalo (Hartm), dentist and Mason; Deodato AreUa.n o, brother-in-law of M.H . del Pilar and ovtlian employee in the army; AmbrOSI0 F)ores (Mu.ro ), retired heutcnan1 of infantry; Agustin de la Rosa. bookkeeper and Mason: Moises Salvador (Araw), contractor and -Mason: Luis Villareal. tailor and Mason; Faustino Villarruel (flaw) pharmacist and Mason, Mariano Crisostomo, landlord; Numeriano Adriano (/pi(), notary public and Mason; Estaruslao Legaspi, artisan and Mason: Teodoro Plata, court clerk and Mason; Andres Bonifacio, warehouse employee; Apolinario Mablru (Kotabay). lawyer and Ma~n: and J1&&11 Zulucta, playwriJbt, poet, and &0"ernmcnl employee Rizal explained the objectives of the Liga Filipma, a civic leacuc of Filipinos, which he desired to establish and its role ,n the socio-economic life of the people. He presented the Comtitution of the Lip which he bad written in Hong Kong and discussed its provisions. The patriots were favorably impressed and glad!) approved the e!tablisbrnc:nt of the Llga. The officen of the new league were elc!Ctcd, as folio,.,,: Ambrosio Salvador. president: Deodato Arellano. <ecretary; Bonifacio Arevalo, treasurer: and A gust.i n de la Rosa, liscal Colllldtation ol the Lip f'Uipma. The aims of the Lag:i F"tlipina, u embodied in its Constitution, were the following:• 1. To unite the whole udupelago 1010 one compoct anJ homogenous body. t. Mulllal protection in every want and necessity . 3. Defense against all Yioleooe and injus1ice. ..,..IIIZA&.rl.lN, _ _ _ , • - 4, £nco11r1aement ot odialioa, aa,lculture, and com. merce. S. Study and application of ttfonn,. The motto of the Up Filipina (One Like All). was: UHi IMlar Onuuum The governing body oC the league was the Supreme Council which had Jurisdiction over the whole country. It was composed of a pr~s•dcnt, a secretary, a treaaurer, and a fiscal. There was a Provincial Council in every province and a Popular Council In every town. All F'tlipinos w,ho have at heart the welfare of their fatherland are quallllcd for membership. Every member pays an entrance fee of two pesos and a monthly due of 10 centavos. The duties or the Lip men_ibers arc aa follows: ( t) obey the orders of the Supreme Council; (2) lo help in recruiting new rn_embers; (~~ lo keep in strictest secrecy the decisions of the L11a aulhonttea; (4) 10 have a aymbolic name which he cannot change until he becomes prcaident or hla council· (S) to report to the flacal anything that he may hear. ~hich affects the Uga; (6) to behave w~IJ u befita a good Filipino; and (7) 10 help fellow membcn ,n aU waya. RluJ. AnwlN ~ J.... la Port Sutlaeo, On Wednesday, · !uly ~• Rizal .went to Malacaftan Palace to resume his aeries of mtemcws wnh the governor general. During this interview Governor ~encral Dcapujol auddenly showed ~Im some printed lea~eu which were allegedly found in Lucia'a pillow caae,. These lncrun,natory leaflets were, entltle:4 Pobrrs Frailu (Poor Friars)9 under the authorship of Fr. Jadnto and printed by the Jmprenta de lot An_ii~os del. Pail, Manila. They were a satire against the ri~ Dom1m':8° f~.ra who &mUICd f1bulo111 riches contrary ·,o their monasuc vow or poverty. Ri~.I vigorously denied having tho11C leaflets in either his or ~uc,a. s bagage, whlcb had been thorou1hl~ 1e1n:hcd upon the,r amval rrom Hong Kon1 by the custom authorhica who found. nothin~. Despite bis denial ~d lnslatent demand for lnvcat1ga1ion 1n acoordance with the due proceas of law, be was placed under arrest and C100rted 10 Fort Santlaao by Ramon Dcspujol, nephew IDd aide of Governor General Ocspujol. Jn 216 ,..,,_,..,. AnJ The Llfo flllpl.,. 111921 Fort Santiago, he was kept incomunicado, as he rel~ted In his diary:,o 'They wlgncd me a fairty fumu,hed room with a bed, a dozen chairs, one table, a wash basin, and a mirror. The room bad three windows; one without grill which opens on a patio, another with gnlls which looks out on the city walls and the beach and another which wu 1hc door clOKd wnh a padlock. Two artillery men as sentinels guarded ii. They had orders 10 fire on anyone whu might signal from the beach. I could no1 write nCK' lflCHk with any one except 1he orr.ccr on duty. The following day. July 7, Lhe Gactta dt Ma,ii/a published the Mory of Ri2al's arrest which produced indignant commotion among the Filipino people, particularly the memhers of the newly organized Liga Filipina. Arbllrary Deportation to Oapltan. The same issue of the CJaceta (July 7, 1892) contained Governor General DcspuJol's decree deporting Riul to "one of the islands in the South". The gubernatorial decree gave the rcar,ons for Rizal's deportauon, as follows: I. Rizal had published books and articles abroad which ,h-,wed disloyalty to Spain and which were "frankly anti• Calhollc" and "imprudently anti-friar" 2. A few hours after hi, arrival in Manila "there wa1 found in one of the packages •. . a bundle of handbills entitled Pobres Fraile, in which the patient and humble generosity of Filip,001 Is satlrued, and which at(usation Is published against the customs of the relig;ous orders", 3 His novel El Fllibustui.rmo was dedicated 10 the memory of three "trallora· (Burgos. Oomc1., and :Z..mora), and on the title page he wrote that in view of lhe vices and errors of the Spanish administratioQ, "the only salvation for the Philippines wu 11epara1ion from the mother country". 4. "The end which he pursues In his effort, and writinas is 10 tear from the loyal Filipino brctit1 the treuures of our holy Catholic faith". Shortly after midnight of July 14 (that is 12:30 a.m. of July lS, 189'2), Rizal was brought under heavy guard 10 the steamer Ctb11 11 which was salling for Dapilan. This steamer under Captain 217 Delgras departed at 1:00 A.M., July- lS, sailing south, paaing Mindoro and Pa.nay, and reaching Dapitan on Sunday the 17th of July, at 7:00 'in the evening. ' Captain Delgcas went ashore and handed Rizal over 10 Captain Ri~rdo Carnic:cro, Spanish commandant of Capitan. Tha~ same ~•ght, July 17, 1892, Rizal began his exile In lonely D~pllan which would last until July 31, 1896, a period of four yean. •• Chapter 22 Exile in Dapitan, 1892-96 •• • Rizal li"ed In exile in rar-awa, Oapitan. 1 .i remo1c town in Mindanao which wu undc1 1hc m1s,1011t11} i1111..J,c11<>11 ol " Jesuits, from ·1892 to 1896. This four-year 1n1,•rrcgnum 111 his life was tediously unexciting, bu1 wa, abundanll) fru11ful .. ,1h varied achievements. He pracmcd medkanc, pur,ucd ,c,cnufo: studies, continued his artistic and li1erur) works. widened h,, knowledge of languages, established a school for boy~. promoted community development projects, invcn1ed a wooden machuw for making bricks, and engaged an farmmg ond ,,,mmt:1cc. Despite his multifarious activities, he kept nn cxtcn,l'C cnrrn pondenc:c with his family, relauv~. fellov. reformist,. and eminent scientists and scholars of Europe, including 131umcn111tt, Reinhold RO$!, A. B . Meyer, W , Joe~! of Bcrhn c; Knu11lc nf Stuttgart, and N. M. Keihl of Prague Beslnnbl& ol Eidk In Dapltan. The ~teamer Crh11 which brought Rizal to Dapitan carried a letter h.im Fa1hcr l'.ihlu Pastells, Superior or the Jesuit Society in the Philippines. to Father Antonio Obach, Je~uit pari~h priest of Dapitan. In this letter , Father Superior Pastells informed Father Obach 1ha1 Rizal 2 could live at the parish convent on the following condiuon~: I . "That Rizal publicly retract his errors conce rning religion, and malce 51a1ements that were clearly pro-Spur11>h and against rcvolul,on. 2. "That he perform the church riles and make • general confession of his past life. 3. "That bcncefonh he conduc1 himself ,n an exemplary manner as a Spanish 1ub,ect and a man of rellg• ion,_. ll8 Rizal did not ag,ec with these conditions. Consequently, be lived in the house of the commandent, Captain Carnkero. The relations between Camiccro (the warden) and Rizal (the pri•• oner) were warm and friendly. Camicero was channed by R.izal's fine qualities and penonallty. They ate together at the &ame table and had many friendly convenations. Camicero came 10 know that Rizal was not a common felon, much lea a filibustero. He gave good repon, on his prisoner to Governor Oespujol. He gave him complete freedom 10 go anywhere, reponing only once a week at bis office and permitted Rizal, who was a good equestrian, to ride his chestnut horse. Rizal, on his part, admired the kind, generous Spanish captain. As evidence of hi~ esteem, he wrote a poem, A Don Ricardo Carnluro, on August 26, 1892, on the occasion of the captain's birchday. 3 Wins In Manila Lottery. On September 21 , 1892, the sleepy cown of Dapuan burst in hectic excicemen1 , The mail boat Butuan was approaching the: town, with colored pennants flying in the sea brenes. Captain Carniccro, thinking that H high Spanish official was coming, hastily dressed in gala uniform, ordered the town folks 10 gather tit the shore, and himself rushed there, bringing a brass band. The mail bo81, Butuan, brought no Spanish officials buc the happy tidings that che Lottery Ticket No. 9736 jointly owned by Captain Carmcero, Dr. Rizal, and Francisco Equilior (Spanish resident of Dipolog, a neighbcring tov.n of Dapltan) \\!On the second prize of 'P20,000 in che government-owned Manila Loi• tery . Rizal's share of che winning lottery ticket was P6,200. Upon receiving this sum, he gave P2,000 to his facher and P200 to his friend Ba•a in Hong Kong, and the rest he invested well by purchasina agricultural lands along the coast or Talisay, about one kilometer away from Dapitan. • Rizal's winning in the Manila Lottery reveals an aspect of hi, lighter side. He never drank hard liquor and never smoked, but he was a lottery addict. Ourin1 his first sojourn in Madrid from 1882 10 1885 he always inve51ed at least chree pesetas every 220 month in lottery tickets.' "This was his only vice," commented Wenceliao E. Retana, his 61$1 Spanish biographer and former enemy. 6 R.baJ.·Puedls Debate oa Rcllpon. During his exile in Dapitan Rizal had a long and scholarly debate with Father Pastells on religion. It started when Father P~tells sent him _a book b_y Saroa with advice chat the latter (Rizal) should des,st from his majad~ras (foolishness) in viewing religion from the prism or individual judgment and self-esteem. This interesting religious debate may be read in four letters written by Riz.al, as follows: {I) September 1, 1892; {2) November 11, 1892; (~) January 9, 1893; and (4) April 4, 1893; and in Father Pastells' replies dated: (I) October 12, 1892, (2) December 8, 1892. (3) February 2, 1893, and (4) April.(noexactdate), 1893.1 Jn all his letters to Father Pastells, Rizal revealed his antiCatholic ideas which be bad acquiced m Europe and embmerment at his persecution by the bad friars. It i~ ~nderstand~blc why be was bitter against the frian who comm111ed cena1~ abuses under the clOllk of religion. As he wrote 10 Blumentmt from Paris on January 20, 1890: "I wane to hit the frian, bot only friars who utilized religion not only as a shi~ld, but also as.• weapon, castle. fortress, armor, etc.; I was forced to attack their false and supertilious religion in order 10 fight the enemy who hid himself behind it".~ According to Rizal. individual Judgment is a gi(t from God and everybody should use ii like a lantern to show the way and that self-esteem if moderated by Judgment. saves man from unwonhy acts. He also argued 1ha1 the pursuit of lruth may lie in diffcrcnl path~. and thub "religio,is may vary , but they all lead lo the lighl ". Father Pa,tclls 1ried his bes1 to win back Ri,al lo the fold of Catholicism. Divine Fa.ith, he told Rizal, supersedes everytlnng, including reason, sell-esteem, and mdivid~l j~dgmen!. No matter how wise a man is, he argued, his m1elhgence IS limited hence he needs the guidance of God He refuted Rizal's attacks 00 Catholic dogmas as misconceptions of rationalism and naturalism, errors of misguided souls. 1 111 IOla IIIZAI.: LI,., WOIIU Nl/0 WIIITl#Ot This interea.hng debate between two briUiant polemJcislJ ended inconclusively. Rizal could not be convinced by Pastell1' arguments so that he lived in Dapitan beyonti the pale of his Mother Church. In spite of their religious differences, Rizal and PasteUs remained good friends. Father Pastells gave Rizal a copy of the lmitaci6n.de CrislO (lmitation of Christ). a famous Catholic book by Fa°!erThomu a Kempis. And Rizal, in grateful reciprocation, gave his Jesuit opponent in debate a bust of St. Paul which he had made Although Rizal did not ,ubscribe to Pastells' religioll$ lnterpretarlon of Catholic dogmas, he continued to be a Catholic. He continued 10 hear Mass at the Catholic church of Dapltan and celebrate Christmas9 and other religious fiestas in the Catholic way. His Catholicism, however, was the Catholicism that Inquires and enllithrens, the .. Cathohcism of Renan and Teilhard de Chardin" lb Rlul ClullJmrtt • Fttnchmu to • Duet While Rizal was stlO debating with Father Pastells by means of exchange of letters, he became invol\/ed in a quarrel with a French acquaintance in Dapltan, Mr. Juan Lardet, a busin=man. This man purchased many logs from the lands of Rizal. It so happened that some of the logs were or poor quality. Larder, in a leller written ro Antonio Miranda, a Oapilan merchant and fnend of Rizal, expressed his· disgust with the business deal and stated that "if he (Rizal - z.) were a truthful man, he "1ould have told me that the lumber not included in the account were bad"; Miranda indiscreetly forwarded L.ardet's letter to Rizal. One of the hero's weaJmesscs, it should be noted was h1s sensi11vuy. When he read Lardet's letter, he flared up in anger, regarding the Fre_nc:hman's unsavory comment as an affront to !tis integrity Immediately, he confronted Lardet and challenged him to a duel. When the oommandant heard of the incident, Carmcero told the Frenchman to apologize rather than accept the challenge. "~y mend, you have not a Chinaman•, chance in a fighr with Rizal on a field of honor. Rizal is an expen in martial arts, partlcularly in fencing and pistol ahooting". 222 hllo In 0ap1,-, 11112-11181 Heeding the oommandant's advice, Lardet wro1e 10 Rizal in French, dated Dapilan, March 30, 1893, 11 apologizing for the insulting comment. Rizal, as a gentleman and weU-versed in pundonor (Hispanic chivalric code) accepted the apology, and good relations between hlm and the Frenchman were restored It is interesting ro recau that twice befo~ his. sensitivity e&U5Cd him to challenge people 10 a duel - Antonio Luna in 1890 and W. E . Retana in the same year. Rbal and Father Sanchez. Father Pastells, aside Crom his penonal effons 10 persuade Rizal to discard his "erron of religion", instructed two Jesuiu in Mindanao - Father Obach, cura of Dapitan, and father Jose Vilaclara, cura of Dipolog - 10 try their best 10 bring back Rizal within tile Catholic fold. Furthermore, he ausigned Father Francisco de Paula Sanchez, Rizal's favorite teacher at the Ate.neo de Manila, to Dapitan. Father Sanchez, since Rizal's days at the Ateneo , had spent three years in Europe and returned to Manila in 1881 to resume teaching at the Ateneo and to head its museum. He was the only Spanish priest to defend Rizal', Noli Mf Tangere in public 12 Immediately, upon his arrival in Dapitan, Father Sanchc1 lost no time in meeting b.is former' favonte student. Of all the Jesuits, he was the most beloved and esteemed by Rizal Almost daily they carried theological arguments in a friendly manner But all effom of Sanchez were in vain. F,or once. Rizal could not be convinced by his former beloved teacher. Despite his failure to persuade Rizal to discard his unorthodox views on the Catholic religion, Father Sanchez enjoyed the latter's company. He assi~led Rizal in beautifying the town plaza. On his binhday. Rizal gave him a precious birthday gift - a manuscnpt entitled &tudios sobre la /e,igua 1agnla (Studies on the Tagalog Language), - a Tagalog grammar which Rizal wrote and which he dedicated to his beloved former teacher. Idyllic Life In Dapitan. In Oapitan , Rizal had aa e~emplary life, idyllic in serenity. Since August , 1893, members of his ramily took turns in visiting hlm in order to assuage his loneliness in the isolated ourpost of Spanish power in the Moroland . Among them were h·is mother; sisters Trinidad, Maria, Narcisa ; and nephews Teodosio, Estanislao, Mauricio, and Prudencio. He 2?J - IIIZAL: LI,_, WOIIICI -WIIITl- built his house by the sca&hore of Talisay, surrounded by fruit ttus. He had also another house for h is school boys and hospital for his patien ts. 1 Describing his life in Dapitan, RiuJ wrote to B lumentritt on D~mber 19, 1893:u I shall tell you how we live here. I have three house.: one square, anothe~ hcxaaon,t. and a third octagon,!, all of bamboo,':'~• and nipa. In theaquare hOUIC we live, my mother, sister frlnidad, a nephew and I; in the octagonal live my boya or some Sood young11ers whoRJ I tea~h arithmetic, Spanish and English; and in the hexagonal five my chickens. From my house I hear the murmur of a crystal, clear brook which comes from the high rocb; I sec t~e seashore, the 1e1 where I have small boats, two canoes or barotos, as they say here. I have many fru,1 1rc1=,, mangoes, laniones, guayabanos, baluno, nanka, etc. I have rabhics, dogs, cats, etc. I rise early- ,u live - visit my planlS, feed the chicltens, awaken my people and put them ,m movemcn1. At half-put seven we brcaklast with tea, pastries, cheese, aweatmeats. etc Later I treat my poor patients who come to my land; I drcs., go to the town in my baro10. treat the people there, and return at 12, when my luncheon awaits me. Then I teach the boys until 4 P.M. and lkvotc the afternoon to agricuhurc. I spend the nig)lt readina and ,rudylng Rhal's Encounttt wlth the friar's Spy. During the early dayg of November 1893 Rizal was living peacefully and happily at his house in Talisay , a kilometer away from Dapitan. H is mother, si11ters Narcisa and Trinidad, and ~ome nephews were then Jiving with ~im. Hi~ bliMful life was then suddenly jolted by a strange incident mvolvmg a ~PY of the friars. This spy with the assumed name of ''Pablo Mercado" and posing as a relative, secretly visited Rizal at his house on the night of November 3, 1893. H e introduced himself as a fnend and relative, showing a photo of Rizal and a pair of buttons with the mitials · P .M." (Pablo Mercado) as evidence or his kinship with the Rizal family. In the course of their conversation the strange visitor offered his services as a confidential c:ourier of RaaJ's letters and writings for the patriots in Manila . Rizal, being a• man of prudence aod keen perception became suspicious. Irked by the impostor's lies he wanted to throw him out of the house, but ltlindful o f h~ 214 duty as a host and conStdering the late hour of the night and the heavy rainfall. he hospitably in~1ted the unwanted visitor 10 stay at his house for the night And early the ne~I day, he ~nl him away. After the departure of bis bogus relative, Rizal aucnded to his daily chore,, forgctung the mddent of the previous mghr tater he learned that th,· rai;cal wa~ still m D.ip11an, telling people that he was a beloved relative of Or. Riul. Losing his cool. he went to the comundanc,a and denounced the impostor 10 C,1pt111n Juan S1tgc~ ("'ho ~ucccedcd C1pldm Cam,,cro on May 4, IK'll as commandant or Oapit.in Without much ado, Snges ordered the arrest of "Pablo Mercado" and instructed Ana~tac10 Adnat,c(). to mvebttg.ttc him ,mmcdiatcly. The truth came out durin11 this inve,1iga1ion The real name of "Pablo Mercado~ was Florencio Namanan He was a native of Cagayan de Misamis. single and about 30 year~ old. I le was hired by the Recollect friar, to a sccrc1 mi~"on 1n Dap11an tc, introduce himself 10 Riial as a friend ,1Dd relative, to spy on Rizal's acuv11tcs. and to filch certain letters and wnun~ of ruzal which mJght incriminate lum ID the revoluuon,1ry movcmcnL. Strangely, Command~nt S11gc, \nddcnly qu11shed the invc,tigation and released the spy He promptly forwarded the transcnpu of the investigatton together w11h lus official report lo GovcrnQr General Blanco who. ID turn, kept these document> as highly c:onfidential Rimi, who was surpri!,ed at th~ turn of e\rnts, requested for a copy of the proceedmgs of the im·cstigati<'n, but Sitge, denied Ins request. As now declassified ,ind prcM"rvcd 111 the B1hhotcca Nac1onal m Madrid, thc,e docun,cnt, .:ontuin certain mysterious deletions These available documents on the failed m1ss1on or the rnars'spy have been quoted by three Rizalist biographers Retana (1907), Palma (1949), and Jose Baron fernantlel (1982). Bui none of these bioiraphers quoted the text or another doru• ment which 1s more reliable and valuable in clarifying the whole mcidcnt. It 1s Rizal's Leiter to his broth,:r-in-law, Manuel T . Hidalgo, wntten in Dapitan, December 20, 11193, u~ tollows, 11 My Dear Brothcr-,n-Law Mancng. I was unable lo write you by the pre•10U5 m,11 for lack of time, for the boat left unexpectedly. 2H - 1 IIIZAL un,WOIIKIMIDWlllflNOS Wott. regard to Pablo Mercado, I tell )OU 1ha1 he came here prescnling hims.elf u a couneo\1$ rnend in order to gel from me my lene-rs, wrilinp, etc.; bul I found him oul soon . and ,r I did nol throw hom ou1 of 1he hou,1c: brusquely. ii w1» becau\C I •l~ys want 10 be nocc and polilc lo everyone. Nevenhcless, as it was raining. I let h,m sleep here, sendlllg him awAy very early the next day I ""s going lo let him olonc in aon1cmp1 but lhe rascal wcn1 arounJ 5a)ing secrelly that he was my cousin or brother•m•law, I rcp<,ncd hom 10 tile Commandant who had hom arres1cd. h wu rescaled ,n his dcdarauon that he w~ ~ent ~y lhc Recnllcci. who ga,e hom P72 and promo~d him more ,r he su=cdcd in wrestling from me my lencr. for cenaln persons on Manila The rascal told me lhat h• wa~ J cou,rn of one Mr I ot<>niua , son of Lu,, Ch1qu110, J<tordin~ to him and bro1her-1n-law of Marciano Ramirez. He wanlcd me to wn1e 10 thc..e gcnllcmcn I fo hrought along be"des a picture of mine, ,ay,ng 1hat II was ~wen to hom by one Mr. lc~pi of Tondo or San Nicolas. I don't remember c•uctly . 11 'ICCffl> 1tu1 he belong, to • gcod l•mily or C"ugayan de Misamo\ Be carcr111 of him, he i• a 1all ho) , 011u·wha1 th1cuct, <lightly squint-eyed. dark, slender , broad shoulders, anJ of impudcnl mnnnc,~ He smokes much, 'I"'' more, and ha, lhm lips Merry Chns1mas ~nd Happy New Year. (Signed) Jo"' RilJI Based- upon all these available llocumcnlary sources, lhc incident of the 11Ccre1 mi'ISit;1n of "Pablo Mercado" in Dapitan was no t an "As.sa.ssinalion Auempt on Rizal •· It was merely an espionage plot concocted by the lriars . At Physician In Oapllan. RitaJ pracu~ed medicine in l)ap11an He had mauy patienl5, but mo)I or them were poor so that he even gave them free medicine. To his frie nd m Hong Kong, Dr. Marquei, he wrote: "Here the r,ople are so poor that I have even 10 g,v.., medicine gratis." 1 He had, however, some nch patients who paid him handsomely for his surgical skill. 11, bllo I• OapitMI !189:MtlN) In August 1893 his mothCT and sister (Maria) arrived in ::>apitan and lived wilh bun for one year and a h.alf. He operated on h1s mother's right eye. The operation WM successful, but Dona Teodora, i8J1oring her son's instructions, removed the bandages from her eyes, thereby causing the wound to be infected. ThllS Riz.al told Hidalgo, hi, brother-in-law "Now I unde11tan<l very well why a ph~1cian should not treat the members of his family. "'" Fortunately, the infection was arrested so that Dona T eodora's sight, thanks to her son's ophthalmic pro• wess, was fully restored. Rizal', fame •~ a physician panicularly as an eye spcciahst, spread far and wide. He had many patients who came from different pans of the Philippine,, - from Luzon, Bohol, Cebu, ,Panay, Negros, and Mindanao - and even from Hong Kong. A rich Filipino patient, Don Ignacio Tumarong. was able to sec again because of Rizal's ophthalmic skill; and highly gratified by the resto.r ation of his sight, he paid P3,000. Another nch patient, an Englishman, paid PSOO Don Florenc10 Az.acarraga, a rich hacendero of Aklan, was al'iO cured of eye ailment, and paid Rizal a cargo of sugar. 17 As a physician, Rizal became interested in local medicine and in the use of medicinal plants. He studied the medicinal plan15 of the Philippines and their curative values. To poor patients, who could not afford to buy imported medicine, he prescribed the local medicinal plants. Water Syatem for Dapltan. RJzal held the 1111c of expert surveyor (pcrito agrimensor), which he obtained from the Ateneo. He supplemented his training as a surveyor by his reading of engineering books, so that he came to know about engineering. In Dapit.an, he applied his knowledge of engineering by cons1ructing a system of waterworks in order to fumibh clean water to the townspeople. · Modem engineers marvelled how Rizal could have built such a system of waterworks, for be had inadequate tools and meager materials, and his finances were very limiled Without any aid from the government, he succeeded in giving a good water system to Dapitan. An American engineer, Mr. H.F. Cameron, praised Rizal's eogiocering feat in lhe following words: 1• 227 Exile I" OIPurt I 188?-1886) JOCl! IIIZAL: LlfE, WOftKI AND WIIITllfGS Another famous and well-known water supply is that Q( Dap1tan, MmJanau, desl8Jled and constructed by Dr. R1tol dunng h" hal'mhment m that munidpality by the Spanish authonucs This iupply romes from a little mountain stream ..aus. the ri,er from Dap11an and follows the rontour of th< country for 1hc whole dis1ance. When one ,-onMd•~ th.al Doctor Rizal bad no explosives with which I<> blaM the hard rod$ and no rcsourcc.s save bis owr 1n~cnu1ty one cannot help hu1 honor ., man, who against advern: condmons. had 1he courage and tenacity tocons1ruct I he uqucduc1 which hild for 11& bottom the nutted tiles from the hou~,: roor~. and was covered with concrete made from hm" burned [rom the sea coral The leng1h of this aqueduct is \e\cral k1h,,m'-=u:rs anti at w1m.b in and out among the r,><;h and i• c.trncd :,cross l(ulhes III baml>oo P•P"'I upheld by rocks vr bnck piers 10 the distribution reservoir Community Projects for Oapitan. When Ri.z.al arrived m Dap11an , h~ ,!.:tided to improve 11, 10 the bcl.1 of hil> Cod-given talenl, and to uwaken the civic con-.ciou\11c" of i1s people lie wrote to Fr Pastclb- · I want to do all that I can for this town " 19 Aside tron, constructing the town's fim water sy~tem, he sp.:nt many months drarnmg the marshes in order to itet nd of maf;ir,a th.11 mfe,1cd Oap11un A, a Eurnpc11n-trn1ncd phy)1cian. he knew 1ha1 malaria i~ sprc~d hy 1hc mo'(fuitos which lhrivc in swamp, place; ·1he P.'i(KI "h1ch an l:'.ng!i,h pauent pa.id him was used hy lum tu C<Ju1p tlu: 11,1111 with 11' lighting >)stem. !'his lighting ~) ,1,•111 n>nsbt,•d of .-o,·onut otl l,,mf" pl.iced in th,· dark ,1n:ets 01 D;1p11an Lk,·tnc lrghlln!!, wa, unknown then in the Ph,hppmcs. 11 "'" m>t unul IK'14 when Mdntla -..,w the ftN clcctnc hght,. Anoll1c1 ""nmuntt} p1u1c,1 ol R,ul wa, the beauu(ication t>f D,1p1lan \\ ,th lhc hl'I p ,>I hi, t.11 mer Jc,u,t tca<hcr and friend. f-'athn <;,mch~z. he rcmt><lclil-,11hc Iown pla,a in order to enhance ,1, hc.iutv. H, 10!..,ngl} remarked that he would make it nicely ,,, th~• 11 could "mal thc l>cst III Fumpc" In lronl of the church. R11.il and raihcr San,·he1 m.,dc d huge relief map of M111donao out t>f canh stones and grass. 1111s map still adorns the town plaza of O opuan Rhal a.-. ·reacher. S.ince boyhood Rizal knew the value of good cducat,on. Dunng his travels abroad he observed the 2Ul educational system of modern nations. He himself planned to estabhsh· a modem college in Hong Kong for Filipino boys so that he could train them in modern pc!dagogical concepts, which were then unknown ID the Philippines. His exile to Dapilan gave him the opportumty to put into praclice his educational ideas. In 1893 he establi6hed a school which existed until the end of his exile in July, 1896. It began with three pupils and ID the cour.,c of tune the enrolment increased to 16 and laler to 21 In hi& leuer to Rlumcntritl on March 13. Rizal said that he had 16 pupils in his school and that these pupib did 001 pay any tuition '" lostcad ol charg1Dg them tu111on !ecs, he made them work on his garden, fields , and construction proJects in the community Rizal taught his boys reading. writing languages (Spanish and English). geography, bisto,y, mathem~t•cs (arithmetic and geometry), industrial work, nature study, morals. and gymnas• tics. 21 He tra1Ded them how 10 collect $pecimens of plants and ammals, to love work, and to "behave like men'' tz Formal classes were conducted between 2:00 p.m and 4:00 p_m_ Rizal, lite 1encher. sat on n hammock, while the pupils !>JI on u long bamboo bench. On one day the lessons were C<>nductcd in Spani<h1 on the next day, in English. As in the Ateneo. the best pupil was called «emperor" and he sat at the head ol the bench, 1he poorest pupil occupied the end or the bench During the recess the pupils built fires in the garden 10 drive away the in5ce1s, pruned the fruit rces, Jnd manured the soil. Outside the class hours, Rizal encouraged them to play games in order to sltengthen their bodies. They had gymnastics, boxing, wrc,lling, ,1onc-throw1Dg, ,w,mmmg, urms (nauve fencing), and bo.ating. ''Hymn 10 Talisay." Rizal conducted his school at his home in Talisay, near Oapitan. where he had bis farm and hospital. His favorite rendezvous with bis boys was under n 1ahsay tree, after which the place was named. In honor of Tnlisay, he wrote a poem entitled "Himno A Talisay" for his pupils to SIDg: 23 HYMN TO TALISA Y At Dapitao, the sandy shore .1011 IIIULI Ll,W, WOAD A#0 "1111'1NCJI And rocks aloft oo mountain crest Form thy throne, O rcruse bielt, That we from c:hildbood days have known. In your wales that Dowen adorn And YOllf fruitlful leafy lhade, Our thinking powers are being made, And soul with body being grown. We are youth n01 Iona on eanh But our souls arc free from MMTow; Calm, airong men we'll be tomonow, Who ~n auard our homilies' nglns. Lads arc we whom naught can frighten, Whether th wider, waves, or rain Swift of ann, aercne of mien ln peril, shall we waec our fights. With our pmes we Chum the aand, Throu&h the caves and crags we roam, On the rocks we make our home, Everywhere our arms can reach, Neither dark nor night obscure Cause us fear, nor ficru torment That even Sat.an can invent Life or <lath? We must face each! "Talisayans\ people call U$! Mighty souls in bodies small O'er 0apuan', district all No Talisay like this towcn None can match our reservoir Our diving pool 1bc sea profound! No rowin1 boat the world around For a moment can pass ours. We study scicncet exact; The hiltory of our motherland; Three languages or four command, Bring faith and reason in accord. Our hands can manage at one time The sail and working spade and pen, The mason's maul - for virile men Companions - and the gun and sword. 230 Live, live, 0 leafy green Tahsay• Our voice• sing 1by pral.c in chorm Oear star, and precious 1rcawre for u,. Our cllildhood's wisdom and IIS balm. In fight• 1ha1 wait for escry man, 1n sorrow and adversity, Thy memory a chann wtll be, Ahd ,n the tomb, thy name, thy calm CHORUS Hail, 0 Talisay! Finn and untiring Ever aspuing, Stately thy pit. Things, everywhere In sea, land and air Shalt thou dominate Contributions to Science. Rizal found Mindanao a rich viriin fickl for collecting specimens. With his baroto (sailboat) and accompanied by bis pupils, be explored the jWJglc, and OOJs~. seeking specimens of insects, birds, snakes, lizards, fm~. shells, and plants. He sent these specimens to the museum of Europe, especially the Dresden Museum. In paymen1 for these valuable specimens, the European scientists sent him sc1en1ilic booh and surgical instruments. During his four.year eirile in Dapitan, Rizal bu1l1 up a rich collection of concology which consisted of 346 shells representing 203 species. 2' He diSQOvcred some rare ~pcc,mcns which' were named 111 his honor by the scien•i~ts. Amo11g these were Dru<:o r,u,/i (,1 flying dragon), Apoflnia rizali (a small beetle), and Rharophorus rizali (a rare frog). Rizal also conducted anthropological, cthnographical. archaeological, geological and geographical studies n, revealed by his voluminous correspondence with hi< i;cicn11~t friends ,n Europe. There was no limit to his <eientific versanht v U ngulstlc Studies. A born linguist, Ra.al oonunucd h,s studies of languages. In Dapitan he learned the B,sayan. ~ub anum, and Malay languages He wrote a Tagalog grammar, mPde 131 a comparative scudy or the 8isayao and Malayan languages, and studied tile 8isayan (Cebuan) and Subanum languages. On April 5, 1896, hi~ 18sl year o( exile in Dapitan, he wrolc to Blumcnlrill: "I know already Bisayan and I speak ii quite well; 11 is necessary, however, 10 know other dialects or the Philipp111c-s". 26 By this time, Rizal could rank with the world'5 great linguists. He knew 22 languages, as follows: Tagalog, llokano. Bisayan, Subanun. Spanish, Lalin, Greek. English, l'rcnch German. Arabic, Malay, Hebrew, San~krit, Dutch, Coulan, Italian, Chinese Japanese, Portuguc~e. Swedish, aftd Russi.in Artistic Works in Dapitan. Rizal continued his artistic pur,mb in Dapitan. He contributed his painting sktll to the Sisters of Charity who were preparing lite sanctuary or the Holy Virgin their private chapel. For the ~ke of economy, the head of the image was "procured from abroad" .U The vestments concealing all the rest or the figure excep1 the feet, which rested upon a globe encircled hy a 5nake m whose mouth is an apple, were made by lhe sisters. Rizal modeled the right fool o{ the image, the apple, and the serpent's head. He also designed the cxquishe cunain, which w~ painted in oil by an ar11s1 Sister under his direction. in Rizal made sketches of pe™>ns and thing5 thal attracted him in Dapitan. He drew, for instance. lhe three rare species of anlllllll hfc - the dragon, the frog, and the beetle - which he had disc:overed He had sketches of 1hc numerous fishes he caught in Dapitan wa1ers One day m 1894 some of his pupils secretly went co Dapitan boat from Tal1say; a puppy of Syria (Rizal's dog) tried 10 follow and was devoured by a crocod,lc. Rizal reprimanded them. telling lhem lha1 had they not disobeyed his advice not 10 go 10 town without his permission the puppy would not have tlied and the mother-dog would have been spared the sorrow of losing an of{spnng. To stress the moral ot 1hc incident, he modeled a statuette representing the mother-dog killing the <:rooodile, by way of avenging her lost puppy. and called 11 ·The Mother's Revenge". 111 .i Other sculptural works DI Ru.al in Dap11ao were- a bus1 of Father Gucmco (one of his. Alcnco ptofcs.<ars). a statue of a Ul girl called "The Dapitan Girl." a woodcarving of Jose phinc Bracken (his wife), and a bust of SI Paul wluch he gave to Father Pascells. Rizal as Farmer. In Dapitan Rizal devoted much of his time to agriculture. He bought 16 hectares of land in Talisay . where he built hi~ home, school. and ho~p11al , 11nd plan1cd cncuo, coffee, sugarcane, coconuLs and fruit trees. "My land" he wrole 10 his sis1er Trinidad. "is half an hour from 1he sea It 1s very poetic and very p1t1Uresque. If you and our parent> ~-omc I will build a big hou~c we can all hve m"/H Liter he .1c,1u11ctl more lands until h1~ 101al holdin~ reached 70 hectares, containing 6,000 hemp plants. 1,000 coconut trees, and numcrot.K fruit trees. ,ugMcanc. com. coffee and cacao On tu~ fairm~, Ru.al introduced modern me1hotb of jgncul 1ure "hich he had ob,;crvcd in Europe and America H,., pupil~ helped him in 1he daily farm labor. He encouraged 1he Dap1tan farmer.. to diM:ard their primitive system of 1ulagc and adopt 1hc modern ngriculturol methods. He impo11~tl agricultural madiincry from the Uni1ed States. Riz:il llrcamed ol c~iabli~hing an agricultural col<mv in 1hc sit10 of Ponot near Sindagan Bay. where 1here was plenty of water and good porl fac1l11ic& He believed thac thi, place would be illcal ·10 raise cacao, coffee, C()(;Onutb, and callle He invited his rcla1ives and friends. especially those in Calamba. to come to his proJCcted agricuhural colony. "We will establish a new Kalamba," he wrntc 10 Hidalgo, his hrothcr-in-lnw. 39 Unfortu• n:itd)' 1hi< colony did not materialize, like his previous Borneo colon,w11on. 'because be could not get the suppon of the govern• lllC:tlt .)U Raul as 0u~in~ssman. Aside from fanning, Rizal engaged in hu<ines.s. In partnership with Ramon Carreon, a Dap,tan mcrchan1. he made prvfitable business ventures m fishing, copra. ,111d hemp indus1rics . He invilcd his rcla11ves, particularly Saturmna and llidalgo to come 10 M,rd,mno, for there "is vast and ample field for husiness" in the island 31 He panicularly told Satui nma 1ha1 ,n Dapilan ,he could profitably engage in the 1ex1ilc. jcwrlry, and hemp business. 32 In o lener 10 I hdalgo, da1cd January 19. 1!193, he exprcs.sed hi, plan 10 improve 1hc fishing industry of Dapitan. He said llJ JOSE RIZAL L!Ft, WORKS AHO W~ll'INC, tlat the town has a good beach hke Calamba and there is ahundant fhh in the i.ea, however, the fi,hing folks, using primitive methods of fishing, were able only to catch small fishes. Accordingly, he instmcted Hidalgo to help him buy a big net for trawl fishing (puku1an) and to send him two good Calamba fishermen who could teach the Dapitan folks bclter methods of fishing. The most profitable business venture of Riiat in Dapitan wa~ in the hemp tl'ldustry. At one ume, he shii;ped 150 bales of hemp 10 a foreign firm i11 Manila al huge profit for himself and his business partner. He purchased hemp in Dapitan at P7 and 4 reales per p1c.ul and sold it m Manila at PIO and 4 reales. giving him a profit of P3 per picul. 11 In his letter to Blumentrin on July 31, 1894, he said: "To kill time and to help also the people of this town, I have become & merchant. I buy abac.a and ship II to Mani la Luck was with me this month. I made a profit of P2(l0 in one Mroke ... 34 On May 14, 1893. Rizal formed .i businc'ili partnership with Ramon Carreon (Dapnan businessman) in lime manufacturing." Their llmeburner had a monthly capacity of more than 400 bags of hmc. To hrc:,k the Chinese monopoly on business in Oap1tan, Rizal organized on January 1. 1895 the COQp,:ra11ve As'IOciation of Dap,tan Farmers. According to it~ constitution, which he had drafted. its 11urpowi. were "to 1mpro,e the fam1 product~. obtain belier outlet\ for them. collect fund, for !heir purchaws, and help 1he producer; and workers by establishing a store wherein they can buy prime commod111es at moderate prices"."' Rual 's Inventive Ablllly. One liulc-known fact about Rizal wa, tlrnt he wu< Hlso Jn inventor. It should b.: remembered that in 1l!87, while practising medicine in C.alnmba, he invented a cigarette lighter which he sent as a gift to Blumentrill. He called H "mlp11kur1 ", unique c,garcue lighter wH~ made of wood. "It, mechanism", ,aid R1i .1l. "1s based on the prmc1plc of com• .. ,, pressed air . · nu, During his exile in Dapuan. he invited a machine for making bric~,. fht> machine could manufacture abou1 6,000 bricks daily. Thus Riz.il wmte to Bh1mcn1ri11 on November 20, 1895. "I have made a wooden machine for making bricks, and I believe it 134 Ewlle In Oaplt#\ f1892 1rH,1 could make more or less 6,000 bricks a day... When l wa_~ m Be l gium, I saw the mak.ing of bricks out-of-doors wuhout~ ~11t1,. ,,ml during my visit to Baden I saw also a mount of bricks on 1hc vound. I suppose in Bohemia they make bnch by means of a d11ferent method; if this is so, please inform me ho" the hnck, .11~ baited such that not much heat is wasted". 38 "M)' Retreat." In February, 1895. Dona Teodora. with her ey<:$ight fully restored, returned to Manila. During her long siav in, Dapitan, she saw how busy her talented son wa, and rcgrcncd that he had neglected the Muses. She requeMed him 10 wntc poetry again. In response to her request, Rizal WTOte a beautiful poem about his serene life· as an exile in Dapitan and sent it to her on October 22, t895 .39 ihispocm was "Mi Retm,'' (My Rctrc.11). which is acx:laimed by literary critics as one of the bc~I c,cr penned by Rizal. It is as follows:"° MY RETREAT By the spreading beach where the sands arc soft 11nu lme At the foot of the mou1b in it, man1lc of green I have built my hut in the pleasant gtOYt's confine. From the forest seeking peace and a calmllC'I~ divine. Real for 1hc weary brain and silence 10 my•orww•, ~ccn Its roof of the frail palm-leaf and its Ooor the cane. I~ beams and poslsof the unhcwn wood. Little there is of value m this hut so plain, And bet1er by far in the lap of the mount to have lain By the.Ong and the murmur of the high ..,n·~ ""''" A purling brook from the woodland glade Drops down o'er the stones and around II sweeps. Whence a fresh stream i, drnwn by the rou~h c•n<', Thal in 1hc Still night its murmur has made. And in the day's heat a crystal fount:un lc•p,. ·Vhcn 1he sky 1, serene how gently II now,. And its zither unseen ceaselessly plays: Bue when the ,rains fall u torrent ii goes Boiling and foaming through the rock) clnw. Roarini uncheck'd to the $Ca's wide ways. 01<1, .,ca lll2AL: UPI, WOIIKI - WIIITINOf The bowl of the dog end the song or the bird, And only the kalao's hoarse call resound; Nor is the voice or vain man 10 be heard; My m,nd 10 harllS! or my steps to bcgird, The woodlands alone and the sea wrap me round The sea, ah. the sea! for me it i, all, And 11 massi,·ely sweeps from the world's apart; Its smile tn the 11u1m to my soul i; a cull , And when 1n the evening my faith seems to p:,11, It breathes with its sadness on echo 10 mv heart. ijy nil(ht an arcanum; when translucent it glows. All ,p:onglcd over woth its molhon, or hght,. And the brt,vit sky a hove resplendent sho" s; Whole the wa,e, with their ~1ghs tell of their woes I ule, that :ire lmt a\ they roll to the height,. nwy tell of the ,.o,ld when the first dawn broke, And the ;unhgltt over their surface played When 1hou,amb or he1ngs from nothingness "oke, To pcork the depths ,111! th, hc,ghl\ to tloak, Wherever 11; hte-ioving kis, v.a, laid Bui ,.hen ,n 1hc Dll(ht the wild ,.,O(J\ •wake, Anu !he .. ,ivc, 111 their lo') ~gon to leap. Throutth thl! uu su,h tht cric~ that 11\) 1111ntl ,hJke, Vo,ce, thal rr..y ,onp and moan, thal rartake 01 lamc,m Imm ohc soub ,Lnl uown on the deep. 'lncn from thc.r ht:,ght~ lhc mounrJlns groJn. And 1hc Hee, , l11vcl' 1remuluu, from grc~11 unh.> l~..t~t. The groves rustle plaontovc and lh<' hrrd, utter n111;1n For they '-'Y th,1t the f.ho,1 t1I the loll that tore gone Ate rathnJ them do'ftn 10 Cht•1r dtJlh\ merry 1c,1,t In h.>rh11 .1mt ,·oufu,ion wl11'ipcr.; the nighL Whole t>IUl' uml j(rccn 0~mes Oil o,cr the Uut LJlm n:,go, \.\JLh the morning's light, • deer, An4 l ,,'km tlh: hold fishcttn;1n \'.'om~, ,nco saght. An,I lu, t>.,rk rushes on and the waves sink to ,tcep S., """"'J glide the days on my lcmclv Hhodc; llri,cn forth from •he worlJ v.hcrc once I was l,.nuwn, I m U'C the fate upon me hcs-mwrd, A frn~r:ont foll!Otlcn that the moss w,U corrode l,.tr Io h,dc lr'.lm manltmd the world on me shown 1 live in thought or lhe lov'd ones left. And or their names 10 my mind are borne; Some have forsaken me and IOfflC by death arc reft; But now 'tis all one. 11S through the past I drift, That past which from one never be tom. Foe it is tbe fnend that is with me always, That ever in sorrow keeps 1he failh in my soul; While through the still night it watches and prays, As here in my exile tn my one but it stays To strengthen my faith when doubts o"er me roll. That faith I keep and I hope to sec shine The day when 1he lde11 prevails over migb1; When after the fray and death's show decline. Some other voice sounds. far hopper than mi_ne, To raise the glad of lhe triumph of righl. J see 1he sky glow, refulgent and clear, A$ when 11 rorced on me my first dear illusion: I feel the same wmd kiss my forehead sore, And the 6re as the same that is bummg here To shr up youth's blood ,n boiling confusion. I breathe here the winds lhat perehanu have pa.s'd O'er the fields and the rivers of my own natal ~bore; And mayhap they will bnng on the rctummg blast The sigh> that lov'd being upon them has cast Messages 1wce1 from lhc love I firSI bore. To sec the same ntoon, all s,lver'd as of yore I feel the aad though1s within me anse; The fond reoollectoon• or lhc troth we swore. Of the field and the bt,wcr and 1he "'idc seashore, The blushes of joy. wtth the salenre and sighs. A buuerfly seeking the Oowers and 1he light, Of other lands dreaming of vaster extent; Scarce a youth, from home and love I look Oighl, To wander unheeding. free from doubt of affright So in foreign lands were my brightest days Sj)Cnt. And when hk • lapguishlng bird I was ram To the home of my fathers and my love 10 relum , Of a sudden the 6eccc lempcst roar'd amain; So l aaw my win~ shattered and no home remain, My trust IQld to 01hcrs and wrcckJ round me burn. 237 - IIIZAL: u,•. WOIIQ AMO WIIITINCI& Hurl'd OUI inlO exile from lhe land I adore, My future all dark and no refuge to seek; My roseate drums hover, round me once more, Sole treasures of all 1ha1 lite ro me b<m:; The faiths of youth 1ha1 with sincerity apeak. But not as of old, full of life and o( grace, Do you hold oul hopes or undying reward; Sadder I find you; on your lov'd face. Though ,till unccre, the pale Unes trace The marks of the faith it it yours 10 guard You orrci: now, dream,. my gloom 10 appease, And the years of my youth again 10 disclose; So I thank you, 0 storm, and heaven•bom breeze. That you knew or the hour my wild fhght to ease, To ca.11 me back to the soil whence J rose . By the spreading beach where the sands arc soft and fine. Al the foot or the mount tn its manlle .or green; I have found • horne in the pleasant uovc's confine, In lhe shady woods, that peace and calmness divine, Resi for the weary t,ra1n and silence to my s0rrow keen. Rizal and Josephloe Bracken. In the silent hours or the night after the day's hard work, Rizal WIIS often sad. He missed Im family and relative~. 'his good friend~ in foreign land\, the exhilarating hfe in the cities of Europe. and his happy days in Calamba. The death of Leonora Rivera on,August 28, 1893 left a po:gnant void in his hean. He needed somebody to cheer him up in bis lonely exile. In God's own time, this ~somebody" came to Dapitan. like a sunbeam to dispel his melancholy mood. She was Josephine Bracken, an Irish girl of sweet eighteen. "slender, a chestnut blond, with blue eyes, dressed wilh e legant simplitity, with an atmosphere of light gayety". She was born in Hong Kong on October 3, 1876 of lnsh parent~ - James Bracken, a corporal in the British garrison. and Elizabeth Jane MacBride .01 lier mother died in childbirth. and she was adopted by Mr George Taufer. who later became blind. No ophthalmic specialist in Hong Kong could cure Mr. Taufer's blindness so that he, accompanied by hil. adopted daugh• ter J~phine went to Manila to seek the services o' the famous 238 Ede 1n O~han (1892 1896) ophthalmic surg~on, Dr. Rizal. They heard tn the cuy that Dr. R-izal was 1n Oap1tan, where they proceeded - accompanied by a Filipin~ companion, Manuela Orlac, They presented 10 Rizal a card of introduction by Julio Uorcnte, his friend and schoolmate. ' 2 Rizal and Josephine fell in love with each other al fir,t sight . A~er a whirlwind romance of one month, they agreed 10 marry. But Father Obach, the priest of Dapitan , refused to marry then wilhout the permission of the Bishop of Cchu When Mr . Tauter heard or their proiccted marriage. he flared up in violent rage. Unable to endure 1he thought or l0<,ing Josephine, be tried to commit $Uicide by cutting off his throat with a razor. Rizal, however, grabbed his wristi. and prevented him from killing himself. To avoid n tragedy, Josephine wcnl with Taufer to Manila by the first available steamer The blind man went away uncured because his ailment was venereal in nature, hence incurable. Mr. T aufer 1e1umed alone 10 Hong Kong. Jo~ephinc srnycd in Manila with Rizal's family Later ~he returned to Dapitan Since no priest would marry them, Rizal and Jo,ephme held hands togetheff and married 1hem,clves before the eye, uf God They lived as mun and wife•' Of course, Father Ohach wa, scan<ialized, and many unsavory mies were c,rculalcd h, go,,ip, in Dap11an. Rizal andl Josephine lived happily 111' D~p11an In ,c,cral lct~ers 10 hi, fanuly, Ri.zdl praiscd Ju,cplunc and re, caktl h" new happines~ He .-a~ no lunger loncl} D.1p11an h.td hc,unie for i1im a heaven or bliss At one time. Rizal wrote as follow,;""' ii j>llCm for Ju,cph1nc. "h1ch run, Jo~phint, Josephi11e Who w I hcse shore, have come Looking fu r a nc:.t ••, homtt, l 1ki: u w.andtrm~ ,wJllow~ If your fate ,s 1akint1- you To JapaJJ, Chinn or Shangh,11. Don·c for,-cr on thl·,c ,h11r~·, A heart for you bcaL, h•l)h 219 EJule frtOap,c., ( l a , . - In the early part of 1896 Rizal was extremely happy because Josephine was expecung a baby. Unfortunately, be played a prank on her, frightening her so that she prematurely gave birth to an eight-month baby boy. who lrved only for three hours Ttru. lost son of Ra.al was named ~F,anasco" in honor of Don Franc1!>Co (the hero's father) and was buried in Oapitan •s Rizal and the Katipunao. While Rizal was mourrung the loss of h1, -.on, ominous cloud, of revolu11on gradually darkened the Philippme skies. Andres Bonifacio, the "Great Plebeian." w~ W\\ing the seeds of an armed uprisiog. The secret revolulK>naf) :.ocict), c-d.lled Ka11punan, which he founded on July 7, 1892. \\ as gaininr more and mor~ adherents . In a secret meeting of the Katipunan at a liule river called Birukang Manok, near the town of Pasig, on May 2, 1896, Or. rio Valenzuela \\3S named emlll1S3.f)' 10 Oap1tan, in order to inform Rizal of the plan of the Kat1punan to launch a rC'olution for freedom's sake On June JS. Dr Valenzuela left Manila on board the steamer To camouOage his real mission, be brought wub him a hhnd man named Raymundo Mata and o gwdc, ostensibly going to Oapitan lo solicit Ri1.al's upcn medical adVM:C V(!nUS. Or. Valenzuela arrived m Oapitan in the evening of June 21. 1896. Rizal, ever a hospitable host, welcomed him. After supper, the two had a heart-to-bean talk in 1he garden. Valen• rnela 1old him of the Katipunan plan and of the nccc~ty of his suppon. 46 phys1ciaru. to minister 10 the needs of the Spanish troops and the Cuban people It was Blumentntt who told him of the dcrlorablc health <1tua11on in war•ndden Cuba and advi.sed him to volunteer a, army ph}"'1Cian there Acunl! upon Blumentritt's advice. R12al wrote to Govemoc (;cncral R:tmon Blanru, Dc;,puior~ succes,,or. on December 17. I >N~ ofk, ,ng h" ,crv,,...,,, a, m1htaf) d,'l<:tnr in Cuh:i . Monlh\ P•"' ·d on, he: re, ·1ved no reply from Malac:uinn!!. He ,ia,·e up h<>p. 1hu1 I! , hum,rnitanan otter would ever receive go,emment ,1pprmJI \\'hen he lca,t c.,pcc:1cd 11. a ktter lrom Governor Blancu <l:tt.:d luh I; lb'lft arn,cJ 111 Dapll:tn , nn1ifymg him of the ,,,,~r1ancc ,,r his offer Th,s lener. which reached him on July JOlh. ahu ,lated thal the poli1,co-m1htary commander ol Dap11an --.uuld govc him a p11,;, -.o thal he could come 10 MJmla, "here h, -.-nuld lsc: giHn ,1 safe-conduct to Spam, ~and there the M1mqcr 01 War "111 aS!-1gn you to the Army of Operations in (.uh,1, Jc1 ..1lcd to the Medical Co~"." "The Song of the, Tra•t'ltr". Great wa~ R,uri. JOY ,n rcce1v• 111g lh<" gladsome new, from Mah;can.anr, Al las1, he v.as free' once more. he was going to travel - to Eurcpc and then to Cuba It "'a,, wub thllo Joyous thought of resuming his travels that h< "rote h1\ heart warming poem LI Canto de/ V1ajuo (The '>ong of the Traveler) which runs in full·"" THE SONG OF Tl 1.E TRA \ F.U:R Rizal objected io Bonifacio 's audacious project to plunge the counlJ) m bloody revolution. He was of the sincere belief that 11 wa\ premature, for l\\O reasons: (1) the people are not read) for a revolulion. and (2) arms and fund, must first be collected before rai5ing the cry of revolution. He also disapproved of the other plan of the Kallpunan to rescue him beeau~ he had gwen his word of honor 10 1hc Span1\h aulhnrili~ and he did not want 10 break 11 l.oke "' a leaf 1hat 1s fallen and v.,1hered. lo,,-cJ h} lh( lcmpc,t !rum pole unlo J><>IC. Thu, roam, the J>tlitnm abroad ., 1thou1 purpose, Volunteers as Military Doctor in Cuba. Months before the Kat1punan contacted him. Rizal had offered his services as mil it• Qf) doctor in ruha, wh,ch wa,, tt,cn in lhc 1hroc1 of a rcvolu11on and a raging yellow fever epidemic There was a shonagc of fvcr ,mrcllcJ by the 10,i"hlc (><>"er. Destined 10 roam from the East 10 the West. 2AO R\.-.am~ 'Aiathout lm·c without country or soul Fulh1" '"ft nn"iom,I) trcachcrnu'.'i. fo-rtune: rouunc: "htch e'en ti h~ gra~p~ at Jt flees. \ .nn though 1hc hope, l~I hos )Cain1ng " ~eek,ng , et d<-.es the politnm cmb..rk on the sea, Oh he rcmcm~r'\ th~ fo\.'.t-'\ ot IO\cd on~. Dream, of th< day v.hcn he, 100 wa, ot resl 241 - IIIZALt Ll,a. WOIIQ AND WIIITINCII Chance may assign bim tomb on the deaen, Orant blm a final asylum or peace; Soon by the w«ld an<I his country fo,aott.c n, God rest Im soul when his wanderings cease! Often the sorrowing pilg,;im Is envied, Circling the globe like a sea-gull above; Lillle, ah, little they know what a void Saddens Im soul by the absence or love. Chapter 23 Last Trip Abroad, (1896) Home may the pilgnm return in the future, Badt to his loved ones his roo~tcps he bends; Nauaht will he find out snow and the rums, Miles or love and the tomb of his friends. No longer an exile, Rizal had a pleasant trip from Dapitan to Manila, with delightful stopovers in Oumaguete. Cebu, lloilo, Capiz, and Romblon. lie missed the regular bteamer Isla d<' Luzon, which sailed to Spain the day before he arrived m Manila Bay. While waiting for the next ship for Spain, he was kept as a "guest" on board the Spanish cruiser Casulla. Meanwhile. on August 26, 1896, Andres Bonifacio and the Ka1ipunan raised the cry of revolution in the hills or Balintawak, a few miles north of Manda. Rizal, worried about the raging hostilities. lcfl for Spain on the ,teamer /$la dt' Panay on September 3. IKW, It was his last trip abroad. Pilgrim , begone! .Nor return more hereafter, S1r&111er thou a.rt in the land of thy birth; Otbcn may sing of their love while rejoicina, Thou once ap.in must roam o'er the earth. Pilgrim, begoncl Nor return more hereafter, Dry are the te:an that a while ror 1hce ran; Pilgrim, begone! And forget thine affliCl>On, Loud laughs the world at the sormws or man. Adl6s, Dapltaa. On July 31, 1896, Rizal's four-year exile in Dapitan came to an end. At midnight of that date, he embarked on board the steamer Espana. He was nccompanied by Josephine, Narcisa, Anf;lica (Narcisa's daughter), his three nephews, and six pupils. Almost all O apitan folks, young and old, were at the !>bore to bid him goodbye. Many wept as the steamer sailed away - especially the other pupils who were too poor to accompany their beloved teacher to Manila. As farewell m usic, the town brass band strangely played the dolorous Funeral March of Chopin. A~ its melancholy melody floated in the nir, Rizal must have felt it deeply, for with his prC$Cntimcnt of death , it seemed an obsequy or a requiem. ruzaJ A5 the steamer pushed out into the sea, gazed for the Inst time on ,Oapilan with his hands waving in farewell salute to its kind and hospitable folks and with a crying heart filled with tears or nost.algic memories. W hen he could no longer see the dim shoreline, he sadly went to bis cabin and wrote in his diary: "f have been in that district four years. thirteen days, and a few hours". 30 141 From Dapltan to Manila. Leaving Oapitan at m1dnigh1. July 31, 1896, the E.spa,ia, w11h Rizal and party on hol>ard. -..1iled north ward. At dawn the next day (Saturday. Augu,1 1). 11 anchored at Oumaguctc, capital of • Negro, 011cn1al "O umaguete," wrote Rizal in his travel diary. "spread, out on the beach. There are big house~, some with galvanized iron roofing, Oumnnding arc the house or a l.td} , wltt1N: 11,1mc I have forgotten, which is occupied by the government und anolhcr one just begun with many ipil posts". 1 In Durnaguete. Rizal visited a friend and former classmate. Herrero Regidor, who was the judge or the province . He also v1s11cd other friend,, ,ncluding the Pcriquc1 und Rufinn fa1111hc, In the afternoon he operated on a Spanish captain of the Ciuard1a Civil. The Espana left O umaguete abou1 I :00 p .m . and reached Cebu the following morning. Rizal wa$ ra,cinatcd by the cnrn,ncc to Cebu which he considered "beautiful" Al the home of Atti,r• ney Mateos he met an old couple whom he had known in Madrid . 24 ) - 111:EAL: Llfl WOIIICS M n • m - •rn Cebu•, he wrote in his· diary, •1 did two operations of stn1bo1omy, one opera11on on tbecars, and another of tu-nor" 2 take him to Spam, portentOU$ evenb occurred, pre.aging the downfall or Spanish power in As,a. ln the morning of Monday August 3, Rizal left Cebu going to lloilo. "The voyage was fine," he wrote, •At the right we saw Mactan, an island famous for what happened to Magellan. rhc whtllt afternoon was magnificent... We saw many islands alons our way The next day, in the morning, we entered 3 lloilo' On the fateful evening of August 19. 1896, the IC01tpu,1an plot to overthrow Spanish rule by means of revolution was discovered by Fray Mariano Gil, Augus11man cura of rondo. Thi\ startling ,nc• , ·• 1 struck terror into the hearts of lhc Spanish officiab and re• 1 .nts . producing a h~steria of vindicltvc re1~11 a1ion against lh< Fil,pmo patnols Rizal landed at lloilo. went ~hopping in the city. and visited Molu. Of the Molo church, he commented: ..The church is pretty oul'°dc and lhc interior is not bad, considering that it had been painted h> a lad. The pa1ntin&5 arc mostly copies of biblical >Ccnc, by Gustave Dore" • The tumul, pmduced hy lhe disco, ery of the Kat,punan plol was aggravated hy the Cr) ol Hail>lt.iwat..' "luch was raised by Rdn1fac1n and his ,·,1lrnnt Ka111 1ncro, C1n Augu<t 2(,, 1!\'It,. At sunn~e of A ugu\t 30, the revolu11onis1~ led hy nomfa,·10 and Jacmto attacked San Juan. near the city of Manila, bm lhey were repulsed wi1h hcav1 I In lhc ahcmoon. after the Banle of San Ju,m , Go,emnr General B1anco prochumed a ,1ate of war m the firsl c111ht province, for ming m arm, agam,t Spam M.. mla (.ts a province) , l}J!Jc.,n, Cav1te, Batanga.s, L.Jguna, Pampani:a Nucv" Eci1a anti Turl.1(' From 110110, Rizal's slup sailed to Capiz. After a brief stopover, 11 proceeded towards Manila via Romblon. Rilil Ml'-~ Ship Going to Spain. The: Espana arrived in Mamla Ra)· early in the morning of Thursday, August 6, 11196 Unfonunately. Riul was not able to catch the mail ship Isla de Lu.toll for Spam because it bnd dcpaned the prcvJOu.s day at 'i:(JO p.m 'He wus greall)I d1sappo111tcd, bul he took this unlucky metdcnce with ah,ding resignation Writing to Blumcntrin later. Rizal mentioned this cpi1'0de, "Unfortunately" . he said. "I did not catch the mall ship for Spain, and [earing lhat my .,ay m Manila for a month might bring me lrouhle~ I mode known 10 the governor general, while rema1n1ng on board the ~h,p (Espana - Z.), of my wish to be •~olakd from ever)body. except my family" 6 Near midnight of lh.: ~':lme day, August 6, Rizal was transferred 10 the Spamsh crui,cr Castilla, by order o[ Governor General Ramon Blanco I le was given good aocommodation by the gallant captain, Enrique Santalo, who told him that he was nnl a pmoncr, but a guc~t detained on board "'in order 10 avoid diff'icult1cs from friend~ and enemies'' ,c. R11.ll lc,1rncd ol lht.: cruplton o[ the rc•nlullon and lhc rng,n~ battles around Manila through the newspapers he rend on the Cas11/la lie was worried for two reasons: (I) lhe v,olcnl revnlu1,on which he ~mccrcly bclic•cd 10 he premature ,,nd would only cau,e much ,ufrenng and terrible In<;< of human hvcs and property, had ,1aned and (2) 11 would arouse Spamsh vengeance agamsl all 1-ihpmo p,unuts. Oepature for Spain. On Augu,t 30, 111%, the day when the <late or war wa~ procla,m,·d in the eight provmcc, R11al rcc,·1vcd from Governor General Rlanco two lcuers or mtroduct,on for the M,mster ol War and lhe M1ms1cr of Coloauei., with a covenng lcucr which ah,ol,cd hm1 lrom all blame for the raging rcvolu 1ion u, follow, 7 Mr 1,,.,c R:11111 M, Ocar Sir: R11.1l ,tayed on the cruiser for 000111 a month, from August 6 to September 2, 1896, pending the availability of a Spain-bound End°""d arc two lc11crs for the Mmistcrs of War and Colome, which I think will be well received steamer I ha,e- no <loub1 1hn1 you will iust,fy me before the Guvcmmcnt h) your future hchJvior 001 only for you, word of honor bul because the prcsenl happerung must bavc Outbteak ot the Pb.lllpplM Re,oludoo. While Rizal was pultenlly waiting on the cruiser Ca.ml/a for the next steamer to 244 14S JOSE IIIZAL: LIFI, WORKS AHO WIIITINGS shown you ,palpably lhat cenain actions which arc the product of looh,h ,dca, yield no other re,uh but hair..-d. destruc• tion, tears, and blood, May you be very happy Is the wish of your aucnhve Strvllnl who kisses your hnnd, Ramon Bl3nto The two letters of introduction were identical, The one addressed to General Marcelo de Azcarraga. Minister of War. was written as follows: Mos1 Excellent Marcelo de Azcarraga My c<,t,c:cmcd Gcl)eral and dc,tlngui,hed Friend, I recommend to you with genuine inlcresi Dr Jo-.., RJZal who i, departing lor the Pcnin,ula at the d1s~I <>I the G~vcmment, ever ~esirous of rendtnng his services as ph)'$1Cran to the Arm~ ,n Cubu Hi, condu~1 dunng the four Y""" th.ii h..- ..,3, '" ex,lc in Dapitan has been exemplary •nd he ,s. ,n my opinion, the more worthy of pardon anJ bene>olencc as he is ,n no woy m_volvcd ci1her in the crlnunal utkmp1 th.u "-1.' urc lamenr1ng these days or tn any conspuacy or ,ecn:.l "-Oeic,, thm th"Y hnvc been plo111ng. With this ()bJCCt I ha,c the pleasure 10 remJin. Your mO\t .ith.'Chonatc tr1c1,d and colle,11:ue "h11 ~1-sc, your hand Ramon Blanco • On ~ep1emb<:r 2, 189h, the d.iy hcftlrc h" JcpJrturc "" Spam, Rizal, on hoard the Grrn/la. ,vrute to h" nt1>1h,-r ,1, follows:• '-'iy Dc,irest Mother. ,\\ I promised, I nm .1Jd1,·~,ms ~l'U ;t kv. lloc, h•.'lort· lca\ing. h> let you knnv. all\llH 1h1.· ,.-111lJ1tmn ol 111\' h1.!,tlth . I ;1m \liClt. lhank \lt.',f,I. I oun uni) ,,,nu.:1m:J ,1, 10 \\h,u will harrcn or shall have h.tf'J'<'n«I 10 you in these <l•Y' ot uplteo1\'i.tl .ind d1'(}rdcr. Lnd will th,d IH) tlld f,nher mJ~ nCll have ,iny lnd1sp(l\1tion 2,46 I shaill write to you lrum the pl,t<c, -.hc1c lh< t, â—„ ,,,t $lops; I expect to be, in Madrid or at lca<t in R"rwlon,1 .,1 the end of this month. Do not worry about anything: we arc all tn the har,J, of Divine Providence Not ,•II those who !\to io Cuh., clw and in the end one has to die· at lea,1 die dorn11, <0mcth in good, Take- good care of yourself and take care of m, ,,IJ fothcr so that we shall sec each other Ol(ain M11n, r,·tt:,rd, for my brother ,sislc"· ntrhe..,, and niece-~. aunts. etc , etc I leave oontcnted, confident that a, long a,, you ,,re Jh,c the family will rcmn,n united Jnd the old mhm,,cy w,11 r-·1r11 1n it. You two are 1he bond that unites •II of us With nothing more, my very dear mother, I ""' ' " "' hand and that of my father wi1h all the atkcuon and I"" 1hat my 'hc•rt i5 capahlc of giving: give me your hi,·"'"~' or which I am in much need. A fond embrace for everyone of my ""e,-,;; rHJ) the, love one another jusl us I luve ull of 1hem V.our ,011 Jn,.., At 6:00 p.m., September 2. R.in1I wu, tran,£crn·d tn the steamer Isla de Parray wluch was sailing for Barcelona. Sp,un The next mornrng. September 3, this steamer left MJn1l,1 Bay At lasi. R1zal's last trip to Sp.iin begun. Amons h" fellow passengers on board were Don Pedro Roxai; (rich M.,nila c«•ole industrialist and his friend) an<l his son named Pen4um Rizal in Singaport,. 'Ote Isla df Panlly arrived at Smg.ipu« in the evening of Scptcmhcr 7. 1 he follo"'"!t murnin)! R11al and other pas-.engcr~ went a,hore for sightsecin~ and ,hopprnr for souvenirs. In his uavcl diary, Rizal wrote: " I ha,·c nhscn,~J some changes: There are more Chmese merchant, and kss Indian . . I bought a Chinese g,)"'n . Singapvrc h.,,. d1:,11gc<I much since I saw it for the fiN time in llll!2. "" Don Pedro, with his son. disembarked at Singapore 1lc advised Rizal 10 stay behind too and take advantage of 1he protection of the British law. Rual did not heed hi, Jdv1ce. Several Filipino residents of Singapore, headed by Don Manuel Camus, boarded the steamer. u111iog him 10 slay rn Singapore 247 - IIIZAL: U.._, WOIIQ AIIDWllmNOa LatT,.Abt... f1. .I to save bis life. He also ignored their appeal because he had given his word of honor to Governor General Blanco and he did not ltke 10 break it. 6n September 28, a day after the steamer bad left Port Said (Mediterranean terminus o( the Suez Canal), a passenger told Rizal the bad news that -he would be arrested by order of Victim fl Spenhh Dupldty. By refusing to break his word of honor in Singapore, Rizal scaled his own doom . For wuhout his knowledge, Governor General Blanco was secretly conspiring with the Ministers of War and the Colonies (ultramar) for his destru<:tion. Governor General Blanco and would be sent to pnson (Spanish Morocco) , opposite Gibraltar Great hero and genius that he was, Rizal proved to be as gullible as Sultan Zaide, another vichm of Sparush intrigue. to For all his wonderful talents, Rizal was after all a mortal man who committed mis'lakes. And orie of his greatest mistakes was 10 believe that Governor General Blanco was a man of honor and a friend because he allowed him to go as a free man to Spain to become a physician-surgeon of the Spanish army in Cuba, where a bloody revolution was raging, and gave him two nice letters of iotroductJon addressed to the Spanish Mini,ters of War and the Colonies. S.S. htu de Panay, Mediterranean September 28. 1896 My very dear Friend, A passenger on board has ju.st 10ld me a news that I can hardly believe and should 11 be true, would bring 10 an end the prestige of Philippine au1hori1ies. I cannoi believe for ii would be the areatest injustice and 1hc mos1 abominable infamy, unworthy not of a mili1aryoffi(1al but of the last bandit. I have offered to serve as a physkian. ri~king life in the hazards of war and abandoning all my business. I am innocent and oow m reward they arc sending me io pnson!' I cannnl t>eloeve 111 This is infamous, bul if ii tum, 0111 to be true , as everybody assures me. I am oommunicating 10 you these news so that you may appraise my shuation. Rizal was unaware that since his depsrture from Manila Bay on his way to Spain, Blanco and the Ministers of War and the Colonies were e-xchanging coded telegrams and confidential messages for his arrest upon reaching Barcelona and that he was a deportee and was being secretly kept under surveillance. tcmbcr 8. Unaware of the Spanish duphcity, particularly of Governor General Bianco's infernal deceit, he happily continued the voyage towards Barcelona. On September 25, be saw the steamer Illa ~ Luzon, leaving the Suez Canal, crammed with Spanish troops. Two days later (Sunday, September 27) he heard from the passengeTS that a telegram arrived from Manila reporting the execution of Fran• cisco Rous, Genato, and Osorio. Ceuta Shocked by the alarming news, Rizal belatedly realized that he was duped by the unscrupulous Spanish officials, particularly the sly Governor General Blanco. With an agonizing heart, he immediately wrote a lener 10 his best friend, Blumentnu, unbut• dening h,s disgust and bitterness, as follows: 12 The truth of the matter, as now substantiated by the declassified documents in the Ministries of War and the Colonies, was that Blanco was his implacable foe, who regarded him as a "dangerous Filipino" who was rc.~ponsible for the raging Phi hp, pine Revolution , and therefore plotted his doom. 11 11.izal Arresced Befort R~achlna Barttlona. The Isla d~ Ponoy, with Rizal on board, left Singapore at 1:00 p.m., Sep, in Yours. (Signed) Jose Rizal There was norh.ing official yet about his impending arrest; was sull merely shipboard gossip. On September 29, Rizal wrote in his travel diary: MThere arc people on board who do nothing but slander me and invent fanciful stories about me. I'm going to become a legendary personage." 11 fhe following day (September 30), at 4:00 p.m., he was officially notified by Captain Alemany that he should stay in his cabin until further o rders from Manila He graciously complied wtth the captain's directive. l49 JOaalUIAL Lll'I.-KI IWOWJI~ Arrival In Barcelou as a Pruoett. About 6.25 p.m , Sc~ t~mbcr 30, the ~1c.11ncr anchored at Mah.. Be,ng conf111cJ tu bis cabin, Rizal was not able to v,~11 the famou\ island foruc:,~ of !be Ch.nstian crusaders. • I saw through a 11n, ,.;ndow," he ""roce 1n ho~ diary. "the bcaoltiul \lew of th.: pon fM.tlta - / " I • wi1h its monumental and magn,ficcn1 castle in three level, .•• 11lurruncd by the lingering afternoon hgh1s " 11 On October 3. at 10:00 o"clod. 10 the morning. the Ir/a d~ PDNJy amved in B.ircelona . ..,,th Raal a pnY)ftCr on lx,ard. The tnp frum \1.mtla 10 Baro:lona l.oted c:x,1ctly 30 <Loy, . He was kept under heavy guard 1n hi, cabin for three da)"i , His 1ailor was no longer the slup capiiun hut the Military Coruman.Jer of Barcelnna, "'ho happened 10 be General Eulog,o O~pu1ol. the -ame one who ordered his ham,hmenl 10 Oap1tan 1n July, 1892. It Wa\ one •f those comc:idences in the lives of ~n 1ha1 make ·h,story ~,ranger than fiction." 14 On hos ..econd day an Barcelona, Raal. although belJ ancomumcado in hh cal>tn, nouccd the c:il y cclebrauon of I hi.!' fc.;,1 of St Francu, of A«,111 He recorded it on h~ diary :15 foll,,..-,. " At 6:00 ,n the morning many cannon shots av,akened 115 Ir ~cems tha1 they nre in honor of the feaM of St. FrJncis of At 12:00 o'clock I counted as many a, JI cannon ,hnt~ anJ ,1 I>()() there ,wre agam » man) At night there "'11S a concert 111 the dining room "'b1ch can be hurd from my cabin • A~,,., At 3:00 a.m. on October 6, Raal was nwakeneJ hy the guard, and c~concd to the gnm and infamou~ pn,on fortress named Moniuich He ~nt the whole morning 1n a cell .\l>out :?:00 in the afternoon, be was , .. i..en ou1 or pnson h) th< iuMd\ and brought to the hc..Jquaner< of General DcspuJol In the onlcn,icw. "hich la,tcd " quaner of un hour , 1he brusque i;cncr.,l told Rizal that he would be shipped back to Manila on hoard the 1rampon srup Colon which -.a~ leavinr. that evcmni , After tbc interview, Ril.al ..,a, taken ;ihoard the <olvn, which was ·full of M>ld1ers and office~ anJ their fam11Jc, - •• At 8:00 p.m ., October 6, the ship left Barcelona, with R11;1l on board. • • • •• 250 Chapter 24 Last Homecoming and Trial Rizal's homecoming in 1896, the la~t ,n hi~ hfc. "'·" h" saddc5t return 10 his beloved native land lie !..new he '"·" facing the supreme test, which rruj!.hl tnean the !>J,nfic:e of hh loft:. hul be WD unafmd As a maucr of fact. h<: wclromcJ 11 Gl.11.il} he d~rcd 10 meet his enem,c, and 10 otkr htm'<!lf a, • ,.1,nltcial victim 10 their sadistic lust and unholy deMtzn~ for he knc,. that bis blood would waler the see& of Filipino freedom Ilk. tnal lhat wa. held ,honly after hos ti.,mccom1n11"' , .,, •I ho,,h>ry·, mockeries of j~tice His enemies ho'A led h~e m.,.: Jog., for h" blood. and they got 11, without benefit of genuine 1u,11c<. A Mart)T'S Last Homecoming. Olly h) day \111<:c lcavinj? Ban:clooa on 1 uesday. Octob.,r 6. 11!96, Ro·;il ,, '""-'cn11ou,ly recorded the e,cnll ,n h" doa') He '""' g1,cn ;o • " " ' ,llhon on the second cla<S and although ,1nctly guudcd he"' , 11ur1,-ously treated by the army offtcers. ··The o(lo~cr-on dut}, · IK wrote ID h" diary, •seems amiable. refined, and !"lhtc, ,,,.,,,,1, 1 "''h the ,criousncs~ of his duty ·· 1 On Octohcr 8 a friend!) officer tolJ R11al th" th<· M•drid newspapers .,.·ere full of Mories about the hlood) rc,nlu1o-0n in the Ph,hppin~ and were blaming him for 11 Rcalmng the ,,d,crsc and unjust puhhc optnion, he thanked Ciod for 1:'""l\ illm the chance 10 return in order 10 confront h" .Jandcr.·r, and to ,,ndicate his name. He "rote m hos doJT) on the ... me dare (October 8)? I bche•e th.,it what Ood IS doona 10 mt I\ • hk,,,n~ . allowina me to So l>acl< 10 the Phibi,,,nn in onlc:r IU he, able to dcstro)' such accu>altOnS. Scuu .... eolh<r tho Jo inc ju~lou and ttcopm< my ,nnocrnu •nJ then I .. ,II t.: tthabilnated or they sentence me to de.th and there!>, 1S1 Lat ttoc .ow.n~'IAnd Tril l . . , ~ Mt1•11r¥ Coui, before the eye> of soctc:1y, I atone for my 111ppooed cnmc. Society will forgive me and later, withou1 any d001ht , ju~tice will be done me aad I will be one more man)'T. At any r3tc, 1m1ead of dying ebrlM<I or in 1hc marugua (Jungle m Cuba) I'll die in my own country I bclic\'e 1ha1 what i, happening " the bc$t that can happen 10 me . Alwa~ let • C.1Kl's ,.,II be donc• I feel more calm w11h regard 10 my furure . . I fccl 1hat pcace has deu:cndcd upon me. tha:nk God! O.Ou an my hopc and my consolauon• Let your Will he dont; I •m ready to obey ti. Either I will be a,ntlemned or abso(ved I'm happy and ready Confiscation ot Riul's Diary, II was known 10 the Spam$h a_utbonues on board the Colon that Rizal was keeping track of the daily event, ,n h,s d,ary. Ibey ,.ere. of course, cunous as to what were recorded m his diary 1'., ti only their curiOStty. but also lhe,r suspicion was arou.sed, for they feared 1hat the diarist might be v.nhng !.Omethmg sed111ous or ueasonable. On October 11 before reaching Pon Said, Ru.ars diary was laken awa~ nnd ..,as cr1l1t,-ally scruunizc:d by the au1hont1es. Nolhing dJngemu, v.a, found in ii\ contents, The cabin was searched thoroughly, but nothmg incnmmatmg was found . On November 2, the diary was returned to tum Owing to the interruption. Rizal was not ahle 10 record the cvc:nh from Mon day October 12 to Sunday. November I Speaking of thi, incident, he wrote in hts dtary. 3 Monday , 2 No,cmbcr - Today, they rcrurrted to me tht> notebook -..hkh lhcy took a,.ay c>n the l11h or lbt month before reaching Port Said For thi\ reason my diary was interrupted. They seardled me and mspccted throug)lly my luuagc lltey tool u"'•) ~II mt papc,- und afterward the)' put me behind bars and rhcy dtd nor take mte out un•il "'c reached the Red ~ - That was what they dtd 10 me m 16 hours hcforc our jmval, Also r..oce they put me m four or six hours before and they rake me our when we arc ;1lrcady in the high Steas. Ho..,evcr. al Singapore they put me in 16 hours before ,,ur amval Abo twice 1hey put handcuffs on m<: Umu«c:ssrul lte..~ue in Singapott. News of R1zal's prcd,ca• ment reac~ his friends in Europe and Singapore. From London, Dr. Antoruo Ma. Regsdor and Sixto Lopez dispatched frantic 152 telegrams to an English lawyer m Sulgapo~ named Hugh Fort to rescue R,z.at from the Spanish steamer when 11 reached Singapore b)' means of a wnt or habea.5 corpus When the Colon amved in Singapore. Atty Fort instituted proceedings at the Singapore Court for the removal of Rizal from the steamer The crux of Mr Fon's legal contention wa,, that Ri1al was ~,!legally detained" on the Spanish 5teamer. Unfortunatel~ Clucf Ju<tice Lome! Cox denied the wnt on the ground that the Colon ,.-as carrying Spanish uoops to the Philippines. Hence II is a warship of a foreign power. which under 1ntcma11onal law was beyond the Jurisdiction of the Sin• gaporc uuthori11c, • Rizal wa, unaware of the attempt made by his friend~ to rescue him in Singapore bccau.<e he was then kept behtnd bar. in the ,hip Arrhal in Manila. On November 3. the Colon reached Manil,1, "'here II wa~ greeted .. 11h wild rcjoiciow, by 1hc Spanu1rds and friar\ because it l>rought more reinforcements and military supplies. While the Spamsh community was exulting wilh JOY, Rizal wa, quiet!) trnn~ferred under heavy guard from the ~hip 10 Fort Santiago Meanwhile . the Spanish authonttes fished for evidence against Rizal. Many Fihp1no pamots. including Deodato Arellano. Dr. Pio Valenzuela. Mo1se.sSal11ador. Jose D,zon, Domingo F,anrn. Tcmotco Pac,. and Pedro Serrano Llktaw, were hru1ally tortured tu implicate Riuil Rizal'~ own brother. Paciano, wa~ arres'led and cruelly tortured. He suffered all pains inflicted by Spain·, drabohca tonur<ers. but he never l>igned any damaging s1a1cmcnt ,ncnmmatmg his }0Wlgcr brother Although his body was ,hanered on the tonure rack and his left hand crushed by 1he -;crev.. hts valiant ~an sp1ri1 remamcd unbroken Pr-diainary ln•estlptloe. On November 20. the prehmtn&f) in,c,ttgauon began . Rll.:ll, the accused, appeared before th<: Judge Advocate Colonel Francisco Olive He was sul>1ec1ed tr a gruelling five-day investigation . He was informed of the chargei against h,m He answered the qucs1ion~ asked by the Judge Advocate. but he was not permitted to confront those whc testified against him. l53 LIit HOfflNlffllne And Trlel ly s.,_,llh Mi11...-y Covn Two kinds of evidence were presented-against Rizal, namely documentary and testimonial. TI,e documentary eviden~ consisted of fifteen exhibits, as follows:s I, 9. An anonymous and unda1ed lctlcr 10 the E'dnor of the Hongkong Telegraph, ccnsunng 1hc ban1shm<nl of Rizal to Oapitan. 2. JO. A letter of Ildefonso Laurel to Rizal , da1ed1Manila, September 3, 1892, saying that the Filipino people 1-0ok up to him (Rizal) as their savior. A letter uf Anlon,io Luna 10 Morianu Ponce, dated Madrid, October 16, 1888, showing Rizal'$ oonnection wilh the Filipino reform campaign in Spain. A letter of Rizal to Ins family, da1ed Madrid, August 20, 1890, stating that the deportation, arc good for lhcy will cocouraac tile people 10 hate tyranny. 3. A letter from Marcelo H. dcl Pilar 10 Deodato '."ellano, dated Madrid, January 7. 1889. 1mphca1rng Rizal 1n the Prol)llganda• camp11gn in Spain. 4, A poem entitled Kund1man. allegedly wriucn by Rizal in Manila on September 12, 1891,6 Thi< po,,m is as follows:1 KUNDIMAN lo the Orient beautiful 'Where the sun is oorn. lo a land of beau1y Full of enchantments But bound In chains. Where the despot reign,, The land dearest lo me. ,\lh! lhal is my country, Sbe is a slave oppressed G:roanmg in the tyrao1's grips: Lucky shaU he be Who can give her libeny! JI A letter of Ildefonso Laurel to Ri:ul, dalcd Man1lu , 17, 1893, mforming an unidentified corresponden1 of 1he arrest and barushment of Doroteo Cones and Ambrosio Salvador, 12. A letter of Marcelo H del Pilar to Don J1m1n A . Tenluz (Juan Zulucta). dated Madrid, June 1, 1!193 rcoom mending the establishmenl o( a special organl:i.alion . ind~pcndcntof Masonry, to help the.cu...., of 1hc Filipin<J l'<'"P'< 13. Trans;:npt of a speech of P1ngk1Jn (Emoloo Jacinto) , in a reunion of the Katipunan on July 23. IK<!3. in wluch the following cry was ultered "Long Live th~ Philippines! Long live Liberty! tong live Doctor R11UI' Ullityl" 14. Transcript of a speech of Tik-Tik (Jose Tunann Santiago) m the same Kalipunan reumon, where ,n 1hc katipuneros shouted: "Long live lhc cmmcnt Doc1or R11.1II Death lo the oppressor nation !" ' A poem by Laong Laan (Rizal). enmlt:d A Talisay in which the author makes the Oap11an \Choolb<1vs , 1ng that lhey know how to fight 'for iheir righh · IS. 6. A ,Mas<mlc documeol, dated Manila, l·ebruary 9, 1892, ho110nng Rizal for h1~ patrio1ir service~ The 1estimonial evidence consi\lcd of 1hc oral tc,tirnoni,·, or Martin Constantino, Aguedo del Rosario , Jose Reye,. Moi,c, Salvador, Jose Dizon, Domingo Franco, Dcoda10 Arellano. Ambrosio Salvador, Pedro Serrano l..aktaw, Dr Pio Vak·111ucl a Antonio Salawr. Francisco Quison. and Timoteo Paez 7, A letlcr signed Dimosalang ( Ri,ar, p,emlonym) lo Tenluz (Juan Zulueta's pseudonym), dated llongkong, May 24, llln, s1aling tltat he was prepanng a •~fe refuge for Filipinos who may be pen.ccu1cd by 1hc Spanhh authorities. On November 26, after the preliminary invcs1iga1ion. Col• onel Olive transmitted the records or !he case to Governor General RJimon Blanco, and the letter appoin1cd Cap1ain Rafael Dominguu as special Judge Advocate 10 inslitulc 1he corrc~pond• ing action against Rizal. S A letter of Carlos Ohvcr 10 an un1dcnttf1ed r,cNm dated Barcel ona, September l8, 1891, descnbmg Rizal a< the man to free the Philtppine; from Spanish opprcs,1<,n ZS4 8. A letter or D,masalang to an unid,ntlficd oomm11tee, dated Hongkong, June I, 1892, sohciting 1hc a,d of 1hc committee in the "patriotic work". 2SS .IOllltllfZAL:1.J'I.WOflUANDWi f W Immediately, Dominguez made a brief resume of the charges and retumed the papers to Governor General Blanco who, thereupon , transmitted them to the Judge Advocate General, Doo Nicolas de la Pena, for an opinion. After studying the papers, Pena submitted the following recommendations: (1) the accused be immediately brought 10 trial; (2) he should be kept in prison; (3) an order of attachment be i$Sued against his property to the amount or one million pesos as indemnity; and (4) he should be defended in court by an army officer, not by a civilian lawyer. RJzat Chooses His Defender. The only right given 10 Rizal by the Spanish authontie~ was to choose his defense counsel. And even this wa~ highly restricted. For he had 10 choose only from a list submitted to him. On December 8, Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception, a list of 100 first and second lieutenants in the Spanish Army was presented 10 Rizal Ile looked over the hst. One name struck his fancy. II was Don Luis Taviel de Andrade, 1st Lieuten• ant of the Artillery, The name was familiar to him so that he chose: the lieu1enan1 10 be his defender in court. LI. Lui~ Taviel de Andrade proved 10 be tbe brother of Lt. Jose Tavicl de Andrade, Riml's "bodyguard'' in Calamba in 1887. Upon being notified by the authorities that he was chosen to defend the accused, he gladly accepted the task. He had previously heard from his older brother (Jose Taviel de Andrade) about Or. Ri1.al of Calamba. Reading of Information of Charges to the Accused. On December II, the information of charges was formally read to Rizal in hi, prison cell. with his counsel present. He was accused of being ··the principal organizer and the living soul of the Filipino insurrection, the founder of societies. periodicals and books dedicated to fomenting and propagating ideas of rebellion. "8 As the accw.cd, Rizal raised no objcct,on on the iurisdicuon or the coun, hu1 pleaded 001 gu,hy to 1hc crime of rebellion . He admitted that he wrote the Constitution of the Liga Filipina which was merely a civic association. He waived the nght to amend or make further s1a1cmcn1s already made, except that he had taken no pan in politics since his exile 10 Dapitan. 256 Dominguez. forwarded the papers of the Rizal case to Malacatian Palace on Occtmber 13, the same day wbcn General Camilo G de Polavicja, with the help of the powerful Dominican friars, became Governor General of the Ph1hppines, succeeding General Blanco. The withdrawal of Blanco from the gubernatorial office s.:alcd Rizal', fate, for he wa, more humane in character than the ruthless Polavieja and, moreover, he firmly believed that Rizal was not a traitor 10 Spain. Had he remained longer 1n oCficc, Ri,a.1 would not have been executed. But this was one nf those inlnguin~ "irs" in hi\tory, of which man has no control becau:.e the dcsl iny of men and natmns 1s in accordance with God's divine plan. Rlul's Manll'esto to His l'eople. On December 15, Rizal wrote a mahi~festo 10 his people appealing to them to stop the accessary shedding of hlood and to achieve their lihcnic~ hy means of education and industry. run, Tlus mamfes10, "'Ti11en 10 his pnson cell at Fon Santiago, ,11, follow,;.'' My Countrymen: On my rclurn from Spam, I learned tha1 my n•mc hod, l>cen u,cd as • war cry among some who were 10 •rm<. The news patnlully surprised me, but believing 11 was all o,cr, I kept silent <we, wha1 I coll!ldcrcd 1rrcmcd1ablc Now I hc:ir rumor~ that the d1s1urh11nces conlrnuc. and lc!tt •my persoru, should still go on u~ing my name in bad or good 1,111h, IQ remedy chi, ohu...: und 10 undcecivc 1hc unwary, I haflCn w addn•~ )"U these 11nc, so that the truth may t>e known I-mm the beginning, when I had news of what was 1>lan11cd, I <>pf'O'Cd 11, fought II, um.I dtrm>n>lrolcd ih ah~>luir impo<sibilily . This h 1hc lrulh aml wilnl.'<sC< cu my words are ,1111 living. I was conv,nced lhill 1he idea "'•' h1ihl1 al»ur,t anti wh,11 wa, worse, "'ould bnng great ,uffcrint1 1 did more . When later, ,n spite of my coun«:I\, ch~ m,>vcmcn1 broke ou1. I sponraneou,ly offered no, only hc111g my &ervu:cs. but my hfc •.-1n<l even in) o.tmc ._., thJt they ni,,h1 u,c them in the manner the, ,aw fi1 10 ,uprr.,~s 1hc rchclhon. for, COO\mccd of the evils tbat would befall lhem, 1 rnn"Jcrcd mysell for1unate ,f, ul 11ny ,,mif,w, I l't!uhl prevent such u«:lcss misfortunes This~ equally of record 157 .10141 l'IIZAw LIFI, WOl'IIICt AHO WIIITtNot My country men: I ha,e g,,en proof~. more than anybody else. or des1rin~ libertie~ for <mr counlrv and I •till desire them. But I platt as II premise the edu~tion of 1he people so that by mean, of tduc:,tion and or lnbQr lltcy m,,ht have o personaluy of their own and mnke themselves worthy of libert i0$. ln my wnlings I have ttrommended redemption. I hove Ul§O ..,rincn (and my word$ have been repeated) tnat reforms. to be fnoitful, have to come frorn above. Lhat tha&e thal come from below arc irregular and un, table Imbued with lhc.c ideal,. I 1:11nnot hu1 condemn and I do condemn 1hi, absurd. savage upri,ing planned behind my back.. which dishonors us, the Filipinos. and discredits lhl>'C who may ad,ocutc our câ– usc I •bhM its criminal methods and disclaim all panic,pa1,on therein. pity• ong from the bonom of my heart the unwary who have allowed thtm'4!lvcs 10 be deceived Re1urn thc11 10 your homes. and may God forgi~e those who have acted in had fa,1h Fommatcly for Rizal. Judge Advocate General Nicolas de la. Pena recommended to Governor General Polav1c1a 1ha1 the manifesto be suppressed. The latter heeded the recommendation ~ that Rizal 's manifesto was not issued to the people. f'hus ~al was •saved _from the shame of his manifc,10', being mismterpreted and dombeyed by 1he Filipino:, in arm~ ""' Ri:i:al's Saddtsl Cbrimna.s. December 25 , 1896 was C'hrisl• mas. On that day all Christendom Joyously celebrated the bonhday of Chnst who wa~ born to redeem mankind and 10 hnng peace and brotherhood to ull men on enrrh What a dark .ind cheerle" C'hri\tma~ for R11.all He, who accustomed _10 ~pend this merry season in the company of his beloved lam1ly or dear friends. found himsell alone and depressed m a dreary prison cell w_as Truly , the Christma, of 11!%, his 1,m on eJrth, wu, 1hc saddest in Riial's life He wa, in despair for, he had nn 11iu,1ons about his fate. Brooding over bis hopeles~ case he wrore a ldter to Lt. Tav,cl d~ Andrade, as follow~, 11 ' 2$8 La1 HOMeeOtnlne And Trilli 8v S{,l_M'lllh M1111My COurt you this morning to tcH you ot an 1mponam mancr, liul undoubtedly the prcssuic or your 11,ork did not permit )"" to oome as expected by the Jn,-es1iga1ing Judge If you h•vc time, I should like 10 speak to you before I app:ar belo,c the court , I ,hall l>c gratdui 1f you cumc 1h" nfte1111x111 . this evenin11. or romorrow Wishing you ~Merry Chnstmas," I rc11era1e Alway~ your attentive and affectionarc 1>ervant nod client, Jose Rizal The Trial of Rizal. The trial of Rizal was an eloquent proof of Spanish inJus11ce and misrule. More than a farce. 1t was patently a mistrial Rual. a c1vihan, was tried b~ a military c,,un composed of alien mihlary officers. His c11o;e wa\ prejudged: he was considered guilty before the actual trial. The military coun met not to give him iusuce, but to accuse and condt:mn him. It tcccpted all charge$ and tc~timonics against 1nm. and ignored! all arguments and proofs in his lavor Moreover , Rizal wa, not given the right (which any accused " entitled 10 have m a reaL tc:>un of ju~ticc) to face the wi1nc~, ugain~t him in open court At 8:<XI a m .. December 26, 18%. the coutt -rnartiul o1 R11.al started in the miliiary building called Cu,mel de F.,paoia Seated! behind a long table on an elevated dais were the ,c,cn members of the mihtury coun, dressed in their rcspccuve ,11my uniform,. as follows, Lt. Col. Jose Togorc~ Arjona· (prcM1lcn1), C.1pt R icardo Munoz Arias, Capt. Manuel Rcgue~a. Capt. Sunuago Izquier<;lo Osorio. Capt. Braulio ~oddgucz Nunez, Capt. Manuel Diaz E.-;cribano, and Capt. Fermin Pere, Rodnguc1 Abo present at the counroQm were Dr Ri,al (the accused), Lt . T.ivicl de AndrJdc (his defense coun~cl), Cnpt Rafael Dominguez (Judge Advocate). Lt. Enrique de Ak<x;cr(Pro,ccuting Allorney), nnd the spectators Among the ,pcc 1,11ors were Josephine Bracken. wmc ncw,papormcn , and nwny Spamards. Fon Santiago. Oertml,cr 25. 1K96 M) Ver) D,~unguo,hcd Oe!e11der: Rita! sat on " bench between tw11 ,old1t.'t, I II' arm, were tied l>chind. elhow to elbow, like n common felon H,: was dressed in a black W')()lcn suit with a white ,c,t anti bh1ck ue. He .,a, calm and d1gn1llcd m appc.1rancc. 1 he ln-c,ogotong Judge ha• onlorrned n1e that tomorrow my case will be beard before the court. I was waiting for The trial wa\ opened h) Judge Al.lvucatc 011ming11c1 wtio explained the case again\! Rita! . After him. Pro<,ccutinj! A llorney 2s, Alcocer arose and delivered a long speech summarizing the charges again,t Ri:z.al and urged the court to give the verdict of death to the accused. The Spani•h spectators applauded noisily Alcocer's petition for the sentence of deaih. After the pr~cuting attorney finished his spirited harangue . DefenSt; Counsel Tav1el de Andrade took the floor and read his eloquent defense of Rizal. I le ended his defense with a noble, but ftnile, admonition to the members of the military: "The Judges cannot be \llndictive; the judges can only be just". lnodcntally, bis admonition fell on deaf ears. The Spanish army officer, who were trying Rual were both vindicttve and unjust. When Lt. Tav1el de Andnide took his ~cat, the court asked Rizal whether he had anything lo say. Rizal then read a supplemeni 10 lus defense which he wrote in his prison cell. In his supptcmc:niary dcfcMe, he further proved his innocence by twelve pornts: I He could not be (I.Uilty or retx-lhon. for he advised 10 rue in revolu1ion. Dr. P,o Val..-nzuel3 m Dap11an not 2. He did not correspond with the radical, revoluuonury deml"nh 3. The rcH)luhnn1'tS used h,~ name without his knowrr he were gullry he ooukl have escaped to Singapore ledge. 4. Ir he had a hand 10 the revolution, he could have escaped in • Morn v,ntn and would no1 have built a home, a hospital. and bouRhl land, in Dapitan ~ If he were the chief or the revolution, why was he nm cun,ulled t,y the rcvuh1uoru$l>? 6. It 11,a, true he wrote the by-laws or the Liga Fihpma, hut chl\ i~ onl\ a civic as\OC:iatum - not a re,•oluhc:mary ~oetcty 7 I he L1,ga F,lipma dtd not h,e long, for alter the fit,t mr:t-t1n1P he w;:11,, hnn1\hcd to Oap1tan Hnd II died our. ~ If th<- l.11ta wa, r~orian,,cd nmc mon1h, later, he did 001 know •bout 11 . lJ Ilic L1ga did not serve the purpose or the u.·\·uh,11onish, uthcl""-1~ thL')' would n.ot have .supplao.tt:d u with the K•t1p1man 260 10. If 11 were true that there ...,,e some btUer com.inents in Rizal's letten, it was because they ,.ere ,.ritten in 18'l0 when his family was being persewted, being dtSpOSSessed of houses, warehomes, lands, etc. and lus brother &nd all his brothcn5-in•law were deported 11 His life in Dapita.n had been uemplary •• the politi<»•military commanden and missionary priests could attest. 12. ft was not true that the revoluuon wa• msp,rcd by his one speech at the hou~ of Ooroteo On&1unco, ~s al~eged by witn~ whom he would hke _10 confront. H" fn~nd1 knew his opposition to anned rebelhon. Why did the Kaupunan send an cml!i!Bf)' 10 Oap11an who WI!\ unknown to h,m? Because thOse who knew him were uware that he would never sancuon any violent movement. The military court, prejudiced as II was, remained indifferent to Rizal's pleading. The president, Lt, Col Togores Arjona, con,idcrctl the trial over and ordered the hall cleared. After a \hort dclibcrntton, the military court unanunously voted for the scntell(;e of death . 12 On the same day (December 26th). the court decision wa~ submitted 10 Governor General Polavie1a . Im mediately, Polavieja sought thc ·opmion of Judge Advocate Gencrnl Nicolas de la Pena o n the court decision The latter affirmed the death verdict. Polavitja SiRns Rizal's F.xeculion. On December 28th, Polavicja approved the deosion of the court-martial and ordered Riuil 10 be shot at 7:00 o'clock in the morning of December 30 at Bagumbayan Field (Luneta). H,s decree on th,~ matter runs as follows: 13 Manila, Dcc:cmher 211, IR96' Conformably to the foregoing opi,uon I •PP',,.." the sentence dictated by the Court Martial ,n the ('f<:<cnl ca~. by virtue of which the death p<:nalty 1s imposed on the accused Jose RiLal Mercado, which sb~II be excculed by shootin& h,m at 7:00 o'clock in the morning nf the 3-0th of this month in the field of Bagumbayan 2'1 For complilnce and the rest that may correspond, let tlus be returned to lbc Jude• Advocate, C.pll.in Don Rafael Domlnsuez. C....G,4ePola~ F~r signing the fall!) document ordering the execution of Dr. Rizal, Governor General Polavicja won the eternal odium of the '".'llipino people. He and other Spanish officials who were re,ponsable for the death or Rizal will evermore remain u obnoxious villains in Philippine history. . . .. . . Chapter 25 Martyrdom at Bagumbayan After the court-martial, Ri;i:al returned 10 lus cell in Fort Santiago to prepare his rendezvous with destiny . During his last 24 bout$ on eairth - from 6:00 A.M. December 29 w 6:00 A \1 .• December 30, 1896 - he was busy meeting vi,i1or., including Jesuit priests, Josephine Bracken and members of his fam,I). a Spanish newspaper correspodnent (Santiago Muta,x), some friends, and secretly finishing his farewell poem A\ a Chnsunn and a hero-martyr, he was serenely resigned to die for his beloved country, which he called "Pearl of the Onent Sea" tn h,~ Inst poem and MPearl of the Orleni" ,n an article cntnlcd ''Unfortu• natc Philippines" published in Tl,r Honskons Ttlr,:raph on September 24. 1892. Last Houn ol Rizal. At 6:00 A.M , December 29. 11196. Captain Rafael Dominguez, who was designated by Governor General Camilo Polavieja 10 lake charge of all arrangement< for the execution of the condemned prisoner, read the dca1h <entence to Rizal - 10 be shot at 1he back by a finng squad at 7:00 A.M. In Bagumbayan (Luneta) At 7:00 A.M., an hour after the reading of lhc death sentence, Rizal was moved 10 the pri<0n chapel, where he <pent his last moments His first visitors were Father Miguel Saderra Mata (Rector of Atenco Mumcipal). and Father Lu,~ Viza. Je,uu teacher. At 7:15 A.M., Rector Saderra left Rizal, ma 1ovo;1I mood, reminded Fr. Vi~a of the statuette of 1he Sacred Heart of Jesus which he bad carved with his pen knife as an Atenco student. Fr. Yiu, anticipating such rcmini~ccnce, go1 1hc ,1atuc11c lrom his pocket and gave it 10 Rizal The hero happil> received it and placed it on bis writing table. 2'2 16) At 8:00 A M .. Fr Anton,o Roscll arrived to relieve Father VtU. Rizal invited rum to join him at breakfast, which he did. After breakfast, Ll Luis Taviel de Andrade (Rizal's defense counsel) came, and Rizal thanked him for his g;allant services At 9:00 A.M., Fr. Federico Faura arrived Rizal remmded hi~. that he 1.;11d that (Riul) would someday lose bis bead for wntmg the Nvli "Father," Rizal rer,ar1'ed, "You are indeed a prophet". 1 Al 10:00 A.M. Fathers Jose Vilac:Jara (Rizal's teacher ar the Alenco} a_nd V~te Balaguer (Jesuit m1ss1onary in Dapitan who had befriended RWll during the laucr's elllle) visited the hero. After them ca.me the Spanish joumalist, Santiago "1ataix, who interviewed R12al for h.is riewspaper £( Herafdo tk Madrid From 12:00 A.M. (noon) Lo 3:30 P.M., Rizal was left alone m his cell. He took h" lunch, after which he was bu~y wn11ng. It was probably during this tirrie when he finished his fare,.,.eU poem and hid it inside his alcohol cooltinR stove (nor lamp as M>mr ~t0grapbcrs erroneously MSert) "'luch was given to him ~ a _g~ft l>y P<1~ ~ardo de Tavera (wife of Juan Luna) during his V\Stt to Pans in 1890. At rhe same time he wrote hi~ last letter to Professor Blwnentritt (!us best friend) in German as ' follow,, 1 Prof. F~mand Blumcn1ri11: My dear Brother: Wbtn you rca:.ve thu letter. I shall be ckod. To,norrow at seven I "1all be !\hot: bur I am innoa:nl of 1hr cnmc of rebellion I am going to cite wnh a tranquil con5Ciencc Go.>dbve, my best, my dcatcsr fncnd, and never 1hm.k 111 ()f • Ilk Fort Sanha~. December 29, 18'16. (Signed) Jose Rl2aJ Regards 10 the entire family, 10 Sra. Rosa. Lolc"g, Conradito and Fcdtrico I am lcavin, a book f0< you a, a 1:151 remembrance of m,ne. 264 At J:30 P.M .. Father Balaguer returned to Fort Santiago ,1nd d,,;c~ed v. 1th R,tal about hi\ rctrac11on o[ the a nu-Catholic ,dca, m hi, "'ri1,ngs and membe~h•p in Mai.onry \1 4 (Kl P \I.. Ri.c.11\ mulher arrived Ri1al knelt do"'n hcfore her and k1~sed her hand,,, heggmg her to forgive hun. Hoth mot her and ,on "'ere c r1 mg a, the guards scparJIC them Shmll, ahcNard, Tnn,Jad c111ncJ the cell to fetch her mother A, 1 ·) were lc.iv,ng R1,al f.3VC to Tnmdad the alcohol coo1'ing ,1mc. "'hasp.:npc to her ,n l::nf.h,h; "There something inside:" I r1111d.1J untlcr•,1011J \he knc"' I np.h,h l><!causc R11.al rnught her th" 1.,n~u.1,:c Thi, ·,nmcthnt!?- wa.s Rizal's farewell pclCm.' So II came 111 r;,,-, that ,he wa, at>k to ,muggle the hero•~ last nnJ !?rca1c,1 poem a pnc<!le,, gem or Phihpp,nc literature. 1, .\he, th,· dq>artun: ol Donal codora and Trinu.bd, f'a1ha~ V,l.,d.11.1 and r ,tani,I.,, M.nch entered the cell. followed by rath<r Roscll ,\1 1,:1~1 r M Rizal rccei,·ed a nc" visitor, Don Silvmo l..11ix1 I u11,,n. the Dean ol Ilk Mamla Cathedral Fathers Ii.al. 11c ,11,J \l.1rth tell. lcuvmg '. 1laclara with Rual and Don 1,il\lRII \1 s IX P.M , R11,1l had his IJ,t ,upper He informed Captain Oonunj!ua "'hu ,..,th ham that be forgave his enem,es, 111du,l1ng th, II' ,hrary Judge, "ho Ulntlcmncd him to death ".1" \1 .,,,11 I' ,1 . R1LJI wa, v~tcd hy Oon Ga,par Cc~tano, 1h,• fl-...,1 Ill th, Rm.ii \ud1cnC1a o[ Manil.1 A~ a graciou5 h<Xt, Rt1.1I 11ftn"ll ham rhc t>e,t chair in the cell After a pleasant l'UII\U\Jll'10 1hc fN'..tl left .. uh a good tmprcss,on of Ru.. ml\· h~l."Ol't. .,nJ nohk 1..:har;t1.:1cr r, \1 111 tal ,., th,· n tht of December ~91h. the draft of the r,·11 11,,n ,,:n• h th• an tl•Filipino Archhi~hop Bernardino 'l,>1.1kll.1 ( 1:-,••1 ll/tlt) ...,a, ,ut>m111cd h) Father Balaguer 10 Raal 1,,1 ,1\!ttah11t..· 1,,11 th-: ht:ro rcjcc1c<l 11 hccau~c 11 wac; too long ,tti.l 1,~ .lad ""I hl..c 11 . \\"conling 111 F:t1hcr R,1l.1gucr's 1e,1imc.\ny. he ,h""'''' R,1,11 a ,b,,ncr retraction .,..h,ch was prepared by hllh"r ""' 1'1. Sur,:n,>r of 1hc Jc,u,1 Society an the Phihpp,n~. v.h1d1 "'·" ...·,qHitM, 10 Ri111I Aller mat.mg some c hange\ in 11. R11al th..:n ,.,111c hi, rctr:wtion m which ht abJurcd Masonry arHI h,, rclt.:1nu, ,Jca, v.h,ch were ant1-Catholic.• This rerracuon 26S of Rizal is now a controversial document, for the Rizalist scholan, who ue c11her Masons or anti-Catholic. chum u to be a forgery, while the Catholic Rizalists believe it to be genuine. Thi\ debate between two hostile groups of Rizalists is futile and irrelevant. Futile in the sense that no amount of evidence can convince the Masonic Rizalists that Rizal retracted and the Catholic Rizalibls that R,izal did not retract. As a famous saying goes; ~For those who believe - no justification is necessary; for the skeptics. whose criterion for belie£ 1s not m their mind~ but in theuwills - no justification is posStblc". It is likewise irrelevant because it does not mauer at all to the greatness of Rizal Whether he retr.acted or not, the fact remains that he was the greatest Filipino hero. This al'IO applies to the other controversy as to whether Riul married Josephine Bracken before his ~xecution or not. Why argue on this issue. Whether or not Rizal married Joscphi,ne in Fort Santiago, Rizal remains just the same - a hero-martyr. At 3:00 o'clock in the morning of December 30, 1896, Rizal heard Mass, confessed lus sms, and took Holy Communion. At 5:30 A.M . • he took his laSt breakfast on earth. After this, he wrote two letters, the first addressed to his family and the second to his. older brother Paciano. The lcuer 10 his sisters follows: 5 To My Family, I ask you for forgiveness for the pain I cause you, bu1 some day I shall have 10 die and ii is bcner lhal I die now in the plenitude of my conscience. Dear Parents, bro1her. and Sisters, Give thank, to God that I may pct$erve my 11anqulll1y before my death. I die rcsiJned, hoping 1ba1 with my death you will be left ,n peace, Ah! It is bcuer to die than 10 live suffering. Console yourselves. I enjoin you to forgive one another the blllc meannC$SCS of life and try to live united in peace and good harmony. Treat your old parenl$ as you would like 10 be treated by )'-OUr children la1er. Love them very much in my memory. Bury me in the gro11nd. Place•• atone and I crou over it. My name, the date of my birth, and of my death. Notbmg more. Ir later you wish to surround my grave with a fen"· you can do so No 1nn1versar1,- I prefer PO/Jn~ /!1mJ.,1< •· Have pity on poor Josephine. Rizal's last lenc, 10 Paciano 1\ us follows. 1 My clear Brother It has been lour year$ and • half that' we ha,c not ,ccn each other nor have we communica1ed with each n1her I do not think it i,, due to lad.. ol affection on m) pan nor on yours. bu1 bccuw.:, kno..ing each 01hcr so \\CII, we du not need 10 11111, to understand each other. Now I am ahout 10 die. and it is to you lhat I dcd,catc my last lines, to tell you how sad I am to leave you alone ,n life, burdened with the weight of the family nr.d mu ••Id parents. I am ~hmktng now bow hard you have worked Ill f.1\C me a career; I believe I have tned not to wa,tc my um~ Brother of mine: if the fru,1 ha.\ been b1t1<1 . II " not my fault, but the lault of circumstances I know thut i·ou haw wffered much on my acxoun1. and I om M><T)' I assure you, brothel')' thnl I die mn<xcnl ilf tlu~ rnnw of rebellion H my former wri1ings haw mn1rihutccl . I do not deny it absolu1cly: bul lhcn. I though1 I ha,e cxpiaml for lhc past whh my dcponauon Tell our Cather I remember Mm. uml how! I rcmuml'CJ my whole childhood. of hi, affection and hi, love A~'k him 10 forgive me for 1hc pain thal I have unwilltngl) caused him Your brother, (Signed) Jose Ku.ul At 5:30 A .M .. Josephine Bracken. ac,'Ompanicd by 3 ~,~1cr of Rizal (Josefa), arrived Jo,cphmc, w11h 1enr~ 111 her C)'C!., bade him farewell Riwl cmhraced her for the las1 ttmc , Jnd befoTe she left. Rizal gave her a last g,ft - a rel1g1ou, hoo k . Imitation of Christ by l'uther 1111:,mas a Kempis. which he :tUIO!( mphro:l. To my dear unhlippy wil'c. Jt,scphme December '10th, 18% Jose Rizal 267 At 6:00 A.M., as the soldiers were getting ready for the death march to Bagumbayan, Rizal wrote his last leuer 10 tus beloved parents, as follows: 8 My beloved F~lher, Pardon me for lhc potin with wh.ich I repay you for sorrows and sacrifices for my cduc:11tion. I did not want nor did I prefer ii. Goodbye, Father, goodbye . .. _ Jose Rizal To my very dear Mother. Sra. Ona Teodora Alonso 6 o'clock in the morning, December 30, 1896. Jos.: Rizal Doth March to Bagumbayan. About 6:30 A .M . , a lrumpet sounded al F'ort Santiago, a ~ignal 10 begin the death march to Bagumbayan, the designated place for the ueculion . The advance guard of four soldiers wnh bayoneted nfles moved . A few meter., behind, Rizal walked calmly, with his defense counsel (Lt. Luis Taviel de Andrade) on one side and two Je~uit pnests (Fathers March and Vilaclara) on the other. More well-armed soldier., marched behind lum R,zal was dressed elegan:ly in a black suit, black derby hat, black shoes , while shirt , and black tie Hi~ arms were tied behind h'om elbow to cJbow. but the rape was quite loose to give his arms freedom of movement. To the muffled sounds of the drums, the cavalcade somno• lently marched slowly. There was o handful of spectators lining the street from Fort Santiago to the Plaza del Palacio 1n front of the Manila Cathedral. Everybody seemed to be out at Bagumbayan, where a va~t crowd gathered to see how a martyr dies. Gomg through lhe narrow Postigo Gate, one of the gates of the city wall, the cavalcade reached the Malccon (now Bonifacio Drive), which was deserted. Rizal looked at the sky, and said Jo one of the priests: "How beautiful it is today , Father. What morning could be more serene! How clear is Corregidor and the mountains or Cavue! On momin~ like this, I used to take a walk with my sweetheart". WI While passing in l'Jont of the Atenco, be saw the college. towcn a)>ove the walls. He asked: ~1s that the Atcneo, Father?" ~Yes", replied tho priest. They reached Bagumbayan Field. The spectators crowde~ huge square formed by soldiers. The cavalcade entered this 3 square. Rizal walked serenely to the place, where be was told to stand. .II was a grassy lawn by the shore of Manila Bay. between two lamp posts. Martyrdom or a Hcr<1. Rizal, knowing that his rendezvous with destiny was imminent, bade farewell to Fathers March and Vilaclara and to his gallant defender, Lt. Luis Taviel d~ Al)drad~. Although his arms were tied, he fi_rmly clasped th~1r hands_ in parting. One of the priests blessed_him and offe~ed h1?' a crucifix to kiss. Rizal reverently bowed his head and kissed 11. Then be requested the commande~ of the firing squ~d , that he be shot facing the firing squad, His rcqucM was denied. for the captain had implicit o rders to shom him in the back. Reluctantly , Rizal turned his back to the firing squad an_d faced the sea. A Spanish military physician , Dr Felipe RUJ2. Castillo asked his permiss10n 10 feel his pulse, which request was gra~1ously granted. Dr, CastillQ was amazed to find it normal, showing that Rizal was not afraid to die. The death ruffles of the drums filled the air Above the drum-beats, the sharp command "Fite" was heard, and the guns of the finng squad barked . Riuil , with supreme effort, turned his bullet-riddled body to the right, and fell on the ground deod - with face upward facing 1he morning sun. It was exactly 7:03 in the morning when he died in the bloom or manhood - aged 35 years , five months, and 11 days. Rizal died as he described in his farewell poem , 1hird stanza · " I dit 1,.,, whtn I su tht dawn brtak, Through 1h, gloom of night. to Mrold IM day; And if color is lacking my blood tlu,u shalt tak,, Pour'd out aJ nud for thy dtur 1ak,, To dyt with its crimsonotht waking ray". It is also interesting to note that fourteen years before his execution, Rizal predicted that he would die on December 30th. l69 - 111241.: llPl, IIIOfllCt _WII. , . _ He was then a medical student in Madrid, Spain. The entry in his diary reads a:s follows: APPENDIX A January J, 188), •0 . Two nights ago, that is 30 December, I had a frightful n,ptmarc whten I almoot died, I dreamed that, im11ating an ~or dying on stage, I feh vividly that my breath was failin11 and I was rapidly loong my wcngth. Then my viSJon bec,ime dim and dense darkneS5 enveloped me 1hey ore the pangs of death. Aftermath cl â– Hero-Martyr's Oath, A! the time when the bullets of Spain's firing squad killed Dr. Rizal, the Spaniards _residems, friars (jesuits not included), corrupt official, (includ: mg Governor Polavicja) exulted with sadistic joy, for Rizal, ~onnid~ble champion of Filipino freedom, was gone. In fact, 1mmed11tely after lhe hero's execution the Spanish spectators shouted "Viva Espana!" "Muerte a los Traidores", ("Long Live ~n! •D~th ,10 the Traitors!") and the Spanish Military Band, J()iJUng the Jubilance over Rizal's death. played the gay Mard,a de Cadiz. Poor bigoted Spaniards of no vision! They were fully unaware of hiflory's inexorable tides. For the execution of Rizal presaged the foundation of an independent nation. True that the Spanish bullets which killed Riul destroyed hi, brain but the hbcrtanan ideas spawned by his brain destroyed tho Spanish rule in the Philippines. As Cecilio Apostol, greatest Filipino epic poet in Spanish, aptly rhapsodized:" .. Rest in peace tn lhc Madows of obUv1un, Redeemer or a country in bondage! In the mysiery of the grave, do 001 cry llccd no1 1hc momcniary tnumph of the Spamard Because i'f a bullet destroyed your <-ranoum, Likewi~ your idea destroyed an empire!" By h,s writings, wh,ch awakened Filipino natiunalism and paved the way [or the Phihppmc Rcvoluunn. he proved 1ha1 "the pen is mightier tha n the s word", A$ a many•splcndo1ctl g~nius,, writer, scientist, a~d political martyr, he richly deserve, history s salute as the national hero of the Philippine,. • • • • • 270 WHO MADE JOSE RIZAL OUR FOREMOST NATIONAL HERO, AND WHY? By Esteban A. M Ocampo• Or. Jose Riial Mercado y Alonso. or s,mply'Jose Rizal ( 11!611896), is unquestionably the greatest hero and martyr of o ur notion. The day of his birth and the day of h,s cxccuuon arc fiuingly commemorated by all classes of our people throu,Ahou1 the length and breadth of this country and even by 1'1h~inos and their friends abroad. His name is a byword 1n every Filipino home while his picture adorns the postage s tamp and paper money of widest c,rculation No other Filipino hero can •~•pa,;, Riz.al in the number of monuments erected m ht< honor; m the number of towns, barrios, and streets named after him: m the number of educational institutions , i.ocictier,, and trade. ~a~1c, that bear his name: m the number or pcr,on~. holh F1l1rmos and foreigners, who were named " Rizal" or "Rizalina" because of their parents' admira1ion for the Great Malayan ; and ,n th~ number of laws, Eiecutivc Orders and Proclamnt1011, of the Chief Exe.cutive. and bullenn~. memoranda. and circulars ~fhoth the bureaus of public and pnsnte ,chool~. Who 1s the F1hpmo writer and thinker whose leaching~ .and nohle thourht, have been frequently invoked and quol<'d by author; and pubhc ,p,:ak• crs on almost all occasions'? None hut R12al And "'hy " 1h1> so? Because , dS biographer Rafael Palma said, "The doctnn~•, or Ri1.al are nol for one epoch bu1 for all epochs. They arc a, vahd today as they were y~lcrdity It ca nno t be si,id th,11 hccau,c 1he political ideals of Rizal have: been a_chicved, hccau,c of 1h<: change o f inst11utions. 1hc wisdom or his counsels or thc ..v;1luc o f h1> t.loctrincs have cca,cd to be <>pportunc. The) how not . •l(nlght Commanoe,, Kn1gh11 ot RIHf, 1no P,-11ldtnt, Phlllpp,ne ._.,110,,cal Aslocialion 1. Tho Pride of tho Maloy " - 1949, p, 366 271 Unfonunately, however, there arc still some Filipinos who cntenain the behef tha t our Rizal is a "made-to-order• national hero, and that the maker or manufacturer in this cai.e were the Americans, pan,cularly Civil Governor William Hol'lard Taft. This was done alleged Iy in the following manner: "And now, gentlemen, you mu;\ have a natiONtl hero". These were supposed 10 be the word, addl'C$.Wd by Governor Taft 10 Messrs. Pardo de Tavera. Legarda, and l..uiurriaga , Filopmo member• or the Ph1hpp,nc Commio\lon, of which Tart was the Chairman. It was further reported that ''m the subsequent discussion in which the rival mems of the rcvolutional'y hcroc~ (Muccio 11. dcl Pilar, Graciano Lopt:1 Jaena, Jose Riral, General Antonio Luna. f.milio Jacinto, and Andres Bom(acto - 0.) were considered, the final chou;e - now universally acclaimed a wise one - was Rir.al And so hi\tOT)' was made "2 • This ,1nicle will aucmpt to answer two questions: (I) Who made Rizal the foremost national hero of the Phihpptnes? and (2) Why is Rizal our great~, national hero? Before proceeding to answer these queries, it will be bener if we first know the mcan111g of lhe term hero. According 10 Webster's New lnltrnati<mal l)irti<lnary of the English language, a hero is "a prominent or central personage taking an admirable part in any remarkable "" ion or event.. A ho, Ma person of distinguished valor or enterprise in danger, or fortitude in suffcnng. • And finally, he is "a man honored after death by public wo~hip. because of c:xccprional i,erv1ce to mankind.• Why ,s Ru.al II hero, nay, our forcmo;t oational hero? He is our greatest he ro becau,;e, as a towering figure in the Propaganda Ca111pa1gn, he took an "admirable part" in that movement which roughly covered the pct iod from 1882 to 1896. H wc were asked to pick out a single 11oork by a Filipino writer during this era which. more than any other writing, contributed tremendously 10 the formation of F11ip1no n111io11ali1y, we sh;1II have no hesitation in choosin~ Ri1.11I'~ Nnli Me Tangerc (Berlin. 1887) It is true that Pedro A. P~temo published his novel, Ninay, in Madrid in 18115; Marcelo 11 <.lei P1la1 . h1~ La Sob/rarzia Monaca/ in Barcelona in 1889; Graciano Lopez Jaena. his Discurso.r y Articulos Vanos, a lso in Barcelona in 1891; and Antonio Luna, his lmpres,ones in Madrid in I S9'.l, but none of these books had 2. Phlf1pp1nes free Presa. Dec. 28, 1946. 272 evoked such favor11ble and unfavorable comments from friends and foes alike as did Ri1al's Noli Typical of 1he encomiums that the hero receive~ for his novel were those he received from Antonio Mana Rcg,dor and Prof. Ferdinand Blumentritt. Rcg,dor , a Filipino exile of 1872 in London, said that "the book was superior· and tbat "if Don Quijote has made its author immortal because he exposed to the world the sufferings of Spain, your Noli Mc Tangu" will hring you equal glory . ."l Blumentritt, afte! reading R.izal's Noli, wrote and congratulated its author, saying arn~ng ot~er things: ··Your work, a, we Germans s«y. has been written With the blood of the hean . . . Your work has exceeded my hopes and I consider myself happy to have been honored with your friendship. Not only I, but also your country, may feel happy for having in you a patriotic and loyal son. If you contmue 5?, you will be to your people one of tho.e great men who w,_U exercise a determinative influence over the progress of their spiritual life .... If Rizal's friends and admirers praised with jus1tfiable p~de the Nol, and its author, his enemies were equally loud and bnler in attacking and etindcmning lhe 5pme. Perhaps _no other work or writing of another Filipino author has. up to this day, aroused as much acrimonius debate not only among 011r people but alJO among the reactionary foreigners as the Nuli,"of Rizal. In 1be Philippines the hero's novel was attacked and coi>demned tly, a F aculty Committee of a Manila university and ~y the P~rmanc~t Censorship Commission in 1887. The Comrmttcc said tha~ 11 found the book "heretical, impi<: is, and scandalous to the rchg1• ous order, and unpatriotic and subversive to_ public ord~r, ~ibelous to the Government of Spain and to us polillcal polices 1~ these Islands" while ihe Commission recommended "that the 1mpo_rtat1on, ;cproducuon, and circulation of this pernicious boo_k 1n the Islands be absolutely prohibited. " 5 Coming ~wn to our lt~e, during the Coogress,onal discussions and hearings on the Rizal (or Noll-F'ill) bill ,n 1956, the proponents and opponents of the bill also engaged themselves in a bitter and long-drawn-out 3 Eplotolono RIHllno, Ton,o hglffldo. 4. laicl.. Torno Primero. 5. Auotin Craig. IUul"• , _ - . . _ Pl'• :1111.305, 273 debate Chai finally resulced in the enactment of a compromise measure, now known as Republic Act No. 1425. c'Ountry. He could have been whGtcvc, he wished h> be . considering his natural endowments; he could ha,·,e eamed conSJdera.ble sums of money from h1s profession; he euuld have lived relatively rich, happy, p,ospcrnu,, hJu he not dedicated himself to pubhc mailers. Bui in horn the voice ol the species was stronger than the voice of personal progren or of private fonune, and he preferred 10 llw fllo from his' family.and to sacnficc his personal affections for an ideal he had dreamed of. He heeded not his brother, no1 even his puents, bein&.$ whom he re.,p<;ctcd and vcncrntcd so much, io orde, to follow the road hi, coilK1encc had traced The nttacks on Rizal's first novel were not only confined in the Phttippmes but were also staged Ill lhe Spanish capicaL There, Senator Fef'llando Vida, Deputy (and cx-Gcn,:ral) Luis M . de Pando, and Premier Praxedes Mateo Sagasla were among chose who unjustly Jambasced and criticized Rizal and his Noll in the two chambers of the Spanish Cortes in 1888 and I8ll9.6 II is comforting to learn, however, that about thirteen years tater. Congressman Henry Allen Cooper of Wisconsin delivered an eulogy of Rizal and even reciced the marcyr's Ultimo Pensamltnto on the floor of the United S1a1cs HOU5<" of Representatives in order to prove the capacity of the Filipinos for self-government. He said in part: "It has been said chat, if American institutJons haJ Jone nothing else lhan furnish to the world the character of George Washington: that olonc would entitle them IO lhe respect of mankind. So, Sir, I say to all those who denounce the Filipinos mdiscrim,nately as barbarians and savages, without poa;sibility of a civilized future, that this despised race proved itself enlilled to their rc<pect and to the respect of mankind when 11 furmshed to the world the character of Jose Rizal. "7 TIie rcsuh of this appeal of Rcprc:.-entaci,e Cooper was the approval or what is popularly known ru; the Phihppsne Bill nf 1902. for tum. "He did no.I have great me•n• at hi• disposal to Cafl) out bis campaign. but that did not diKouragc h11n, he contented himself with what he had. He suffered the ngors of the oold winter of Europe, II!,' ,uffeocc.l hunger, priv•llon, and misery; but when he rai,scd hi, eye, 10 heovcn and •l•" bis ideal, his hope was re.born. He complained of his countrymen, he complained of <ome or thmc whu bud pu•nuscd him help and did nOI help him, until al time\. pr.1foun<II) disillusioned. he wanted to renounq! hos camflllogn forever giving up evcrythmg But ,uch moments were c,·ancs<:c11l , he soon foll comfoned and resumed the u"k of hearing I he cross or his suffering."" Dr. Frank C. Laubach. an American biographer of Rizal, spoke of the hero's courage in the following -.urJs: The preceding paragraphs have ~ho"n that hy the Noli alone Rizal, among his contemporaries, had become the most promin.e nt '.Ir the central figure of the Propaganda Movement. Again, we ask the questton: Why diJ Rizal become the greatest Filipino hero'/ Bccau,e ,n this writer', humhlc upinion, no Filipino has yet been born who could equal or wrp;1,, Rizal as ~a person of dil.tinguishcd valor or entcrpriM: in danger, or fortitude in suffering." or the,e trail$ of our hero. let u, sec what a Fihpino and an American biographer said: "What is most oumoruhlc in Ri1•I." wrote Rafael P:olrnJ , "is his complete self-denial. hi< complete uh:ondonment of hos pc~onal intcrc;ts ,n order to th1nL ,,nly t1f 1h11,c of his His consuming life purpo;e was she secret of Im mooal c~ur~ge. Physicnl courage. ii • 11: true . wa\ one or hi1' rnhcrth!tl traits. Bui that h.gh couraie to doc lovin, bs murdc;crs, which he at last achoevcd, - tlta, canno1 be on he roted. II must be forged out in the fires of ,ufrerin11 und 1conp1,11111n As we read through his life , we can see how 1hc morJI s,new and fiber grew year by year n, he fntc<l n.-w rcrols and wa.s forced to muke fearful dc:1:1,im1, Ir required couru,t~ to wntc his t'A'O great novels. telhng n~Hhmg_ 1ha1 rio oth..:r man had ventured 10 say before, ,1and1ng almu,1 ~lone against the- moM powerful mlcrcsts in hi,) 1;.-ounll>,' :ind rn Spain, and knowing full well that dcspo1ism would strike back. He had reached nnother lolticr plateau llf heroism 6, Aetana. VWa ,y - 1 0,101, Jooo llllel. Hlo u,., and llmH. p. "4 274 ' . i 0.. JoM Rlnl. pp 131-133. 8 Palm1. Tho Plido of tho Moley - • p 381 •2&2. 27S wtoen be: ... rou thole ldtcn ta Hmglong. 1"0 be opeaed Wr my clnth," and Ailed tnlo 1M -1r1p" tn Man,la w11bou1 aoy tlhwon.. Theo ,n hi5 Dapnan 0011:1h:, when he was 1cmr4cd to cK:apc:, •nd saiJ • p,,u•, not ona: t,ut hundr~ or umes lo, fOllr k"'I )Un., and""'"· on th, "'"' ,., (;ut,• l'Nko Rous ph:wcd with hun to ~tep <>1r 1he ~I o( S,naaporc upon Bnt,.., tcm1ory and •~ve h.. hfc wh•t ,rmcr $lruggh: II D"lust Juve auicJ bun 10 3ffi'ACJ' o .. c.r .rnJ aga,n , · i-o, no. no!" WI= 1hc ,cn1cntt of dcalh and the ratdul mor111ng of h1> tucul,on t>roughJ the ftnal tesl. Dccemt>rr JO. 18%, be "'11lked •1th rrrlc,.:t ,:alm 10 th.: finni hnc u though by ha ov.n ~ . lhc oaiy heroic ftprc ,n 1hat o.,~, 14""lfdld M'\"n(t"' Tn llw "•~led Sp,uuard,. 1n Spoon and ,n lbc Ph1lippuies, Razal ~ s th.."~ 1ntdh~nt, mo,1 roungcou, 11nd mo\! Jangcr• Olll> c11cm} ol 1he rcact1ooanc\ and 1hc 1yran1>; therefore he .tlou ,J < I-it, :"u"1,dv 1n ordc:r ID )Crve as an cumplc and a wamu,' to lh, ,· of "" ~ind llu, "·" 1hc rc:a50n why Rual, alter a hnel m, .ck In ,I ,.a, <cntenn-d to d, a1h and m.id<· to face the tmng 1ouJ JI Bagumba~110 field. nv-,• lhc l.uncta, ,n the early mom i; ,,I lh:,crnhcr Jo, 18'1<1. .,m.t And lnr 1hc 1hml la\l 11me, v.c n.-J)('at 1he 11uouon. IS R11..al the ~a lot Filrpino hero tha1 .,,er l1ve,1 / B<-cause he is ·11 man honored alter dea1h b) puhhc v. on.hip, because .,f cx,ep1111n;al s.:",cc 10 manlmJ·. \\ c can sa, th.n e,cn before h,s cu·c1111on R11.1I "a, alrcad) ~,d.urncJ b, kl.,, h Fit1p1no." ind h•rc,gnc" a, th~ forcmo<t ka,lcr ol h" people Wnting from B.ir«lon.i 111 the Great 1'1.ll ". n o., March Ill. ll!X9. Mar,·clo •~ <kl hi.tr 1J " RILaln,,i, ".,un Jcrecl1<.1dmonr ,u nombrc con,111u,e la rna, pur,1 c mm ...·ulaJJ l>andc,,. Jc a,p,nmonc, y f'lanJd ) It" ,u,o, "" ,r, c,...,. m.is quc unoi, ,oluotano,; quc m,lu,in l>:110 ci.a handcrJ h:rnando A.:ncdo, -.ho called R11al his 'dl\ltngu1do 111nigo rnmpJncro ) p•1>ano., . wrote the: latter from I ua,:nza. ~p.iin. nn October 2.'i, I 9· "I i.cc in ,nu the rnoJd I 1h1•mo. ,our 3pplicat,un 10 stud> ""d your talent~ hJ,.- placed on ., h,·1ph1 ,.h,~h I re-ere nnJ admtre."' 11 Tbc Wh, '°" Bicolano Dr T<>mM Art,JOla wrote Rizal ill Madrid. F ~ 9 1891, sa)mg: · Your moral mflucncc over w. IS tnddplltal>lc. And Guillermo Pu.,tu or Buban wro1c 1his tn"-ne to Rizal. say,n& Vd a qui.;n se i. rucJc (llamar) ~n razoa. abcza lutelar de Ins fihp,nos. aunque la comparaaoo paruca algo ndocula. porquc p.--ce la vutud de atracr con.Mg<> cnconad» voluntad. , ,anJ~r t..> d1~vrd1as y cnc.-mistadn rn,ccros:n, ~~r en fic,ta, .1 homhrcs que no qucnan ver.;c DI en la calk- • Aw ,n, the forc.-1incr, who rcrog:n,,cd Ri.u.l as ID< lcadiut f,hpmo ,f •11, um.: v.crc Hlumentrolt, ~apoleon M Khril. Dt Reinhold RMt oed V1cc111c Baruntcs. IJlumcntnll 1olJ Dr M"'" o Viol tn May , IN<7 that • Rual ,..,n the grcatol product ,f r.he Ph, ppme, and th•I lus .:,.wn,n,: to the •orld wa:. like the .. ppcaranct uf" rnrc comcl, whose ,~re bnlliancc appan onh c•< n otht r ccntur) •I) "lapokon M Kh<-,1 of f'r.,t,,e, Au~iria "rnh.' tn Rizal and ,;aid "aJmiro en V<I a un noble repre,entJOlC de I• Espan.1 colo111al ,.,,. Or Ro-;t, dasnniu1<,hcd Mal ,_,,k'17•I anJ 1,hran,1n ul the lnJ,.. ()fhc:c 1n I oodon . C2lled Ru,,I -una pert., de hnmbrc•,,. ,..hilc Oon Vicente B_ arra,!'~f hatl 1n ,1<ln111 1h,11 R11al wa~ ·1he first amonj! the Filipm<>'> • r,ur. 1:,cn h<forc: 1hc outl>re ..l uf 1hc R.e--o!utKln a!,1•~• Spam m l!Nt,. 11 ,any 111 ,ianu,- <,on he: c,t.,.t to rro,c 1ha1 h~ rounirym,eo her<· uml .,l•roaJ r,•,ogmt<·J Rv,11'• lc:1<lc~1p In the earl, part of l'-'N ,., ""•" unan,m.-.u,t~ elected I>) the fwp,no m Ba[,dona and M .. JnJ as horwra.f\ pre<idcnt of the La St1bJ,,ri'Jad 11 "T- " T - . p tr.9 13 ._._.._1fft0 V.ol• My Tr..,._.,.._ JtNa ......._ 13a (plot--· ,._ _ _ y _ c...,a. 9 ~ lloael. M.n Many,, pp 001 003 10 E,,i,1-.0 ~ . Tomo 5-,ndo. 11 ..... , . . . 176 s a d1.p m s.:.M- moroih, IJlcf. ,n l',m, . he• orgam,cd :and lx-.:;1mt• chod .,r 1hc Ina,,, lJ, .. ,o< In J.inu.11"), 1'<91 . R12al ..,., agilltl ""''n,m~~~ chu~n Re,p,.,m,1/>/, (Clnd) oftlo, ~p3n,sh•hhp1110 \,--,,oat1on. lie ..,_,, ah,n ihc fnunJcr anJ "'"""g ,pmt 1n 1hc founding of the f .:,, f-1/1ponu 1n M,omla nn July '• IK'n 15. - - 17 l .. ,bech. . . • ,._ - T-, C - -- - pp • p 132 ,11 , . ffl ffJStory tells us that the revolutionary society known as the Katipunan likewise acknowledged Rtz.al's leadership and great"~ by making him its Honorary President and by US1ng bis family name RiZ,(J/ as the password for 1he third-degree mcmbers.19 A year after Ri.zal's e~ecution, General Emilio Aguinaldo and the ·01hcr revoluuonary chiefs exiled 10 H ongkong held a commemorative program 1here on December 29, 1897 on the occasion ol the first anniversary of the hero's execution and manyrdom. 211 Of utmost sigruficanee in the public's appreciauon for Rizal's patriotic labors in behalf of ha• people were the 1r1bu1e, paid by the Revolutionary Government to his memory In his opening address at the Congress assembled at Malolos. Bulacan. on September IS, 18911, President Agwnaldo 10,okcd the spmts of the depar1cd heroes of the fatherfand, thus llloslrious spints of l'l.17AI. l..opcz Jae"" . of Marcelo del Pilar! August shades of Burgos. Pelain, and P.onganib.on! Warhkc geniuses o( Agu,nalclo (Cri'l)uln- O ), and Tirona. of Natividad and Evangeli<aa 1 A""e H momena from y11ur unlmov.,i gr.,vcs!2J Then on December 20. 1898 at the revolutionary cap11al at Malolos. President Aguinaldo •~ucd the fir,1 official proclamation making December 30 of that )Car o, ~Rimi Day" The same proclamation ordered the hoisting o , the Filipino nag, al half•m~t -rrom 12:00 noon on December 29 to 12:00 noon on Decembe r 30, 1898- and the ck>'img of "all ofhcc, of 1hc govern ment" during the whole day of Dcccmtoer :l(} ' l Actually an 1mpress1,;e Rizal Day program. spnsorcd by 1hc Cluh Fihpmo. was held in Manila on December JO. 1898. ??, h <hould further be noted 1hJt bo1h the La l ndependenria. edited by Gen Antonio Luna. and the El iferaldo d~ la Re•olu19 G,egono F Zeide. The KadpUNn. p 9 20. L. R. s.r,ano. The &ol.,...,n °' Rini D• •· 21. Gt_,o F Z.Jde, The 22 ~ Two of the greatest Fihp1no poets 10 thr Spano,h I. nguJ!(<' paid glowing tn'hutcs to the Mar1rr of Bogumhayan 111 acl..now ledgment or the hero's labo~ and sacnfice<; for h1, ~oplc. Fernando Mo. Guerrero MOie ,,n Septc:niber :?5. l!i<IS, lhu, ·N<, has mucrto, no. La gl<>n• cs tu de<t•oo. tu cor011a. lo-; fuegos de la ao,.,ra , y tu inv,olablc al1ar nuesua ro""icnc,a - 3 And Cecilio Apostol, on December 30 of I.be same }ear. wrote these hnes: •tDuerme en pu en lu '!Offlbras d• la nada, Rcdcnlor de una Patria ~viz.ada! !No !lores de la tumba en el mnteno Del c<pailol el triunlo rnomcn11n<io Que si una bala dcstroz6 tu cnlnco. Tambien tu ,dea destrozo un empeno! '" The Filipm<X •ere not alone in gnevmg the unt1mcl~ death of their hero and idol. for the ontcllcctual and sc1en11foc c,rctcs of the world fell keenly the 10"< of Ri1,al, who wns their c<acc:mcd colleague and fncnd Dr. Camilo Osias and Wcnceslao c Retana both spoke of the universal homage ac:rorded to R1wl 1mmcd1atcly after his death. Dr Osias wrote thu<, ExpreU1ons of deep stmpathy came from 1jlumcn1n11 and many otben; such as Dr Renward Brausteucr of Lucerne, a schoLu on lhrng.,, \hlky; Dr. Feodor J.,g,,,r , a German author of Philippm~ frav,/,. Or Fncdnth R.t11d, an eminent German geographer and e~pherc Senor Ricardo Palma. a J,s11ngul>hed man of kllc" frnm Peru. Profe550r M Buchner Director of lh< Fth1111gr 1ph1~ Museum of Munich and a noted Mab~·olo~"1· "1on."cur Edmont Pbncbut, a French Onentab>t auuu,r ,,1 , ....,.,.., worts and wriler on Ptuhppinc •ubtcct>, Or W Joc,.1. emment Ge.rman geographer and Professor al the Un,v~Nry l'I..,..,..,. llnolutlcn. p. 2S2 Flllplu, p 2 221 L R S•rreno. Fi,_ Rtt.84 0.y P,09,1mi ,,, Mar,•I• 278 doll, official orpn of the Revolutionary Government. issued a spceial supplement in honor of RtZal in one of their December issues in I 898. n ,._,,., ~ .._ p. 449. 2'. . . ... ~4.50. 279 °! Rerun. !)r. H K<:m, Professor of Sansktn 1n lbe Univer"'1Y of Lridcn and a:lcl>ra1cd •ulhorny on Malay affairs Or. J Montmo. a dmongu1\loed French linguist an1hropol<>gt,,I and author of a Mnnona on lbc Phibpp!Ms; Dr F Muellc:r. Profes.or of the Un1ves11y of Vienna and a great plulologis1; a DOied Du1ch literary woman ..,ho signed H D Tccnl W111ink. author of a touching and oonscic:ntious hiofraphy of Raal: Hen Manfred W1111ch, writer of uipi,g Dr Bctancn. Cuban pol11ical leader; Dr Boettger. a noted German ""turah,1 •nd author of works on 1he fauna of lbc PlnhPfllne>. Or A B Meyer, Dircc1or of the Museum of Elhnograph) of O~o and emment Filrptnologist M Odc,k~rcben of_ Uigc,, Oirccll)r of L Eipres<. a ncwspapc; ,hc1-~m Or Rual ":Tote an,clc,. Or Ed S.,lcr. translator rn Germ.to of Rizal s M• La.st Fare,.elJ· Mr H w B • dtSllnjtu"hcd Engll>h "'nlcr; Mr Joh~ Foreman au;:;; of work, lhc Ph_ilrppnc,. llen- C M lielier. a Oemun naturalrst: Or. H. Stolpe. a Swedish savant "ho spoke and puhb\hed C?" the Ph,hpp,ncs and Ri2.i1. Mr. Armand Lehu,. ant. A...anu cngnccr aad v.ntcr: Dr J M Podh k nou.blc C2Cdl writ«. author of -.orl,;s on lbc .,.._?,"' a and Or RQ:al n ml 1ppmc:s and °" r• A'™?ng 1hc scientrfic nccrological services held especially 10 ~ : : Rita!. •he ooc spon~red by the Anthropological Society ~ rtin on Ncr,ember 20, 1897 at lhe initiative of Or. Rudolph rdlow, iu President, was the most imponant and significant. Dr F..d Seier recited the German translation of Rizal's ''M las Farev.-eu- on that occasion 2f> Y t out 1be newspapers, magazines, and other periodicals lhrough1.M ovd.iud world - in Germany Austna France H II d I ondon th cd o an , ·. e nrt rates, Japan, Hongkong Macao Sm • pore. ,tzcrl:"'d· and in Latin Amencan countries_ p~b!Js~.. accounts of RiuJ' · , ,.;u s martyrdom tn order to render homage to his greatness. 17 u· s • • , s... Did !be ~ . especially Governor William H . Taft really~ Ri2aJ out o(severaJ Filipino patriou u the Numbe; :zs.o...._.._,._7 :!6."-'a,,._.._P439 77 180 --PP.«--C:19 One Hero of his people? N.o tlung could be fanber (rom 1M tnllh. In the preceding pages, we have shown beyond the shado"' of a doubt that the Grca·t Malayan , by his own effom anti sacrifices for his oppressed countrymen, had proJccted himself as the foremost leader or the Philippines until 1hc moment or his immol;uion, and this fad was spontaneously acknowledged not only by his own people but also by the elite or 01her lands who intimately knew bis patriotic labors We ha,e hkc-.= shown that immediately after hi, execution, his own people had JUSII} acclaimed him a• their foTemost hero and man yr The mlcllcctual and scientific world. as we have also demonstrated. was nor slow in according him Mgoal honors as a hero of humaruty and as an Apostole or Freedom Mr Tafl. as Chairman of the Sccondl'h1lippinc Comm1s.,ion arriYed in the Philippines in June, 1900. This Comm1'\Slon began 1L~ legisla11ve funcuons on September Isl of the same year. On June 11 of 1hc cn~umg year the Pbihppme Commiwon .ipproved Aci No 137. which organi1ed kt he politico-military district of Moroni:" into the "Province of Rizal". This was the FJR!)'I Ot-FICIAL STEP taken by 1hc Taft Commi:»1on to honor nur grc,nc,,1 hero and ~nyr. It should be borne m mind that SI'\ DAYS before the pas.sage of Act No. 137. the Taft Comm1ss1on held a meeting at the town of Pasig ror the purpo;e of organ1211.g 1he pro~tncc. In that meeting aucndcd by the leading c11izcn, of both Manila and Morong. a plan was presented to combiO(' he two districts onto one, but this proposal met wtth determined and vigorous ob1ec1JOn from the leaders of M orong. - At this po,nt,• reads the 'Minutes or Proceed mi:-· of 1hc Taft Cornm1SS><111. "Dr. Tavera, or the fede,al Party . who ;occompanO<'d the CommL<1.,ion, a,l.cJ 1hu1 he mo~hl make a suigesti<,,i with reference 10 the proposed union of Man,la and Morong prOlllnces. h wu hts optnion 1h.11 111 c:isc ur union nei1hcr the name of Moroo1t nor Mon,IJ O\l!(hl 10 be retained. He then staled the custom which pre, ailed on the, United States and Olher countn e. of naming rmpor1an1 locahhcs or dutncts ,n memory of some 1llus1nous c111zcn of lbe country ln line w,lh this he SU!ll(CSted that 1hc united pro,111C:O be named 'Rizal', 1n memory llDtl m honor of rhe mou Uluur,ou.., F,J,rmo and th, mosr "lrntr1nus ro~ol,'K tht /,la11dJ had ever 'tnown The President (Wilham H Tall - 0.) s1a1cd !hat tbe Commission. not less 1han 1he Filipinos, left proud 10 do honor to lhe name of RIZIII, and if, aflfer considennion, ii decided to unite the province.,, it would have pleasure. ,r such ac1ion mer 1he de.,irt$ ol the people, in giv,ng 1he new province the n:1me of Rizal",~ (Ilalio supplied) It is obvious then that the idea of naming rhe d1stnc1 of Morong afier Rizal came rrom Dr. Pardo de Tavera. a Filipino, and not from Judge Tarr, an American. his interesting to know that two countrymen or Mr. Ta(r - Justice George A. Malcolm and Dr. Frank C. Laubach- who both resided in the Philippines for many years and who were very familiar with the history and lives of great Filipinos - do not subscribe to the view tha1 J~e Rizal is an American-made hero. Jusice Malcolm had this to say: J'n ihosc nrly days (of the Amcncan occupation 0.). 11 was bruited abou1 that the Americans had 'made· Rizal a hero to serve their purposes. That was indeed a sinister in1erpretation or voluntary American action designed lo pay lribute to a grear man.,. Dr. Laubach's view about lhe question is as follows: The u,adiuon 1ha1 every American hears when he reaches the Philippne Islands is th al William Howard Taft, feeling 1ha1 the Filipinos needed a hero, rnade one out of Rizal. We trust thal tills book (Rizal: Man a/Id Marryr 0.) will se~e to show how empty that statement is. II speak:s well for Taft lbat he was sufficiertlly free from racial prejudice 10 apprcc.iate in some measu~e 1be stature of a great Filipino. II was a Spaniard who did more than any other 10 save Rizal for posten1y - Retana, whose work (Vida y Escritos dtl Dr. lost Rluil, Madrid, 1907 - 0 .) is by far the most oomplele and scholarly thdl we have {in 1936 - 0 .). Like Rizal, he lost all his money m the cause or the Filipinos, and died a poor man. "" Granting for the sake of argumen1 Iba.I L~e Tart Commission chose Rizal out or several great Filipinos as 1hc Numhcr One 28, RePoft of tho Phillppln. Comml..,on. 29. Mlleolm, - 282 . Not ooly Is Rizal ntE MOST PROMINENT MAN OF HIS OWN PEOPLE but 11-{E GREATEST MAN THE MALAYAN RACE HAS PROOIJCEO. His memory will never peris.h in his fatherland, and future generation, of Spaniards will )!el learn 10 utter his name with respect and reverence.> 1 ( CapitoJi%alJOn supplkd) Perhaps the following quotation from the late William Cameron Forbes, an ardent admirer of Rizal and the Governor-General of the Phllipp1ncs during the construction or the Riuil Mauo;Qleum on the Luncta, is appropriate al Ibis point. He said: It is eminently proper Iha! Rizal should have become the acknowledged national hero or the Philippine people Th, A,mirican administration has lent ,v,ry anistanc, to rni• recognition, setting aside 1he anniversary of hls death to Ix, a day n( o~rvancc, placing bis piclurc on the p<>stagc stamp most commonly used in the Islands, and on lhc currency. coopera1ing wi1h the Filipinos in malt.mg 1he she ol his school in OapilBn o national park, find cnt0uraging the erecu,m by public subscription of a monument in his honor on 1he Luneta in Manila near the place where he met his death. One of the longes1 and most ,mponunt ~trects in Mun,l:t has been named in hi, memory - Rizal Avenue. The Filipinos in many cities and towns have erected monuments 10 his name, and 1hroughou1 the Island, the public M:hc>ols teach the young Filipinos to revere his memory a, rite Rrenttsl of Fil,pmo patnots.-" (Italics suppll,d) Now and then we come across some Fihpmos who venture the opinion that Andres Bonifacio, and not Jose Rizal. deserve, to be acknowledged and canonized as our first na1tonal hero . They maintain that Rizal never held a guo, a rifle, or a sword p. 202. C-... c..-tot. p. 78, 30. Lluboch, ..,_ ell., p. 3113. hero of bis people, stiU we can say lhat wha1 the Commission did was merely to confirm a 60rt of a r.it accompli, ond that was thal Jose Rizal had already been acclaimed by his c,)untrymen and the scientific world as the foremost hero and manyr 1>f the land of bis binh. Nay, we can go even farther and concur with Prof. Blumentl'itt, who said in 1897: 31, Crolg, op. ctt .. p 66. 32. 8ta1r 1nd Aob9f1.won. The ,t"41plne lel• nch. Vol 1. p. 55. 181 1n fighting for the liberty and indcpendeooe of our country m the baulefield. They further IISSCrt that while the foremost national heroes of other countrie:s are soldier-generals, like George Washington of the United States of America, Napoleon I and Joan of Arc of France, Simon Bolivar of Venezuela, Jose de Snn Martin of Argentina, Bernardo O'Higgins of Chile, Jimmu 'fenno of J apan, etc., ou r greatest hero was a pacifist and a ci\ltlian whose Wellpon was his quill. Howe\ler, our people in cxcrctSing their good sense, mdcpendent judgment, and urru,ual discernment , have not followed the examples of other nations 1n selecting and acknowledging a military leader for their greatest hero. Rafael Palma has very well stated U>c case of R1wl versus Bonifnc10 in these words: h should be o source of pride and 5atisfaetion 10 the Filipinos to have among their national heroes one of su.-h excellent qualiues and merits which may be eqwled but nol \\lrpa~scd by any other man Whereas gcocrolly the heroes of occidental nations arc warriors and generals who serve their cause with lhc sword, disulling blood and tears. lhc hero nf the Fihpmos served his cause with the pen. demonstrating that the pen ,s as mighty as the sword lo redeem • people from 1beir pohucat slavery. It is true that ,n our case 1hc sword of Bonifoc:,o was after all needed to shake off 1hc yoke of a foreign power; but the revolution prepared by BoruJacio was only 1he clfea, the, consequence of 1hc spiritual rcdemp1ion wrought by the pen or Rizal Hence, nol only in chronological order but also in point of 1mpor1•ncc 1hc prcv,ous work of Rizal seems to us superior tn 1h11 of 13onifacio, bccau.:;e although that of Bomfacio wa, or 1mmediak results. that of Ri:ul will have more dwable and permanent eftcctS." And lei us note further what other great men said about the pen being mightier and more powerful than the sword. Napoleon I himself, who was a great conqueror and ruler, said; "There are only two powers in the world, lhe sword and lhe pen; and in the end the former is always conquered by the 34 laucr". The following Slatemcnt o f Sir Thomas Browne is more applicable to the role played by Rizal in our libertarian struggle: 3J Polm1 . ..,, "'-• p 367 3' Tvron Ed4Janb, n....N.w Dlcdaw7 flf ~ p, 451. "Scholars are men of peace; they bear no arms; but their tongues are <harper than the sword; their pens carry further and give a louder report than thunder. I had rather stand in the shock of a hasili<l 1ha 11 ,n the fury of a merciless penw.'l And finally, lei u~ quote from Rulwer · "Take away the sword; states can be saved without rt; bring the pen!"36 For those who may still doubt and question the fact that Rizal b greater. far greater than Bonitacio, or nny Other Filipino hcru. 1hc follnwtnl( ohscrva11on mndc hy Retana will be ,ufficient: I ,ldn, lo, p.tf\C, llc ncn ,u 1Jolo ma, nin8uno 111.:nc un mitw1· ,d,>lll; 4ue F,lip,nru; Antes dc,aparererli de lo~ I .,1t1Jo~ l.,"rudos la mcmon:1 Jc 1)· ya l.'S dear! w,"11111i,1m1 ,111c clc rilirinJ\ I., mcmorm de Rl7.I\I,, Nn tuc 1(1/ l\l.. como medico. un \1ariani. oi romo dibujante un (iu,tu\.O Dore . n1 ctimtt poc1,1 un Gnctht: m como 1mIrupcilo~w un Vm:how . ru como etnografn un f{;111cl ni como fili~mi,t<11 un BlumcnInu. m como bistoriador un MJ1,:;ml.,y , ni como pt:n'-ldor on 1 l~rv•"• 01 c:onu.> nu11Jy0lug.o "'' Kern. m 1.·nmn fih\,ofo un Ot,Ci:trtc~. ni comn no"·ch,t., 1111 /.ola. m como bteratn un Menendez y Pelayo. m cumo l'....:ulhtr lm Ouc,ol . '" corno gc6~n1to un Rcclu), nI como 11r.1dor 11n 1'101 Oi~1,ngu16~ en mm:hu~ di~iplinaso pero en nin2un..1 Jc cll:.L" •.dc3n.l6 (.St grado supremo quc a!\Cgura lu 11un~1tt11l1Jad I ut 1>atriotn, tut ,wir11r d,I umur d \ti pair. r,•ro ,·n d ,.,,., ,le Rl7.AL hav otro< filipinos; y ;.en 4ue quc RIZAL cst:i <i mile~ de cuJer.a sobre todos euos·.> l'OJl'l'-h.' t., f111u1;,.t cxqu1,11u de :,u C1'pirttu ..:n la qmjtlh.•.,.fa de.· ,o coraz6n, en ~u ~lffilngia lo<hl; ""·n..·111.tml"nll.'~ l'.H 1Hthh:1.1 H•rn.inlK..,. !-Ol1..1dora. buen.i. adorable. ~,cologia quc sinh.'lt1d t•hlt" h" ~i.·nt im1c1111,s y n,,,arac,one-s dt un pueblo qu"· ,utn., vierH.hN.~ \.1ctima lk un rerimcn l'>p·rob1oso. , . t.l ":,perttu t.ll! la Rcvotucmn rag.aid se 1uzga por cstc solo h,:du• ( tic. ~omo 4.·, ,ab,<lo. t i hra10 armada de aquc.l Ohl\ i mit.-1110 Andre, Bomfac10 . hC ahi el hombre quc diO t.·I pnmt'1 ~nto eontra la uraniu. cl 4uc ucuud,116 la~ pnrneras h,11·,tl·,. i.: l c.1u1.: murin cn lu hrcc.:ha, Y :.i c~ homhrc .,pcna" ~C' le recuerd..1~ no ~c le h.1 cre.g,<lo mng.Un monumcnilo~ I~ vatcs popuJares no le hJ.l1 canrndo~ - M1cnU,I' qui• d Rl7A1 cn~m1~tl Uc l .i R1.:\'0luc1(m QUe crihflc<~ 35 ll>id., pp 456-457. 36. Loe <•t de #1/vo~ y tlaJoonro#. le glorifica el pueblo hasta deific:arlc . .. iNo ae \'C ca csto un pueblo cmlnentcmentc espintuAI, quc tuvo l"JI RIZAL un rcsumcn vtYleJ!te? Todo filipino lleva denuo de sl todo lo mis quc pucdc de RIZAL, raro cs, en cambto. cl que Deva dcntro de sf algo dcl dcmagogo Bonifacio. La IDIDOrtalidad de RIZAL est& asegurada de oen maneras Pero como mu ""'gun,da cst6 cs porquc lo& milloocs de filipinos de boy, de manana y de si=lpre bebc:n y bebcrin csplri.tu de RIZAL; DO sc nutren de ot111 cosa." APPENDIX B MEMOIRS OF A STUDENT IN MANILA In the preceding pages we have tried to show that Rl2.al by P. Jacinto• wu not only a great hero but the grcate,;t among the Filipi.nos. As a matter of fact, the Austrian savant Prof. Blomentritt judged him as "the most prominent man of his own people" and "the g.reatest man the Malayan race has produoed~. We have also shown that even during his lifetime, Rizal was already ac,cl:umed by both Filipinos and foreigners as the foremost leader of his people and that this admiratK>n for him has increased witfi the passing or time sinoe his dramatic de~th on the Luncta that fateful morning of December 30, 1896 Likewise. we auempted to disprove the claim made by some quaners that Rizal is an American-made hero, and we also tried to explain why Rizal 1s greater than any other Filipino hero, including Andres Bonifacio. Who made Rizal the foremost hero of the Philippines? The answer is: no smgle·persoo or groups of pcfS!>ns were responsible for making the Greatest Malayan the Number One Hero of his people. Rizal himself, his own people . and the forcigncn all together contributed to mali:e him the grcatc~t he ro and marlyr of bis people. No amount of adulation and canonization by both Filipinos and foreigners could convcn Rizal into a great hero if he did not possess m h1mi,clf v.hat Palma calls "excelle nt qualities and merits" or what Retana spoke of "la finura cxqui1>ita de su csp1mu. . . la nobleza qwjotesca de su coraz6n, . . . su psicologfa todn, rom4nuca . <0iiadora, buena. adorable, psicologfa quc sjntetiz6 todos los sentimie ntos y aspiracioncs de un pueblo que sufria. viendose victima de su rel(irncr oprobioso. . . ." ~ - - - .., dt.. pp. 450-461. 286 CHAYl'Ell I MY BIRffl-EARLY YEARS I was bom in Calamba on 19 June. ,1861, between eleven and midnight. a few days before full moon. It was a Wednesday and my commg out in tlus vale or tears would ba,e cost my mother her life had she not vowed to the Virgm of Antipolo to take me to her sanctuary by way of pilgrimage. 2 All I remember of my early days is I didn't know how I found myself in a town with some scanty notions or the morning $Un, of my parents, etc. The educabon that I received since my earliest infancy was perhaps what has shaped my habits, like a jar that retains the odor of the body that it first held . I still remember the fiISt melancholy nights that I spent on the terrace lazotea - ZI of our house as if they happened only yeMcday - night!> run of -Tiiia ,st~ studen1 mtiff'IOits or ,e,nin isc::enoes of Jos. Ri::at He wrot• i1 from 1871 ao 1881, trom the ao• of 17 to 20 English lratl.illllOn t,y , ._. JOI& A1.a t N•tiOAII Centennial CommiPM>n . ' P Jacinto pen -~ wn 1he first pen-name. used by RtUl 1n t,,s wnt.mgs. HtS OIi.he, we,,• Laong laan end D,mu A.ling 1Tha V1rg•n of Ant-Polo h es t>ct1:n ~ ral-1 bv F, pln <n-. Sp.ania rd-.. oMd Ctunne Stnce $oiincsh cok>nial days. Th• "110flth o f M oy ,s the tJnie o f p ll9m n a9e 10 he, thone She •• .tlto calltd OUt l .OV of POK• Ind GOC'>d V"Y~ , lhe o~oor sain1 of uavetM&.. One legend savs: her image s~ved •rorn "Sh epwreQ ihe crew o• • stt,p thM bore Nlf' from A.t.to,uJco to Ma" 11 tnll"lV Vfl't rt 190 the saddest poem lhat made impression on my nund, the stronger the more tempcstuous my prC$Cnt ~1tuation is . I had a nurse (ayo - Z.) who loved me very much and who, m order to make me take supper (which I bad on the terrace on moonlit nights), frightened me with the sudden appari11on of some formidable =ng, of a frightful nuno, or parc~-nobis, as me used to call an imagnary being similar 10 the Bu of the Europeans. They used to take me for a ,troll to the most gloomy places and at night near the 0owing ri,cr in the shade of some tree. in the brightness of the chaste Diana • Thus was my heart nourished with somber and melanchol,e thoughts. whtch even when I was a child already wandered on the 1,1,,ngs of fantasy 1n the lofty regions of the unk.nov,-n I had nine sisters and one brother My father. a model of fathers, had given us an education commensurate with our small fortune. and through 1hnf1 he was able to build a stone house. hu)' another, and to erect a liule nipa house in the middle of our orchard under the shade of banana trees and others. There the tasty a~ (all,) displays 11~ delicate fruits and bends tts branches to save me the cf£on of reaching for them, the sweet santol, the fragrant and honeyed tampoy. the reddish macupa, here contend for supremacy; farther way are the plum tree, the casuy. harsh and piquant. the beautiful wmarind, cqyally gratifying 10 the eyes and delightful to the palate, here the papaya tree spread, its broad leaves and attracts the birds 1,1,ith its enormous fruits. yonder arc the nangca. the coffee tree, the orange tree. 11,h1ch perfumes the air with the aroma of its Oower~. on thi> ,ide are the iba, the balunbing. the pomegranate ,.;,h its thick foliage and bcauuful 001,1,ers that enchant tbc senses; here and there arc found elegant Jnd ma1esuc palm trees loaded with enormou, nul\, rocl,.ing II\ proud crown and beautiful frond.., the mi,tr=s of the forests. Ah! It would be endless 1f I were 10 enumerate all our trees and en1cnarn myself Wl naming them! At the close of the da} numcrou\ birds came from all pans. and I, Mill a ch,ld of three years at the most, entcrtarned myself b) looking at them 11,11h unbelievable joy. The yellow cultauan, the maya of different vanct,c,. the culae, the marta capra. the mamn, all the <pecic<o of pipit, 311ined in a plea'\.ant con<--en and intoned m varied chorus a hymn of fare,.·ell 10 the sun that "as disappeanng behind the tall mountains of my town. Then the cloud,. through a whim of nature. formed a thousand figures that soon dispened. as such beautiful days passed away also, leaving behind them only the flimsiest remembral'K:CS. Alas! Even now when 1 look out the wmdow of our house to the beautiful panorama al twilight, my past 1mprCSSJ<>ns a>me back. to my mind with painful eagerness' A hcn.ards comes night, it extends 1ts mantle, sometimes gloomy though starred, when the chaste Delia~ does not scow the sky ,n pwswt of her brother Apollo. But if she appears in the clouds. a vague bnghtnes> 1s delmeatcd. Afterwards. as the cloud\ break up. <0 10 speak, little by little she is seen beautiful, ~ad, and hu,;hed, rising like an immense globe. as if an omnipotent and 1n•1S1ble hand 1s pulling her through the spaCC1>. Then my mother would ma.kc us recite the rosary all together. Afterward we would go to the terrace or to some window from which the moon can be seen and my nurse would tell us stones, sometimes mournful. sometimes gay, in which the dead, gold plants that bloomed diamonds were in confused mixtures, all of them born of an entirely oriental 1magioation. Somcumes she would tell us that men lived m the moon and the !>pCCk.s that v,c observed on it were nothing else but a woman who was oontinuously spmning. When I was four year~ old I lost my httlc \1Ster (Concha) and then for the first time I shed tears caused by love and grief, for unul then I had shed them only because of my stubbornness that my loHng and prudent mother so well knew bow to correct. Ah' Without her what would have become of my education and what would have been m) fate? Uh, yes! After God the motner is cverylhtng to man. She taught me how to read, she taught me how to ~lammer the humble prayers that I addressed fervently 10 God. and now that I'm a young man. ah, where is that simplicity. that innocence of my early days? In my 011,n town I learned how to write, and my father. who looked after my educatJoo, paid an old man (who had been his classmate) to give me the fi~t lesson$ in Latin and he stayed at our house . After some five months he died. having almost foretold his c\eath when he was still m good health. I remember that I came to Manila With my father after the buth of the third >A name of Oien.a.. goddNa of tfw moon end of hunting 28' I g1rJ (Trinidad) who followed me, and ii was on 6 June 1868. We boarded a casco.. a very heavy craft. I had never yet gone through the lake or La Laguna consciously and the first time I did, I spem the whole night near the cJJtig, admiring Lhe grandeur of lhe liquid element, the ,quie1ness of the night, while at the same rime a superstitious fear IQOk hold of me when I saw a water snake twint itself on the bamboo canes of the outriggers. With "What joy I saw the sunrise; for the fusl time I saw how the luminous rays shone, producing a brilliant effect on the ruffled swfacc of the wide lake. With what joy I spoke to my father for I bad not uttered a single word during the night. Afterward we went to Antipolo. I'm going to stop to relate the sweetest emotion~ that I felt at every step on the banks of the Pasig (that a few years later would be the witness of my griefs). in Cainta, Taytay, AnIipolo, Manila, Santa Ana. where we visited my eldest sister (Saturnina) who was at chat time a boarding student at La Corcordia.' I returned to my town and I stayed in it until 1870, the first year that marked my separation from my family. This is what l remember of those times that figure in the forefront of my life like the dawn of the day. Alas, when shall the night come to shelter me so that I may rest in deep slumber? Ood knows it! In the mean1ime, now that I'm in the ~pring ol life, separated from the beings whom I love and mo51 in the world, now that sad, I write these pages... let us leave Providence to act, and let us give time to time, awaiting from the will of God the future, good or bad, so that with this I u:ay succeed to expiate my sins. 8 Dulumbayan, 6 Sta. Cruz, Manila, 11 September 1878 ~Casco i.s • PhllipPJne river craft. made of wooo. used for passengers and lr••ah1, Tho cahg ,. the vetMl'a CHJtrfgge,s medo of bamboo canH. 'A welHknown bo,rding ,choot fo, girts, t.a Concordi1 Co41oo• wes 1dmlnf1• tared by 1he1 Sister, of Charity. tt wn founded In 1869 by Mafg•rha Roxu de Ayea., • weetthy Rhprno wom,n. who gaw her coun1ty homt telllkl La Concordi1 ~n Sc.. Ana. Meoill to the sc:hoo• and hence h:s popular desiunadon. hs official name 11 ColeigiO de fa lm!".eullde Concepc.lon 'Thlt ok:;t 1lrNt WM absorbed by the now av-,,ut namttd for him -Rial A.venue. ht name na, IAen dropped. 290 CHAPTER D M\' LIFE AWA\' FROM MY PARENTS MY SUFFERINGS It is true that the memory of past days is like a gentle balm that pours over the hean a melancholy sweetoess. so much sweeter and sadder the more depre!o.sed the one remembering ii is. Turnin11 my eyes, my memory, and my imagination towards the days past, that I don't wish 10 remember for being very painful, the first that I discover 1s 8iiian, a town more or lcs, an hour and a half distant from mine. This 1s my father·~ birth· place and to which he sent me to continue the >tudy of the rudiments of Latin that I had begun. One Sunday. m:,, hiother took me to that town after I had bade my fomily. 1ha1 i,. tny parents and brothen. [sisters - Z.] goodbye, 1>ith tcH~ in my eyes. I was nine years old and already I tried 10 hide my tears. Oh, education. oh, shame, that obliges u, to hide our sc111111u:nts and to appear diflerentl How much beauty, how rtl.lll) tender and pathetic scenes the world would witnes, without you' We arrived at Biiian at nightfall and we wr.m to the hnus.of an aunt where I was to stay. 1 he moo~ w.is bcgnning 10 peep, and m the compony of Leandro. her grandson, l w;ill..cd through the town that seemed to me lurgc und rich hu1 u11I) and gloomy . My brother left me afterwards. n,11 wi1huu1 havonp first iniroduced me lo the 1eacher "ho ""' going tu lcm:lt nw It seemed to me that he had aho hccn hi, lie w," 1.,11, 1ldn. long-gecked, with sharp nose and body ,Jighll) bent for... ,11t1 and he used to wear a si11omay Shirt, woven by the ,l1lh.:u hand, of the wom-en of Batangas. He knew by heart 1hc gr.,mma1, b~ Nebrija and Gainia . Add 10 this h,, scvertl) 1ha1 m my ;udj,\ntc111 was exaggerated and you have a picture, perhap, vague. 1ha1 I have made of him, bu! 1 remember only tin;,, When I entered his class for the firsl time. tha1 L,. on hi; Imm house which was of nipa and low . abou1 1hirty mc1,,r, my aunt's (for one had only 10 pass through a portion nf 1he ""'"> 291 strc~l and a tittle comer cooled by an apple tree,') be spoke to me m these words: " Do you know ' Spanish?" "A little sir," J replied. ··oo you know Latin?" "A little, sir," I anSWCRd again. _For these replies the teacher's son Pedro, the naughtiest boy m the class. began to sneer at me. He was a few years older th~ I and was taller than I . We fought, but J don ·1 know by ~hat acc1dcn1 I defeated him, throwing him down some benches m the classroom I released him quite mortified. He wanted 3 retu:'1 match. hut as the teacher had already awakened I was afr:ud to e!<pose myself to punishment and I refused. After this I .1cqu1rcd a fame nmong. my cla~smates, perhaps because of my ,mallness so that after cla~s. a boy invited me to n fight. He was called Andres Salandanan. He offered me one arm 10 1wisl and I lost. and almost dashed my head against the sidewalk ofa "'-ouse. l don·t want to amuse myself by narrating the whacks that I ,uffcn:d nor describe what I felt when I recei,.ed the first hcalln~ (>n the hand Some en, icd me and othc~ pitied me. :>°lllt:l1mc~ they a~uscd me wrongly, sometimes rightly, and ,1lwa}, lite accusauon COM me half a dozen, or three lashe$. J used 10 -..111 m the gangs, for oo one defeated me. I succeeded to pas, o,er many, excellin~ them, and despite the reputation I had (good rare _was the day when I was 001 whipped or SI\ en C1vc or six beaungs on _the hand. When I went in the company of my classmate~. I got Crom them more sneers, nickname~. and they called me Calambtiio, 8 but when only one went MIit me, he behaved so well that I forgot bis insults. Some were ~ond and treated my very well, like Marcos Rizal, son of a cousm of mine, and _others. Some of them, much later, became ":1> cl~o;smatc~ 1n Mamla. and we round ourselves in very changed SltUllllOll~. oor) Uc~ide the house uf my teacher, who was Justiniano Aquino Cru7. ,tood that of his father•in-law, one Juancho, an old painter who amused me with Ills paintings. I already had such an incli• notion for this art that a classmate of mine, called Jose Guevara, and I were the "Ca~hionahle paimers" of the cla.~. I low my aunt treated me can he easily deduced from the following facts: We were many in the house: My aunt, two cousins, two meces, Arcadia and t-1orentina , and a nephew, Leandro. son of a c,,u~in My aunt was an old woman who must be se:venly or year< old. She used 10 read the Bible 1n Tagalog, lying down on the floor. Marg:1ri1a (ltay), my cous111, was single, very much JdJ1c:1cd to confe~,ing nntl doing penance. I !er hrother Gabriel wa," widower. Arc.idia wa~ a mmooy, of an inflexible character and 1rntablc, though she had a simple and Crank nature. The Nher. Flori:nuna, was o little girl of vulgar quahues. As to l.citndro. hr wos a capricious. pampered little hoy, a flaucrer when 11 ~u,tcd him. of an ingenious talent, a rascal in the full m"aning of the term. One day when we went 10 the river, which w,1, only ,1 fc" step, (mm our house, inasmuch us we pas\Cd h,•,idc the orchard. while w,: were bathing on the stone landing. tor I did not ,.l:irc go down as 11 was too deep for my height. the little boy pushed me so hard that had not one of my feet hcsn ~.iu.ght, wnhout doub1 I would have hcen drowned for the (urrent was already pulling me. This cost t.1m some lashes with ., slipper• and a good reprimand by my aunt. '° Somcumes we played m the ,trcet at night for we were not ull<1w<'<I 10 do so inside: the house ArcaJia who was two or 1hrcc )car, older than I, tt1ught me game~. 1reating me like a hmthcr: only she callcJ me --uncle Jose .. , In the moonlight I ,cmcmh~rcd my homcw"n and I thought, with tear, in my eyes, of my beloved father my icloli1ed m<>thcr. and my ,;o1ic1tous <i>1ers. Ah. how sweet to n,,: wa~ Calamba. in spite of the fact that it was 1101 as wealthy as Bui.in! I wuld feel sad and when. k,M c~pc.:c1cd. I stopped lo reflect. lier~ w;i. m) life . I heard the four o'clock Mas~ . ,r there was an~. or I studied m> lesson at that hour and I went to Mass afterwards. I returned home and I went to the orchard to look 'nu. ao-ca,-, apple tree tl locally named m1,nani1H for it bears WltV tJny ,1)1>1 .. --rt.as is• n.CiYe tmncutine) of C.lamb&. 291 •1n Spenr11t,, (h1MC•1M. 111.,.ny, IHMI tdmln,,leted Yw"tlh • 1l1pper With • leathtsr sole, a common way ot pvn11hlng chi.ldren 11'\ Filipino home-s. 193 10 ' fot a' mabo/0 to eat. Then I took breakfast, which consi5ted . generally of a dish of rice and two dried small fish, and I went to class from which I came out at ten o'dock. I went home at once. If there was some special dish, Leandro and l look some of it 10 the house of her children (which I never did at home nor would r ever do it), and I returned without saying a word. I ate with them and afterwards I studied. I went to school at two ahd came out at five. I played a short while with some nice cousins and I returned home. I studied my lesson, I drew a little, and afterwards I took my supper consisting of one or two dishes of nee with an ayungm. 11 We prayed and when there was a moon, my nieces invited me 10 play in the s1ree1 together wi1h others. Thank G(?<I that I never got sick away from my parents. From l,ime to lime T went to Calamba, my hometown Ah, how Iorig the way home seemed to me and how short th c way back was! When I sigh ted Crom afa.r the roof of our house, I don't know whal secret joy filled m} heart. Moreo~er I used to leave Biiian early in the morning before sunrise and I reached my hometown when ,ts rays already were sliming obliquely over the broad rne3dows. And I used to return 10 Biotin in the nfternoon with the sad spectach.: of lhc disappearance of th,; sun king. How I looked for pre1exts to, stay longer ,n my town; one more day seemed to me a day in heaven, and how I cried though silently and secrc1ly - when I would sec the calcsa i: that was going 10 take me. Then everything seemed to me sad I picked a flower, a stone 1hat auructcd ·,my anen11on. fearful thal I might not 6C<.l 1bem again upon my return. It w11s a new kind of melancholy, a ·sad pain, but gentle and cairn thal I felt dunng my early years. Many things that are of no importance to the reader happened 10 me until one day I reuived a leuer from my sister Saturnina advising me of the arnval of the., steamer Ta/i,n that '°Mabolo or mebuto (Diospyros disooto,. Wild., is • Ir~ that bears fruit.5 ot the Mmt nemie. When rllM,, i1 i. J,1gr•r11, flHhy, twNt. and utis.fvlno was to take me on a certain day. h seemed that I had a presentiment that 1 would never come h.ick so tha1 I 1o1.en1 very often :.nd ~udly to the chapel of the Virgin of Peace I w_cnt tn th, river and gathered litle stone, 10 keep a, a ,ouvcnir I rn;cd, paper fishes and I readied everything for my <lcpanurc I lld,k my friends and my te~c::hcr farewell w11h a 1Jlca,ant a111I pl<lfounct sadness. for even ~ufferings, "'hen they have hccn lrc,111cn1 ,ind continuous. hecomc M> dear to 1he hean. so to speak th.it ,inc feels pain upon leaving them, I left Binan then on 17 Oeccm!,cr 1870 (lie. 1871 - Z.~ I wa, nine years old ut on< u'dock on 1he afternoon of Saturda) For the fir.;t time- I sow a steamer It <.ecmcd to me ,w1 beautiful and admirable when I heard the con,ersJtion of 111) cow;,n, who took me, with 1hc boatma11 on ,1, ma,tncr of runmng It was the only one they were wailing for Two <111lrn, put Rl) thiny,s ;n the cabin and I went to see II I thOU!!hl I \\;t, )!(IIOA alone. without a companion. but a Frenchman calkd Arluro Camps, my father's friend, was in char~e of Jcrnmpa111•inA m,· The trip seemed to me very lon11. accordioi: to mv hd1<·f, "1th regard to a steamer. At sea, I remember I ,pilled th,· chucul,ctc Finally we arnvcd at Calamb.i Oh, my JOY on ,crn,i: lhc beach' I wanlcd to jump at once intn a he1m·a. h111 11 ~.-n ;,\111 ,,11 lonl me 1n his anm and put me in 1he captain\ ho.,1 ·\hcr"'anl, the Frenchman came and four sailor, rowed u, to the beach It wa, impossible to dcsenb.: nw hnppinc" when I'''" th, Wr\.t111 with lhc carriage wailinp for u,. I JUIIIJ'(ld and here I ,1~.11n ,n my house wuh the love of ml' Cam1h· Ewr\'thmg w:i, lor m e JOy. day~ of happines,i, I fou11J J httk tu:use \\llh hw 1.1hh1iwcll den>rated and painted for the pre-( hn,1111." "-1:i"<'' \h b rother; (brother and s;s1ers - 7 I u,d nn1 ,top 1alk1ni: 111 m,· m I!"' Tlus is the end of my n:mcmhr.111c.: ,.f 1h;i1 '-"' .md time during "hit·h I tasted strun)!c f11o<l f,,, 1hc 11"1 Inn.Alas, 11 ,cem, thllt I wa, burn ,k,11tK·d to p:0111ful rn ! ,·qu.<11\ biller scenes! I have withheld 1101hin~ irnpnr1.i111 r-.11 "1 11;,1,,.,1 how dmerc111 from that one! 11 Ayungln 11 O,e n1m1 of • 1m1II C•bovt 12 c.n1imet•r• long) fruh w.110,. lntxs,enSMt fish CTherlPC)n plutnbeus knerJ. "A horN-Clrawn vehicle. llghl and airy. 294 Salcedo S1rec1. No 22 Monday, 28 October 187k , atAPTEa m FROM JANU.ARY, 1871 TO J UNE, 1872• I don'! know how to describe to you my pasc days. I would not have been able to furnish you with anything notable had net something OCCtJrred that was truly unpleasant and sad that I could not forget it. Have you ever felt your honor outraged your name tarnished, by persons who owed you many ravors? My pen refu$es and would have refused forever to put on paper some remembrances that I should like to forget if my purpose were not to make a succinct narration of my joys and misfortunes. I will tell you that a few days after my arrival at my town it was decided to make ~e stay there and send me to Manil~ later. The day came when I had desired to study under a tcacbcc ~£ t~e town. O f ~ • I nolhcng more than the multiphcab<>n tabl~. Dunng this llme an uncle of mine (Mr. Jose Alberto) amved from Europe. During his absence bis wife failed lamentably ,n her duties as mother and wife. He found his house empty and his children abandoned two or thre'c days before t,y the culprit. Frantic the poor man set out to look for the where• a~u~ of his wife until at last ·he found her. 'He thought of di_voraog h~r but at my mother's pleading, he agreed to live with her aga1~. He passed tbrough Calamba on his way to Biilan, where he resided. A few days later the infamous woman in connivance_ with a lieutenant of the civil guard, who was a fri~nd of our fam1lr, accused _her husband of being a poisoner and my mother as h,s !ccompb~ for which my mother was imprisoned by Mr. Antonio V,venao del Rosario, a fanatical mayor,n a !~ •tn hla lettw to Blumentrirt. written It Gene'lf.a. Jun• 10. 1M7._ Aii•I n Jd ah.at rn,• Rb-•l•B&umentritt CorrNpondenc:e, Par1 I, P• 100. RIQI bov•n his 01..- In 81ilen In Ju,,., 1870 and , . . _ homo servant of the friar. I don't want to tell you our resentment and profound sorrow. Since then, though still a child , I have distrusted friendship and doubted meo. We were nine brothers [brother and sisters - Z . J and our mother was unjustly snatched away from us and by whom·/ By some men who hl\d been our friends and whom we had treated as· sacred guests. We learned later that our mother got sick, far from us and al an advanced age. Oh, God, I admire and respect your most sacred will! The mayor, at the beginning, deluded by the accusations, and cautioned against everything 1h01 is noble, treated my mother rudely, not to say brutally, and later made her confess what they wanted her 10 confess, promising to release her and 10 let her see her children ,f she would say what they wanted her to say. What mother could resist , what mother would not sacrifice her life for her children? My mother, like all mothers, deceived and frightened (because they. told her thal if she did not say what they wanted her to say, they would declare her guilty) submiUed to the will of her enemies and weakened. The question became complicated until, oh, Providence! the mayor himself asked my mQther for pardon, but when? When the case was already in the Supreme Court, 14 he asked for forgiveness because he suffered remorse and be was horrified by bis vileness. My mother was defended by Messrs. Francisco de Marcaida and Manuel Marian , the most famous lawyers of Manila She finally succeeded to be acquitted and vindicated in the eyes o( her judges accu.ers, and even her enemies, but after how long? After two and a half years. In the meantime they discussed my career and they decided that I should go 10 Manila with my brother Paciano 10 take the entrance examinations and study the secondary course ar the Atenco Municipal. ,s I therefore went down 10 Manila on June ' 10, 1872 and took an examination on the Otristian Doctrine, arithmetic, and reading at the College of San Juan de Letran. They gave me a grade of w Approved" and with this I returned to my hometown happy, having for the fir.I time experienced what examinations were. he •yYlld 1ft 81":'n for ·• W'Mr and• hett.• to c.t.n,1>o ln Docembe< 1871-realty one YN• and o half.) """ ~~nlalt, • • - ....,. o,cordMd llle eomblned flinctto1111 296 of,_, â– xocut,w 1-rhla wa1 c.elled tM R•al Aud1end a de Manila. '--0.11 wN the fatnOW achoOI cof'Ktucted by \hti J..\Jil fa1hert, rtnown•d for 11,oir tduutlonal won<. 297 A lew days later the town feul was celebrated , after which I went down to 'vlanila. but with sad feelinp that I would agllll brcome unh4ppy. 22 Salcedo Street I November 1872. CHAPTER rv 1172-1875 Today I'm gomg to relate to you my studies. As I bad expected, I was introduced at lhc Ateneo Murudpal to the Rev. Father Min,,ter (admirustrator - Z .) who at that tune Father Magin Ferrando At first he did not want to admit me either because I had come after the period or admission was over or becau5C of my rather weak constitutJOn and shon stature: I was then eleven years old But later, at the request or Mr. Manuel Jerez (Manuel Xcres Burios - z. J, nephew of tbc ill-fated Father Burgos 16 and now Licentiate m Medicine, the diCfic;ultics were removed and I was ddmitted. I dressed like the rcst. that is. I put on a coat with a ready-made nccitlie. With what fervor I entered the Cl'lapel or the Jesuit Fathers to hear Mass, what most fervent prayers I addressed to God, for in my sadness I didn't know whom else to invoke. After Mass, I went to cla5s where I saw a great number of children. Sparuards, 17 tnelllZOS, and Fihpmos, and a J~1 who w~ the professor. He was called Father Jose Bech He was a toll man, thin. with a body slightly bent forward, with hasty pace, an 11~c1ic. r,cvere and inspired physiognomy. sunken. small eyes, sharp Grecian nose , fine lo~ fonmng an arch whose ends turned 1owar<b ht> beard. 1be Father was 10roewhat lunatic so that one should not be aurpriscd to find him sometimes disgusted himself, playing like a child Among my classmate, I should ment10n 10 you IOmC who were quite interesting and perhaps "'ould be mentioned by me frequently . One boy or young man or my own prov,nce called Florcncilo Gavino Oliva had an c, ccllcnt m,nd hul w&s of ordinary ~tudiousncss One Joaquin Garrido. a Span"h mestiz.o, with poor memory but bnghr and ~tud1ou\. Rc~mbhng him very much was one Moises Sanhago, mn1hemn11cmn and penman. One Gonzalo Marzano who then occupied the canopied throne or Roman Emperor. You should know that m the Jesuit oollegcs. 1n order t0 sumulate studcn~. they put up 1"'0 empires. one Roman and the other Carthagm,an 01 Greek, con,1.1nll) HI war, and in which the highest po,itions were wnn through challenges. the winner being the one who made three m1~ta1<c, less than hi$ nval They put me at 1hc 1a,1 end I -.ca"cl~ ~new Spanish but I already understood 1t t,fter rc1rcot'" I left and I found my hrorher w,1111111: for me to take me home. whtch ,..as at>out twenty-to,c mmu1e, from the college ror I dtdn 1 111:in1 to ~,ay In 1he \\aUetl cit~ \\h1cb 1CCmed tu me very gloomy. I found a companion c,1llcJ Pa\tor Millcna. a boy of my own age. The house w;I\ sn,a ll . located 11 Caraballo St reel. A nvcr ran alon11-.ade two corner.. The htlUSC ~,stcd or I\ Jimng ro<>m, a d1Jw1ng r()Olll d ,lccpona r()Om. and kitchen A oowcr co,ercd the <mall <pn,,· Jxrwc-,n rhc &ate and the stam,. My landlady was a bachelor woman called r11ay, who owed u~ over P300. I fer mother lived •1th us. n good old woman . un utmost h,umless ,nsanc and wmc youn11 Spanish mc..tizos, the fruit< of frail lo,e affairs. I sh•II not tell )OU how much I ~uffcred, nor ~hall I tell you my d1Splca,u1es ancJ Joys. I will only tell you wha1 happened to me on the cln\\ during that year At the end of one week, I was prom01cd and I \l,l}Cd at noon at the Colegto de Sta Isabel.~ paymg there three re~"- 1•r.1h1r Joao A Burgot l1!8l1 1812) tnd rwo other Allplno clergyrr,en Ja,clnto Z-Oro 11836-11721 and Marla.., Game, (1799-11172) - • a••rote<I on tho 17111 or lebru1rv 1871 o~ &.g..;mNy•n ,,_.d M.111 •• tauety charged of eornpt11,.1cy tn the mu-tony It the Ch te Arsenl ,n 18n m-61,ation and tix_.,ci:S4il ''Mest110 1n tM PhtliPPJne• 11 apph&d to F,a.o,nos of mix~ J)lrentage; hence, Sp,n1ah: mHhlO I tht ofi1ettln-g o f I Sptnl1,d and a Flhplnn, t Chin... mwtlto; of• Ch,nese.i:,.ftFihp,no: Amer Clnmntt,:o, of 1nAmenqnend frhoino. etc »rh• wu • tt,go bo11dlno te:hool fo, gl,11 1n front ot 11\1 A10~. App1r1ntlv k th«, odmin<ld boys N clay bootde,s 1•A C.thohc ~ •Ice oonslaona of certlin numbo, of days devoted 10 r1Ugtoua °' t ~ ti ~ W alled Crty of Mani&. Mt,1muro& ~ • man-y dlur-:hes and corwent.t • nd o,ovetnMWlt bulld1nga ~r• fouNI I lived with Pastm A month later I was already emperor. Ah, hn" h.tpp~ I "'"' when for the fir~, 11111.: I gm a religious print for n prt7c' In the first 4u.1rccr I won n [irsr pri,c wrth thc grade ,,f cx.:dlt'n1. t>ut ilflcrward, l "~' disgu,1ed on .iccoun1 of some \\ ,ird, u11.:rcd by my prok,sur. and I did not want to study hard ·"" 111,,,.. '" 1h.it 111 1hc emf 11f 1hc year. 10 my mrsfonune, I ,1t>1:1rnnl ,,1111 ,ICC('J<rr 1 '" .. 11 my \Uhjecls, grad.: nf excellent v.nh,1111 !!•'llln_g Jny fir<t pn1.e. I spent my vaca1ion in m) h11111ch•\\ It and I ,, ...companu:d my c ider s1,ler Ncn'!ng to Tanauan h>r 1h, 1<•wn ku~1 This hJrpcncd , in 1!173 But my h.ippmes, " "' nc,c, ,·omplct,· for my mother was 1101 yc1 wilh u\ l wcni lo ""' her then all)R(' Wllht)UI ltlhng mv fa1hcr about it. This "·" 11hc, the -.h,,ol 1crm un<l I 1ultl her that I received,,. auu. W11h "hat ddi,-llt l <urpn,.-d hcr1 Aul af1crw.irds we en>hraced ca, h ot her weeping . fl was almost more than a year that we had 1101 ,c.,n t.',ll'h 01 her Even now I rcmcmocr .,1th sud plea<urc 1h, 111111,• "·,·nc 1ha1 01..-urrcd hctwc.-n u,, Ah. how cruel men .ire h>\\ard, th,,ir lellow mcn 1 I V1&1ted her agarn Wh,-n v;ocation was over. I had 10 return to Manila 10 enroll for lhc ,ccond vcar course and to look for a land.fut.Iv mside the I w:i, lircd living outside 1hc city. I found one wullcd cit), on M;tl(<1llane< Street, numhcr 6. where lived an nld lady called Do1ia PcpJy, widow. with her d,1ugh 1er. also a widow ,called D111111 1'11cJ111Jcion """ lour ,on, Jusc. RJfoel, lgnoc;,, and R~mnn ""'h,nf! CKtrnordin,1ry h;,ppencd to me 1h1~ year, for Ill) prnf,·,,wr was 1hc :,;ome as the one last year. I only had other dJ,,m.11c, nr o:r1hc1, I cnC<>unicrcd agam three "'ho "'ere mv d,"'"'•llcs on Hui,111. They were called Ju,unmn" Soo-iunn. Angil and San11a110 CarnJlo At lhc cnJ of the year I won a medal and I 1cturncd to my homcto.,n. I 1·1,i1ed my mother again alnuc .uul 1hcrc, hk,· arw1lwr Jo,cph. I predicted. ,111crprctmg :1 tfrc,un nf ht•rs, 1hat \\1thm 1hrcc mnnth, she would be releosed, a prc,h.-1,un 1hat was rcuhzcd b:, i1CC1den1. ro; But thi$ lime I. hcgan 10 devote m>>self 111 my leisure hours 111 the roa,l1ng of novels. though years helore I had already read f.l Ultm11, \h,·m·l'rrOJ~. ~1 but l d1d11·1 read rt w,th ardor. Imagine 11 sustained dialogues and delighting in its beauties and following step by step its hero in his revenge. Under the pre1ex1 lh at I had 10 study universal his1ory, I importuned my father to buy me Cesare Cantu's work. 2• and God alone knows the benefit I got from its perusal, for despite my average studiousness and my lillle practice in the Castilian tongue, in 1he following year I was able to win prizes in the quarterly examinations and I would have won the medal were it not for some mistakes 111 Spani,h. 1ha1 unfortunately I spoke badly, which enabled the young man M. G .. a European, to have an advantage over me m this regard. Thus, in order to study the third yea.r course, I had to return 10 Manila and round Doila Pepay w1lhou1 a room for boarders. I had 10 stay at the hosue of 0. P. M . together with a nch follow townsman called QwnterO. I was discontented because they were smct woth me but I kept regular hours which was good for me. l prayed and played with the landlord's children. My mother was not delayed in coming out free. acquiued, and vindicated, and as soon as she was out she came 10 embrace me. I wept .. .. Arter two months and a half, I ler1 that house and retumcd 10 the recently vacated room in the house of my landlady, Dona Pepay , and returned also 10 the same life as before. As a result of what happened 10 me in my studies, as l have already narrated, I received only the first pnzc in Latin. that i,, a medal. not like last year, so that l returned to my hometown discontented, though I knew that many would have danced with joy for less. My family resolved to put me in the college as a boarder. Indeed it was time for I was giving very little a11cntion to my studies. I was already approaching thirteen years and 1 had not yet made any bnllillnt showing 10 my classmates. Until here limed my happiest days, though short; hut what docs it maucr if they were short? Calamba, 7 April 1879. Second ()tire. "~~nish vera,on of Le 0.rn,e, dn Abenc. 1gN I novel by V,scoun1 Frencols Rene de Chateaubriand (1768-1M8) 300 ll boy of twelve yeal:li reading the Count of Monl«risto, 23 enjoying uA !10¥.. of Ne1tander Dumes, father t1802-1S70) "'centu•, boot wu entitled un;wrs.t HistOf'Y. 301 ~ V TWO YEARS IN COLLEGE Soon t(l become eighteen years old and dtSitlusioned, scarcely have I &ieprcd on li£e\ threshold, I direct my glance toward that happy period of my life. like a traveler who. feeling for the first tame the breath of the tempest, already engulfed, turns his glance townrd the •hore that reminds ham or has peaceful hours Ah, I weep for you, pl~cid hours that disappeared from the scene of my life more rapidly and fugaciously than lightning that ,hanc, on the dark mad of the traveler. So sad i• my ~uuauon thni I dnuh1 if I lrnd ever been happ) al ul! for I douh1 1f 1hose day, had ever existed. DurinJ! val.'a111,n my sisters made clothes for me and durinf. th at 11111c .tl,u my si•ter Narcisa married . . I cannot ponray here whal I felt 011 seeing the •cp~auon of tt ,istc , ,.,hom I and no1w11lmtuxling it had to be thu\. loved "' mul'h . I enh:rcd · college tlt<: n on 16 June 1il75. My cla,\mates received me well. l'he brother wardrobe-keeper assigned to me an Jlr,,-.· h11.',11"d III aim corner nf the dormitory loo~ing ,,u1 to the s,·., "'"' the eml?an~mcnt lo wnsi~lcd of' a space of ~hout 1wo MJuarc vara,.!' an iron bcd,tcat.l on whil'h they placed my llcddang, " ,11>.<II oabk w11h J ha"n , whath a >Crv:101 filled with w;ilcr . ., dwir and a dot hes rri.·k. I lorgol to ,uy that in the li11k 1,1hlc I hJd a drawer wi,th soJp. comb. brushes for the hair and t11r th~ teeth. powder, Cle. My In tic monc} that amounted 1,, ><•me e1gl11 pe~u,. I kt>pl u11Jcr my pillow. We didn't go II> the alcove but twice a day regularly. once ,ti siesta to wash and aga,11 jl rught 11, slec1). On holu.lay-.. in the afternoons. we dressed and we " cn1 ,>u t 1or a s1r,,11. I he rc,1 ul the 11mc we ,pent in th~ ,1mt) hall . :tt recess, in the cl.is-..:,. m the dining room. and in 1hc chape l In spi1e of my 1hineen yeti<\ to fourteen. I was still very small . a nd '" 11 i~ ~nown 1ha1 new Students. especially the small n,A vara 30? ts. 3 mea...uro of •~th, tbO\lt 32 inchu. ones are received by the big ones wuh jokes, so 11 was on my first day, my pranks having attracted their attention. In a chorus they teased me and when they calmed down I told them in ~ tranquil voice: "Gentlemen, thanks " Since lhen lhey re~pccte<l me and they didn'1 tca.c me. malicious!)' Excep1ang It kw ..,II my companion$ were good, sample, pious, just, and 11m1ahlc. There was no one among us who would want to con1rol 1hc rest by force, for power as achieved through sk.111. I had the luck to win ,f not the love at least the esteem of all of them. The n.unc, of some of my classmates shall never Ile erased from m,· me mm¥: among them that of one Jovellanos. of one Lete (Ennque) and of others whose enumeracion would be very pleasant for me hu e I foresee will be vexing 10 the reader Our Profe.sor was a model of upnghtnc~s. carnc.\lnc". nnd love of the advanccmcnl of hi\ pupils: and"° much w.is h" ,cal that J, who scarcely spoke very ordinary Spanish. at lhl' e nd of a short ume, succeeded already to wme 11 moderately well. H,s name was Franci~co de Paula Sanchez. With his nid I ,1ud1cd mathematics, rhetoric. and Greek with some advantage Often I got sick with fever despite the gymnastic exercises that we bad, in which I wa, very much behind, though not ,o ,n t.lruw,ng under a teacher worthy of his name and under whose guidance l stall continue to study . l'm proud IO tell you. reader. 1ha1 I spent th!!, year better than 1tnybotly cl...: io 11 ,tudenl , ·'.' ,, •~an. and as a Christian Ten mon1hs pus-.cd that I haven I wnllcn anything in my diary hecause I don't wa~t 10 relate 10 you inspired occurrences, and thank God I won five medals with Jll immense pleasure for with them I could somewhat rcp.iy Ill\ father for his sacrifices. What sentiment~ of jl,ratitudc dad no: then spring from ,my heart and wi1h what sad delight I keep them still! After hav,ng bidden farcwcll 10 my ~upcnors. tcJd1cr,. and companac,ns. I ldo . Who has nor fell the vnguc rmcl:m,·h11I) that seizes the heart upon ~eparatong from one's co,npamon,·/ Who. at the age of founccn yeaf$. if he has cnioycdl the lu, or of the Muse~. docs not shed tears on the transiuon from ch,ldhooll to young manhood? - My arrival at my hometown in the company of u father who idolized me mitigated somewhat my sorrow. and I spent my vacation in the best way possible. 303 I returned 10 college after three mooths and I began to Sludy again, !hough the subject tbar I rook was different. I was in the fifth year, already I was a philosopher I bad other profcsson, called Fathers Vilaclara and Minoves, the first one of whom liked me very much and to whom I was somewhat ungratdul. Although I was srudying philosophy, physicg, chcm1s. try, and natural history and in spite of rhc fact that Father Viladara had told me to give up the society of the Muses and give them a laSI goodbye (which made me cry), in my leisure hours. I continued speaking and cultivating the beautiful language of Olympus under the direction of Father Sanchez. So sweet is their society that after having tasted 11, I cannot conceive how a young heart can abandon it. What matters, I said to myself, the poverty rhat is the eternal companion of the Muses? 1s there anything s1>.ecter than poetry and sadder than the prosaic positivism of mcralhc hcam? Thu~ I dreamed then! I studied the fifth year course with the same success as the previous one, though under other circumstances. Upngbt, severe philosophy , inquiring into the why of things aurncted also my attention as did poetry, beautiful as she alone can be. playing with rhe charms of nature and leaving traces that breathe sublimity and tenderness. Phy~ics, lifting up rhe veil that covers many things. showed me a wide Slage where lhe divine drama of nature was performed. The movement, sound, warmth, light, eleclricity, a thousand varied phenomena, the most beautiful colors and delicate beauties entertained me during my free hours. Polari1111ion plunged me into a world of mysteries from which 1 have not yet emerged. Ah, how beautiful is science when the one teaching 11 knows how 10 embellish Ii! Natural history seemed to me somewhat antipathetic. Why. I asked myself, if the perusal of history and the descriiption of the birds and nowers, of animals and of c~tdls capuvate me so much, why do I loathe seeing lhem reduced to a harsh order and wild anunals mixed with tame ones? Shells pleased me very much for their beauty and ~cause I knew that they inhabited the beaches of which my innocent 1magmatlon dreamed and rreading on them J 1magiru:d the most beautiful waters of the seas and lakes lapping my feet. Sometimes I seemed to see a goddess with a shell that I saw in the shelf. At last the encl of the term and the same thing happened to me. I carried away another five medals due to the indulgence with which my superiors rreated me a~d _to my no little luck in winning them. The day before the d1stnbu11on of prizes, a feeling. tormented me, the saddest and most melancholy that I had ever felt. On thinking that I had 10 leave that asylum of peace in which was somewhat opened my mind and my heart began 10 have bitter sentiments, I fe~ into a profou.nd ~adness. The last night on going to my dorrmtory and cons1denng that night would be the la~t I would spend in my peaceful. ~lcove, because. according to what they said. the world was wa,110~ for me, I had a cruel presentiment which unfortun~tely was realized. The moon shone mournfully, 1llum111a1ing the lighthouse and the sea, presenting a silenl and grand spectacle which seemed to cell me chat the ne>el day another life awaired me . I was unable 10 sleep until one o'clock in the rooming. It dawned and 1 dressed. I prayed fervently in the chapel and commended my life to the Virgin so that when I should srep into that world which inspired me with so much terror, she would protect me. The pm.es wert distributed, they gave me the degree of Bachelor of Aru, and I believe that any young man who was fifteen yean old, loved by his companions and profcsson, with five medals and the degree of Bachelor of Arts, the dream of the student of the secondary course, should be very much contented.26But, alas it did nol tum our that way! I was sad, cold, and pensive. ~ or tbree tears rolled down my cheeks, rears offered as in farewell 10 the 1ime pas1, 10 my gocd luck that would never oome back, to my peace chat soared to heaven leaving me alone on eanh. Imagine it and you will feel it, if you have a heart. Now it remains for me 10 evaluate the two years that I consider the happiest of my life, if happiness consists in living without vexauous cares. In what way have I advanced, that is, t+w E. R..1na, Rtal't Sp,anit;h biographet. wn\ff ,n hlt V1da V ncritoe del Or. Jose Rini (Madrid. 1907, p. JOI: "'R,,11 ., ''"' 11g• of 9a1rce-ty Yfl,._ o, ,,,,.~ when M '-" rile Arenoo with rhfl degtff of Bachelor of Arts in hi• pocte(. wn srvdlou1,. vety ,rudlr,u•,• n,ll«tlve. modctSt. of gre•r tr1orltl hMOl'Y, •ltd t>HICMI having p•sad with tho grllde of excellent ;n ttll the wb,oct'$ and won through compet,tion almost •II rl'Mt p(Ufl-, Md mown of Nitto • Po'l't- Mtd drl•lflMr. ,,, trurh. rtt. ,.,,,. cannot N N;,d of •H men.· ,,1tt,.,. .,Qfl, 305 what bad I learned during the first year of my residence in college? What did I get from what I had learned? OIAPIDVI •. ente~ed college still a child with very little: .knowledge _of Spamsh, w11h a moderately developed mind, nnd .ilmost wi1hou1 refined sentiments. By force of study, of analyzing myself. or aspiring higher, of a thousand corrections, I was lntle by ltttle transformed thanks 10 the beneficent influence of n zealous professor. M:,r morality at rhac time makes me now sigh on tem~mbenng that state of sweetest tranquility of my spirit. By cult1va11ng poetry and rhetonc, my sentiments were funher elevated and Virgil, Horace, Cicero. and other authors showed me another road through which I could walk 10 attain one of my aspirauons. I don 'i know if my present state makes me see the ~auty of the past and the sadness or the present, but the Lruth IS that when I was a college student, I never wanted 10 leave college and that now I would give anything 10 get over this cemble age of youth . Had I been percbance like the brook that while following its delightful ,way amid~, willow~ and dense flowers smiles and frolics and upon being converted into a torrent angrily and turbulently flings itself until II is burred in the sea? My second year in college resembled the fim with the difference tha_t patriotic sentiments as an exquisite sensibility had been greatl~ dcvelo~d Lil me. It passed like the first among pnnc1ples of logic, phys.1cs, and poetical compo~nions. I had advanced somewhat in the cultivation of the Muses liQ much that I hod composed a legend which suffered very slight correction by my professor and a d1a1ogue which was staged for chc first time at the end of the school term, alluding 10 the Mudcnh' farewell. APllD. TO D£Ct:MllDt lffl .. Good~ye th~n beaut_iful, unforge1table penod of my h[c, brier tw1hght which ,will not shme again! If my eyes no longer shed rcal'li upon recalling you. my heart mell!. and seem.; to be oppressed! I ha~c your memory here in my heart. in my mind, in my whole being. Farewell fortunate hours of my 10\I childhuod, Oy lo rhc bosom of pure Innocence wtiich created you to sweeten che moments of tender hearts. Manila, I , December H,79. Wake up, bean, kindle again your eJrtinguished fire so that in iU wvmth you may remember that time which 1 dare not judge. Go, thinking. mind, and go again through t ~ placa, recall those momenu in which you drank together with the nectar the bitter gall of love and disappointment. After the vacation period of that memorable year, I looked for a house in lntramuros77 and I found one on SOiana Strcei, whose landlord was a priest. My mother said that I had enough with what I knew and 1 should not return to Manila anymore. Had my mother a presentiment of what was going to happen to me? Has the heart of mothers, in fact , double vision? I enrolled in metaphysics, becau&e. besides my doubt about the career that I would follow, my father wanted me to study it, but so little was my inclination for it that I didn't even buy the textbook used by the otber studenu. I round myself in Manila a if atupeficd. A fellow collegian of mine, who had le:ft college three months before and lived at tha1 time on the same street u I , was the only friend I had then. My house companions were from Batangas, recently arrived at Manila . My fnend M . r•. went to our house every Sunday and other days td afterwards together - would. go to Trozo to the house or a grandmother of mme, friend of his father. For me the days [Passed happily and silently until one Sunday when we went to Trozo , we encounte r,l!d there a .girl29 of about fourteen years frcs'b, pleasant. winsome wbo received my companion with much Camilianty, from which I ded11ced that she might be his sister who I already had heard was going to marry a relative whose name I didn't remember In fact we round there a tall man, dressed nicely, who seemed to be her fiance. 30 She was short, with expressive eye&, ardent "Tha city of M111ll•. .....,....., ICaflGb<lt of llpa, 81tong- -S.,nda l<Migbell• ...._,.. wr of Lipa.,- -. XI'/ at tunes, and droopiog at OCher times, pinkish, a smile so bc:t1ildting and provocative that revealed some very beautiful teeth; with an air or a S)iph, l don't know what alluring somethin& was all over her being. She was oot the most beautiful womaa I bad seen but I had never seen one more bewitching and alluriJII. They told me to sketch her, bur l excused myself because really I dido ·1 know Finally they compelled me and I drew a grotesque picture. I played chess and whether due to the lady with h~ 6ancc or I was distracted scelllg her or I was nattered or I didn't know. the fac1 was I lost I Now and then she looked al me and I blushed A1 last they talked about novels and other thinp about literature and then I took part in the conversauon with advantage. That day pas.scd until the young woman K, entered college after ta.king leave or all the 01hcrs who were there. l returned home and l didn't think seriously agam of that day. A second Sunday came and I saw her followed always by her fiancc and other girls. It happened that I changed my residence and a sister of mine enlered the Colegio de la Concordia in which the young woman K , was a boarder. I went to all on her and she appeared in the reception hall accompanied by the young woman who bad become her intima1e friend As I had nothing 10 say 10 her nor had I had the honor of being uuroduccd to her, besides my bashfulness as a collegian. I dido'1 address her cxccp1 a ceremonious and silent bow to 'Nhich <he responded with admirable grace and delicacy. When I returned in the company or my aunts, we found them strolling. My sister followed us in a carriage and we went to the college where shortly afterwards the young woman appeared. No incident occurred 10 ~ worth mentioning. One Thursday, my friend M . who ..,as 1he brother of Miss K , came to invite me to go together to La Coooordia to visit our respc::tive sisters. l accepted the invitation gladly and we went. We found lus sister in the hall. She greeted us and she asked me 1r I would like her to ca.II my sister Olimpia I thanked her and she went away nimbly but always with grace that I have never seen tn any other woman Shortly afterwards the two appeared and we formed a s;oiall circle Since then we talked and animation reigned in our gathering. Her brother left us and went to speak with a girl to whom be was later married. 308 I don't remember bow our conversation began, but I do remember that she asked me what no..ers I Liked best. I told her 1hat I liked all. but that I prcfened the white and the black ones. She told me that she liked the white and the pink ones and she became pensive; but later she added: ·Yes, I also like the black ones." I kept quiet "Ha~e you a ~wcetbcart?" Sbc asked me after a moment of silence. "No" I rephcd, "I ne,er thougJit of h3v1ng one b<!caU!.e I know well 1ha1 no one would pay attention to me espc:cially the beautiful ones" "Why. is it possible? Yo deceive yourself! Do you want me, to get you one?" "Thanks, Miss," I told her. "but I don't want 10 bother you " 1 remembered at that moment thm she woult.l marry her uncle the following December , and then I a~ked her: "Do you go hack 10 your town in December?" "No" she answered me dryly "They say tha1 in your town a very big reast will be celebrated in which you will take an important part and it is possible that it wtlJ not be held without your aueodance ." "No." she replied and she smiled " My parents wan1 me 10 go borne bur I should not Ii.kc to do so, for I wish to stay tn college for five year.. more." Lillie l>y httlc I was imb1b1ng the ~weete~t pooon of love as the conversation continued He r glances were 1errihle for their sweetness and expressiveness Her voice was so· sonorous that a cenain rascmat1on accompamed all her movements From ltmc 10 lime a languid ray penetra1ed my brart and I felt some thing tha1 until then, was unknown 10 me And. why did the years pass so rapidly that I didn't have time to enJ0y them? Finally when the clock sLruck seven, we took our leave of our respective sisters and then she- said: "Have you any order to give mer )09 wMb., ( - r had the CIIIIOlll of ordering womco," I replied. wr expect them to commll!d me" We went down the wide staircase of the college and went home. I don't remember how I tpCnl the w&ht then. The time that passed afterward was so painful that the beautiful and sweet were ~rased from my mlDd leaving only black shadows mixed wit.h the tints of tediousness. My friend and I returned the following Sunday and "'c found only my sister because his had gone 0111 that day w11h her father It was a stonny ni&ht. My sister had asked me if I had requestC'd her friend to make nowers and as I replied 1ha1 I didn't, she told me that she bad asked for material from the ~is1ers fnuns Z.). I bad made a pencil ponrait of Miss K. that I copied from a photograph that she bad given me last Thursday. After a while, her father and ~he appeared l greeted him for we knew each other. They brought with them a cone of almonds which they offered us while she greeted us with her at1ract1vc smile Her brother took a handful but I didn 1. She diSJppearcd, returning afterwards with two wh11e ro.e, one or wh,~h ~he offered to her brother and·the other to me which she hcr~lf placed m my hat band. I offered her the por1ra1t I had made, which pleased her Our conversauon became animated and afterwards we rook 011r leave, the ,ame as last Thul'>da:,, She ~111I that the white rose that she gave· me was from my sister. And though. I knew it was not, I pretended to bchevc it. I went home and kept the rose , symbol or her artificial love My aunt\ and I wenl there again on Thursday following thal Sunday They came out ns usual, each one carrying a wh11e ro-;e; my sister ga\e me hers and she gave hen. tu her brother We formed a c1rde 11nd my seat was next to her, My ~hlCr had to commun1c-Jlc I don': know what feminine ,;ecret to my aunts and therefore ,h.: lcf1 us alone. I took advantage of the OCUISion 10 a~k her who lllJtk those r05CS and to tell her thJI I cunsuler my "Mer 1n.:.ipahlc of havin& made them for she didn't k.oow }Cl hew, 10 make 1hcm so well and moreover I wanted tu kno,i, the name of my creditor She confessed 10 me the I ruth blu~hing. I thanked her, promising her that I would keep it while I hvc and I added· wDo you know 1ha1 11 is very painful for me to lo.c you after having known y0111~ 310 w8ut I'm aomg to get marned! she replied and two tears appeared in her eyes. having d,vmcd the very murkcu 111tcniion of my remark After thu, my aunu. relurncd and we continued our,, ,~a sauon The ~uhiect turned to 1nne, It " uuc 1hat Junnr 1hc: convemition our eyes met, ,md the mo,t intcn<e glanrr, lull of a loving melanchohcal expre,'1on came to enslave m1 "'"I forc,er Our vm,., L-unllnucd I •l»ta1ncd, ur rather I tori 111,: Ill} hear1 10 love her knowing tha1 ,he wa, cngai,1cd. Ou1 I "1"! h• m~elf. Perhap'I <he did love me perha~ her love fnr her t,.,m;e wu notlung more than a g1rh,h lo,e a, he; hc:an had not )ti opened to rc<e11c 1ruc 101, \torcov" l"m nci1t,•·r •1d n,, handsome nor gallant nor 11tract1ve, and if <he 1'>1cd me her love would be true. for 11 wa, not ba-..:d on vain aml ,haky foundation. Bui c-cn then, I decided Ill keq, 4u1cl unlll I .:,1uld ICC 1rca1er pr,,af, of <)mp•lh) hc1wccn u, I "'oul<I n<ilhcr sub1ect m)self to her yoke nor declare mr,clf 10 her Once when I went Jlonc Ill thl· nilkgc, I carrinl lcuer.. and order; for her and con,cquently I roulc.l ,encl for hn to come out to the reception room. bu1 I c.hlln't tk> ,., 1. ,1c.,d I waited for her lmlc "~1er m "'hom I dchwrc,I thew 10 h,: "llcn to her My M~tcr came out 1elhng me 1hM i... ..,,1, "'" ~- d on account of what I had done. I said nothmp,', Aher ;1 ,111111 while, her bro1her arrived and ll<!nt lor her She came out Vl'r. w11ou, and formal I llowcd tu her .,nJ ,he •c3rcd> resp, ·od, I ,.,,h &liSht inclination of the head ,. 11h,>u1 ,mihn,t, and w,01 1<1 .1nu1h,·, group. I "'enl back to my seal then and l>c!!an 10 ,p.:.,k ""~ her hrother. Af1cr a while ,he came h.ttk 1,1 "'here "'c .... ,,.,., gay, loquac1ou.,. and willy. ,he: enlertainctl u, ,lch~h1full, wilh her pleasant con-ersation When ni1?hl c.unc. 1he mon11 re,._._. up maJCSUCally and we had to take our lca,c Iler hrn1her ,ind I were going 10 lca,e together uni.I "hen "'c were .1lrr.11h .......,tnJ in 1he carriage, my ~1stcr called me and 1uld me: ··K rcquc.·,I\ you not to come except ,n the company of her bn11her ,o 1ha1 YOII can vmt her " I received 3 plc,1,mg J") hut a 111.111110,can exterior hid 1t from all, 1,a,d y~ and leh Since then cHr)•hmg changed for me. 311 In the meanrimc chaucrina and lyjng rumor was already apreadiJic our imaginlrj love, IIUI In embryo, u ocnain. Everywhere I beard only talk about our relations and truth to tell we loved cac:b other without having declared it clearly except that we 'understood each other through our glancc5. fn the meanwhile, lime was passing away, I In going there every Thursday and Sunday and she in receiving us always enchanting and attrac:tive, always a conqueror of my heart that still, refused to surrender. It happened onoc that my . aunts, another young WOtUan and a sister of mine had to malce flowers for I didn't k:now wlu,t saints and for this purpose went to the college in the morning and I had to fetch them in the afternoon; I went there already twice. Once I gave in 10 my friend, and another till)e 'I didn't go, aaying I was ill. The following day I found them on the i.oding of the staircase - she, my two sisters, an aum of mine, and an,otber young woman. She was simply but very elepolly dressed, with her hair loose, and with a smile on her lips. Ob always J saw her thus even in my dreams! She received me cheerfully, accompanying us with my sisters until the carriage. My sister coUegian talked with my aunts and she with me. "Have you been sick?• she asked me in h~r sweet voice. "Ycs," I answered her, "but now I'm very well thanks to you . . . . " "Ohl" she replied, "last night I was praying for you, fearful that something bad migl'lt happen to you." "Thanks," I replied. " But being so, I would like to get $ick always inasmuch as in this way I have the happiness of being remembered by you; moreover death might do me much good." "Why?" she replied. "Do you wish 10 die? Well, I'm sony. ~ And we kept quiet. C don't remember now what came out of our lips then, but we must have talked a great deal, inasmuch as night overtook us. Alas! Our conversation, was so s weet, though we bad not yet declared ourselves, that more and more fastened the yoke already being laid on me. Ah! Once happy memories, now heart-rending! Oh, vanish from my memory, for inatead of bringing me happiness, yuu inflame my despair and my skepticism. 312 I was then reOecting on my situation. New anxieties, new cares, new ideas, new Kn ti ments seized me. When least ~xpcctcd J spent the nighl alm05t sleepless, steeped in my reflections. My rebellious bean·, which perchance forebode what was going to happen later, refused 10 express 11self yet at!d consequently to bend its nccli:, perhaps fearful of e ntrusting its happir_iess to such fragile hands. Alas, why have I not followed th~ impulses of my presentiments and followed another route,_ fascinated by the melodious-voice of this siren , much more temble and powerful than those of antiquity? The eighth of December came. feast o f the college in which she was a boall'der. It was a Saturday, with an enviable s~n. Some students and I went 10 tho college. It was decorated with pennants, lanterns, flowers etc, We we nt up and L~ere l fou~d my ( unintelligible word) ... beautiful as ever but wtth a ccnam severe and rcsc,rvcd air that I could not explain, I asked for my sister and ,he came and ~he tried 10 call her, hut she only approached our group carrying some pictures which she left with my sister. I took one of them without telling her, for she did not converse with us that morning, Twelve o'clock struck and we were going co depart and I approached her and said: :• ~iss, pardon me for having taken your picture without your perm1ss1on. Will you not be offended 1f I keep it?" "No " she said with a smile and made me forget her scriousne~• Ari'e rwnrds ~he called u friend of her1, thus cutting off o ur conversation. We took our leave. When we reached home. I kept the picwrc a nd pretended not to be in bad humor. One day nny grandmother took me to the college m the morning ~nd sent for her and my sister. I still seem to sec her coming ou1 pak and pantin.g a~d lumi~g a glance t~ me that filled me with joy, though 1t did not dispel my secret sorrow. Then l learned that her mother., having given binh to a boy lo whom they ga\/e the name Jose, had ordered her to go home that same month . A painful presentiment oppressed my heart bu: I concealed it under a cloak of indifference. My grandmother and the mo ther [nun - Z .] went away leaving us four there. thnt is, her . my two sister,;, and me. My grandmoth~r ?nd the mother came b:ack a while and we went down for I d1dn t lcoow 313 whaL While we were going down the stairs, she remained behind. I asked her then if it would not displease her to be of my hometown and she replied blushina that it would not. of the same age as K.,,of my town, who was also going home to Calamba for a few days with her father after h:uving ~pent almost five years in the college. She stopped beside the carnage and I, 100. ond we remained thus looking at each other for our companions had gone away to see I knew not what. We ltnew cadl other very well, but the cducacion th,11 1hc sisters ol her college gave her made her excessively umid ,inc.I bashful, so much so that I refrained from using 1he Jea,1 .1111b1gu• ous word. l had to resign myself to .peak with her hack lier father was with us. To entertain her during the trip I a,kl'd about her college, her fnends. and her hopes or illusions She answered me m monosyllables and I nvtcd tha1 she hJJ f<lrgollcn half of Tagalog if not all of it. The time to take our leave came and we. my grandmother, my sister, and I, got into the carriage. My grandmother handed to me the letter in which her father ordered he.- to go home . I read and reread it and in the meantime I thought of what would become of us afterward should she beconw my panncr. Oh; dreams! At last Thursday came and I went 10 the college 10 v1Sit them and say f arc well as I had to go home the following day. We spoke very few words but ,;ad and affectionate. She told me that she was going home on the following Saturday, that i~ one day after my projected depanure. I answered her then that once I had decided to go home on Friday it would be very ugly lor me to retract, but at any rote we would sec each other 1n my hometown. She kept quiet . but she became pensive and raised her eyes to the s.ky. Even now ii seems to me that I see her leaning against 1hc door, in an attuude so though1ru1 that had made me think so muc_h. I took leave of her as at ,1thcr times, and the moon which at that time was at its apogee. illuminated the one who was m modify so much my ideas. standing on the landing of the staircase. always poetic for my imagination , That was the first n1gh1 1ha1 I felt an unguish and 1nqu1e1ud1.: resembling love, if not jealoioy. perhaps because I saw,1ha1 I was separating from her, perhaps because a million obstacles would stand between us, so that my budding love wa, increasing and seemed to be gaining vigor In the fight. Since then I knew that I loved her truly and in my own way, that 1s. ver) diffcrcnl from other loves that I have hc-ard mentioned. As I had promised , I did go. home the following day and J found on the steamer a young college wom,rn of Sta, Catnhna, 11 :,, A boarding achool &trict order of nuns.. 314 to, glrt1 In Manila. Coleg.io de S 1• CeIahna tJnde, , very At last we arrived at our town · I, a little querulou\ Jhouc the bad treatmeni that I received from my fellow to wnswoman despite the fact that, continually besieged by the thoughc of my beloved, I could not think or joking other women When I reached home, my mother , who had already lost much of her sight, didn'i recognize me unril after havrng oh<crved me a long time. That saddened me at the begmntn!! when I didn't know yet the cause. My sister. received me JO}ful!} .ind I could read their pleasure in their face,. They .iskc,I me al~>ul K. and they leased me. Of all of ttiem my father was the most contented and the one who talked least. Consider my situation and my iUusions! My family wu, very much a.stonished when they learned that I knew how t<l handle arms, for that very night I proved myself to tic the hcs1 swordsman in my town. The following day, at the time when the Meamcr ought to arrive and therefore the family of my friend or my h;;lovcd af1cr having waited for her a few minutes. we learned from my fo1her . who had gone to meet her, that the steamer. on accounc of the wind, did not touch Calamba, but instead the pa,~engcrs d1'cm barked at Binan. Consegue0tly, her father, wi1h all his companions, relatives of the fiance and others who formed the e...corr. waned outside the town and from there to go m upii I hac.l a white horse saddled and I mounted it and wcnl nut uf th.: town because I expected to see her for 1he las1 time. I wem in the direct.ion 9f BiJ\an and I passed precisely the point where all those awaiting her were encamped. I goaded my horse as ii I didn't notice them. Then I heard one crying out I<> me: ustop. stop." I looked back and I sal\' no one who talked to me and I tried to go ahe.ad and then the same call was rcpe.ated. I looked around. I encountered her father who asked me smiling how long ago had l arrived. "Yesterday," I replied, bowing. "Well, they arc arriving today," he replied. "Yes," I answered "It seems 1ha1 my friend told me something about that." Bui I knew very well 1ha1 was lhc day of her arrival. I didn'l conlinuc on my' way. I took another road towards L(~ Barios. hul I though! il would be better iC I wenl to our lands as they would pass there 10 go 10 their town. I did as I had thought and I rushed 1he horse until I reached our mill . I got down lhe horse and I amused myself looking at the water that ran through the canal. comparing its velocity to my days At this moment. only one coach arrived and I saw getting down the student of Sta. Ca1alma, an aunl of hers. an uncle, and a young man. ~ludcnt of the Atcnco. who lmd 1u,1 arrived that day from Manila . They were going to lhci r lan<h called Presa. I accompanied them O'l foot leaving my horse lied to a stake. When we had arnvcd a1 1hcir mill, I took leave 10 rc1urn 10 the wwn. hut really to wail again on the road on case 1hey had nol passed by ye1. I arrived there and I inquired if there had passed lhere cavalcades or carromatas. 0 No one could tell me. Sadly I Sat down hy lhc hank of lhc brook thal run lhc old mill 1ha1 we had in il. thinking of many lhing, at lhe same lime and not being able to fix my mind on anything. I saw the swift curren1s carrying away branches thal 1hey lore from lhe bushes and my thou~ht. wandering m other region, andl having 01her "Light two wl\Mled cov-•red veh.c,.. u1ue1.ty hof'M,o(kewn. •nd MO,e tpedow than 8 Cllt:$it. 316 subjects, pajd no attent,ion to them. Suddeoly J perceived a noise, I nised my head and I saw caluos and hones enveloped in a cloud of dust. My heart be.at violently and I must have become pale. I 100k a shon stroll returning 10 where J had the hone lied. There I waited. The first vchicl-c carried K's father and another gentleman. He invited me to go 10 his town. I tlhanked him . How I would have liked to go! The vehicle that came behind was occupied by K., her s.i ster, and other girls from La Concordia. She bowed to me smiling and waving her handkerchief, I just lifted up my hal and said nothing.' Alas! Such has always happened to me in the: most painful moments of my life. My tongue, profuse talker, becomes dumb when my heart is bursting with foeling.s. The vehicle passed like a swift shadow, leaving no other tr.ace but a bbmble void in lhe world of my affections. I mounted the horse while lhc third vehicle was approaching where my friend was riding. ll halted and he invited me to go to his hometown. I was going 10 follow them for I was riding a preuy good horse. Bul in the critical momenls of my life, I have always acted againsl my will , obeying different purposes and migh1y doubts. I goaded my horse and look another road without having chosen it, exclaiming: TIils. is ended thus. Ah, how much truth, how much meaning. these words lhen had! My you1hful and trusting love ended! The first hour, of my firsl love ended. My virgin heart will forever weep the risky step mt took in lhe abyss covered wi1h nowcrs. My tlluston will re1urn, indeed, but indifferent, incomprehensible, preparing me for tho firsl deception on lhe road of grief. I returned 10 the 1own inebriate and confused . Melancholy, swec1 in its 1or1ure,,, seiied me. I knew thal she was 1h1; woman who salisfied fully the aspirations or my heart 1ha1 told me I had lost her. I spent the two nights that followed this day. in visitmg, 1ogcthcr wi1h L, a young woman who lived toward the casl in ,, little house al lhe nght She was a bachelor girl older than we were. Sbe was fair with seductive and anractive eyes. She, or we, ialked abou1 love but my hean and my thougbl followed K. 1hrough lhe nigh1 10 her 1own. If 1he most filthy corpse had told me lhat she too was ttiinking of me. r would have kissed 11 ou1 or gratitude. 317 I spent the last days of December in that monotonous melancholy so much more implacable as I could not find any other objeC110 distraC1 my thoughts. My father, who had learned about our visits, prohibited us from continuing them. perhaps because the name of the oriental maid did not figure in his calculations. I did not visit her agrun. Manila, 16 November 1881. S . L. departed. CHAPTER VD FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER 18711 The short vacalion ended w11hou1 any important happening, On the 6th or January I took leave or my paren1~ and re1urm·d to Manila , my second hometown. The old house on Magallanes Street received again I he gucs1 who since childhood had taken shelter in tis shadow. An indefinable malai.s e and sadness like remorse took hold or my h<•:trt I spent the night in vague, most melancholy reflection, II dawned. I sat down on my chaise lounge and I almost cncd on remembering my family and my old friends My room-niolc found me praying. The days of January , February, and March ra~scd alm(>st withoul any incident. I was waiting only for some news from her. During these months I had the di:.cu~1on of Mc1aphy>1c,,, that is I maintained most intncatc, vyingly cnmplicated question, in Latin. I came out very middling for I had 001 prerarcd as I should. I took the eumination in Melaphysics in March and I obtained the grade of excellent . 1 hnd the same success in the examinations in topography. winning two medals in this and 111 agriculture. My mother had given me for expenses that month something like Pl.5 .00 I bought a lmlc tortoise-shell box and presented it 10 my professor or drawing.33 And not having any thing more to do. I went home to spend the long vacation. CHAPTER VIII MY FlRSf REMINISCENCE Nben I had not yet seen other rivers except the nver of my 1owo, crystalline: and gay ,n its winding course. shaded ~y murmuring bamboo groves; when my world was only c1rct1mscnbed by the bluish mountains of my province and the white surface of the lake that I discerned from after through some ruins, sparkling like a mirror ond filled wi1h grnccful ~a~ls, I like stories very much and I believed with all my heart everylhmg the books contained, convinced that what was printed must perforce be the t~lh . And why not , since my ~arent~. who punished me for the smallest lie, emphatically cnJotncd me to a11end 10 my books , to read them diligently and understand them. My first remembrance concerning leucrs goes back '? my earliest age. I must be very small yet because when they polished the floor of our house with banana leaves , 1 would \till fall dipping on the shiny surface as did the lillle s killed ~lcater. on ice II was still difficult for me to climb up a chair, I went down th~ stairs step by step, holding on to every baluster, and in o ur house as in the whole town, petroleum w,1~ unknown, nor had I seen until that lime any qurnque, 34 nor had any carriage ever passed thmugh the streets of my town that I believed io he the swnmum 1~ of joy and animation. One night, when everybody at home .was ulrtad)' .isk~p. when all the lights in the globe~~ had already been rut out by blowing them off by means of a curved 1in tube wluch -.ccmcd 10 me the most exquisite and wonderful toy in the world , I dvo't lc:now why my mother and I h3d remained watching bc,u.k tlw only light that in all Philippine houses burned a ll ni!(hl . lon.i: and that went out precisely a, dawn waking the people w11h 11, cheerful hissing. »rhis word 11 ct.riv.ct from lht n.a.me of 1h, fir,1 m a\•r • F,r .nehfnan Ouinque refera to oetroleum lamp. or tt\lll l1m1-J Ov•r'Qv1•t -,.hi u1most. -o,oo., 'wtre 1pp11enc11 made of cry1tal "'which wo,v Ph•etd 1h• vos•t.1li com:aining otl for bgh1109, Thr, ue hung from the ceilil')Q ~th iron chain$ 318 My mother lhen was still youqg. After a bath her .hair which abe let down 10 dry, dragged half a handbreath o n the Ooor, by which reason she knotted its end. She taught me to read in Amigo de los Ni/io$, a very rare book, an old editfon, which had lost ,ts cover and which a very industrious sister of mine had covered again by pasung on its back u thick blue paper, the remnant of the wrapper of a bolt of cloth. My mother undoubtedly annoyed at hearing me read pitifully, for, as J didn't understand Spanish, I oould not give meaning to the phrases, took away the book from me . After scolding me for the drawings I had made on its pages, with leg.~ and arms extended like a cross, she began to read asking me to follow her example. My mother , when she could still see, read very well, recited, and knew how to make VCl'$CS. How many times during C hristmas vacation afterwards, she corrected my poems, making very apt ubservallons. I listened to her full or childish admiration. Marvelling al 1he ease with which she made them and at the «onorous phrases 1ha1 she could get from some pages that cost me so much effort 10 read and that I deciphered hahingly. Perhaps my ears soon got tired of hearing sounds that 10 me meant nothing perhaps due to my natural distraction I gave title attention to tbe reading and watched more closely the cheerful name around which some small moths fluttered with playful and uneven flight, perhaps I yawned, be it what ii might, the case was that my mother, realizing 1he litte interest thlu I showed. stopped her reading and said to me: "I'm gomg to read to you a very prelly story , be attentive". Upon hearing tile word story l opened my eyes expecting a new and wonderful o ne. I looked at my mother who leafed 1hrough the hook as if looking for it, and l got ready. to listen wilh impatience nnd wonder I didn't suspect 1hal in thal old book 1ha1 I read without understanding, there could be stories and pretty stones.. My mother began to read to me the fable of the young and the old moths, translating it lo me piece by piece into Tagalog. At the firsl verses my attention redoubled in such a way that I looked towards the light and fixed my allenhon on the moths that flullcred around it . The s1ory could not have been more opportune. My mother emphasized and commented a great deal on the warnings of lhe old moth and directed them 320 to me as if to tell me that those applied to me. I listened to her and what a rare phenomenon the ligh1 becmed to me more beautiful each llmc, the flame brighter, and I even envied instinctively the fate of tho';e insects thal played so cheerfully in its magical exhalauon. Those that had su<.-cumbed were drowned ,n the 0 11 ; they d1dn'1 frighten me My mother con1111ucd her reading, I listened anxiously. and the fate of the two insects interested me intensely . The light agitated its golden longue on o ne side, a singed moth in one of these movements fell 1n10 the 011, clapped tlb wings for-,omc time nnd died That assumed for me the proportion, of a !(real event and as a strange phenomenon that I have always observed tn me when SQmethmg cxettes me. It i.ccmcd to me that the flame and the molhs were moving far ;;way , very far and that my molher·, voice acquired a ~trange, sepulchral timbre. My mother finished the fable. I was not hstenmg, all my attention, all my mind and all my thoughts were coneentrated on 1hc fate of that rnolh, young, dead , full of illusions MYou see?" my molhcr said to me taking me to bed " Don't imitate the young moth and don't be disobedient: you'll get burned like it. " l don't know if I replied , promised somi:thing, or cned. Tbc only thing I remember is that it took me o long 11me bcfott r could sleep. That s1ory had revealed to me thing.< unknown to me until then. To me moths ceased to be insignificant insects; moths talked and knew how 10 warn and advise as well as my molher did. The light seemed lo he more beautiful. dazzling, attractive. I understand why molhs Outtered around lights. Advices and warmngs resounded feebly m my ears. Wha~ preoc• cup,ed me mo,1 wns 1hc death of the unprudent, but at the bo11om of my heart, l didn't hlame ii . My mother's solicitude didn't have all the success that she hoped it would No; many years have e lapsed; the child has become a man; plowed [sailed - Z.I the mos1 famous foreign nver~ ~nd m editated beside their copiou, ,1 ,com~. The s teamship has taken him across the seas and all the oceans; he has climbed the region of perpc1ual snow on moun1a1ns very much lugher than the Makiling of lus provmcc From exp<:rience he ha, received bitter lessons. oh, infinitely more bitter than the ;,wect lesson that his has 321 mother gave him, and nevertheless I.be man preserves 1he heart of n cltil~ and h_e believes that ligh1 is 1he most beauuful thing there 1s m crcauon end thnt II is worthy for a man 10 sacnfice his life to it. APPENDIX C TO THE YOUNG WOMEN OF MALOLOS * (London, februal) 21, 1889) When I wrote Noll Me Tongere, I a.led 11,r-,elt whether bravery was a common thing in the young woui..·n ol our 1>cnpk. I brought back to my rccollccrlon and rcvicw,·d 1t11"c I h,1d lcnown since my infancy, but there were only few who seem lo come up to my ideal. There was, ti ts true, an abundance of girls with agreeable manner~. bt!auuful way~. and n1<>tks1 demeanor. bul there was in nil 11n admixture of ,er>llutk and deference lo the words or whims of their ~o-.:alled ~spiritual fathers" (as tf the ,spirit or soul had any father other than God), due 10 cxceslivc kindnc.,s. mod~~I}. or p<·rhap, 1~no ran,c They aeemed faded plants sown and reared in darkne<ss, h.ivmA Onwers without perfume and fruits without sap. •This 1•mous lene, was written by Rial in T3gatog, while he wa, ,et;,O,ng 1n London~ upon the r&qu611 of M H dal ~ta, The story behind lhh, h!Htt; II 1h1a: On o«emtNtr 12, 1888, • grouo of Twentv young womfW' t)l Matolc» pt"1 1 1io,n,ed Governor•Gtner•I Weyler for pemuu1on 10 open a "'nlQbt :.cnool'" \o 1ha1 they might stucty Spanl1h \lndlr T.odoro S•n<tlko Tht Spen15h p.Jrl\lt pn-,t, f, Fol,~ Garcia. ot>,tcted so that the goYeroo,-gener,I turned down the s,etit 011 Howev.t, 1h1 vou11g women, in defi•nce of 1h• hl1,•1 wt;)lh. bru"Jl•ly cor-tin1,nd lhflli1 M,)it111on of th.e school - a thmg unheard of in the Phllippu)es in those 11mes ThPV flN(ty ...,Ccood',Jd in oblt,lnlr,g governmflnt appro"JII 10 the;, projtct on cond11,on 1hat $er\ori1a Gu•da1upG Reyes. should be their ntacher file n1;1d.ent caust?cd c1 greet stir In ct\e Phllipplnu and In f1t·IW8Y Spa,n 0.1 P,1a,• ._.. ,twy 1,1 8.ir'-t:f•1no1 on February 17, t889, requH18d A.,tat to l>llld I lenet' tn Tigo:(Xf tn uw brilvf' women ol Malolos Accordlngly, A1zat, although busy ,n London anr a ta:1 rtg Morgas boo", penned 1h11 famou1 tet1er•n~1en1 11 10 o., P1&,ronFul.m.1,11vn, UUN1m 11 ,, ,n • ,1 to M1lolos F'oi- full text of lhts letter 1n o,igln11 Tag.alog and ,n E~ltsti and Span1ih u1ot111loM ... A ,..,,,,, to tho Yo~ma Wom•n ot M•Jole>s by JO~- R,.u1. <td•IOd by Teodoro M. Kalaw and pu~l1hod b 1 the Nat~nal Llbtary, M.in t ,c;112 322 313 However, when the newa of what happened at Malcma readied I saw my error, and great was my rejoicing. After all, "'ho is to blame me? I did not know Malolm nor ns yoag "'umcn, except one called Em,ha (Enulia Tionpon, whoa! Rizal met 1n 18871, and her I knew by name only us, Now that you have re~pondcd to our first appeal in the interest of the welfare of the people, now that you ba--e set 811 example t o ~ •h<>. hke yvu, long 10 have thctr eyes ~ocd and l,e delivered from 5CrVi1ude. new hopes are awakened ID us and we no,. e,en dare 10 face advel"Slty, because we have you for our allic~ and arc confident of VICtory. No longer does t~c F-.lipin.i ~tand •1th her head bov.ed nor docs she spend her tnnc oo her knees, becau,,c she IS quidtcncd by hope in the fotun:· no longer ..m the mother contnbute to kccpu,g herdaughter ,n darkn," ,1nd bnng her up an oontcmpt and moral anmh,l.,tinn Ami no longer v.ill thc: 'ICiena: of all acicoccs coma. in bhnJ ,ubmLSSion to any un1u<1 order, o r in extreme complacency , nor ... .n a u>wleuu.s wn1lc hc. decmcd tJic Oftly "'capoa aprmt insult or bumble tccars the indfal>le renacca for all lribula1,on• You know that the w,11 of God 1) different from that of the pne~t: that rehgiou,ness docs not cons,st of lone pe~ spcnt on your knec-s, nor ,,, endle-. pr;oyen, big roslll'W», and gnm) $0lf'Ulancs, hut in a spotless a>ndue1, firm ,ntentiaa and upnjtlll Jndpncnt You al'iO kuow that prudenc,e does 11CJ1 COJW>I tn blindly obcymg any wh,m of the hllle tin god, bot ID obeying unly that which ,s reasonable and JU<t. becaU5C bl.iod obt-dicncc is itself the: cau.c and origin of ti-e whuns, IOd th,_ i:u,lt) of II a,~ rca..1 10 be bbmed. The official or fria can n•• longer a~rt that they alone arc rc:.pomiblc for thar unJ'"' •rd<·"· ht·,au-e God 1a~c: each ind1V1du"I reason and a will of hi, or her own to distinguish the just from the unjust; all ,., I· •rn ,.,,1hout >haddcs and free, and nobody ha.. a ngbt ,to 5.,l>,ug.,1~ lbc ••II and the sp,nl ur aoother. And, "'by should \Ou subnlll to anotber ,our thoughts. seeing that tbou&J,t is noble and free? It oo•,.·arJ,c, .,nd crroncow. to believe that sauitlmc:s:s bh ,d o1 ,cn...r and th.tt prudence and tbc habot ol thinkin& arc prc.sumptuo~ l,uinrancc has e~c r been ipol'IJl0C, a~d never prudence and honor God, the pnmal source ot al wisdom, d ics not demand that man, created ,n his unq,c aad is comm" 324 111 likeness, allow himself to be deceived Md boodwia.t.ed, btll wants • to use and let shine the h&J,t of tulOII with wbic:b He has $0 mcrafully endowed us. He may be compared 10 the Cather who gnc each of ha ~ns a tor,,1 10 bpt !heir way m lbc darkncM bidding thern keep II\ light bnght and talr.e care o( 11 , and oot pl.II 11 out and trust to the hght of the others, bet 10 help and advice each other to find 1he nght path , They would be lllidmen "'ere they lb lollow the hght _.r another, only to u,roc to a fall, aml the father c,ould unbra,J lhcm .iud '<3) to them • Did I not c,ve each of you hl5 own tnrdi,~. hut he could not say so 11 the fall were due to the hght of the torch o( tum wti., foll, ;a,. the hght might ho,c hcen dim .nJ 1hc road ~Cl)' b:ad The de~cl\-cr is food ot u.ing Ille say1nit that •11 as presump tuous to rel) ,.,, one's nwn •ud,:rncnl • bur ,n rnv or,,n,,.,n, 11 is more l)R'>Umptu,iu, for a p<'f""'ln to put h,, 1udgn..-n1 at,,-, ,e tha1 of the othe r, and try to make II prevail over their,;. It ~ more prc~umptuou, for a man to ~-001,11tu1,· huw.ctr 1n1<> an idol and pretend to he 1n Cllmmuni< ''"'" of thou!\ht with God, ..nd it i• more than pr~umptuous and even bla<phemous for a rcrson II> attnbute e~er" mo\c:mcnt ol his h~ to Ood, to rcprc,;cnt c\cry whom or h1\ a, the v.,11 111 <,od, and In brand his own enemy ti an cnem~ of God Of cou=. •e <houlJ not cnn<ult our own Judgment alorl<:, but hear the oprn,on of othcrs domg what may seem rno,t rca<onablc tu u~ fhe wild man from the tull•. af dad ,n a pn.,,1·, robe. remains a h1llm1n and can only deceive the weak and 1gnoran1, Anti , to make my argument more conclu,rvc. 1ust buy a pncst's robe a:. the 1-'raoc,,un, wear 11 and put 11 on "ca,,.hao, .and ,'flu will he lu,ly tf the c.traban Joe, '"'' hccon,c lazy on account of the robe But I v.,11 leave th,.. subJect 10 6pcak or something el,e, Youth is a nower-bcd that ,s 10 bear nch frurt and must accumulate "'"altb for ,ts de..ccndanb , Wh.t oft.<pnng will be that of a ,.oman who.e k1n40C5' or character o eaprCSKd by mumbled prayers; ..110 knn'II/$ oothin,: by heart but aw,u, novtnus. and the alleged mm,des; whos.: amusement coas1s1> ,n playing pangwngut or in the frequent confess.on of tbc same ,ill$? What ,ons will <he have but acolytes, priest's scoanl5, or cod.fighters? h 1s the mother" who a.re responsible for the present 5Crvuude of our compatnou. o ~ 10 the ll'\limitcd truwulness 31S of tbc:ir lovina bearU, to their udaat desire to elevate dieir SODS. Maturity is the fruit of infancy and the infant is formed on the lap of ib mother. The mother wllo can only teach her c:hild how t.o kneel and kiss hands must not expect 10ns with blood other than that of vile Ila~. A tree that grows in the mud is unsubstantial and good only for firewood'. If her son should have a bold mind, his boldness will be deceitful and will be like the bat that cannot show itself until the ringing of vespers. They say that prudence is sanctity. But, what sanctity have they shown us? To pray and kneel a Jot, kiss the hand of the pnests, throw money away on chun:bes, and believe all lhc friar secs 61 to tell us; _gossip, callous rubbing of noses.... now ref\ise to stir a fool unless paid In advance? And. a, if they were starving, they sell scapularics , rosaries, bits. and other things which are nothing but schemes for making money/Jnd a detriment 10 the soul; because even tf all the rags on car1h ":ere converted into scapularies and all the trees m the fore~L 1010 rosaries, and if the skins of all the beasts were made mto hdh, and if all the priests cf the eanh mumbled prayers o•cr all th1> and sprinkled oceans of holy water over it this would not pu11fy a rogue or condone sm where there ,s no repenten,c. r hw.. also, through cup1d1ty and love of mon~y. they will. f.>r •• price. revoke the numerous prohibitions such as those agam,1 catm~ meat, marrying dose relatives, etc. You can do almo,t an)thmg if you 1>111 grease· thell' palms. Why that" Can God be hri~d and bought off, and blinded by money. nothing more nor lcs, than a friar? the brigand who has obtained a bull nf compromise can live calmly on the proceeds of his robbery, becau.~e he W'II be forgiven. God, then, will Sil at a table where theft prov1Jcs the viands? Has the Omnipotent become a pauper that He must assume the role of the exase man or gendarme" If that is the God whom the friar adores, then I turn my back upon thJt Gou As.·~ the mites and gifts to God, is there anything in ihe world that does not belong to God? What would you say of a servant malung his master a present of a cloth borro-..ed Crom that very master' Who IS so vain. so insane that he will give alms 10 God and believe that the miserable thing he has given will serve 10 clothe the Creator of all things? Blessed be they who ~uecor_ 1he1r fdlow men, aid the poor and feed the hungry; b1it cursed be they who tum a dead ear 10 supplications of the poor, who only give 10 him who has plenty and spend their money lnv,shly on silver altar hangJngs for the thanksgJviDJ!, or in serenades and fireworks. The money ground out of the poor is bequeathed to the master so that he can provide for diaim to subjugate, and hire thugs and exccul.looers. Oh. what blindness, what lack of understanding! Let us be reasonable and open our eres, especially )OU women , because you are the ftrsl 10 innuence the con-.c1ou,ne~, of man Remember that a good mother does not rc~mblc the mother chat the friar has created; she must bring up her child to be the image of the true God, not of a bla$=kma1bng_ •• gra,ping God but of a God who is the father or us all, whn " 1u,1; who doe$• not suck the life-blood of 1he poor like a vampire. nor scoffs at the agony of the sorely beset. nor male~ a_ cr<l<>kcd path of the path of Justice. Awaken and _prepare the w,11 of <>ur children toward:. all that is honorable, 1udi:ed by proper stan• dards, to all that is sincere and firm of purpose. clear Judgment . clear procedure. honesty ,n act and deed , love fllr the frllo"'rn.,n and respect for God; this 15 what you mu,t 1c,,c_h your d11ldrcn And. seeing that life is full of thorns and thistles. y11u mu,1 fortify their minds against any stroke of advetb,t) and acrn,111111 them 10 danger. The people e3n not expect hnnor n, ,r prn'I"'"" so long as they will educate their children m a v.rong wa). so long as tbe woman who guides the child in his ,teps " ,l3v,~h and ignorant. No good water comes from a turbid, h-ttcr ,pnn~. no savory fruit comes from acrid seed , I Sainllmcss consists in the first place in obeying the dictates of reason, happen what may. "II is acts and not word~ that I want of you,~ sa.id Christ. "Not everyone that saycth unto me, Lord , Lord shall enter into the kingdom or heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is m Hea,en. ·• Sainll,nc,, dOC$ not consist in abjectness, nor is the succ=r nf Chri,1 to be recognized by the fact that be gives his hand to be kissed. Christ did not give the kiss of peace to the Phansecs and ~ver gave lus hand to be ki$$ed . lie did not cater to the nch and vain; He did not mention scapularics, nor did He make rosaries, or solicit offerings for the sacrifice of the Mass or exact payments for His prayeB. Saint John did not demand a fee on the River Jonian, nor did Christ teach for gain. Why , then. do the £rian j:24 r 1be dutica dlat • ha to pcdolm in order to deliver the people from. iii6:1 WI are of no little importance, but be they as they may, they wiD not be beyond the strength and S!IID!DI of the Filipino people. The power and good judgment of the woman of the Pbilippines are well known, and it is became of dus that sbe bas been hoodwinked, and tied, and rendered pmillanimnus; and DOW her eosla\lers res1 al ease, because so long as Ibey can keep lhe Ftlipina mother a slave, so long will they be able 10 mate sines of her children. The cause of the backwardness of Asia lies in the fact that there the women are ignorant, are slaves; while Europe and Amenca are powerful because tbere the women an: free and well «:9uca1ed and endowed with lucid intellect and a strong will. We lcoow that you lack instructive books; we know that ootlung is added to your inlellect, day by day, save 1ha1 wbic:b is in1endcd to dim its natural bnghtness; all this we know, hence our destre to bring you the light lhat illuminates your equals here III Europe. U that which I tell you does 001 provoke your anger, and if yoo will pay a little attention to it then, however dense the mist may be lhat befogs our people. I will make the UDIIOSl efforts to have it dissipated by the bnght rays of tbe •sun, wbicb will give light, though they may be dimmed. We aball DOI feel a.oy fatigue if you help us: God, too, will help to scatter the rrust, bec:awe He is the God of truth: He will restore to its pristine coodition the fame of the Filipina in whom we DOW mia only a aitcrion of her own, because good qualities she has enough and to spare. 'Ibis is our dream; 1his is the desire we cbeNh in our hearts; to restore the booor of woman, who is half of our bean, our companion in the joys and tribulations o f life. If she is a maiden. the young man should l15vc her not only because of her beauty and her amiable character, but also on account of her fortitude of rrund and loftiness of purpose, which quiclccn and elevate the feeble and ttmid and ward off all vain though~ Let the maiden be the pride of her country and command ,cspect, because it is a commoo practice on the part of Spaniards &rid frian here who have returned from the Wands to speak of the Filipina u complaisant and ignorant, as if all should be thrown into the same class because of the nussteps of• few, and as if women of weak cbancter did not CXISt in other land,. lu to purity what could the Filipina not bold up to otben! 3lS Nevertheless, 1he retummg Sparuanls and frian, talkati\lc and fond (>f go-;sip. can hardly find lime enough 10 brag and ba"'I. amidst guffaws and insulting remarks. that a certain woman was thus; that she behaved thus at the c:onvent and conducted her.cit thus wtth the Spaniard~ who on the occasion wa, her gue,t. and other things that set your teeth on edge when you think of them wluch. in the majority of cases, were faulLs due 10 cand,H. cxce~s"c kmdnc~. mcckne~,. or pcrha~ ignorance and were all the "ork of the defamer himself There is a Spaniard now m htgh office who has sat at our table and enjoyed our ho,.p1W.hly tn lus wandenngs through the Philippines and who, upon hi, return lo Spain, ru,hcd forthw11h ,nw print dnd related that on one occa,;ion in Pampanga he demanded h0<;pitali1y and ate. and slept at a house and the lady of the house conducted her.elf 111 ,uch and ,uch a maMct wtth hun. the. ,~ how he rep;,1d 1he ludy for her supreme hosp111Jlt1y' Similar 1n<inua1inns arc made by the fnars 10 the chance v,si1or from Spain concerning their very obcd1en1 conjesanda.t. hand-ki'"scrs. etc .. a..--compan,ed by ~mile~ and very s1gn1ficant winking, of 1he eye. In a book published by D Sinibaldo de Mas and m othet fnar sketches sins are related of which ,.omen accw.ed themselves JD the confc,"onul and of which the fn;ir.. made no ,c:crcl u, talking to their Span"h vi:,11ors -.casoninl( them. al the hest, with idiotic and shamele~, tale~ not wonhy of credence. I cannot repeat here 1hc shamcles., siorie,, that a friar told Mas and 10 which Ma, Attributed no value whatever. Evc~timc -..c hc:tr or read an,,hm!! of this kind, we a,k each otl:er: Are the Spanish women ,tll cut Jftcr the pallcrn or the Holy V1rgtn Mary and the hltptnas .,II rcpr<1h;t1c,' I t>chcvc that if we ,1re to balance accounh in thi, c.lclica1c 4uc,11(ln, perha(", Bui I mu~l drop the ,uhjcc1 b<!causc I am ne11her a confessor nor a Spanish 1ra,eler and hJ,c no hu,mcS\ t,\ take awa~ anybody·~ good name I ,hall let 1h1 I(" und speak of the du1tcs of woman 1ns1cad A people that respect woman , like the Rhpmo people, must or the situation in order 10 be· able to do what ,, '"peeled of 11. II see= an established fact that when a young ,tJJcnt folb in lo,c, he throws everything 10 Lhc dogs - knowledJ:c. honor . .ind money. as if a girl could not do anything but sow misfortune. The bravest youth becomes a coward when he married. and Lhe born coward becomes shameless, as tf be had know Lhe truth 329 been waiting 10 gel married In order to show his oowardice The son, ,n order to hide his pusillanimny, remembers bis mother, swallow, bis wrath, wffcn his cars 10 be boxed, obeys the 11101t foolish order, and becomes an accomplice 10 his own dishonor. It ,hould be remembered that where nobody 0ees there is no punuer; when there IS no liule fish, there can not be a big one Why docs the girl not require of her lo'Cr a noble and hono,ed name, a manly hcan offering protecuon 10 her v.eaknc,,. and a high sptnl incapable of being sali~fied with engendering slave,! Lei her discard all fear, lel her behave nobly ,Hid not deliver her youth to the weak and faint-hearted When ,he is mamed, she must atd her husband, insprre h1rn with courage. share has perils, refrain from causing him worry and sweeten his moments of affliction, always remembering 1hat there ,s no grief 1h11 a brave heart can not bear and there is no bitterer inheritance than that of infamy and ,ta,ery Open your duldrcn's eyes so that they may Jeldously auard their honor, love theu fellowmen and their native land, and do their duty. Always impress upon them they m~t prefer dying with honor to livtng 10 dishonor The )lwOmen or Sparta should <ef'e you as ao cumple 1n this; I shaU give some of their charac:tenstics. When a mother handed the shield 10 her son as he wu marching to batllc, she Yid nothing to him but th1S: MRetum with at. or on 1t,M which mean, come back vic:tonous or dead, because ii was customary whh the routed w¥fior to throw away his shield, while the dead warrior wa~ carried home on has shield. A mother received word that her son had been killed in bat1le and the army routed. She d,d 001 !MAY a word , but expr=<! her thankfulneu 1ha1 her i.on had been saved from disgrace. However, when her ~on returned olive, the morhcr put on moumang. One of lhe mothers who went out 10 meet ,he wamors returning from baule w.u 101d by one that her three sons had fallen. I do nor asl( you 1h,11. said the mother, but whether we have been victorious or not. We have hcen victorious - answered the warrior. If that is ~o. then let us thank God, and she went lo the 1emple Once upon a ume a king of theirs, who had been defeated hid in the temple , bccau~ he feared ,he popular wra1h . Th~ Spartans resolved 10 shut him up there and star-e him 10 death 330 When they were blocking the dool", the mother wa~ the first to w11h lhe tu~1orn there, and all Greece admired the Sparun woman or dll ,.,omen _ a woman said jestingly - only you Spartan~ have power over the men . Quite natural - they replied - of all wo men only we pve birth to men. Man, the Spanan women said. w,1< not born ti) life for himself alone but for his nata-c land So 1c,ng as this way of thinking prevailed and the~ hJJ th.1 land of women in Sparta, no enemy was abh: 10 put hb foot upon h~r u, nor was there a woman an Sparta who cvt•r ~uv. a hoM1le 50 anny 1 do not expect to he believed <imply he, ;1u-.e 11 " I v.ho am saying this, tlierc arc many people who do a>ot l1Stcn LO reason, but will listen only to tho,e who wcJr 1hc ,aw.ad. or have gray hair or no 1ec1h, but whale 11 " In"· 1ha1 th, a~ed 5hould be venerated, because of their tra,a11' and c,1-... 11cncc, yet 1he life I have lived. coni.ccr-.11cr.l to the h.1ppanc" "I rhc people, adds r.ome ycan, though not man~ of 11\) ,age I do 1101 pretend 10 hc looked upon as an id<1l ,,r fct"h .,nd to 1-..: 1'hc,cd and listened to w11h the e,es closed. th - he·«I howed .,nd the arms crossed over the breast; whal l .a~I. ,it all " to "tln1 ,.., what I tell him think 11 over and sh,fl al rardulh t••• 11,•h rh, sieve of rea,on Fint of oil Toal the t)ranny or <,0me r- J\<'''1t>k onh thrnueh cowardice and negligence on the part of 01hu, s~cond What makes one contempuble " lack ot d1~111ty and ab1ctt rear of ham who hold, one in co ,1c111pl brin& stones. 1bcsc things were In accordance Third Ignorance "&erv11udc, b«a11>e •" ,1 man lhrnk, ,o he is: a man who doc~ not think for him~tlf .111<1 allo-..,·11 h1111 If 1o be guided by the thought of another i, til.c the bcJ,1 led h} a halter Fourth J le who kwes has independence mu,t l1r,1 ,11d has fellowman, hccau~ he who refuse, protection t'1 nthcr, will find hl ..1self without it; the isolated nb of the hun p,,trn , C.t\aly broken, but not -SO the broom made of the n~ of the p3 lm bound toge1her. Fifth. If the Fitlp,nn will not change her ,:nntlc_of hcang, let her rear no more children, let here merely ervc h1r1h to them }31 Sbe must cease to be the mistress of the h ome, otherwise sbe will uncoruciou.sly betray hll$band, child, native land, and all. Si.xrh. All men arc born equal, naked, without bond,. God did not create man to be a slave; nor did he endow him with intelligence to have him hoodwinked, or adorn him with reason to have him deceived bl' others. It is not fatuou.s to refuse to wor;hip one"s equal, to cultivate one's intellect, and to make use of reason in all things. Fatuous is he who makes a god of him, who makes l>rute, of others. and wbo su ives to submit to his whims 1111 that is reasonable and just. Seventh Consider well what krnd of religion they are teach• ing you. See whether it is the will of God or according to the teachrng• of Christ that the poor be succored and those wh<1 suffer alleviated Cunsider what they are prcach,ng to you. the object of 1hc ~rrnon wliat is behind the masses, 110,.en/JS, rosanes, scapularies. images, miracles, candles, belts, etc., etc.; which they daily keep before your minds; cars and eye~; Jostling, ,hm11ing, .im.l coax mg; ,nve.iiga1c whence they came Hild whither they 110 and then compare that religion with the pure religion of Christ and see whether the pretended obsen•ance of the life of ChrlM dt>c, uot remind you of 1hc rut milch cow or 1hc fotlcncd ' pig, which is cncoural!Cd to ~row fat 1101 1hrough love of the animal. bu1 for grossly mercenary mo1ives. Let us, therefore, relfec,: let us coos,dcr our situation and sec how we smnd. May the~c poorly wnllen line, aid you ,n your good purpoSc and help you 10 pursue 1hc plun you have initiated "May your profi.l be )!Teater than 1he capital invested:" and I ,hall gladly accept the usual reward of all who dare 1ell your people the 1ru1h. M:.) your desm: 10 educate yo<m,elf be crowned with <uccc<s; may you in 1hc garden of learning g:11hcr not biller. but choice fruit. looking well before you ca1 because on the surface of 1hc glohc :,II is dccc11 , and the enemy sows weeds in your ~edhng plot. All this is the ardent desire of your compatnol. APPENDIX D THE INDOLENCE OF THE FILIPINOS* Doctor Sancianco, in his Progreso de Filipina.r, has taken up this question, agitated, as he calls it, and relying upon facts and reports furnished by 1he very same Spanish au1hori11cs thut ruled the Philippin~ ha; demonstralcd that such indolence docs not exist, and that all said aboul It does not deserve a reply or even passing choice. Nevertheless as discussion of it has been continued, not only by government employees who make it responsible for their own shortcomings. not only by the friars who regard it as necessary in order that they may contioue to represent themselves as ind1spcn~ablc, bul also by serious and di;intercstcd pcri.uns: and as evidence of greater or less weight may be adduced in opposition to that which Dr. Sanciano cites, it seems expedient to us to study this question thoroughly, without supercilousncss or sensitiveness, without prejudice, wi1hou1 pessimism. And as we can only serve our country by telling the truth, however, bitter it be. jus; as flagrant and skillful negation cannot refute a real and pos11ive fact, in spite of 1he brilliance of the arguments; as mere affinnarion is nut sufficient 10 create something possible, let us calmly examine the facts, us.ing on our part all the impartiality of which a man is capabl~ who " convinced that tkcrc is no redemption except upon solid bases of virtue. The word indolence has heen greatly misused in the sense of little love for work and lack of energy. while ridicule has JOSE RIZAL 332 •Engh•h 1r•nlP11lon by Otrbyahl1• Tht anclo by A1,~I. o,iglnally wrinen In Spani.sh. was pubhshed in U Sollt»rldad in fi've installments. from July 15 to S.p<omber IS. 1890 333 concealed the misuse. Th.is much-discussed question has me1 with the same fate as certain panaceas and specifics of the quacks who by ascribing 10 them imp05sible virtues have discredited them . In the Middle Ages, and even in some Catholic countries now, the devil is blamed fqr everything that superstitious folk cannot undcrs1and or the perversity of mankind is loath to confess. In the Philippines one's and another's foults, the shortcomings o{ one, the misdeeds of another, are attributed to indolence. And just as in the Middle Ages he who sought the c,cplanation or phcnomens outside of mfcmal influence, we~ persecuted, so in the Philippines worse happens 10 him who seeks the origin of the trouble outside of accepted beliefs The consequence of this misuse is that there are some who arc in1crested in staling II as a dogma and others in comba1ing it a~ a ridiculou, supers1i1ion, ir not a punishable delusion . Yet it is not 10 be inCcrred from 1he misuse of a 1hing that it does 101 CXJSI. We think that there must be something behind all 1h,s ou1cry, for it i, incredible that so m1tny ,ho11ld err, amopg who111 we ha,·c said there are a lot of serious and disinicrcstcd pcrwns. Some act m bad, faith, through levity, through want of sound judgment, through limitation in reasoning p<,>wcr, ignorance of the past, or other cause . Some repeal wha1 1hcy have heard, v;-it~ou1 examinallon or renec11on; others speak through pessimism or are impelled by that human chara.c1cns11c wh,ch paints as pcrCcc1 ever y1hing tha1 belong~ 10 o neself and defective whatever belongs to another. But it cannot be denied that there arc some who worship truth, or if not truth itself at least 1hc semblance thereof whicll is 1ru1h in the mind or the crowd. Examining "'ell, then, all scene, and all 1hc men that we have known from childhood; ond the lire of our country, we believe that indolence does exis1 there. The Filipinos , who can measure up with the most achvc peoples. m the world . w1tl duubtlc,, not rcpudialc hi, admi"inn, Cor· it is 1ruc 1hc rc one works and struggles ngaons1 lhe climale, ag:1ins1 n:Hur<: and agamst men. Bui we musr nor rnke the exception for the general rule, and should ra1her seek the good of our cuuntry by slating whal we b<:lieve to be true We muSI confess 1ha1 indolence does actually and positively exi51 there, only that, mstead of 314 holding it 10 be the cause of the backwardness and the trouble, we regard II as the effect of the trouble and the backwardnc:5s, by fostenng the development or a /111ntnrable predi.vpMitwn. Those who have as yet treated of indolence. with the exception of Dr. Snncionco, have been content 10 deny or affirm it. We know of no one who has studied its causes Nevertheless, those who adm·1t ,ts existence and exaggera1e it more or less have not therefore failed to advise remedies taken from here and there, from Java, from India , from other English or Dutch colonies, like the quack who saw a fever cured with a dozen sardines and afterwards always prescribed these fish a1 every rise in temperature th&t he discovered in his patient We shall proceed otherwise. Before proposing a remedy we shall examine the causes, and even though strictly speaking a p rcdisposi'fion is not a cause, let us, however, study at its true value this predisposition due to nature . The predisposition exists? Why shouldn't it? A bot climate requires of the individual quiet and rest, JUSI as cold ,ocitcs 10 labor and action. For th~ reason the Spaniard ~ more indolent than the Frenchman ; the Frenchman more so than the German. The Europeans themselves who reproach the residents of the colonies so much (and I am not now speaking of the Spaniards but or the Germans and English themselves), how do they live in tTOpical countries? Surrounded by a numerous train of servants, never-going afoot but riding in a carriage, needing servants no1 only to take off their shoes for them bu1 even lo them! And yet they live and eat better, 1hcy work for themselves 10 get rich, with 1he hope of a furure, free and respected, while 1he poor colonist, tl)e mdolent co/om.st, ,s badly nourished, has 1110 hope, toils for others, an,J works under force and compul•ion! Pe rhaps 1he reply 10 this will be that while men are not made 10 s1,md the ~c, crity of the climate. A ,nistake' A m.,n cun live in Ml) d1ma1c. if he will only odapt him~cll 10 it~ re4uircmcnb .ind condi1inn, What kills lhe Fur<lpcan in hM coun1rics is the- abuse nf liquors. the anempt to live according to the Oalurc ol hi, own oountry under another \ky and another sun We 1nhuh1 uJ 111S ul h,u countnc, ioH? well ,n no rthern Europe whene, er -.. ~ take the p ret'auno ns <if the people th,·• , do . Furo- J' pc.ins can also stand the torrid zone:, if ooly they would get rid of thar prejudices. • fbe fact is that Ul troplCal countries violent work is not a good thmg as 11 is in cold countries, there it is death, destruction, annihilation . Nature knowi. this and like a just mother has therefore made the earth more fertile , more productive, as a compensation. An hour's wo rk under that burrung sun . in the midst of pernicious inOuences spnngmg from nature in activity. is equal 10 a day's work in a temperate climate , it is, then , just that tbc earth yields a hundred fold! Moreover, do we not see the active European , who feels lbe Cre5h blood of spnng boil in h,s veins, do we not see him abandon his laboT$ , during the few days of his variable summer, close bis office - where the wo rk is not violent and amounts for many to talking and gesticulaung ID the shade beside a lunchstand , - flee to watering plnccs , sn in the cafes o r stroll about. What wonder then that the inhabitant of tropical countries, worn o ut and with lus blood thinned by the continuous and excessive heat is reduced 10 inacuon" Who is the indolent one in the Manila offices? rs it the poor clerk who comes in at eight in the rooming and leaves at one in the afternoon with only lus parasol, who copies and writes and works for himself and for his chief, or is it the chief, who comes in a carriage at ten o'clock , leaves before rwe.lve, reads his newspaper while smoking and with lus feet cocked up on a chair or a table, or g=pmg about all bis friends? Which is indolent, the native coadjutor, poorly paid and badly treated, who has to visit all the indigent sick living in the country, or the ·friar curate who gets fabulously rich, goes about m a carriage, cats and drinks we.II, and does not put himself to any trouble .,.,1hout oopecting an excessive fee? Witho ut speaking further of the Europeans in what violent labor does the Ounaman engage m tropical countries, the industrious C'hinuman , who flees from his own country driven by hunger and whose whole ambitiod'i$ to amass a small fortune? With the exception or some porters, an occupation that the nabves also follow, be nearly always engages in the trade, m commerce , so rarely docs he take up agriculture that we do not know of a single case. The Chinaman who in other colonies cultivates the sot! docs so only for a certain number of yean and then retires. 136 We find, then, the t.cndency to indolence very na1ural, and nave to admit and blc~ il , for -..c unn >t alter natural laws, and without ,t the race v.ould have disappeared Man i, not a brute , be is not a mach,ne , hos ohiect is nol merely to produce. in spite o( the, pre1cn>1ons of w mc Chn~t,an "'hues who would make or 1hc rnl<>rl.J Chri,11.in a k,od of moti,c powi:r somewhat more inldl• -•enl and ks, ~-o<t•v than st<!Jm Man'• ohject " nol to s:11,sh the pa,<10n~ ot ar.,lhcr man. h1> ohjecl isto !'.eek happ1n= r.,r I · .,-., t , 'ld his ~ind t>~ Ir·" cllonl,\ aluni; the rOJd of progress ;,nd p,:rtccl11•n 1 , ,., ·• , nnl th•• ondolcncc c~i,1, mon- or k,-, latently hul 1t.,1 ,1 ,, t, "'"'"d and ma!!Qif1cd . Among men . a, well a,, amone. n41t1m,, there t''.\l~t not only . 41pt1!udt:'!!. but at--.,, tcndent.,o g•K>d -,nd C\11 T,, lo,,lcr lhc f:<K>d one, .in,I 01d them, a, ".'ell a• wrrect the ~, ii and rc1>r~•, 1hem , would he the dut, of socicry and gmcrnment. if ks,, noble lhoughb did 001 occup) the1r a11cnt1<•n 1hc c,il " II ,at the 1nd<,lcncc on the Ph1hppir><, " a IThlgmfic:J inJokncc d'l ind<1knce of 1he ,n~b,111 type, i~ we moy be rermmed the expre"-<ion. an evtl that increase., m dtrect prop,.1nion 1,, the pcnoJ, nt ume. and e/J~ct vt misgovernment and or bad,"'.irdnc,,, a, we ,:uJ. and n,11 a causr thc,--of. Others will hold the contraf\ opinion e~pcoall, 1hosc who have a hand in 1b.: misgovernment. but we do n01 care. v.e have made an as,crtmn and are go•nl! 10 prv,c 11 -UWhen in consequence of a IOT'l? chronic illnc~ the condio nn of the patol'nt "exammed. 1he que-;tion ma~ arise "bcther the wcat..erung ul the hbcn and the debility 1hc organ., arc the cause of 1hc mal.,d) ·, conunuml! or the cff<:~t of tlw l»1J treatment that proto n~ ,ts action The allcndinl! phy,ioan aurihtltes the enl m: ta,lu rc of h,s , Juli lo the poor rons111uuon of the pat1en1, to 1hc cl11na1c. 10 the surroundi ng,. and so on On the other h,ind. the patu:nt annhule< 1he aggravaunn of lhe evil 10 1he w stem of treatment follo v.ed Onl} the common crowd, the 1~qu1>1II\ Cpopulace, \hake~ 11~ head and canO(>l rt'a<:h a JcC1\ion ur Somc1h1ng hke t his happens ,n the cai,c of the Ph,hppmcs Instead of physician . read government. 1ha1 is. friar,. employees, etc In.stead of patient , Philippines; mstead or malady. indolence. 131 And JUSI a, happens in similar cases when the patient gets ~rse, everybody his head, each one dodges the responsibility to place 11 upon somebody else, and instead o f seeking the causes LO order 10 combat the evil in them, devotes himself at best to attacking the symptoms; here a blood-lcning. a tax; there a plaster, forced labor, further on a sedative, a trining rcfQffl'I. Every ne1" amval proposes a new remedy: one, seasons of prayer, the relics of a saint, the viaticum, the friars; another sho,..-er-bath: still a.nothcr, with pretensions 10 modern idcaJ., a transfusion of blood. ~It's nothjng, only the patient has eight m11hoo indolent red corpuscles; some few white corpuscles m the form of an agricultural coloaywtll get uso\11 of the trouble. •= So, on all sides there are groans, gnawing of lips, clenchmg of tuts. many hollow words, great ignorance, a deal of talk a Jot of fear. The patient is near his finish! Yes, transfusion of blood, transfusion of blood' New life, new vitality! Ycs, new whue corpuscles that you are going 10 inject into its veins, the new whlle corpuscles that v,ere a c-,mccr in another organism will withstand all the depravity of 1he ~y,1cm, will have more stamina than aU the degeneration, all the trouble in the principal organs Be 1bankful if they do no1 become coagulations and produce gangrene, be thankful 1f they do not reproduce the cancer! While the patient breathes, we must not lo<e hope. and however late we may be, a judicious exammation is never superfluous; at least the cause of death may be kno,..n . We arc not trying to put all the blame on the physician, und s11II le~, u n the patient, for we have already spoken of a predispositJon m the absence of which the race 11,ould disappear. sacrificed to n=ive labor in ll tropical country, Indolence in the Philippines 1s a chronic mal ..lly, bu1 not .i heredit.ary one. The Filipinos have not alway~ bc:cn what they are, witnesses whereto are all the historians of the first years after the d1SCOvery of the Islands. Before the arrival of the Europellns, the Mabyan Filip~ carried Qn an active trade , not only omong thert\$Clvcs but also with all the neighboring countries. A Chinese manuscript of the 13th century, translated by Dr. Hrrtb (Globus, September, 1889), 338 which we will take up at another brne, speaks of China\ relauon, with the islands, relations purely commeroal, which mcn1,on 1< made o f the activity and honesty of the lradcr; of Luzon. who took the Chinese products and dismbuted them throughout all the islands, for the merchandise that the Chinamen dod nol remember 10 have given them. The products "'hich they in exchange exported from the islands were cmdc v.ax couon . pearls; tortoise shell. betel-nuts, diy goods, etc. The first thing noticed by P1gafeua who came 11,11h Magcllan in 1521. on amving a1 the firs1 island of the Ph1hpr111c, \.,mJr was the courtesy and kindness of the inhahi1an1s and their com meroe. "To bonor our capitan," he says. "they conduct<!tl him to their boats where they had thctr merchandise. wl11ch '°""'1cd of cloves. cinnamon. pepper, nutmeg,. mace. gold anti 111h,·r things; and they made us understand by gestures thJt ,u.:h amdc, were 10 be found m the island, to which "'" 11,crc !!'''"!! Further on he speaks of the ,cM,cb anti u1<0n"b ,11 ,ohd gold th~I he found in Butuan where 1hc people w,,rl.l·ll 111 m:n,·, He describe.< the silk dresses, the dagger. "uh l"nl! i:,,ld tult, and scabbards of carved wood. 1he gold S<:t< o! 1cc1h . .:ic Am,•ng cereals and frwts he mcnuon, rice, m1lkt. or:0111!,·' temun,, panicum, etc. That the islands maintamcd relations w,th nci,:hl'<•nnJ! r,,untries and even with distant ones ,s pro,..:n h) 1h, ,h,p, r11,m Siam. laden with goltl and ,laves. th,11 M~g,;lldn tounJ 111 C..:bu These ships paid certain duties to the king nf 1hc "land, In the same year, 1521 , the survivors of Magellan\ expcd111on met the son of 1he Rajah of Luron, who. ~ ~•p1:oin-gcncrul o f the ~uhJn of Borneo and admiral of his 0eet. h"tl cnnqucrcJ r,,r h,m lhc great city of Lave (Saraw-Jk ?) Migh1 th" captam. who ,. JS greatly feared by all his foes, h:tve been 1he Rajah MJt,,nJ.i whom the Spaniard, afterward, encoun1crcJ in TonjJ,1 ,n I ~711' In 1539 the warriors of Luzon u:x,, part III the tormitl:,hlc contests of Sumatra, anti under the order, of Anit• S11y Timo1. Rajah of Batta. conquered and o~-erthre11, the temhk AILadm Sultan of Atclun, renowned m the hiMOfll.tl annals uf 1hc I ,,1 East (Marsden, liutory of Sumarr,1. C't•Jptcr XX ) At 1ha1 time, that sea where 0oal th, >'land, like ,t wt uf emeralds on a paten of bright glass, that sea was everywhere 339 travencd by Juno. pa,aus, barongay1, vinUII, vessels swift as shuttles so large that they could maintain a hundred rowen oo a side (Marga); that sea bore everywhere commerce. indusuy. agncuhure. by the force of the oars moved to the 'IOUnd of warlike wngs of the gcncalog,cs and achievements of the Phllippinc di,iniue~ (Colin ChJpter XV.) Wealth nt>ounded in the islands . Pigafetta tells us of the abundance of foodstuffs in Paragua and of its inhabitanrs who nearly all tilled their own fields. Al this ISl~d the surviv~rs of \,lffgdlan', expc,di11un were well received and provisioned. A htlle later •hc,c same survivors c:apturcd a ve'l....:I, plundered and sacked 1l and took pmoner m it the chief of the !$land of f'aragud wuh h" '°n and brother . In this same vessel they captured bronw lombards. and Ibis •~ the first menticln of artillery of the riltpino, for these tombards were u:,cfuJ to the chief of Paragua agams• the ~.wages o f the 1ntcrmr l hey let him ransom h1m~clf within i.even days. demanding nwa.,urc~ (c·uvaner:') of 11cc 20 pig,, 20 goili:.. and 450 ch,dcns. nus " the firs• act of piracy recorded in Philippine history l'he chief of Paragua paid every•hing. and moreover. s~luntrmly added cocon t11$. banana,, and sugar-cane jars filled Wllh Jl"lm v.1m· When Cue,ar wa> •akcn pmoncr by the corsairs and rcqwred to pny t"cnty-fivc talents ransom, he replied ~1•11 g.avc yuu fifty. hut la•cr I'll have you crucified!" The chief of Paragua was more generous he forgot, His conduct. while ii may reseal weaknc~~. also demon~tratcs •hat the islands were abundantly pro-.s1oncd This chief was named Tuan Mahamud· h,s hmthcr, Gu.intd, and his son, Tuan Mahamud : (Manfu Mend,•,. Pur\cr of the hir \',, toria: A•chivo de lndins.) 4{)0 . I\ vel) c~tr,turdinary •h1ng. and one that ~hov.-s the facility wuh whi<h •he nau,es learned Spanish, is that fifty years before lhc armal ot th" Sparuards m Luzon, in that very year 1521, when they hr,, cumc to the tsland\, there were already natives of LU1on who understood Castilian In the 1rca1ies of peace 1ha1 the survivors of Magellan·s expedition made with the chief of Paragua. when the ,crvant-mterprctcr died they communicated with one another through a Moro who had been captured in lhe l!>land of the Kfog of Luzoo and who understood some MO Spanish. (~•.nin Mendez, op cir.) Where did lhas extemporaneOLS mtrrp,~ter learn Castilinn7 In the Moluccas'/ In Malacca , with the Ponu~u~~e? Spaniard~ dtd not rc~ch l.u10n un1il 1571 . L.:11,..tpi·, ~xpedition met in Butuan variou~ trader, of Luzon with their lx>:!!s laden wuh ,ron. cloths, porcelain, etc (Gaspar Jc S.in A~'"''~) plenty of provi«,ons, act1v1ty. trade movement in all the: •nuthc 1n islands The\ ,irr··c,I at the Island of ( d>u, ~ah(>undmg m provi~•ons. with mine, '" I washing~ of gold. and peopled with na11ve,," as Morga s:•\' · very populous, and at a port frequented by many ships that c,1111< from the island" und kingdom, near lndtd ... 115 1nlin ,,.~, .,,d even though the)' were peaceful I> rcct'ivcJ di •·ord ,onn Jn,,.__ I he cily w~ tak.:n by lorce and hurned. l h.: first d•·•••••~•"• ''" lo,><.I ,upphc, .111J naturall)' fotmne tiroke ou• m tha1 ""'" of ·• humlrcd •hnu,:md people. a, the h1'torian\ soy and amon~ the nwmbcrs of the cxpediuon. but 1hc nc1111.hboring i,lan<h 411,cktv 1chcved the need. thanks to •he abundance they cnJoycd All rhc hJStnrics of tho'>c lm,t ycar~. 1n ,hurt, uoound m long .,ccnunr, ahout the industn· and &f,!ricuhurt of the natives; mine, gutd-"a,hmg,. looms. farms . barter. nasal construction, rai,,1nl! ,;I l'lOuhry ,md ,tuck. "caving of si!k and cotton, d,~tillcries. mJn\Jlaclurc, e>f arm<, renrl fi~hcrics, the civc1 indu,try the ht>rn ,ind hid~ mdustry. etc.. arc thmgs encoun•ered at every step. ancJ con>1dcnng •he time and the cond111ons m the ,sland~. prow th111 there"'•" hfc. there was acuvn\. Ihere was mo ...cment \nd 11 thh. "h1ch "dcdu,h«ln, do,•, not convintl' .mv mmds imt->uc,I ,11th unfai r pre1udices perhaps, of <Ome avail may be lhc 1c,1 111l11 11 , of the oil-quoted Or. l',forga. who wa, Ltculcnant( '"'"""' o l \ 1,mtla le1r ,c",n }car, nnd .the, rcndc11ng great ,l·n ,_.,. in th, A1,·hi p..-ta~o ""s .1pp<1m•cd cnmm,11 JUd)Cc of th•· Autl,cnn,1 nt Mcxic,, anu Counsellor or the lnqu1si11on. I hs •,·,11111,,n~. Yoe "')· "high ly crcthhlc, not only occause all h" c,mtcmpur,inc, haw spoken of him in h:rms that border on vcncr.11i1,n hut a lw h.:c,m,c hi, work. from which "c •akc the~ i:11,1111•11,. 1s \\Ill ten ,11th great circurnspecuon and care. a, well "'i1h rdcrc ,,n· tu the ,1u1hm111c, tn the Ph1ltppinc, •" to •he 1·rm1, th n cummilkd. The nauvc< ·· ,ay., Morga 111 C'h.1rtcr VII. <pealing of the occupauons of the C11ine<;e_ .. are very far 341 from exercising fanning, raising As they used to the country was those trade and have forgotten much about poultry, stock and cotlon, and weaving cloth. do in their Paganisrp and for a long time after conquered." The whole Chapter VIII of his work deals with this moribund activity, this much forgotten industry, and yet in spite of .that, how long is bis eighth cbaptcrl And not o nly Morga, not also Cbin no, Colin. Argensola, Gaspar de San Agustin and others agree in this matter. but modem travelllers, after two hundred and fifty years, examining the decadcnoe and misery, assert the same thiing. Dr. Han, Meyer, when he sew the unsubdued tri\•e~ cullivating hcautilul fields and working energetically, asked if thex wo11ld not brcomc indolent when they 10 tum sh ould accept Cbn~tianity and a paternal government. Accordingly. the rilipino~ in ,pnc nf the climate , in ,pitc of the-ir few needs (they were le,~ then than n<,w) . were not the indolent crea,ures of our time, and. ~ we sha II sec later on. their ethics nnd their m,Mlc of lifo 1,crc not what 1~ now t1>111pl.1 ccn1ly 011ribu1cd to them. How then, nnd in whal "ny, w:" that :,ctivc and cntc rpri,injl infidel na1ive of ancient times con,·ened into the lazy a nJ ,ndolcnt Chrbuan, as our contemporary wrilers ¥1Y'' We have alrcad}' spoken of the more or less latent prcd1s• position which ex,sts in tne Ph1hpp1nes 1owarJ andokncc .•,nd which mu>t exiM every"here, in the whole "llrlc.l. in a ll men . becau:.e we all hale work more or less. as it ma~ be more or less hard. more or lc.s unproductive. The tlolce far 111en11• of the Italian. the ruscorNr la lmrrigfl of the Spaninn.l. the ,,,prcme aspiration of the bourgeois 10 lisc on his incorne in peace and tranquility, auest thi5. What causes operated to awake tha,, terrible pred1sposnion from its lethargy? llow is it thi.lt the Filipino people. w fond ui its customs as lo border on rou1ine, h:1s given up ib ;rncient habits of work, of trade , or na·,•iga1ion. etc .. even to 1he extent of completely forge11111g 11s past~ -m-• A fatal combination'o{ circumstances , some independent or the will in spite of men's effons, others in offspnng of stupidity and ignoranoe. others the inevitable corollaries of false p ronciples, and still others the result of more or less base pa"inn, . ha< induced the decline of labor. an evil which instead of t>c,ng remedies by prudence. mature reflection and recognition of the mistakes made , through a deplorable policy, through rcgrcunhlc blindness and ob~inacy, ha~ gone from bad to worse until 1t has reached the condition in which we now o;ec 11. Fin;! came the wars, the internal disord.:rs which the ne"' cllange of affairs naturally brought with 11. It was ncce~ary 10 sub1ec1 the people either by cajolery or force ; there were fights. tllere was slaughter; those who had submiued peacefully ,;eemed to repent of it; insurrections were suspected, and some O'.-.urrcc.l. naturally there were executions, and many capable laborc rs penshcd . Add to this condition of di:,ordcr the tnVil~ion of Li-Mahong; add continual wars into wbich the inhabitant, of the Philippines were plunged to mamtam the honor of Spain, to cx:tcnd the sway of her nag in Borneo, in the Mnlucc,,, .ind in lndo-0,ina; to repel the Dutch foe; costly wars. fru11lc,s expeditions, in which each lime thousands and thou,and, of native archers and rowers were recorded to have embarked. hut whether they returned to their homes was never ,rn1cd. t.ikc the tribute that on,ce upon a time Gr•ece sent 10 the Mmotau, of Crete, the Philippine youth embarked for the c xped111on . saying goodbye 10 their couniry forever· on their hnrw,n "'~r, the stormy sea, tlhe intenninable wars. the raih c-.:pc<lition, Wherefore, Gaspar de San Agustin say,;: "A lthou\!h ant'ocn tl) there were in this town of DumangUJ. many people. in tht' rnur-. of the time they htivt very greatly 1Jim/11ished hera1111 1/ir m1111·r• are tht best sailors and most skillful rowers on the v.holc cua~1 . a.nd so the governors in the port of I loilo tak~ mm/ 11/ tltr p,•t1rl,· from this town for the ship, that they send ahrv.,J When t!he Spaniards reached this i~land (Panay) ii i~ sa,d that thc,e were on it more than fifty thousand families; hut these d1mm1shcd greatly . . and at present they may amounl to romc f(ourtccn thou&and tributanes." From fif1y thousand families t-o fourteen thousand tributaries in little over half a century! 343 We would De\'a get lbroagh. bad we lo quote all the evidence or the authors regarding the fnghtful duninution of the mhabitants of the Philippine,, in the first years after the discovery la the time of their first bishop, that is, ten years after Legazpi. Pluhp II !>aid that they had been reduced to less than two-thirds. Add 10 these fatal expeditions that wasted all the moral and ma1cnal energies of the country, the frightful mroa~ of the terrihle pirates from the south. iMtipted and encour•gcd by the govemmet1I, first in ordCT 10 get a oompl~int and afterwards disarm the a,,lands subJected 10 11, inroads that reached the very ~bores or Manila. e,cn Ma.late it,;clf, and dunng which were seen .to set out for captivity and slavery. in the baleful glow or burning \llllages, strings of wretches who had been unable to dc:fcnd them,;clves, leaving bcb10d them the asbe,, of their homes and the corpses of their parents and children Morga. who recounts the first piratical invasion. says: "The boldness of these people of MmJanao did grca1 damage 10 the Visayan Island, as much hy what they did in them M by the fear and fright which the native acquired, becam;e the latter were in the power of the Spaniards who held them subJect and tributary and unarmed, 111 such m,mnrr I/wt t~y did not protttct them from their tltt!tnW or lea1•r t~ TMans w11h which tQ defl'nd them~rlvl's, AS THEY DID WHEN THERE WERE NO SPANIARDS IN THE COUNTRY " These piratical attacks contmually reduced the number of lhc inhab,t.onts of the: Philippine,. Mnce 1he independent Malays were espeetally notorious for their atrocities end murders, sometime, because they bebe,cd that 10 preserve their indcpcndcnL't: n was necessary to weaken the Spaniard b)' reducing the number of his wbJcct.~. sometimes because a greater hatred and a deeper resenlmem msp,red them a,tamst the CllrisFihp,no v.ho. bc,ng of their own race, ser.ed the stranger m order to depnve them of their precious hbert y Thc!.e exped1t1<>ns lasted about lhree centuries, being repeated five and ten times a )CM, and each expedi1ion cost the island over eight huodrcd prhoncr... !'.an "With the invasions of lhe p1Catcs from Sulu and Mindanao." sa.s Padre Gaspar de San Agustin, (the •~land of Bant,yan, near Cebu) "has been greatly reduced, because they ca'lil> captuced the people thece, since the latter had no place to fonify 344 themselves and were far from hclp from Cebu. The hostile Sulus did great damage-in this island m 1608, leaving 11 almost drropulatcd .. ( Paj!e lSQ . ) J'he,c muj!h a11a,l, . cnm,n~ frnm without produced ri counter eftect in the in1enor, which. ,·arnittj! out meJic;1I C"nm• pam.on, " a, lt~c 3 purge o r dJel m an ,nJh ,dual "'ho h,b ,u,1 ""' J great Je4l ol hlu,>J In urd.:r HI mJkc hc.iJ\\ay ag111n,1 ,o n·am cat.,m,t,e,. to ,ccurc th,,r ""•·n·1snr> ,,nJ t,1ke the offen,l\c in thcStt d1sa<1rou, cont.:,,,. ,o ,-..,late 1hc warhkt: ,ulu< from 1he1r ne,~hhor<. ,n 1he ,outh 10 <,tr, t, ,, the nee.ls ot the empue o t the l,,d,es (fur one i,f the •<·""'" "hv 1he Phihpp,ncs \\oerc kept. a, contemporan do.:um, nt, pr,we wa,; their ,trategical p<>stllon lx-tv.ccn l'-c" Spam .,r,d th~ Indies). Ill wre,1 fr,•m the Du1d1 th\."n gro"mg colnmt:, ul 1hc tofu(...... " .•nd gc' ud o( ,um, tn1uhlc,omc Ol"tj!hhor,. t,, tnatrltJan in ,hor, 1he: tr 1.k of China w11h ,ew Spain. II was. neces...an to con,1ruc1 nev. .,nd large ~h,p~ v.h1..:h. a" Yit.: hj\t.:: ~en LO~ll~ .,., th : · l~ ... countr~ for their e,1u1pmc111 and the rnwcr, they required ,.,re not kss <o hecau.Stt or 1he manner in which the} were con~trucred. Padre l·ernando de los Rio< Coronel. who fC'ugh1 ,n 1heStt \\oars and l,ucr 1urnc:J pne,1. -.peak,n, ol tht'~c Jo.inf, .h,r , ,, 11 • " the\ "'ere so l.1r1tc. 1h, hmlicr nccd,·tl v." cares · t~ f,,. ,d ,n the fnrc,1, (of th,· Ph1hpp1nc,''). and thu~ II "'"' nccc"" " .,.,d,, 11 "'"h grc.tl d,rfi<uh) in lhc mo,t remote of them. where, one< found. in order to haul and cu1WC) it 10 1hc ,h,p~ard the 1nwn.r 11[//,(' <11rra111ulin, cnuntry· had 10 be depnpula1ed af narfres. who ,,., ii 0111 "it/1 1mmttns,• labor. damai:e, and coJI to them. The nattve< turn"hcd the m,L'>t\ for n galleon. occording hl the a<semon of the Franciscan~. and I heard the governor of the prmince where they were cul. which is Laguna de Bay, say that 10 hJul them ..:,en league, o~er ,ef) broken mountam, 6.1100 ntl/11 ,., 1<wr rni;agu/ thru monthJ. w11/io11t furmshmg th~m (t>()d, khich 11,c wrt'tched nam·r Jwd to !.t'<'k for himself'" \nJ Gaspar de San Agustin says: "ln these times (ln'lO) . a.color ha, not the people 1hat 11 had in the past hecauStt of the upn,,n[! in that pro-.ncc ,-hen Don Sabiniuno Manrique de Lara wa, Governor of 1hc,c island, tlntl becau,c of the continual lahor of cutting 1imher for hi, Majesty's shipyard\ which hinder.; them from cullivatmg lhe very fenile plam they have. 34S lf th11 is not sufficient to explain the depopulation of the islands and the abandonment of industry, agriculture and commerce, then add Mth11 'llatives who were executed, those who left their wives and children and fled in disgust to the mountain.\, those who were sold into slavery to pay the taxes levied upon them," as Fernando de los Rios Coronel says; add to all this what Philip JI said in reprimanding Bi~hop Salazar about "natives sold by some enco=nderos to others. those flogged 10 death, the women who arc crushed to death by their heavy burdens, those who sleep in the fields and bear and nurse their children and die bitten by poisonous vermin, the many who are executed and left to die of hunger and those who eat poisonous herbs . and the mQthcrs who kill their children in bearing them," and you will understand how in less than thirty years the population of the Philippines was reduced one-third. We arc not saying this: it was said by Gaspar de San Agustin, the preeminently anti-Filipino Augustinian . and he confirms it throughout the rest of his work by speaking every moment of the state of neglect in which lay the fams and field once so flourishing and so well culuvated, the town 1!1jnoed IIIPt had formerly been inhabited by many leading families! How is it strange, then , that discouragement may have been infused into the spirit of the inhabitants of the Phihppincs. when in the midst of so many calamities they did not know whether they would sec sprout the seed they were planting, whether their field was going 10 be their grave or thcircrop would go 10 feed their executioner? What is there strange in it, when we see the pius bul impotent friars of that time trying 10 free their poor parishionc~s from the tyranny of the encomenderos by advising them to stop work in the mines, to abandon their commerce, 10 break up their looms, pointing out 10 them heaven for their whole hope , preparing them for death as their only consolation? Man works for an object. Remove the object and you reduce him to inaction. The most active man in the wortd will fold his anns from the instant h.e understands that it is madness to bestir himself, that this work will be the cause of his trouble, that for him it will be the cause of vexations at home ;ind of the pirate's greed abroad. It seems that these thoughts have never entered the minds of those who cry out against the indolence of the Filipinos. 346 Even were the Filipino not a man like the rest, even were we to suppose that zeal in him for work was as essen ti al as the movement of a wheel caught in the gearing of other. in motion. even were we 10 deny him foresight and the judgment that the past and present Corm, there would still be left us another rca,on to explain the attack of the evil. The abandonment of the fields by their cultivators, whom the wars and piratical attacks dragged from their homes was sufficient to reduce to nothing the hard labor of so many generati.o ns, In the Philippine,, a ban don for a year the land most beautifully tended and you will ,cc how you will have to begin all over again: the rain will wipe out the furrows, the Ooods· will drown the seeds. plants nnd bu,hcs will grow up evcryw~ere, and on seeing so much uscle~s labor the hand will drop the hoe, the laborer will de~ert hi~ ptc,w. lsn·1 there left the fine life of the pirate!! Thus is understood that sad discouragement wh1d1 we 1111<1 in the friar writers of the 17th century . ,pcak,nii <>I .. n,c "'" fertile plains submerged. of pro,ince, and town, dcpnp11l,11cd. of leading families exterminated These pages rc,cmhk ., ,Jd and monotonOlilS scene m the nigh1 after a lively dJy. 01 ( ,tl),J) Jll, Padre Agu~tin speaks with mournful brevity. ''A great de.ii of cotton. of wlucl\ they made good cloth 1ha1 the Ch ,nc,c and Japanese evef) year bought and carntd awa) .'" In the hi,tnn~n·s time, the mdu~lf)' and rhe trade hqd come to nn cntl. II seems tha, ·here arc causes more' thun suffic,cnt HI hrccd indolence even in the midst of a beehive Thu, i, explained why after thirty-two years of the system, the circumspect and prudent Morga ~aid that the natives havt forgorten much """"' J<111111t1~. raising pt>ulcry. scock und muon and ..-ea,·ing ,·/r,11,, '" rl,n 1,wd 10 do in their pagam}m and for a long time af1er 1he countrv had been conquered!" Still they :struggled a long time against mdolcnce. ye;,; hut their enemies were so numerous that ut last they g.ivc up' - JV - Wc recognize the causes that awoke the prcdi~po~ition imd provoked the .evil. now let us see what fo~tcr and ~ust,.,n ,t. In this connection government and governed have to how our head~ and say: uwe deserve our fate.~ 347 We have already tnaly said that when a house becomes dh1urbed and disordered, we should not a0C11se the youngest ch,ld or 1be scrvanlS, but the head of ii, especially ,r his authority in unlimited. He who does not aa freely is not responsible for his actions; and the Fthpino people, not being master or its liberty, ~ no1 rcspon5ibl<! for either its mi,fortunes or its woes. We ,;ay 1his, il ~ lrue, but. as will be seen later on, V.'C al"O have a l.,rge part in the continuation of such a disorder. Tht' following other causes contributed 10 foster the evil and aggravate 11; the constantly lessening encouragement that labor hu, met wilh in the Philippines. Feanng to have the Fihpmos deal frequently v.,1h other individuals of their own race, ·" , , ·re free and 10dependen1. as the Bomeafil. the Siamese, 1.._ C.unhod,~11,. and lhc Jupanc,c. people who in their cu,torns' and fu:ling differ greatly from lhe Chine~e. 1he government ac1cd uw,ard 1hcse others wi1h great mis1rus1 and great severily. as Morga l<:!>llfic, in the last pages of lus v.ork, unlil lhc) finally ceased to wmc lo 1hc country. In fact 11 <cem, thar once an uprising planned hv the Bomeans was suspected· we ,;ay s,,upecred, for !here was not even an aucmpt. although there were manv exc:cu1,on, And ·" 1hc,c: nahons were the very one, that consumed Ph1hpp1ne pmduc1,, when •II communication v.ith t~m had been cut off. consumption of thc.c products also cease!d The only two ~nunu .c:1> w,lh which the Philippine continued to have relations were China and Mexico. ,,, l\c"' Spain, and from this 1rade only China and a few private individuals in Manila go1 any benefit. In fact. the Celestial Empire sent her junks laden wilh merchandise, that merchandise which shut down the factories of Seville and ruined the Spanish indw;try, and re1umed laden in exchange with the silver 1bat was every year sent from Mexico :'llothing from the Pbilippin~ at that time wenl 10 China, no, even gold, for in those yea~ the Chinese 1raders would acccpl no payment but silver coin. To MeXJCo "cnl a tittle more: some cloth and dry goods which the enco=drros took b) force or bought from the native,. al a paltry price, wax, amber, gold, cive1. etc; but nothing more, and not even in great quantity, as is stated by Admiral Don Jeronimo de Bcnuclos y Carrillo, when be begged lhe Kmg that "the lflhab110II.IS of the Manilas be permitted ( 1) to load as many ships as they could w,rh native produ.as, such as wax, gold, per{umL$, .k3 ivory. cotton clorhs. whu-h tltq would have w buy from the Mlivtt of 1hr counrry. .• Thus fril!ndshtp of thc.se people$ would M gaint'd, thry -..ould furnuh /\cw Spam wtth the,r m£rchandue and lhe m()itty that i.r brought 1(1 Wamla would not lra,·I' this place." '° The coa~twr;e lrade. active in other times, had to die ou1. thanls to lhe p1ra11caJ auach of 1he Malays of the ~u1b: and Ira.Jc in the 1ntc1Lor ot lhe ,~land~ almo:.1 cnurely d1Mppearco, ,,win~ 10 re,trictHJn, pa,-spon, and other ndm1mstra1"e rc:quiremrnh Of no h•tlc 1mpor1ance wcr<: 1hc hindrance and obl,1.ick, lh:11 lrom th.: hqunnmg were 1hro"n in the farmer's wAy by 1he rule, who v.crc influenced by ch1ltli,,h fear .ind ~w c,cryv.here \ll(nS of c11n,p1rn i,:s jnd 11pn\1r1g,. Tiw n,,ll\C, v.cre not JU,,.... cd to. go 10 lhetr laho~. that 15. their farm~ . ...-11/tout pum1.\\ion of the go,anor or r,/ hu a11enu and ojf,cen, and en•11 of the pnesu a< M, rg. '·"'· f"ho,c v.ho know 1hc admm1Slra11ve ,lad,ne!» ano confu,wn in" coun1ry "'here the officials "urk SC,trcely 1wo hours a dJy. lht>-.e v.ho ~o"' lhe eost of go,ng 10 and reluming from 1hc ,,tp,\.il 10 1hc hulc t)ranL, v.1II v.ell undcrsland h.ow 11o;1h ·h,,crudc arr;,n ,·m, nt 11 i~ po,,,hk to ha,e th,· mo,t abl.urd ~~"'" lture , I ru.: 11 ,, that for -.ome umc lh" ahsurdi1~ "-hich v.oulo be lud,crnus hao II not been so Serious. has d,~appc:ared; bu, CH 11 1I the "'ord, "'"" gone our ol u-.c other lacb and ulhcr prmi,,un h.,,e replaced 1hem Th,· Mun, p1ra1c h;i, d,,..,pp,:,m:d hu1 1he1c r<·marn, the outla"' who intc~b lhe ncld, and waylays rt-· fa·111c1 h.1 h,,IJ him 101 ran,om Nov. then. the go,ernmcnt. "'hich h," " ('omlanl t.:ar of the p,.·ople. ,kn,e., 10 lhc farmc" ncn 1hc u,c ol J shot~un nr ,f it ,Inc~ allo" n docs -.() ,er) grud!!lJl!(I~ unJ v.uhJra\\, 11 al ,lca,,urc. v.hcnce II rc,uh, wuh Ilk: I ,hor, r. "'ho. 1h:inb 10 h,. 111,·.ui- of ocknse. planl\ h1> ,r,,p, ,,m 111, ·,1, hi, mcaRer fo tune: m !he fum,,.., lhal he h,I\ " lahon, u,I, np,:ncd. 1ha1 when h,, cr<>p malurel. u occurs lo lh, g,,,crn111 nl ,,_h,ch t, 1mp,11cn1 10 ,upprc" hnganJal!e. 10 J,·pr,,,: h1111 ,1 ~i, weapon, and lh,•n , "nhnul defense and v.11hout securnv he " r,•tlu,cd to 1n,1c11nn CJ.Rd ah,mdons hi~ field. hi, w< Jnd tah"' to gamhhng a,, lhe hc,t means or ~c,1mng J h,cl1hooJ I he i;r<'cn clu1h " und..:r the prolecuon of lhc go,emmcnt, n "safer' A mournful cnun,elor i~ fcJr. for •k: it oot only cause. r = hr• but abo iD caatiug aside the weapons, strengthens tbe very pen«:utorl · The sordid return the native gets from his work has the effect or discourqing him . We know from history that the encomenduos, after reducing many to slavery and forcing them to work for their benefit, made othea give up their merchandise for a trifle or nothing at all, or cheated them with the measures. Speakmg of lpion, in Pa.nay, Padre Gaspar de San Agustin . but provoked by the annoyances they suffered from some governors they have ceased to get 11 out, prefcmng to live in pove11y than to suffer such hardships." (Page 378) Fur1hcr on, speaking or o rher 1owns, he says: ~Goaded by ill treatment or the encomenderos who in admirustering JUSllCe have treated the natives as their slaves and not as their children, and have only looked after their own interests a1 the expense of rhe wretched for1uncs and lives of their charges... (Page 422) Further on: Min Leyte, they tned to lull an encomenduo or the town of Dagami on account of the great hardships he made them suffer by exacting tribute of wax from them with a steelyard wluch he had made twice as long as others.... " says: MIi was in ancient times very rich in gold This state of aff31rs lasted a long nme and still lasts, in spite of the fact that the breed of e11comenderos has become cuinct. A term passes away but the evil and the passions engendered do not pass away so long as reforms are' devoted solely to changing the names. The war., wnh the Dutch, the inroad, and piratical auacts of the people of Sulu and Mindanao di&appcared; the people have been transformed; new towns have grown up while othen have become impoverished; but the fraud~ subsisted as much as or worse than they did in those early years. We will not cite our own experiences for aside from the fact that we do not know which to select, critical persons may reproach us with partiality; neither will we cite those of other F'wpinos who write in the newspapers , but we shall confine ourselves to translating the V.'Otds of a modem French traveler who was m the Philippines for a long time. "The good curate,W be says, with reference 10 the rosy picture a fnar bad given Jum of the Philippines, "had not told 350 me about the governor, the focUilOSl official of the district. who was too much i.ken up with the ideal of gerung rich to have time to tyrannize over his docile subjecu; the governor. charged with ruling the country and collecung the vanous taxes m the government's name, de.·oted lumstlf almost wholly 10 trade; .,, his hands tht high and noble functions he performs nrc nothing more rhan instrwnent of gain. He monopoliu1 all the busirreis and inswul of developing on lus part the lovt of -..·ork. instead of stimulating IM too Miura/ 111doltnu of the mmves. ht wtth abust of his fX)1+~rs thinks only of destroyi11g all·compt11t1u11 that 171/Jy 1r0uble him or antmpts 10 parric1pa1e in his profits. It mauers lilllt /0 him that the OOUJ'llry u unpovenshed, without cultmmon. w/thow comnl.l!rce, withoul industry. JUSt so the goeemor n quickly enric/ted." Yet the traveler bas been unfair in picking out rhe R<>I ""'"' espeaally. Why only the governor? We do not cite passages from other auJbors: becaus.: "'e have not their works at hand and do not wish tu 4 uutc from memory The great difficulty that every entcrpns.: encounrcrcd with the admimstration contnlruted not a little to kill orr all commercial and industrial movement. All the Filipinos. as well ~ all th()<,C who have tried to engage rn bu.sines,. in the Philippine,. lnow how many documents, what comings. how mam ,r~mped papc~. how much patience is needed to secure from the government a pemut for an enterprise . One must count upon the good will of this one, on the influence of that one, on a g()()d bribe 10 another in order that the application be not p,gcon-holcd. a present to the one further on so that be may pa,;:, 11 on 10 hi,, chief. one must pray to God to give h,m good humor ,1nd rune to see and examine it ; to another, talcn1 10 r«ogniu 11, c,pc diency; to one funher on sufficient stupidity not to scent l>chmd the enterprise an insurrcctionary purpo,c and that the~ may not all spend the time taking haths. hunting or plaving ca rd, w11h the re,erend friars to their convenrs or country hou,..;:, /\nd above all, great patience, great knowledge of bow to get alnng. plenty of money, a great deal of poh11cs. many salutations, grc~• influence, plenty o r presents and complete resignation' How i, it strange that the Philippines remain poor in spite or the fertile 351 IOil, when history tdla 118 that the countries now the most flourishing date their development from the day of their liberty and civil rights? The most oommercial and mos1 industrious oountnes have been lbe freest counuies. France, England and the United States prove this. Hongkong, which IS not wor:th the most msignificant of the Philippines, has more commeci.al movemenl than all the islllods together, because it is free and is well governed The trade with Oiioa, which was the whole occupation of 1he colonizers of the Pbilipptnes, was not only prejudicial to Spain but also the life of her colonies; ,n fact, when the officials and priva1e persons in Mmila found an easy methoc:I' of gelling rich they neglected everytbtng. They paid no auenuon either to culuvat,ng the so,l or to fostering industry. and wherefore? Ch,na furnished 1hc trade. and the.) had only to take advantage of it and pick up the gold lhat dropped out on its way from Mexioo toward the mtenor of China, the gulf whence it oe,er returned. The pern1c1011., eumple of the dorrunators in surrounding themselves wi1h servants and despising manual or corporal labor as a thing unbecummg the nobility and chivalrous pride of !lie heroes of «.1 m.1ny centuries; those lordly airs, "'hicb the natives have 1ran.ta1ed into Illa /co c:asllla, and the de$ire of the dominated to be the equal of 1he dom.inators , if not essentially; at least in 1heir manner~; all this bad naturally 10 produce avers10n to act1v11y and fear or hatred of work Moreover "Why work?" ai.kcd many natives The curale says 1ha1 the nch man will not go 10 heaven. The rich man oo eanh is liable 10 all kinds of trouble, to be appointed a caba,, de b(lrungay, 10 be deported ,f an upriStng occurs, 10 be forced banker of 1he military chief of 1hc town , who to reward him for favors reccJYed se,zes his laborers arid hlS stock in order to force llim 10 beg mercy and thus easily pays up. Why be nch? So that all the officen of Justice may have a lynx eye on your actions, so that at the lea.<t slip enemies may be raised up against you, you may be indicted. a whole complicated and labyriolhine story may be concocted again~! you. for which you CJlJ\ only get away, not by the thread of Ariadmc bul by Dane·~ shower of gold, and still give thanks that you are no1 kept m reserve for $0mc needy oocas,on. The nauvc, whom they pretend 10 regard as an imbecile, ,s not so much so that he does not understand that 3Sl it is ridiculolq to wortt himself to <!~th to become wone off. A proverb of his says rite pig is cooud in its own l4rd, and • among lus bad qualibe$ be b~ the good one of applyillg to himself all the critiCl$11lS and censures he prefers to live miserable and indolent rather than play the part of the wretched beast of burden. Add to this the introduction of glambliog. We do not mean to say that before 1he coming of the Spaniardl the natives did not gamble the pa~ion for g;,'Tlbling is inn.ale in adventuresome and excitable races, and such is the Malay. Pigafetta tells us of cockfights and of bets m the Island of Paragua. Coc.k.,fighting mus1 .ilw have e1dsted ,n Luzon and m all the island,. for in the terminology of the game are two Taj!alog words: sabong and rari (ooclo.pn and gaff). Bui there IS not the leasl doubt that the foslering of th~ game ~ due to the government, as well as the perfecting of it. Although Pi(!afetta tells us of 11, he mentions it only m Paragua, and not in Cebu nor in any other island oC the south, "'bere be stayed a long 1,me Morga doc~ not ,pc:a1t of it, in spite of his having ,pcnl \even year. in Manila, and yet he does describe the londs of fowl. the jungle hens and oocb. Neither ,does Morga speak of gambllng. "'hen he talks about VHlCS and other defects. more or less concealed, more or less • insignificant MoTC-Over excepting the two Tagalog words sabong and tan, the others are or Spanish origm .s so/tad.a (selling tbc oocks to fight, then the fight ii.Self), pu.sta (apues1a, bet), logro (winning), pogo (payment). elc. We 5ay the $3mC about gambling; the word sugal Gugar, ra gambk), likL Jcumpi:sal (oonfesar. to conf= to a priest), mdicales 1ha1 ~amhUng was unknown 10 the Philippines before the Spaniards, The word lart1 (Tagalog, :o play) is 001 the equivalent of the word .rugal The world word (baraJa, playing-<:ard) proves that the introduction or playing cards was not due 10 the Cbmese, who have a kind of playingcard~ al'iO, because in th;1t c;,,se 1hey would have taken the Chinese name. ls not lhis enough? The word taya (tallar, to bet), paris-pans (Spanish, parts, paus of ca.rds), po/Ilana (napolita11a a wmning sequence of cards) sapote (10 stack the cards), kapott (to slam), monte, and so on. all prove the foreig,'l ongio of lhis temble plant. which only produ~ vice and which bas round m 1he charac1er of the nauve a 61 soil, culuvated ciroumsl ances. .bl Along with gambling, which breeds di,like for steady and dlfficult toil by its promise of sudden wealth and its appeal to the cmot1011>. with the lottene~. with the prndtgaht) and bospt· 1ahty of the Filipinos. went also, to swell 1h1, train of 011,fnrtunc,,, the rehgiou, functions. the great number of fiestas. the long masses for the women 10 .spend 1he1r n)orn1ng, ;ind the novcnancs to ,p,;n<i 1he1r aflcmoons. and the 111gh1, lur the proce."<c<ions and rosaries Rem~mber, that l3ck 1,t capital and absence of means paralyze all movement. and mu will see how the nauvc Wi1$ perforc.: 10 be indolcn1 for 1f a·ny money nught remain to him from the triJh, imposts and exaction,. he "ould have IO give i1 10 the curate for bulls. scapulane,. candles, oovcoancs, etc. And tf tlus d~ not suffice 10 form ao 10d.Jlent character, if the chmate and nature arc not enough in thcm-,.;l\cs to daze him and dcJ)Tive him of all energy. recall then that the doctrine of llli religion teach him to 1rnga1e hi, fields in 1he dry season, not b) mean, of canals bu1 with mas,e, and prayers: 10 preserve his Mock durin, an epidemic "'Ith holy .,.,,1er, exorcisms and l>enedict1ons that cost five dollars an animal to drive away the locusts by a proce,Mon with 1he ,mag~ of St Aug~une, CIC. h i, "'ell, undoubtedlv. II) IIU~I grea11\ in God; hut ii i~ better to do wh~t o~c can not trouble 1hc Creator every moment. even wh.:n these appeal, rcdoum.t to the bend,1 of Hi, mm,-1c" We havt: noticed that the countries wluch believe mm, in nm ,de, are the laziest, just as spoil.ed children arc the mo,1 111mannered. Whelhcr 1he~ bd1e,c ,n m,raclc, m palhJtc th~ir la11ncs- or they arc la1\ hccau-.c the) hdicH 111 miracles. we cannot say hut the fad 1, 1hc Fihpmo, ,..:re much les., lazy before the "'ord 1111rac/e "'·" introduced into their language The facihtv with which individual lil:>crty " curt,ulcd 1h.11 contmual ala"ln of aH from the knowledge that they are hahle to a <ccrct report. a go,ernmcntJI uk111,e, and to the accu....11011 of rebel or !,Uspect. an 3CCU5~llon whoch, 10 be efkcttvc, does 001 need proof or the production of the accuser. With 1he lack of confidence on the future. that uncertamty ol reaping the reward of lahor. llb m a Cit} btncken woth plague, cveryhod} yields to fate, ~huts himself in his house or goes about amusing himself )$4 m th< attempt to spend the few days that remain to hun m the least disagreeable way possible The apathy of the government itself 10,.ard everything ,n oommcn:e and agriculture contributes not a hnlc to f"'tcr mdo• lence. There is no encouragement at all for the manufacturer or [or the farmer, the government fumi,hc~ no aid either "'hen a poor crop comes, when che locu,t~ sweep over the field,. or when cyclone destroys in its passa~e the wealth of tbe soil. nor does ii take any trouble to seek a market for the produ.:15 of 11S colonies. Why should 11 do so "hen che,c , ,me products 3rc burdened with taxc, and imJ)(l't• and ha,e no free entn m10 the pom of the mocher country· nor " their consumpuon there encouraged? While we ""'" all the: v.alls of Lon.Jon co,c1cJ "',1h advertisements of tbe product& of its cok>mes, "'hile the f:nj!h,h make heroic efforts to subsutute Ceylon for Clnnese tea, toey.,nning with che sacnfice of their wte and their Momach. in ~p.Jn, with the excep1ton of tobacco. nothinj! from 1he Ph1hr1'"" ts known: neither it, sugar, coffee. hemp. line dnth,. nor ,is llocano blankets The name of Manila 1\ kno1.>n onh lrom 1h,osc d,,ths of Chma or lndo-China "'hk'• at on~ 1u11.: ·cn,hcd Sp.un by way of Manila, heavy ~•I~ ,bawls. fan1.i,1ic~II\ hu1 ,1,ar,dy embroidertd. which no one has thought of 1m1ta1tnt? m !\.lamla S1nce they are so easil> made. but the gmernmcm ha, ,,thcr cares, and the Filipinos do not !,,now th31 ,uch obJcct .,re mnr,• highl) e,;teemed in the Peninsula than their deli..-ak pdia embroideries and their very fine 1usI fabric,: Til!15 disappeared our trade in indigo, thanks 10 the trickery of the Chin,...,c "h,ch the government could not guard agai.,,1. •,ccupied n, ,1 w , "' th other cboughts; thus die now the other industrie,, the fine manufacturers of the Visaya. arc: graduall} disappc.iring from trade and even from u;.e: the people. continu,111} ~c11m11 cannot afford the costly cloths and have to be con1ented with calico or the imi1a110ns of the Germans. who produce 1m11a1ion, even of the work of our silvcrYruths. I'"""" The fact that the best plantauons, the bo1 tract> ol land m some provinces. those that from their ens} access are more profitable than others, are m the hands or the religious corpora• uons, whose desideratum is ignorance and cond1uon of semi-star• vation 0£ the native, so that chey may, continue to govern him and make themselves necessary to his wretched existence. is one JS~ Of the reasons ,.,hy many !owns do n I • . e fforts of rhcir mhab,iants W will beo progress m sp,re of the · e met with th b. · a~umcnt on the o!hcr ,ide, that the w~1~hi:~:i bclon an are companuvely richer than those which do no1 in ro g ~o !he~ They surely a re! just as their brethren in Europe un ,ng I cir convent~. knew how 10 sc,lect the ~ valle,: ~~e~t upland, for the cul!1va11on (l{ !he or the product,~~ so al,;o the Ph1hpp10e monl..~ have known ho"' to select the make ~f l~e beau11ful plain,. !he "'Cll-water,:d fi..:ld~ to d . . .,d I 1cm n~, plantallom, l°<•r ~ome time !he lnar. h~v ecenero,manv were . hv. mak1no0 them hel,c, C I hat ,r. the-.: p Jlllat,on,,e :; :::e be'; to"'"• ""c '~"'TIS, :~~ole: •~,~~~::~,~::~~1~~e:c:;~~:~~~ ~~~•~t''~ !he and that rn some province~ "'here thc1 hav. . ey orget reason to get s' r . c not been able to, ,ome like Hauan a:::;sr:.'on o the b~t tracts of land, their plantations. . ,tng, arc mfcnor 10 Taal 8alaya . d 1 ~cgion, cultivated cnurcly by the native~ "'. th n an .,pa. interference whatsoc1e1 , out monl..,sb "''J _Add to this lad or matcri.,I inducement the abscn . r m<><al ,tunulu, ;•nd you .... 111 ~ce hov. h ho 1 . ct ~ that cnuntr . e " ' not mdolen t 1n f Y nu,r nccJ, be ,l ma<.lman or di least a fool Wllat u~ure ;ow:111, him who Ji,tongu"hc• h1m,cl1. hom "h,, : rud . w o n-.c abmc the crowd·> At the COM of studv anJ sacrific~c, young no;in llc,omcs a gr.-at chemist and aft ·r . I0 a Ira· h • ' a ni; ~,>uf'<! 01 . rnihcnr,1"' t'run nc11hcr the !!0vernmcnt nor an)boJv h.1s ,;,ven h •m I I d h. I · · " A .east · help he . con cu L'S ' ' oni: ,ta> 111 the l n,ver,,it, compc1111-., examination " hdJ to fill a cert·•·n r Th, vounu m 11l I ?OS• 1011. e • ,. • " ' " ' t '" throu"h lnov.1~ '"c nJ ..,.. f he h . . " '"" ·• ,.~,-c,aancc anJ a 1cr .1, v..on u. It ,., ahofo.. hcd ht~r~1u,c: we,,; Jo ,· to i:11e the re· "'n I h no c.1rc .a: . • lUI " er. a mumc1pal l.1hor.1u,r\ j, rlo,4.·J 1 order to ah,,l,,h the I' ,,111011 of <.11reuor "'ho lt<'t hi,, pl }' <.·om,x·11tl\c.· c.·,~1n1111;1t1nn. wh•k Hhc:r ·r,, h . ahc e pre, · ... l: · • ,u~ .,1!\ t t' lh ;,.~i"~r. arc rrescn,·d. II i, h<--,.1usc 11><.• lwl icf ni,I\ tha1 J ,... " ' " ' m1t1rL th, p,·opk murc th . 11 h • I ,,, ~tcJ fuoJ, In th. • .on ,I I ' • . l: ,.1n1c.: 'A,1} Jflothei nmng n1Jn won a pro1e tn a loteran ,·om~·tn1<•n ., .t, 1nn~ ·'" hi, ori••m wa, ,-~ ' JOu . UrIk 11ov.n I11,. "ort.. wa, d~. d h e ' xu"e ' 1 <" rn:,\~papers praised it and u \o\ .s" rt.t,Jh.kJ "·" .1 ttM..,h.:rptl·~l." but 1hc "-'.~•l··d •·11,· ·I open ·J th · ~ ~ • 'op,,-, were < c "'inner [lr<l\cd lo t,, 3 n.,11,,• wholt ,mon th • g e losers •here ur.- Peninsulars· then all the ' newspapt.>" h;,stcned 156 u..1 t ,,;h6· 10 extol the losers! Not one word from u,, to11ernmen1, ocx from anybody. to encourage the native who with so much affection has cultivated the language and letters of the mothe r country! Finally passing over m,m) other more or les\ in,,gnifieant rea<ons. the enume ration of which would be intenmnable. let us close this drean list with the principal and most ternblc of all the educauon or the native From h,, birth unt.tl. he sinks tnto h1, grave, the traon,ng of the nati,c ,, hru 1ah11ng. depre,sivc and an11-human (the "ord Minhuman .. i, nt)I <ufliciently e~planator, whether or not the Acadcm) adm11, it. let II go). Jlterc is no doubt that the go,em• ment. Mime pncst< hkce the Jc:,u,i. and ,omc Domtn1can< hlte P.idrc !Jcna,tde<, h;\se dune a great d~al hy foundtng colleges, schools of pnmar, m~ruction. and 1hc hkc. But this ,s 001 enou!?h. their effect> t> ne111ralucd In<) ..mount to five or ten years ()cars of hunJ«<.l and hit) day, at most) durin!,! which the voulh <'<>mes in contact ..,,th hooks selected b\ th05C ,cry pne,ts .. hu l>oldly prodaom that ,t ,sen! for the nat1H·s lo I-now Ca,ulian. th.11 the n.11ivc <hould not b.: scpar.11,d from h" C'Jrah,111 th.II he ,hould not ,alue ttn) f.,rthcr a<p1r:11inn<.•nd so on: live tn ten venrs durin!! "'h1ch the m;11ori1~ of the <tudents haH' grasped nothm!? more than th;it no om, undcrst,1nd, "'hat the bunh ,J)'. not even the profec<,or~ themsclv<", pcrh,1p,. and the-..: f,v.:, 10 ten vear, have to offset the da,I) preachment wluch lov.crs the J1j!ni 1v of m.tn "'hu:h b) degree, brutall} Jcpnve~ him of tht.: ''- nt 1m.:n, of ~c:1r.~,t4..'Cm. th.ti ccernal. ,whht,rn, con,t.ont l.1t>.>r 1t1 "-"• the n.1111, , nee!... to male, him ,1cccp1 the ,n~,· pbc-l! hH'> ,,n .o !,:,cl v.11h the bca,1 - a ,abor aulcd 1r b} '-'HllC pt.·1,nn,. \\ll'h r•r \\ll~lllUt th~ at:,,1ht) 10 ~fltt:: . \\h1t.:h 11 J1,1,.''\ 1101 picHht1 ~ , ,, ..,,u11" 1nchvuh1;1I, th.: dt.:'1J\:,t ~£led IO - other, it h." 1h,· ,lr('<"lle eftect. hkc the breakin~ 01 ., cord ihat L\ ,trctchcu 100 t1[!hth Illus 11,h1l~ 1he, attempt to make ot the n.,11,c .1 ~ind ,>I Jn1mal. \Cl in cxchani:c they Jen and <>( horn ,II\ me •"· th,n<. /\nd "~ :,..,, "'"' ••J.'-' .u,:1..._m, IJ(.·t..:au'4.: he mu,, he..· "god" h,, Jo..,, n,>t hc,ome inJ.,kn t in that d omate. surrounded h~ thl.' l"lflUm,aan,·c, mcltltOO\.'.'d l)cptl\C a man. then. c.,r h,, c.h!,!nl l\ ...mJ \(Ill n,,, 1111, c.k•, ~ 1..· •'1m1 nt h1, morJ\ ,tn.:n~th hut n.,u . 11,l't mJkt.· u~h:~, C\\'n t,~r ,hose who w1"ih to make uc;;e ~r ham I \l'!"\ \.'fl'.Huh.. :,.,~ " .. 1, 1tu~ 1·" t 11 ...,r g. m.10·') 1:-, 357 his self,c:sieem. Take it away from him and be is a corpse, and be who seeks IM:livity in a corpse wiU encounter only worms. Thus is Cltplained how the natives of lhc present time are no loogeT lhc same as lhosc of the time of the discovery, neither morally nor physically. The ancient wnters, lile Cbmno. Morga, and Colin, take pleasure m describing them a wnl•ftarund, with good apt,tudts for any thing they take up, ku" and susuptiblt and of rtsolutt will, very clean and neat in their persons und clolhing and of good mitn and ~"ring ( Morga). Others delight in m1nu1e accounb of their inlclligcnce and pleasant manners. of their aplltudc for music. tbe drama. dancing and smging. of the facility \l.ith which they learned. 001 only Spanish but also Latin. which they acquired aim= by thcm,dve, (Cohn). Others uf their exqu,...1c poh1cnL...,_ m their dealintts and m their ,ocial fife. others. like the r,,.,.t Augustinians. "hose account~ Ga5par de San Alt\L~tm copies, found them more gallant and hcner mannered than the mhabuanis of tl,c Molu,·ca, "All I,. t off tl11•1r huvhantfrv. ·· add, Morga, "their farmr, fisheries and enrtrpnses. for thev travel from island to 1sl.uid by ,;ea and from province 10 province b} land." In exchange. the wn1ers of the pr~n, 11me, "'11hou1 being more gallant than I lcnnan Cot1c2 and Salcedo, nor more prudent than Legazpi, nor more manly than Morga. nor more studiou) !ban Colin and Gaspa de San Agustin. our oontemporary wnter; v.,e ~.-y find that the nauvc ,, u creature sometl11ng '""'" than a monkey b111 much ltsl thon u man, an a111hro11md tl111l-..med, stupid, timid, diny, cnng,ng. i/1-dQthtd. 111dole111, lazy, brainless, immorul, etc. tic. 1 o v.,ha1 •~ thl!> rctrogre"u\n Jue" h II the delectable ci, ihuion, the religiun of !>;1Jvauon of the friars, called of Jc,u\ Chmt by euphemism. that has produced this mirade that has atrophied hil, brain, paralyzed his bean and made of the man llus son of vicious :1nimal that the writ<'rs depict? Ala~• The whole m1>fonunc of 1hc prc,cnl Frhp,nt>s con,i.sh in thar they have become only half-way l>rutc~. The F,hp,no i, convmced that Lo get happmess 11 ,s necessary for !Jim 10 lay aside his d1g1111y as a rational creature, 10 aucnd maM, 10 bche•e whal is told him, 10 pay what is demanded of him, 10 pay and forever 10 pay; to work, suffer, and be silent , without aspiring 358 any thing, without aspiring 10 lmov. or even 10 under;tand Spanish, without separating btrnself from has carabao, as the priests shamelessly uy. without prote,,tmg ag.i,n" •'"} 1n1u,11cc. agall\.~t any arb,trnl") acuon. :igam.,1 an a~sauh ..,ga111~1 •~'.' m,ult . that is, not to have heart. hram or ~pmt; a ('rcaturc w11h drm, and 3 purse of gold .. the~c·~ the ,deal nau,c! untor~un.,'.ch: .____ the brutalizatton ,, 001 yet complete a ,J he,,,.,_. rh, or .,.,.,..use f h· 1 nature o f man 1l> 1"nherent 1n hro; l'>cm,- in 'l'IIC o 1< wm 111011 the native protests; he still has asp1rauon~. he thinks .mJ ' 111" ' ' 10 nse, and there's the trouble' In the preu:ding chapter ,,.e ;,ct forth the t:'Ju~, 1ha1 puxccd from the government m fo,1enng and mamt.11111011 tht· ,·,·1 W< thn...: 1h.11 cm.male · are d .,scussmg. ,No·" " ,t falls to us 10 anal•Le , from the people. Peoples and gmemmcnh ar.: u11rd,1tc I 11d complementary 3 \lup,d gmcrnment -..ould he on .,11.,11.,h among righteous people, ju~• as a corrupt people cann•>t "'"' under )USI rulers and wise la\l.S. L1l.e people. hke gu,.:1111ncn1 we will say 1n par.-phra,;c of a popula1 adage We c;in reduce all these cau,c, to two d~""' to ,tc:fcct, of trninmg and lacl, of national ~ntimcnt or the influence of climate we ,poke a1 _1he hc~1nmnc. so we will now treat of the effects arising fro,m 11 The very limrted traming m the home. the 1vranmcal Jnd stcnle educa11on or the rare cen1er, of lcarn,n~ th.11 l>hntl ,ul><>1 dination of 1he youth to one of greater a11c. ,nn,,.,n, c tht· 01111 •1 so that a man ma) not aspire to e xcel tho-.c ,,. ho rrcu:,kJ lu, but mw.t merely be content 10 go along with a m. «h h ·h,n them . Stagnatron torcibl) rc,ull\ from th,, .•mJ • he 1,,. ,1, 11 < himself merely to copying di,est~ h1imclf ,>f other qu.1l111c,, 1, . own narure . he naturall) becomes -.tenh.:; hence tlccadu ,, , to h1s Indolence ,s a corollary denved from the 1..d. ,,f st1111ul11, ,,,, of viiahty. That modest) infu,;ed into 1he con,11:t10n, .,f c,cr\""' "' to speak more clearly. that msinu~ted infenont~. ,1 ' " " , '.' l,u~, and constant depreciation of the mind ,o that II ma> n,11 lx · .11-..:J 10 the rcg,ons of light, deadens 1he enel'g,cs. paraly1n .,11 lcnden JS9 aes toward adv~ncement. and of the least struggle a man vci, 11 up without ~ghtmg. lf by one of those rare incidents, some wild spinl, that ,s, wmc aclJvc one. excels, tnStead of lus example ~•mula~mg, 11 only cause, others 10 pcnist in their moetion. Th~rc s one who v.,11 work for us; 1e1·s sleep on'" say his rc:latHes and fnends. frue 11 ,, lhat the spirit of nvalry 1s sometime, .,wakened, only that lhcn it awakens wilh bad humor m the guise of cnv>. and imacad of being a lever for helping 11 1s an obstacle that produce,; discouragement • Nurtured by the example of anchorit~ of a contemplative and laL) .hfe, thi: natl\e~ ,pend theirs ,n giving their gold to the Oiurch .•n .the hope of miracl~ and other "'<.>nderful thin~. lnc,r 1s hypnouud from childhood the\ learned to act mcch~mcally, wnhout kno,.,lcdgc of tbe obJcct. th,m~, lo tbe excrc1"1C 1mpo-.:d upon them from the tenderest )Cars cf pra)mg for whole hours m an unknown tongue. of ,cneratinF th,nll) that ~hey do not understand. of accepting belief, that arc 001 explained to them, to having absurd1t1~-.. impo.cd upon them. while the prot,:,;t, of rea-;o11 are rcprc,St."d J, it any wonder that w,th the, ~,c,ous dr. uage of intelligence and wtJJ the native. of old lo~Kal and consNcnt JS the analy,,s of his past and of his langua1tc <;!"mo11s11ate~ should now be a ma~ of dismal contradicoons. That continual struutc between reason and duty, ~tween ht> organism and his ncv. idcab, that civil war which d"rurl>< the peace of hib con-ciencc all his life. ha,, the result of paralv7mg all his energies. and aided by the M:verit> of the chmate. make, of that eternal vacillation. of the doubts in his brain, the ong,n or tu, mdolcn_l 1hsposi1Jon ,.,,II . "You cao·1 know more than this or 1ha1 old man• "Don't a<;ptrc 10 l>c gr.-atcr than the curate'" "You belong to an inferior race'" ·you ha,-en·1 any energy'" This is ,.hat the> tell the child and the). repeat 11 so often. it ha, perforce to become engraved m _the mind and thence mould and pervade all tu.~ acuon. The child or youth who tnes to he anything c:lsc 1~ olamcd with "anfty and_ presumptlOD; the curate ridicules him with cruel ~rca~m h" rela11ves look upon lum with fear. ,1rangers regard hlm with great compa<tjon No forward movement - Get back in lhe ranks and keep m line! . ~1th his spirit thus moulded the oaove falls into the most pem,ciou, of all rou1tnes: roulllie not phumed but imposed and .360 forced Note that the native him"'lf i, not n,11.i,;ilh ,nclmcd 10 routine, but his mind is disposed to accept all truth, JUSt ~ lus house 1s open to all siranger... The g,lod and the beautiful attract him. seduce aoo captivate him although hkc the Japanese he often exchanges the good for the eVII, 1f it appears to h,m garnished and gilded. What he laclr.J. is in the first place liberty 10 allow expansion to his adventuresome ~p1rit, and good examples, beautiful prospecis for the future ft is neccssan that hi~ spirit. although it may be dismayed and cowed by lhe elements and the fearful marufcstauon of their nught y force.,. store up energ)', seek high purposes, in order to struggle agam~t obstacles in the midst of unfavorable natural conditions. In order that he may progress it is necessary that a revolutionary spirit, so to speak, should boil in his veins, since progress ncccssonly requmis change; it implies the overthrow or the past, there defied, by the present; lhc Victory of new ideas over the ancient and accepted one. It will not be sufficient to speak to h1J. Caney, 10 talk rucely to him, nor that the light illuminate him like the ignis fatuus that leads travelers astray at night: all the Oancring promises of the wrest hopes will not suffice, so Jong as htS spmt •~ not free, his intelligence not rc«pccted. The reasons that ongmate ,n the la.ck or national scnument are still more lamcotable and more transcendental. Convinced by the msinuation of his inferiority. his spirit harassed by his education, if that brutalization of which we spoke above can be called educauon, IJl that exch8Jlge of usages and sen11ments among different natioru., the Filipino, to whom remain only his ~usceptibility and bis poetical imagination, allows himself to be guided by his Caney and h~ self-love. II is sufficient that the foreigner praises 10 him imported merchandise and run down the native product for him 10 hasten to make the change, without reflecting that evef)'lhing has its weak side and the most sensi~le custom 1s ridiculous in the eyes of those who do not follow 11. The) have dazzled h,m with 11~1. with strings of colored glass beads, ..,;th noisy ranles, shining mirrors and other trinkets, and he has given in rerum bis gold, his conscience. and even his ltbcrty. He changed his religion for lhe external practices of another cult; tbe convictions and usages derived from his climate and needs, for other con\.ictions lhat developed under another sky and another mspiration. HIS sptrit, well-disposed toward 361 ~ o g that looks good to him , was then trusformcd, at the pleasure of the nation that forced upon him its God and its law, and as the trader with whom he dealt did oot bring a cargo of useful implements of ,roo, hoes to till the fields, but stamped papers, aucifixc,, bulls and prayer-boob, as he did not have for ideal and prototype the tanned and vigorous laborer. but the aristocratic lord carried in a lllXurious liner, the result was that the imitative people became bookish, devout, prayerful, it acquired ideas of luxury and ostentation. without thereby improving the means of its subsislCJ!CC to a corresponding degree. The lack of national sentiment brings another evil, moreover which is the absence .o( all oppos1110n to measures prejudicial to the people and the absence of any imtiative in whatever may redound to its good. A man in the Philippines is only an indi• vidual, be is not a member of a nation. He is forbidden and denied the right of association, and is, therefore, weak and sluggish. The Philippines is an organism whose cells seem to have no arterial system to irrigate II or nervous system to oommunicate its 1mpressaons; these cells must, nevertheless, yield their product, get it where they can; if I.hey perish, let them perish. In the view of some this is expedient so that a colony may be a colony; pcrltaps they are right, but not to the effect lhAt a oolony may Oourisb lbe result of tlus is tba, if a prejudicial measure ~ ordered, no one prole5U, an goes well appattntly until later the evils are felt. Another blood-letting, and as the organism bas neither nerves nor voice the physiaan proceeds in the belief that the treatment is not injuring it. lt needs a reform, but as it must not speak, it keeps silent aod remains with the need The patient wants to eat, it wants to breathe the fresh air, but as such desires may offend the susceptibility of the physician who thinks that he has already provided everytfting necessary, it suffers and pmcs away from fear of receiving a scolding, of getting another plaster and a new blood-letung, and so on indcfimtely. 1 In addition to. this, love of peace and the honor many have of accepting the few administrative posttions which fall to the Filipinos on account of the trouble and annoyance these cause them places at the head of the people the most stupid and inc:apabl~ men, those who submit to everything, those who can 362 endure all the capnccs and euct1on, of the curate and of lht official\ Will this mefficiency 1n the lo"<"f <ph<"rc\ of po,,er !nd ignorance and mdifferencc 111 1hc upper. with 1he t~q uent changes and the eternal apprcn1ici,.h1p,. "11h i;r..-1• fe31 md many adrmmstnth·e obsl8cles, w11h a voicek" peopk 1h.,1 ~ •ve neither initiative nor cohesion, with employees who nc~rh :,II strive to amass a fortune and return home, with mhab1lan1> >'ht> live in great bard.hip from the instant thel be8,n to hrc,,thc create pl'Olpcrity, agricullW'e and industry, found enterprise, and companies, things that still hardly prosper in Cree and wellorganized oommunlties? Yes, all attempt, is useless tha1 does not spnng from a profound study of the evil that afflicts us. To combat thh indolence, some have proposed increasing the native's needs and raising the taxes. What has happened? Criminals have multiplied. penury has been aggravated. Why? Because the native 1lready ha enough needs with bis funct1om of 1he Church, v.11h his fiestas, with the public offices forced on him. the dona11ons and bribes that be bad 10 make so that he may drag out his wretched existence The cord is already too taut . We have heard many complaints. and every day we read 1< makmp; to rescue the country from tlS condition of indolence. Weiglung it> plans, its illusions and its difficulties, we are reminded of the gardener who spent his days tending and 14.itering the handful of canb, be trimmed the plant frequently. he pulled al 11 to lengthen i1 and hasten its growth, he grafted on its ccd.m, anJ oaks, until one day the little tree died, leaving lhc man cunv,nccd that it belonged to a degenerate species attnbutmg the failure of his expenment to everything except the lack or so,I and his own ineffable fqlly. in the papers about the efforts the government Without cducahon and liberty, which are the !oOil and 1hc sun of man, no reform is possible, no measure can give the result desired. This does not mean that we should ask first for •be native the inSlruCllOD of a sage and all imaginable liberties, in order then to put a hoe in his hand or place him in a workshop, such a pretension would be an absurdity and vain folly. What we wish is that obstacle be not put in his way, not to increase many bis climate and the situation of the islands already the 363 ~ t e tor him that instruction be not begrudged him for fear that wheo he becomes intelligent he may separate from the colonizing nation or ask for lbc rights of wlucb he makes himself worthy. Smee some day or other he will become enlightened, whether the government wishes it or not, let his enlightenment be as a gift received and not as conquered plunder. We desire that lbc policy be at once frank and consistent, that IS Jugbly civ1hzang, without sordid reservations, without distrust without fear or jealousy, "'ishing the good for the sal.c of the good, civtlizanon w11bou1 ulterior thoughts of gramudc, or else boldly cxplo1bng tyranrucal and 5Clfi$h, without hypocn.sy or deception. with a whole system well-planned and studied out for dominating by compelling obedience. for commanding 10 get rich. to be happy If the former, the government may act with the security that some day or other 11 will reap the harvest and will find people its own in hean and interest; there is nothing like a favor for securing the friendship or enmity of man, according to whether II be conferred with good ,.,;11 or hurled 11110 his face and bestowed upon him in spite or himself If the log.cal ~nd regulated system of exploitation be chosen, stifling with the 1mgle of gold and the sheen ol opulence the sentiments of independence in the eolonics, paying w11h 11S .,.ealth for its lack of hbcny, M the English do in India, who moreover leave the government to nahve rulee>. then bwid roads, lay out highways. foster the freedom of trade , let the govemmcn1 heed material interests more than 1he intc=ts of four orde~ of fnars; let it -.end out intelligent employees to foster industrv; JUSt judges. all well paid so that they be not venal pilferers. and lay aside all religious pretext. TlllS policy has the advantage in that while it may not lull the instincts of libertV wholl> to <lccp yet the day "'hen the mother country loses her colonies she will at least have the gold ama,scd Jnd not the regret of h:1'1ng reared ungr.iteful children. APPENDIX E THE PHILIPPINES A CENTURY HENCE* - 1- f'ol'o.,.1ng our urual custom of faan5 squarely the most dirricuh and dehcate quest,ons relaung to the Phihppines, without weighing the consequences that our frankness may bring upon us. we shall in the present arncle treat of I heir future. In order 10 read the destu1y of a people, it IS necessary to open the book of Its past, and this, for the Philippines may be reduced in general terms to "hat folloW5· Scarcely had they been attached 10 the Spani•h crown than th~ had su..tamed with their blood and the effons of their sons the' war. and amb1t1oos, and conque,t of the Sparush people. ,ind in thc..c <truggl~. m that ternhle cri,1\ when a people chang~ ,1, form of go,emment. its laws. usages,·customs, religion ~nd bchd,. th.: Ph1hppmes was dcpopulate<J, impo,erished and retarded caught in 1he1r meumorph0<.1s w11hou1 confidence in their pa~,. wi1hou1 faith in their present and w11h no fond hope of the years 10 come. The former rulen who had merely cn<kavorcd 10 secure the fear and sub1J1&Sion of their ,ubJects, hahnuatcd by them 10 scrvnudc fell hkc leaves from a dead tree and 1~ people. "ho had no love for them nor knew what hocny was. easily changed masters. perhaps bopmg 10 gain "'m<·thmg hy the mno,aunn. fhcn bc,gan a nc" era for the Filrpinos. They gradually lost their ancient tradition,. their rccollect1ons. - they forgot their ,H1tln)!\. 1hc1r sonJ!!-. their p<>elC)' their laws in order to learn t,~ heart mhcr doctrines. which they dtd 001 understand. other • Engh1h l/.n .... t1on by Chart•• £ o.,t,v,t, ,. Thil famous NNV ot Rael '<1 ·1=,t,p,n41s dentro de cion. af'IOS.· -.,,qs f1t:sl publtsh&d '" U SolJdandMJ. M..-1r ...1, Stpfember 30, ·act-f.abruary 1. 1890 ~, ethics. other tutel, diffa-cot from thOR inspired m their race by their climate and their way of thinking. Theo there was a falling-off, they were lowered in their own eyes, they bcoome ashamed of what was distinctively their own. in order to admire and praise that was foreign and incomprehensible; their spirit was broken and they acquiesced. Thus.yean aod c:enturies rolled on. Religious shows, ntes that c:au~t the eye, soap, lighr.s, images arnyed wtth gold, worship m a strange language, legends, mincles and sennons hypnotized the allcady naturally superstitious spirits of the coun~ try but did not succeed in de,,troying it altogether, in spite of the whole system afterwards developed and operated with unyielding tenaaty. When the ethical abasement of the inhabitants had reached this stage, when they had become disheartened and disgusted with themselves, an effon was made to add the final stroke for reducing so many dormant wtlls and intellects 10 nothingness, ID order to make of the individual a sort of toiler. a brute, a beast of burden and to develop a race wilbout mmd or bean. Then the end sought was re,·ealed. it was taken for granted, •~d the race was insulted, an effort wa< made to deny 11 every vmue, every human characteristic, and there were even writers and priest,; who_ pushed the movement sull further by uying to deny to the nabves of the country not qnly capacity for virtue but also even the tendency to vice. Then this which they had thought would be death was sure salvation. Some dying persons are restored to health by , heroic remedy. So great endurance reached its climax with the msuhs and the lethargic spirit woke up to life. His sensitiveness the •chief trait or the native, was touched. and while he had the f~rbearance to suffer and die under a foreign Oag, he had it not when they whom he served repaid his sacrifice5 with insults and Jests. Then he began to study himself and to realize his misfortune . Those who had not expec. • .:<I this result. like all despotic masters. regarded as a wrong every complamt, every protest. and punished it 11,,:lt death, endeavoring thus to suae every cry of sonow with blood, and Ibey ma<k mistake after mistake 3'6 The spirit of the people was not threby cowed, and even though it had been awakened in only a few beans, 11s Oamc nevertheless was surely and consumingly propagated, thanks to abuses and the stupid endeavors of certain classes to suOe noble and generous sentiments. Thus when a Dame catches a garment, fear and confusion propagate it more and more. and each shake, each blow, is a blast from the bellows 10 fan it into life. Undoubtedly during all this time there were not lacking generous and noble spirrts among the dominant race that tned to struggle for the nghts of humaruty and JUst1cc. or sordid and cowardly ones among lhe dominated that aided the dcba'lt:mcnt of their own country. But both were exceptions and we are speaking in general terms. Such is an outline of their past. We know their present. Now, what wtll their future be' Will the Phillpptne lslan~ conunue to t>e a Spanish colony, and if so. what kind of colony• Will they become a province of Spain. with or without autonomy? And to reach this stage. what kmd of sacrifices will have 10 be made? Will th.ey be separated from the mother country to bve independently, to fall into the hands of other nations. or to ally themselves with neighboring powers? It is impossible to reply 10 these questions for 10 all of them both yes and no may be answered, according to the 11me desired to be covered When there 1~ in nature no hllcd comh11on. how much less must there be in 1he life of a people. being endowed with mobility and movement: So. 11 ,s that 1n orde, to deal with those quesllons . ,t 1s nccessaf} 10 presume an unhmucd period of time, and ,n accordance there,.,llh try to fore-·a\l future events. -11- What will become of the Phihppines "ithin a ccntun ·• Will they conunue 10 be a Sparusb colony• Had this quest10n been asked thrc:.: c:cntunc, j);O "hen jl Legazp1's death the Malayan Fihp1n"" l>cgjn 10 I•~ i:radu,,11) und«-eived and. finding the yoke hea,)', med m , am to ,hake 11>7 ii off withoul any doubl whatsoever lhe reply would have been easy. To a sptrit enthusiastic over the liberty of the country, to 1hose unconquerable Kagaya,nes who nourWled wilhtn themselves the spiril of Magal11s, to the desocndan1s of the heroic Gat Puhntang and Ga1 Salakab of the Province of Batangas, independence was assured, it was merely a quesuon of getting together and making • determ,nahon But for him \'tho, disillusioned by sad experience, saw ever.'Where di<;cord and disorder, apathy and brutalization in the lower classes, discourngement and disunion an the upper, only one answer presented itself, and it was: extend his hands to the chains, t>ow hi, neck beneath the yoke and accept the future with the resignation of an invalid v. ho watches the leaves fall and foresees a long winter a1DJd who~ snows he discerns the outlines of his grave. At the time discord jus1i6ed pessimism - but three centuries passed. the neck had become accustomed to the yoke, and each new generation, begotten ,n chains, was constantly belier adapted 10 the new order of things Now then, are the Philippines in the same conduion they were three centuries ago? For the liberal Spaniards the ethical condition of the people remams the same. that is, the nauve Filipinos have not advanced; for the fnars and their followers the people have been redeemed from savagery, that is, they have progre1.scd; for many Filipinos ethics, spirit and customs have decayed. as decay all the good qualiues of a people that falls into slavery that ~. they have retrograded. Laying aside th~ oontjderation, so as not to get away from our subject let us draw the brief parallel between the political situauon 1hen and the s,111.111011 at present, 10. order to see if -..hat wa, not possible at that time can be so now. or vice versa Let us pas~ over the loyalty the Fihp,no,, may fee l for Spain; let us suppose for a moment, along with Spanish writers, that tbere exist only m<>11ves for hatred and jealousy between the two rucc,. let us adn111 the assertions flaunted b) many that three centuries of domination have not awakened in the sensitive bean of the native a single spark of affection or gratitude; and we may see whether or not the Sparush cause has gained ground in the Islands 368 Formerly thr Spanish lluthority was upheld among the natives by â– handful of wldien , three to five hundred â– t mosl, many of whom were engaged in trade and were scattered about IIOI only m the Islands but also among Ille neighboring na1tons. ~pied in long wan agamst the Mohammedans ,n the south, against the British and Dutch, and ceaselessly hara«;ed hy Japanese, Chinese, or some tribes in the interior. Then commurucauon with Mexico and Spain was sto"'. rare and ds((kult frequent and violent the dt~turbances among the ruling powc~ tn the Islands, the treasury nearly always empty. and the ltte of the colorust~ dependent upon one frail ship that handled the Chinese trade Tltcn the seas ,n tbosc regions were 1nfc~tcd with pirates, all enemies of the Spanish name, which w,s ~fM<led by an impoverished fleet, generally manned by rude adventurers. when not by foreigner~ and em:m1b, which was chcclced and an expedition of Gomez Perez Oâ– smarinas. which v.as ch«ked and frustrated by the mutiny of the Chinese rowers, who killed him and thwarted au his plans and schemes. Yet in spne of so many adverse cm:umstances the Sparush authority has beco upheld for more than three centuries and, though it bas bem curtailed, still continues 10 rule the destinies of the Philippine group. On the other band, the present :i.ituatioo seems to be gilded and rosy- as we might say, a betutiful morning compared to the vexed and stormy night of the past The material forces at the disposal of the Spanish sovereign have now been trebled; the 0eet rela11vely improved: t here 1s more organ1zauoo in both civil and military affairs; communication with the sovereign oounuy is swtfter and surer. she has no enemies abroad; her possession is assured and the country dominated seems 10 ba~e less 11>iri1, lcss aspiration for independence, a world 1hat is to it almost inoompreheosible Everything then at first glance pre• sages another three centuries, at least, of peaceful domination and tranquil suzerainty But above the material considerauons are arising others, invisible, of 10 e1hical nature, far more powerful md 1ransc:enclental. Orientals and the Malays, m panic:ular, are a sensitive people· delicacy of :ienument is predom!nant with them. Even. .,., now, in apite of contact witb the Occidental oatiom who have ideas different from bis, we see the Malayan Fili~ sacrifice cvcrytbing- liberty, case, welfare, name for the sake of an aspiration or a conceit sometimes scientific, or of some other natu~c but ~t the least word which wounds his selI-lo\le he forgets all his sacrifices, the labor expended, to ueasure in his memory and never forget the slight be thinks he has received. So lbe .Philipp! nc peopl~ !',ave remained faithful durin& three oentunes, givtng up their liberty and their independence, ~e~ dazzled by the hope of the Paradise promiJed, sometimes CIJOlcd by the friend$hip offered them by a noble and gener~ people like the Spanish, sometunes also compelled by supenonty of arms df which they were ignorant and which tunid inv~ with a myuerious character, or sometimes becaUJe the t~vading foreigner 100k advantage of internecine feuds to ltcp mas the peacemaker in chsoord and lhus after to tlominate botb perties and SUbJect them 10 hi~ authority spiri!5 Spanish domination once established, was firmly ma1n1a1ned, ~ks to the attachment of the people. to their mutual dissenAODS, and to the fact that the sensiove self-lo\le of th~ native bad not yet been wounded. Then the people saw their own coun_trymen _in the hlgher ranks of the army. their general officers fightmg besi~ the heroes of Spain and shanna their laurels, be~dged netthcr chµae1er, reputauon nor consideration, then fidelity and attachment 10 Spain, IO\IC of 'the fatherland made of ~e n_ative tncomnidvo and even acncral, as dunne the ~nglisb tnV3SlOD ; then there had not yet been invent.:d the tnsult_ing and ridi_culous epithets with 111bicll recently the: most laborious and pamful ac luevements of the nati\'e le.ide" hJ,c been SIJ.gmatiz.ed; not then hEI it become the fashion to insult and _slande~ rn stereotyped phrase, in newspapers and boo~ published with governmental and superior ecclesiastical approv.il, the people that paJd. fought and poured out its blood for the Spanish name, nor was it considered either noble or witty to ~ffend a w~le race, which was frobidden to reply or de[cnd itself, and tf there were religious hypochondriacs who m the le1SUte o~ their cloisters dared ro write against it, as did the August,ruan Gaspar de San Agustin and the Jesuit Velarde their ·'lathsome aborti ,ns never saw the light. ar.d still less wer~ they tb urtws rewarded with miten and raiaed io high offices. True it la that neither ~ the natives of that time such as we are now: three centuries of bnitalization and obsatranusm bne neceuarily had some influence upon us, the most beautiful work of divinity in the bands of certain artisans may finally be converted into a caricature. The priests of that epoch, wishing to establish their domination over the people, got in touch with it and made common e&IIIC with it apinst tlie oppre111ivc encomcndero,. Na1urally, the people IA'!" in them lcamin& and some presuge and placed lta confideaco in them, followed their advice, and listened 10 them even in the darkest hours. Jf Ibey wrote. they did so 10 defense of the rights of the native and made his cry reach even to the distant steps of the Throne. And not a few pricstS, both ~•rand regular, undertook dangerous journeys, as rcprc<en, tatives of the country, and this, along with the striC1 and public relidencia then rcqwred of the goverrung powers, from the capcain-general to the most insigruficant offioal, rather consoled and pacified the wounded <pirits, Alilfying, even though 11 were only in form, all the malcontents All this has passed away. The derisive laughter penetrates like mortal poison into the bean of the native who pays and tufters and it becomes more offe,.sive the more 1mmu1111y it enjoys. A common sore the general affront offered to a whole race, bas wiped away the old feuds among· di{femt province~ The people no longer h'as confidence in its former protectors. now its exploiters and executioners The masks have fallen II bas been that the love and piety of the pa~, ha,·e come to resemble the de\lotion of a nurse, who, unable to live elsewhere. des,res the eternal infancy, eternal wcaknc!», for the cluld in order to &O on drawing her wages and existing at ,ts exper.<e, 11 ha.~ seen not only that she does not nourish it t0 make it grow but that she poisons it to stunt its growth and at the slightest protest she flies into• rage! The ancient show of JUSllce, 1hc bo' re"dencu has disappeared; confusion of ideas begins to pre,ail, u.e re, rd lhown for a governor-general, lie La Torre ,.bea>mes a cnme in the government of his sw:ce"or. sufficient 10 caul>C the ciuzcn to !Ole his libe.11y and his home; if he obeys the .-.rde of one offic:ial, as in the recent matt.e r of admitting corpses nto the 311 cburcb. it is ellOlllb to have the obedient subjects later harassed and persecuted in every p<mible way; obligations and tua increase without thereby increasmg rights, privileges and liberties or assunng the few m eiristence; a regi.lt\e of continual terror and ~ncenainty disturbs the minds, a regime worse 1han a period of disorder for the fears that the imagination conjures up are g~oerallr greater than Lhe reality; the country is poor; the finao~ crws through which it 1s passing is acute, and every one potn1s out with the finger the persons who are causin1 the trouble. yet no one dares lay hands upon them! True it is lhat the Penal Code has come like a drop of balm to such bittemerss. But of what use are all the codes in the ~rid, if by means of confidential reports, if for trifling reasons, 1f through anonymous traitors any honest 'Citizen may be exiled or barushed without a hearing, without a trial? Of what use is that Penal Code, of what use is life, if there JS no secumy in the home, no faith in justice and confidence in tranquility of cooscieoce? Of what use is all that array of terms, all that collee1Joo of articles. when the cowardly accusation of a traitor has more 1nfluence in the timorous ears of the supreme autocrat than all the cnes for justice? If this SUie of affairs should continue, what will become of the Ph1bppincs withtn a century? The batteries are graudally becoming charged and if the prudence of the government does not provide an o::tlet for the currents that are a.:.cumulaung, some! day the spark will be generated. This is not 1he place to speak of what outcome such a deplorable conflict might hitve, for it depends upon chance, upon the weapon~ and ui,on ,1 thousand circumMdOCCS which man cannot foresee. But even thou~ all the advantages should be oo the government's Slde and therefore the probabilitv of succc~, it would be a Pyrrhic victory. and no government o~ght to desire such _If thixe w~o guide the destinies of the Ptulipplncs remain obsunate. and instead of introducing reforms try 10 make the cond111on of the country retrograde; 10 push their severity and repression 10 c•trcmC) agairist the classes that suffer and thmk they are going to force the laner to venture and put into play 'le wretchedness of an unquiet life , filled with _privation and bittemen1, apinst the hopo of ICQlrina IOGldhin& indefinite. Wut would be lost in the strop? Almost oothing: the life of the nwnerous discontented classes has no such great auraaion that it ahould be preferred to a glorious death. It may indeed be a -suicidal attempt - but then, what? Would not a bloody c;hasm yawn between victors and vanquished and might not the latter with time and experience become equal in strength, lioce they are superior in nwnben to their dominaton? Who disputes this? All the petty iosuuctiom that have oci:nned in the Philippines were the work of a few fanatics or discontented toldien, who had to deceive and humbu& the people or avail themselves of their powers over their subordinates to pin their ends. So they all failed. No insurrection had a popular cba!Kler or wu bued on a need of the whole race or fought for human rights or justice, 10 it left no ineffaceable impressions, but rather when they saw that they bad been duped the people bound up their wounds and applauded the overthrow of the <listurbers of their peace! But what if the movement sprinp from the people themselves and based its causes upon their woes? So then, if the prudence and wise reforms of our ministers do not find capable and determined interpreters among the colonial governors and faithful perpetrators among those whom the frequent political changes send to fill such a delicate post; if met with the eternal ii is ou1 oforder, preferred by the elements, who see their livelihood in the backwardness of their subiects, if JUSt c:laims are to go uobeeded, as being of a subversive tendenc:y; if the country is denied representation in the Cortes and an authoriz.ed voice to cry out agamst all kinds of abuses, which escape through the complexity of the laws, if ,n lhort, the S)-Stem, prolific in result$ of alienating the goodwill of the natives, is to continue, pricking his apathetic mind with insults and charges of ingra_utude, we c:an assen that 10 a few yean the present state or affain will have been modified completely - and ioevita_bly There now exists a factor which was formerly lack· ing - the spirit of the nation has been aroused and a common misfortune, a common debucmeol has united all the inhabitants or the Islands. A nwnerous enlightened class now exists within and without the Islands, a class created and continually augmented by the 1tupidtty of certalo s<>verniog powers, whlc:h forces the Inhabitants to leave the count!)', to secure education 373 abroad, and It It main•alned tbanb to the piovocalioo and the system of eapiooaae in vosve nm d-, whose numbeT "' cumulatively incrualna, i5 in constant communication with the rest of the Islands, and if today it constitutes only the brain or the COWltty Ill a few yean it will form the whole nervous system and manifest 111 exbtc:nce an all its acts. No:w, atatecraft bu vuiout means a11ts d"pol&I for chedtina a people on the road to progress; the brutaliz.atioa of the masaa thruuah a caste addicted to the aovemment, llristoc:ratJc, u in the Dutch colonies, or lheocretlc as in the Philippines; the impoverishment of the country: the padual eiitenninatiOfl of the , inhab1tanu, and f01tenng of feuds amona the ra,ccs Brutal12atlon of the Malayan Filipinos has been dcmon,trated 10 be ampoaible. In "P'te of the darlr. horde or &ian 1n whc»c hands resu the 1iutruct1on of youth, wluch mil• crably wastes yean and yean in the colleges, issuina therefrom tired, v.eary and das&ustcd with boolu 1n spate of the ccnsoohip which tnC\ to dOK every •VC'IIUC to J'l'OIJ'C" an spate of all the pupds, coofessionab, boo;ks, and missals that inculcate hatred toward not only all $Clen11fic knowledae but e,en toward 1he Spanish lanauaae 1t.aclf. in ,pue of 1h11 "'hole elabonte S)'ltem pcrkcted and tenaciously operated by 1hose who w"h 10 keep the bland$ in holy ianorancc; there cxis1 wntcn. freclhinkcn, historian'I, philosophers, chcmhots, phy.1cians, art~ts. and 1urut1 Enlightenment i1 sprcadina and the penecution 11 ,uffcn quickens it. No, the divine name of 1hou1h1 ls inu11nguish1ble in the Filipino people and somehow or other it will lhanc forth and compel rccolJUtiOn . It is impo1S1blc 10 bru11h1e the ,nhabnants of the Ph11ippinC$! May poverty arrest their dc•clopment'> Perhapa, but it ia a very danger011s means Experience ha1 everywhere shown us and especially 1n 1he Philippines, 1hat the cluau which arc bellcr off have always been addJCtcd 10 peace and order. becauac they hve compara11"ely better and may be the lo11uun civil disturbances Wealth brinp wilh it refinement , the •Pim of OOllSCrvation. wlule l)O"erty inspires advcnturou, ideu, the desire to chan&e tlunp and hu httle care for life Mad!ia¥Clli humclf held thi1 mean, of 111bjecting I people to be perilous. oblervln& that lou of welfare stin up more obdurate J74 enemies than lou of life Moreover, whee there are •calth and abandanoe, thct'c is leas discon1ent, less oompl~int and 1hc aov• cmmcnt, itself wealthier, has more means for sus1a,nang it.elf On the other hand, there occun in a poor country wb~1 happen, in a house-where bread is wan11n1 And further. of "'ha1 u~ to the mother country would a poor and lean colony be? Ncill\Ct is 11 poss1ble paduaDy to cxtenninate the 1nhab11ant1. The Philippine racet, hke all tbc Mala)'ll , do not SUCC1,mb before the foreigner, like the Ausiraliana , the Polynrsians and the Indians of the Nn< World ln ipltC of the numc rous "11" the f"lhpinol have bad to c:any on, 1n q,ite of the ep,demia that have periodically vi11tcd them, their number bu trebled ai bu that of the Malays of Java and the Moluc<a• The Filipin• • embraces avibution and lives and thrive$ in every clime, in contact with every people. Rum, tha1 po1SOn which exterm,na1cd the natives of the Pacific islands, has no power in the Phihppincs, but rather. COlllparilon of their present a>n<lllion w11h 1h11 descnbed by the early lristonaos, makes II appear 1ha1 the f"tliptn01 have arown 10berer. The pcny -rs with the inhabitants of the 1011th conswnc only tbc 10ld1tn, people who I,\ 1hc11 fidelity to the Sparush naa, far from being a menace , •re surely one of its aolldest aupports . Tllcrc remains the f01terin1 of intemccine feud, among the provinces. This wu formerly poss1blc , when commun1ca11on from ane to another wu rare and diffkult ,.h,n there "'ere no steamers or telegraph hnes, ..,hen the reg1mcnh ..,ere formed according to the variou.s provinces, "'hen some pro"1nc... .,.ere cajoled by aw,rda of privilescs and honon nnd 01hcn were protected from the str0ngest. But now that lhe pri"1le,ic• have diaappcared, 'that through a sp1rit of distrust the regimcn1s have been rcorpnlud, that lhe inhabitants move from one 1$1and to another, oommunication and eiichantt or imprcuions !'a1urall~ inc.reuc, and as all ace themselves threatened by lhc ,ame peril and wounded 1n the 11me fcebn_gs, they clasp handi and make common cause It is true that the un,on as 1101 )Ct ,o holly per • tecud, but to thii end the measures of good aovcmmcnt. 1hc vcudons to which the townspeople are sub1cc1ed. the frequent dlallp of officials, the acuaty of centers or lcarmn, forces i.itand 37' • tlle JOUdi ot all the Wendi to come toptber and bepn to pt ac:queinted. lbe jomneyl IO Europe contribute not e little to ti&fltcn die bonds, for ebroad the iohebitants of ma.t widely separeted provinces are impressed by their patriotic feelinp, from seilora evco to the wealthiest merchants, end et the sight of modem liberty and the memory of the misfom.u,es of their oounuy, Ibey embreoe end call one another brothen. In lill>rt. then , the edvancemem end ethiceJ prop-ea of the Pbilippinea are inevitable, are decreed by fete. The Islands cannot remein in the condition they are without requjring from the aovereign country more liberty. Mllllltu nuuondis. For new men, e new social order. To wish tha_t the allqed child remam in its 1Waddling clothe& tum against its nurse and nee, t.earin& away the old rags that bind it. . 1s 10 nsk that 11 may . The ~ilippines, then, will remain under Spanish domina• non, but wtth more law and greater liberty, or lh.ey will declare thesmelves independent after steepin& thenuelws and the mother COlllllry ia blood. As no one should desire or hope for such an unfortunate ~p(ure, which would be an evil for all and only -t he final argument 1n the m05t despenate predicament, let us by what forms of peacdu1 evolution the Islands may remain subjected to the ~panw, autho~ty '. with the very least detriment to the rights, interest, and dignity of both parties. see -m- u the Philippines must remain under the coqtrol of Spain they will neceaarily have 10 be transformed in a political SCll$C' for the coune of their history and lhe needs of their iohabitan~ so reqwred. Thu we demonstrated in the precedln1 anicle. We also said that this transformation will be violent end fetal if it proceeds from the ranks of the people but peaceful and fruitful if u emaoatea from the upper cleMCt' . Som~ g~vemon have reallzed this truth, and impelled by lb.ear P,biotism, have been tryin1 to introduce needed reforms • ill order to foreatall events. But notwitbatandin1 all that have 37' been ordered up to the present time, they have produced scanty resu.lts, for the government as well as for the country Even those that promised only a happy issue have at times caused injury, for the simple reason that they have been based upoo unstable grounds. We said and once more we repeat, and aU will ever assert, that reforms which have a palllanve character are nol only ineffectual but even prejudicial when the government ,s con• fronted with evils that must be cured radically. And were we not convinced of the honesty and rectitude of some go~ernon, ~e would be tempted 10 say that all the partial reforms arc only plasters and salves of a physician, ""ho, not kno,.ing ho"' to cure the cancer, and not daring to root 11 out, Irie~ m this way to alleviate the patient's suffenngs or to temporue "'ith the cowardice of the timid and ignorant All the reforms of our liberal ministers -were, have been, are. and will be good - when earned out. When we tlunk of them , we are renunded of lh.e dieting of Sancho Panza In bi1 Barataria Island. He took lus sca1 at a aumptuous and well-appointed table "covered with fruit and many varieties of food differently prepared," but between the wretch's mouth and each dish the physician Pedro RCZK> inter• po1Cd lus wand, saying, "Take It away'" The dish removed, Sancho was a1 hungry u ever. Truth is that the despotic Pedro Reno gave reasons, which seem to have been wnnen by Cer• vantes especially for the colonial administretions. "You must not cat, Mr. Oovemor, except accorchng to the usage and custom of other islands, where there are governors." Sometlung was found to be wrong with each dish: one wu too hot, another too moist, and so on, just like our Pedro Rezio on both sides of the sea. Great &ood did his cook's skill do Sancho! In the case of our country, the reforms take the place of the dishes, the Philippines are Sancho, while the pan of the quack physician is played by many persons interested in not having the dishes touched, perhaps that they may themselves get the benefit of them. The result is that the Ion& suffenng San<:ho, or the Philippines, misses his liberty, rejects all government and ends up by rebellin1 ageinst his quack physician 317 ln like manner, so long u the Philippines have no liber1y of the press, have no voice in the Cortes to make known to the government and to the nation whether or not their decrees have been duly obeyed , whether or not these benefit the country, all the able efforu of the colonial ministers will meet the fate of the dishes in Barataria Island. The minister, then, who wants his reforms to be reforms, must begin by dedaring the press in the Philippines free and by instituhng Filipino delegates The free pre:ss in the Phillppinea, because their complaints rarely ever reach the Peninsula, very rarely, and if they do they are so secret , so my11erlous that no neW1paJ)<\r dares to publish them, or if 1t docs reproduce them. It docs so tardily and badly. A government that rulu a country from a grtat d4ranct is the one that bas the most need for a free press more so even than the government of the home country, ,r it wishes to rule rightly and filly. The government that goverru in o Cl)Untry may even dispense with the pre,s (if ii can). because it is on the ground, because it has eyes and ears, and because •ii directly observes what it rules and administers. But the government that gov,r,u from afa, absolutely rcquues that the truth ond 1he faC!IS reach its knowledge by every possible channel so that it may weigh and estlma,e them bcuer, and this need increases when a country like the Philippines is concerned, where the inhabitants speak and complain In a language unknbw/1 10 the au1hori11es. To govern in any other way may also be called governing, but it is 10 govern badly, It a.mounts 10 pronouncing judgment after hearing only one of lhc parties; ii 15 stcrring a ship whhoui reckoning its conditions, the state of the sea, lhe reefs and 5hoals. the direction of the wands and currents. 11 is managing a house by endeavoring merely 10 give it poh~h and a fine appearance without watching the money ches1, wi1hout looking after the servants and the members of the family. But routine is a declivity down which many governments slide, and rouhnc says that freedom of the press is dangerous . Let us sec what History says; uprismgb and revolution, have always occurred in countries tyrannl1ed over, m countries where human thought and the human hean have been forced to remain silent. 371 If the .great Napoleoll had not tyranniied over the pre., pcthaps it would have warned him of the pcnl mto wh,ch he wu burled and have made him understand 1hat the people were weary and the earth wan1ed peace. Perhaps his genius, ins1eau of being dia&ipated in foreign aggrandizement would have become intensive in laborina to strengthen his position and 1hw, have IIIIUfCd it. Spain henclf records in her history more revolutions when tlie press was gagged. What colonies have become indepcndcnl while they had a free prep and enjoyed liberty? I) 11 preferable to aovem blindly or to govern with ample knnwledgc 1 Someone will answer !hat In colonies with u free presi. 1h, prestige of the nalers, that prop of false government$. will he greatly imperiled. We answer that the prestige of the nauon " preferable to that of a few indiv1duals. A nation acquire~ rci.pcc1. not by abetting and concealing abuses, but by rebuking nnu punishing them, Moreover, to this prestige is applical>Je what Napoleon said about great men and their valets Who endure and know all the false pretensions and rcuy persecutions of tboee sham gods, do not need a free press in ·order 10 recognize them; they have long ago lost !heir prestige. The free pres~ 1s needed by the government, the government which bllll dreams of the prestige which ii build$ upon mined ground . We say t~e same about the Filipino rcpre!lentauvcb. What risks docs the government sec in them? One of three things, either that they will prove unruly, become poh11cal trimmen, or act properly. Supposing that we should yield 10 lhe most absurd pe~simibm and adm.it the inault, great for the Philippines but sli 11 greater for Spain, that all the representatives would be scpara1is1s and that in all their contentions they would advocate scparM1s1 idea•; doea not a patriotic Spanish majority exist there. is there not present there the vigilance of the aovcrning poweM 10 combat and oppose such intentions? And would not th1~ be better than the clltcontent that fermenll and expands 1n 1hc )CCrecy or the home, in the huts and in the field? Certainly the Spam~h people doea not,'!)ale Its blood where patriotism is concerned hut would not a struggle of principles in parliament be preferable 10 the exchange ofshot in swampy lands, three thou&and league, from · h"IUc in Impenetrable forests, under a burning •un or amid 379 bell.des torrential nina? Tbete pacific ~ of ideal, beiDi a thermometer for the government, have the advantage of being cheap and glorious, because tile SpaniJh parliament especially, abounds in oratorical paladins invincible in debate. Moreover, it is said that the Filipinos are indolent and peaceful - then what need the government fear? Hasn't it any infi11C11ce in the elections? Frankly speaking, 11 is a great compliment to the separatists 10 fear them in the midst of the Cor1es of the nation. If they become ·what they should be, worthy, honest and faithful to their tru.n, they will undoubtedly annoy an ignorant or tncapable mani11er with their. questions but they need him to govern and will need IOtne morr honorable figures among the representatives of the nation Now tben, if the real objection to the Filipino delegates, is that they smeU like lgorots, which so distur.bcd in open Senate the doughty General Salamanca, then Don Sinibaldo de Mas, who saw the Igorots in pc1$0n and wanted to live with them, can affirm that they will smell at worst like powder, and Sei\or Salamanca undoubtedly has no fear of that odor. And if this were ·all, the Filipinos, who there in their own courttry are accustomed to bathe every day, when they become representatives may give up such a dirty custom, at least ~uring the legislative session so as not to offend the delicate nostrilJ of Salamanca with the odor of the bath. It is usele55 to answer certain objections of some fine writen regarding the rather brown skins and faces with somewhat wide nostrils. Questlons or taste ,re _peculiar to each race. China, for example, which has four hundred million inhabitants and a very ancient civilization, considers all Europeans ugly and calls them "fankwai", or red devils. Its taste has a hundred million more adherents than the Europeans. Moreover, if this is the question, we would have to admit 1he inferiority of the Latins, especially the Spaniards, to the Saxons, who ~re much whiter. And so long as it is not asser1ed that the Spanish parliament as an assemblage of Adonises. Antoniuscs, preuy boys, and other like paragons, so long as the purpose of resorting thither is to legislate and not to philosophize or to wonder through imaginary spheres, we malntain that the government ought not to pause at 1hese obligations. Law has no skin nor reason nostrib. 380 So we see no serious reuon why the Philippines may not have representatives. By their institution many malcontents would be silenced, and instead of blaming its troubles upon the government , as now happens, the country would bear them belier, for it oould at least complain and with its sons among its legislators, would in a way become' responsible for their actions. We are no1 sure that we serve the true interests of our country by asking for representatives. We know that the lack of enlightenment, the indolence, the egotism, or our fellow countrymen, and the boldness. the tunning and the powerful methods of those who wish their obscurantism, may convert reform into a harmful instrument Bui we wash to be loyal to the government and we are pointing out to it the road that appears best to us so that its effort may not come to grief, so that discontent may di,appcar. If after so just, as well as necessary, a measure has been introduced, the Filipino people are so stupid and weak that they arc treacherous 10 their own interests, then let the responsibility faU upon them, let them suffer all consequcn«:S Every country gets the fate It deserves and the govenncnt ~n say that it has done its duty. These are the two fundamental reforms which properly iotcYprcted and .applied, will dissipate all clouds, assure affection toward Spain, and make all succcccling reforms fruitful These are the reforms sint quibus nora. It is puerile to fear that independence may come through them. The free press will keep the government m touch w11h public opinion, and the representatives, if they are, a, they ought 10 he. the hest rrom among the sons of the Philippines, will be their hosiages. With no cause for discontent, how then auempt 10 ,11r up 1he masses or the people? Lil.cw~ 1nadmiss1ble is the obligauon uffered by some regarding Lhc imperfect culture of the majority of the mhnb11ants. Aside from the fact that 11 is not so imperfect as as averred. there as no plausible reason wby lhe ignorant and 1he defecnve (whc1he1 lhrouih their Ol!.n or ,mother's fault) should be dented representation m lt>ok after them and i.ce that 1hey arc not abused f hey are the very ones who mos1 need it. No one ceases to be a man. no one [orfcu, Im nglm 10 civilu:auon merely by 381 bei.ag more or lea UJICllltun!d, md Ii.nee the F'"tllpiao ii reprcled .. a fit citizen when be It uted to pay t.ues o r shed hb. blood to defend the fatherland why must lhill filness be denied him when the question arisea of granting him some right? M.oreover , how is he to be held reapomible for his ignorance, when It is acknowledged by all, friend, and enemies that his zeal for lcamlng is so 11ea~ that even before the coming of the Spaniards every one could read and write, and that we now see the humblest families make enormous aacrifices to the einenl of working as aervants in order to learn Spanish? How can the country be expected to become enlightened under present conditions when we aee all 11\e decrees luued by the governmcn1 in favor of education meet with, Pedro Rezio, who prcven1 execution '1¥hereof because they have in their hands what they call educe• lion? Uthe Filipino, then, is sufficiently intell1gent to pay taxes, he must also be able to choose and retain 1he one who looks after him and his in1ereat:s, with the product whereof he serves the government of bis nalion. To re85Qn otherwise is to rc85Qn stupidly When the laws and the acts of officials are kept under surveillance, the word iu11tice may cease 10 be a colonial jest. The thing that makes the English most respected in lheir posses• lions is their strict and speedy justice so that the inhal:>itants repose entire confidence in the judges, Justice is the fore!1'°5t virtue of the civilized ·races. It subdues \he: barbarous nations, while injustice arouses the weakest. Offices and trusts should be awarded by competi1ion, publishing the work and the judgment thereon , so tha1 there may be stimulus and that 'disoontent may not be bred. Then, if the native does not shake off his indolenu he can not complain when he secs all the offices filled by Castilas. We presume that it will not be the Spaniard who fears to enter in this contest, for thu$ will he be able to prove his superiority by the superiority of intelli&ence Although this is not the custom in the sove~ign country, it should be practised in the col.onie&, for the reason that genuine prestige should be sought by me~ns or moral qualities, because the colonizers ought to· be, or at least to seem, uprigbt, honest and intelligent, just as a man stimulates virtues when he deals with stranger. The 382 offices and trusu so earned will do away with arbitrary dismmal and develop employees and officials capable and cogniiant of their duties. The offices held by natives, instead of endangering the Spanish domination , will merely i.erve 10 assure 11, for what interest would Chey have in convening the sure and stable mto the uncertain and problematical? The na1ive 1s, moreover. very fond of peace and prefers a humble present to a brilliant fu1ure. Let the various Filipinos still holding office speak in this matter, they are. the most unJhaken conservatives We could add other minor reforms touching commerce, agriculture, security of the individual and of property. education, and so on, but these are potnts with which we shall deal in other uticles, For the present we 'are satisfied with the outlines and no one can say that we ask too much. There will not be lacking critics to accuse us of Utopianism. but what is Utopia? Utopia was a country imagined by Thomas Moore, wherein e~iated umversal suffrage, religious tolcra11on. almost oomplete abolition of the death penalty and 50 o n When the book was pu'blished these things were looked upon as dreams, impoesibilitics, that is Utopianism Yet c1vihzation ha,\ left the country of Utopia far behind . the human will and conscience have worked greater miTacles, have abolished slavery and lhe death penalty for adullcry - thmgs impossible for even Utopia ilfelfl The French colonies have their reprcscn1a11ves The 4uc,1u111 has also been raised in the English parliament of 111ving rcprc,cnlation to the Crown colonies, lor the others already enioy ,om~ autonomy , The press there i~ also fn:c . Only Spain. which 111 the sixteenth century was the model nation m civili1,11ion, lag, far behind. Cuba and Puerto Ru:o , whose inhah1i..nts do no1 number a thtrd of those of the Philippines. and v.ho ha,·c not made such sacrifices for Spain, have numerou, rqirc...:1u,,tl\n The Philippines in the early days had their,;. Y.ho rnnfom:d with the King and Pope on the needs of 1he country Thci had th~m ,n Spain's crillc:al moments, when she groaned under the Napoleonic yoke, and they did not take advantage ,if the sovereign country's misfortunes like other colonies hut tightened 1nore firmly the bonds that united them 10 the nation. giving proof; of their loyalty and they continued until many yea" later. l~.l Whal crime law tbe Wends commilt'ed that they ere deprived ol their npts? To rec:epitulete: the PhiUppines will remain Spanish if they enter upon the life of law and civilization, if the ri&hts of their Inhabitants ere respected, if the other ripts due them ere granted, if the bberal policy of the government is carried out without trickerv or meanness, without 1ubterfugc1 or flltc interprctadoas. Otherwise, if an attempt is mede to ace in the Islands e lode to be exploited, a resource to satisfy ambitions, thus to relieve 1~ aovereip country of tuee, ltillina the IOOIC that lays the golden egs, end shuttina its eers 10 ell cries of reaeon5 then, however, great maY, be the loyalty of the Filipino.I, it will be Impossible to hloder the operations of the inexorable laws of lu•tory Colonies cstal>lilbed to 1ubserve the policy end the commerce of the sovcrcip country, ell eventually become independent eeid Bachelet, and before Dachelet, ell the Phoenician, Carthaainien, Greek, Roman, En&llih, Portu,uese, end Spanish colomes hed Aid 11. 00K indeed ere the bondl that unite us to Spain. l'No peoples do not bve fo.- three centuries in oontinual contact, 1harin& 1he same lot, &hecldlng their blood on the 11me fielcll, holdina the same bclicb, worshippina the same God, intcrdwla• ina the ,oame idul, but that ties ere formed between them stronger then tbote enpdered by affection. Machiavelli, the great reader of the human heart 1ald: /a ntUUrO •111 """'"1nl, t CMi obligarsr p< II batqiciJ w 1 - co- pn qwlU cM mi ricn,()llo (it is human nature 10 be bound as much by benefits conferred as by those received). All this, and more, Is true but 11 is puirc ..-ntimentelity, end in the arena of politica Item nc0CU1ty and interests prevail. Howsoever much the Filipinos o - Spain, they can not be required to forego their redemption, to have their liberal and enlightened sons wander about in e:lile from their native land, the rudcat asptrations stifled in its atm05phcre, the peaceful inhab.taots living in constaol alarm, with the fortune of the two peoples dependent upon the whim of one man. Spain can not claim, oot even in the name of God himself, that a. millioos of people should be brutalized, exploited and opp, e ned, denied light Md the ngbts inherent to a human being end then ,.m 314 heap upon them allgbta and imults. There ii no claim of gntitude ,hat can exC\IIC, then: ii not eooup power in the world to j~itify the offenses a11inst the liberty of the individual, agam51 the sancthy of tbe home , agetnst the laws, a1ains1 peace and honor, offcnlCI that are ooaurutted then: daily There Ii no dlVlnity ,hat can proclaim the perificc of our dearest arfectiont, the ,)l.:nficc of the family, the sacrileges and WTOnp that are com• ,mued by perscns who have tbe name of God oo their lips No >nc: can require an lfflpoGibdity of the F,bptoo people. The ~oble Spanish people, 10 jealous of IIS rights and liberties, cannot hid the Filipinos to renounce theirs. A people that pri~ itself un the &1orie1 of its past cannot ult another, trained by 11 , to accept abjectiOfl end d111honor 11s own name! We, who today arc stnia&Jing by the legal and peacdul means of debate so understand it, and with our 117e fixed upon our ideals, ,hall not cease to plead our cause, without going beyond the pale of the law, but if violence first silences us or we have the mufortune to fall (which II poGJblc for we arc mortal) then we do not ltoow what course will be 1aken by the numc{OYS tendencies that will 1'\1111 in to occupy the places I.hat we leave vacant. If what we desire II no, real12ed In contemplating ,uch an unfortunate eventuality, we n1us1 '° not tum away an horror, and instead of dosing our eyes ,..c will face what the future may bring. For this purpose. after throwing the handful of dust due 10 Cerberus, let u~ franlth descend into the abys.~ and ~nd its terrible mysteries -IVHistory d~ not record 10 its annals any lasting don11nat1011 exercised by one ~ople over anotMr, of differtnl race., ol diverse asage$ and cll$lorns. or opp0111e and diver,ent t<1eals One of the two had 10 yield and succumb. Either the fore11ner was driven out, as happened in the case of Carthagi • nian,, the Moors and the f~och In Sp1U1, or ct... ,hcse autodlthons had 10 11ve way at1d peruh, as wa the case With the inhabitants or the New World . :sas One of the longest dominations was tbat of the Moors in Spain, which lasted seven centuries. But, even though the conquerors lived in w: country conquered, even though the Peninsula was broken up into small states, which gradually emerged like little islands in the mi<lst of the great Saracen inundation and in spite of the chivalrous spirit, the gallantry and the religious toleration of the califs, they were finally driven out after bloody and stubborn conflicts, which formed the Spanish nation and created the Spain of the firteenth and sixteenth cenuries The existence of a foreign body within another endowed with strength and activity is contrary to all natural and ethical laws Science teaches us that it is either assimilated, destroys the organism, is eliminated or becomes encysted Encystment of a conquering people is possible, for it signifies complete isolation, absolute inertia, debility in the conquering element. Encystment thus means the tomb of the foreign invader. Now applying these considerations 10 the Phibpp,nes, we must .oonclude, as a deduction from all we have said. that if their population be not assimilated to the Spanish nation , if the dominaiors do not enter into the sp,rii oC their inhabit.ints, iC equitable laws and free and liberal reforms do not make each forget 1ha1 they belong to different races. or if both peoples be 1101 amalgamated to consrnute one mass, socially and politically, homogeneous, that is, not harrassed by opposing tendencies anti antagonistic ideas and intcrcstS some da~ the Phihppiner- will fatally and infallibly declare themselves independent. To this law of destiny can be opposed neither Spanish patrionsm, nor lhe love of all Filipinos for Spain, nor the doubtful future of dismemberment and intestine strife in the Islands themselves. Necesity is the most powerful divinity the world knows , a nd necessity is the resultant of physical forces ~t m operation by ethical forces. We have said and ~tatistics prove that it is impossible lo ,:Jllenninate the Filipino people. And e ven were II possible whal interest would Spain have m the dcs1ruct1on of the ,nhabi1ant, of a country she can not populate or cultivate, whose dimal<: is to a certain extent disastrous to her? Whal good would 1he Philippines be without the Filipinos? Quite otherwise, under her colonial system and the transitory character of the Spamardi. who JO to the colonies, a colony is 110 much the more useful and productive to her as it possesses inhabitants and wealth . Moreover, in order to destroy the six million Malays, even supposing them lo be in their infancy and that hey have never learned to fight and defend themselves, Spain would have 10 sacrifice at least a fourth of her population. This we commend to the notice of the partisans of colonial exploitation. But obthing of this kind can happen . The menace 1s that when the education and liberty necessary 10 human eJustence are denied by Spain to the Filipinos, then they will seek cnhghtl'n ment abroad, behind the mother country's back or lhcy will secure by book or by crook some advantages m !heir countl\· with the result that 1he_opposition of purhlind and parc11t p ,t,1,cians will not only be futile but even prejudicial hcc.. u"" 11 will convert motive$ for love and gratitude into resentment and hatred. Harred and resentment o n one side. nustru,t and anger uu the other, will finally result in a "iolcnl terrible collr~11m. ,-,,pt·• cially when there e~ist elemen1s intercs1cd m hav,n!! d1s1urbancc~. so that they may get something in the exc,t<!ment. demon,lratcs their mighty power, fos1er lam~n1ation, Jnd rccrrm,n.111urh or employ violent measures. Jt is to be e,pected th~1 the: J!Ovcrnmen1 will triumph and be generally (as ,s tb1.. cuslom) severe 111 pu11"hment, either io teach a stem lesson in order to vaurH 11, · rrn!llh or even ro revenge uppqn 1hc vanqu'<hecl th<.' ,rdl, 1,f cx,·,1cmcn1 and terror that the danger caused it. An unavoid~hlc ~~mromllant of th0$C catastrophies is the accumulation ot acts ol m1u,ucc committed against the innocent and peaceful mhabitnnt~ Pm•t~ reprisals, dem1nc1ation, despicable accu~ahon~. rcwntmcnl~. covetousness, the opportune moment for calumnv. the ha~te and hurried procedure of the court martial, the: pretext of 1hc ,ntcgrnv of the fatherland and the safety of the Mate "'hich cloak~ and justifies everything, even for scrupulous minds, which unfortu• aately are still rare and above all the panic•Slncken 11mid11y. the cowardice that battens upon the conquered - Jll these 1h,ng, augment the severe measures and lhe number of 1he victims The result is that a chasm of blood is then opened between lhe rwo peoples that the wounded and the sfOktcd, instead of becoming fewer, are increased, for to 1he famihcs and friends of the guilty, who alway~ think the punishment excessive and 337 tbe jlldge unjust, must be added the families and friends of tbe innocent, who see no advantage in living and working submilsively and peacefully. No~e. too, lhat if seven measures are dangerous jn a nation made up of a homogeneous population, the peril is increased a hundred-fold wben the aovemment is formed a race different from the governed. In the Conner an in1usttce may still be qc:ribed to one man alone, to a governor actuated by personal malice, and with the deach of the tyrant the Vletiorn is reconciled to the government of bis nation. But in a country dominated by a foreign race, even the jmtcst act of severity is construed as. injustice and opprCS5ion, because it is ordered by a foreigner, who is unsympathetic or is an enemy of the country, and the offense hurts not only the victim but his entire race, because it is not usually regarded as pcnonal and so the resentment naturally spreads 10 the whole governing race and does not die out with the offender. Hence the great prudcm:e and fine tact that should be excrased by colonizing countries, and the fact that government regards rhe colonies in genera.I and our colonial office in particular, as training schools, contributes notably to the fulfillment of the great law that the colonies sooner or later declare ibemselves independent. Such 1s the descent down which the peoples arc precipitated. In proportion as they are bathed in blood and drenched in tears and gall, the colony. if it has any vitality, learns bow to struggle and perfect itself in fighting while the mother country whose colonial life depend$ upon peace and the subnussion of the subJects. is constantly weakened and even though she makes he roic effo~. as her numb« is le~ and she has only a ficnuous C'1~tcncc, she finally peri~hcs. She is hke the rich voluptuary accu~omeJ to be waited upon by a crowd of servants toiling and planting (or him and who on the day his slaves refuse him obedtence, as he doc, not hve by his own efforts, must cite. Rcpri.sah, wrongs and suspieioru on one part and on the other the sentiment o f patriotism and liberty, which is aroused in these incessant conflicts, insurrections and uprisings, operate to generalize the movement and one of the two peoples must succumb. The struggle will be brief, for it will amount to a slavery much more cruel than death for the people and to a ditbooorable loa of pcatige lor the dominator. One of the peoples must succumb. Spain, from the number of her inhabitants, from the coodition of her army and navy, from the distance she is situated from the Islands, from her scanty knowledge of them, and from struggling against a people whol!e love and goodwill she bas alienated, will necessarily have to give way, if she does not wish 10 nsk not only her other possess,ons and her future to Afnca, but at.a her very independence m Europe. All this is at the cost of bloodshed. and crime, after mortal conflicu, murden , con.flagrarions, military execuuons, famine and misery. The Sparuard is gallant and patriotic, and sacnliccs everything m favorable moments, for hu country's good. He bas the intrep,dity of his bull. The Filipino loves bis country no ICS5 and although he is quieter, more pcaa:ful and with diffiailty stirred up, when he 1s once aroused he does not hesitate and for him the struggle means death to one or the other combatant. He has all the meekness and all the tenacity and ferocity of bis carabao. Climate aff~ bipeds in the same way that it does quadrupeds The tcmblc lessons ano the hard teaching., that these confl,ctJ. will have afforded the F"tlipinos will operate 10 improve and ~trcngthc,n their ethical nature. 1be Spam pf the fifteenth century v..us not the Spain of the c,ght With their biller experience instead of mrestine conflicts or some islands against others, a, 1s generally feared, they will extend mutual support, like ,h11>1H<'cked person, when they reach an "land after a fearful n1ih1 of storm 'for may it be said that we shall partake of the f.nc ,,r the small American republics. They achieved their indepcntlcncc cJsily and thetr tnhabitants arc anunated by a different ,pint from v..ha1 the Fihp1nos arc. Besides the dnngcr of fallmg again into other hands, English or German, for example, will foru the Fihp1nos 10 be sensible and prudent. Absence of any great preponderance of one race over the others will free their imagination from aU mad ambitions of domination, and as the tendency of countries lhat have been tyrannized over, when they once •hak~ off the yoke, il. to adopt the freest government, like a boy leaving school, hkc the beat of the pendulum, by a law of reaction the lslaods will probably declare themselves a federal republic. If the P1tilippines aecure their independence after heroic and stubborn conflicts, they can r<:$1 assured !hat neither England nor Germany, nor France, and stilJ less Holland wi)I dare IO take up wbal Spain has been unable 10 hold Within a few years Africa will completely absorb the attention of the Europeans, and there JS no sensible nation which, in order 10 secure a group of poo_r and hostile wands, will ncglcc, 1he immense 1eni1ory offered by tho Dark Continenl, untouched, undeveloped and almo,,. undefended. England has enough colonies in the Orient and I not going to sacrifice her Indian Empire for the poor l'h1ltpr1nc lslandlo - if she bad entertained such an intention she would not have restored Manila in 1763, but would have lcpl some point IA the Philippines whence she might gradually c pand Moreover, what need has John Bull the tr.ider to exhaus1 himself over the Philippines, when he is already lord of 1he Oncn1, when be bas tltcre Singapore, Hongkong and Shanghai? II " probable that England wtll look favorably upon the indcpen• dence of the Philippines. for it will open 1hc1r ports to her and afford grea1er freedom to her commerce. Furthermore. there exis1 in the United Kingdom le.ndenacs and opinions to the cffeC1 that ~he already has too many colonic~. that they arc harmful, tbal lhey greatly weaken the sovereign coun1ry. For the ~ame reasons Germany will not care to run any risk , and because a scattering of her forces and a war in distant countries will endanger her existence on the con1inent. Thus we see her attitude, as much in the Pacific as in Africa. is confined to conquering easy territory 1hat belongs to nobody. Germany • avoids any foreign complications. France has enough to do and sec more of a future in Tongking and China. besides the fact that the French spiri1 does no1 shine in z.cal for colon1u1ion. France lov~ glory, bur the glory and laurels thar grow on rhe battlefields of Europe. The echo from battlefields in thc: Fear East hardly sa1isfies her craving for renown, for i1 reaches her qwte faintly. She has abo other obhgallons, both internally and on lhc conrmem Holland is sensible and will be con1ent to keep the Moluccas and Java. Sumatra offen her a greater future than the Ph1hpp1ncs whose seas and coasts have a smister omen for Dutch expeditions 390 Holland proceeds with 11cat caution in Sumatra and Borneo from fear of losing everything. Olina will consider herself fortunate 1f she succeed~ m keeping herself intact and i.s nor dismembered or part111oned among the European powers that are colomzmg the conuncnt of Asia. The 5a111c is true with Japan On 1he north side she has Russia, who envies and watches her. on the south England. with whom she is 1n accord even to her official language. Sh<• " · moreover, under such diplomatic pressure from Europe thar she can no1 think of ourside affairs until she is freed from 11. ,.h,ch will not be an easy matter. True ll 1s lhal she has an exec~~ of popula1ion, but Koren atrracts her more than rhc Philippines and is also easier to seize. Perhaps the great American Republic. whose intcresrs he io the Pacific and who has no hand in the spohauon uf Afnc.i may some day dream of fore,gn posse,sion This is not impo"il>k for the example is contagiou\, covctousne<~ and ambition arc among the srrongest vices, and Harrison manifested ,;omcth1ng of thd sort 1n the Samoan quesuon Bui the Panama CMal 1s nor opened nor 1he tcrri1ory of rhe Stare, c<>ng,..,tcd w,th mh11t>11ants, and in case she should openly ancmpt 11 the f.-uropcan powers would 001 allow her 10 proceed. tor rhey know ,c" well that the appcrite is ~harpcncd b) the fir..t b11cs N<>rth J\mcr,c,, would be quite a troublesome rival. ir she should .,n,c (?<:I into the business. Furthermore. this is contrary to her 1rad1t1<>ns. Very likely the Pbilippmes will defend v.1th mcl(prc"il>lc valor the liberty secured ar the pnce of i.o much hlood ,,nJ sacrifice. With the new men thal will ,pring from 1he1r soil and with the recollee1ion of their past, they will perhap, ~tn.,.e 10 enter freely upon the wtde road of progres.. and ,di v.111 labor toge1her 10 srrengthcn 1hcir fatherland, both mtermllly .md c~1cr nally, with the same enthusiasm, with which a yourh fall, :t)(a1n to tilling the land of his ances1ors so long wasted arul abandoned through rhc ncglcc1 of those who have withheld II Imm h,"' Then 1hc mines will be made to give up their gold for rchcvmr distr=, iron for weapons, copper. lead. and coal Perhaps the country will rev,ve 1he manllme and mcrcanttlc hfe for which the islanders are fitted by thetr nature, abilny and 1n,1mct,, and 191 ooce aore free, like die bird tbat lea- its ca,c, lib die ftoweilhat unfoldl to the air, will n:,c:o,n:r the p, mue .lrtuQ that an gradually dyina oat aad Will aca,n become lldcbcted to peace cheerful, happy, joyOQS, bolpitable and daring . 11lcsc and many other th1np may come to p.. within something like • huodrcd ycan, but the IIIOII locicaJ p;ujpJOitication, the prophecy hued on the best probabtli'-, may en through remote and imipi6can1 calllCS: An octupus that aeiz.ed Mark Anthoay's ship alttted the faoe of the world ; a aoa on Calvary and a just taa11 nailed lbcreon changed the ctrua of half the hum&D l'IICle, and yet bcf~ <llrill, lilow many just men wroa.gly pcruhed and bow many cronn were raued on that hill! lbc dealb of the JIISI sandilied bis wort and made Ills tevhJna unanswcnbk. A wnkcn road at the bank ol Waterloo buried all the gloncs of rwo brilliaot decadea, the whole Napoleonic world, and freed &rope. Upoa wbat chPN'C ICC'WCD~ will the destiny of the Philippieee depeod? 110e11Nd ,,. ot beloa uaitor., DMd) becauae - loft om OCMllry beca- - tel ti.ec the tr\lUI and bate all tiDdl al iaj fr. Wbat dost thoo - h 111 to tell Ol&f ~chcd country wbea it ub about the result of our • ~ ? Mast - say to i1 tba1, since for it we have lost cverythina- youlh, fu!Ure, bopc:, peace, family; since in its service we have exhausted all the raovces of hope all the dssill11$iOM of desire, 11 also tatcs the rcudue which ~ can nol use, the blood &om 0111 veiM aod the ltrdlgt.b left in our arms? Spalll, mlllt we aome day tel Filii " • that thou hast no car for her .,,ics and that ii lbc wiahca to be aavcd , lhe must rcdccal llenctrr' -ti- Nc¥Cl1klca, • ia DOt wdl to U.. ID IC . ht•. for there ii an ~ aad ~ b l e lope ia die WC'd· p of hi 1 :;. NI Mefy, peel\ lei U wdl a eo,u ?JI I arc aabj ec:b to it, 'Therelo«, - rq,eat and - will :q,eat, wllle dlen-. ii time, and that ii better to tccp pace will! die dairc ol a pcopc than top way~ 1km; die b bcpls .,..,.,..7 and lcne, the latter coata:rpt ad ana,cr Siacc it ii nec:eauy to pao1 m million their nctaca• ., that dley -Y be in fact Spanianll, let Ille aove. rt snot dieK nchta freely and lf)Ol'l•oeo-llly . without dan.aa;ac 1W1Vatiom, widlollt inil&WIC millnal . We lball oew:r UR of repeating lb.is while a ny or hope II left •• for •e prder tlw 1t'lpfeeuo~ wt •o the Deed of some day .., . , to the eodier -try: •Spun, have apco• OW' youth io servin& thy interests in the ioteretU of OUI COl&Rtry; ba•e lootc:d to u-. - have expended the whole lialit of o.r intdlecta, all the fen« aod cnthusialm of 0111 beans ID worlti.Qg for the aood of what thine, to dnw froco them a glMOC ol ltwc, e hllcral potic:y end tbat would 8MWC Ill the peace of our nauve land and thy IWllY over loyal but ullfonunate nlenda' <;pain, thou but tTmaioed -leaf, aod, wrapped a.p ID thy pride, ~ punued thy fataJ coune and F"...,_,. ,,, APPENDIX F LAST FAREWELL Let the moon beam o,,er me soft and serene, Let the dawn abed over me its racbant Oubes, Let the wind with the sad lament over me keen; ADd if on my Cl'O$$ a bird should be seen Let it trill there its hymn o( peace of my 3$hts. FarewcU, dear Fatherland, dime of the ,un caress'd, Pearl of the Orient seas. our Eden lose• Gladly now I go to g,ve thee tlu$ faded life's best. And were II bnghtcr. fresher, or more blest. Still would I give it thee nor count the C05t Let the sun draw the vapor., up to the sky. And heavenward in purity bur my tardy protest, Let some kind soul o'er my untimely fate sigh. Atld in the Still evening a pta)cr be hftcd on high From thee, 0 my country, that in God I may res1 On the field of baltle, "mid the frcnry of liaht, Others have gi,·en lhc,r lives. wnhout doubt or heed; The place mauer. n,,c - cnxes.s or laurel or hly ,.,h,tc, Scaffold or open pr.un, combat or mal1)rdom'< plight, 'Tis ever the same, to serve our home and country's need. Pray for all those that hapless have died, For all who line suffered the unmeasur'd pain; For our mothcn that bttlerly their woes ha•e rncd, For widows and orphans, for captives by torture tned; Atld then for thyself that redempuon thou ma)st ga,n I d,e j0>1 when I see the dawn brealt, Through the 1lnom of night. to herald chc day: And if color is l.ckmg my blood chou shah take. Pour'd ouc at Med for thy dear ,ake To dyc wtth Its crimson the wakmg ray Atld when the darl rught wraps the grave,ard around. With only lhe dead in their "'"' to see, Break not my repocse or the mysterv profound And perchance thou mayst hear a sad hymn resound. 'Th I, 0 my country, raising a wng unto thee. My dream,, when lifc fi,-.1 opened to me, My dreams, when che hopes of youth beat high Were 10 see th) lov'd face, 0 gem of the Oncn, sea From gloom and grid, from care nnd sorro" free, No blu,h on th} brow, no cear in thine eye When even my grave is remembered no more, Unmark'd by never a cross or a stone; Let the plow sweep through it, the spade turn u o'er That my ashc5 may carpet thy earthy 0oor Before intq nodtingoess at last they are blown Dream of my life, my bvmg and bummg des1rc. All hail' enc, 1hc soul that is now "' 1&ic·n11h1, AU hail' And s•ect 11 •s for Chee 10 cxp,re To die for chy sake. 1h~1 chou mayst aspire. And sleep ,n lh) bosom c1ern1t) ·, IMtt n1gh1 1bcn will obbY10n bring to me no care; As over thy vales and plains I sweep, Throbbing and cleansed in thy space end 1ir. With 001or and Ught, with song and lament I fare. Ever repeallng th~ faith that I keep If o,·cr my ,1rn,c some d:ay thou ~ct:,, grov.· My Fatherland ador'd that gdness 10 my som,v. lcnil>. Beloved rilipioas. hear now my laSI good-bye' I give thee all; parents and kindred and fnends; For I So where no slave before the opprcs.sor hend,, Where faith can never kill. and God reigns e'er on high' In the grassy sod. a bumble 0ower. Draw ii 10 thy hps and l,s., my ..,,ul <0. While I may feel on mv bro" m che col<I to.,.,h t-.:11,,. 'ihc touch of th, cendcmcss , thy breath's ..,arm I""'"' t.,. •Eng1•sh 1ran,.t,1,on b'f Ctt.r• E. 0.rbyttlire This•• m<>"il oopv1,, and Wsdefy reeogniHd or the 21 lrnown Engt,,h trantJllfOn.s of Ruat's Ultimo Ad;o, h should bt.: nor.ct thlC the orig ,._. farPWell poe,r. w,s w 1t10u1 • t,1'4 Ind was uns,g.ned It Wll'.IJ$ Falhe-t Mar~nc- Dacanay. f1l1p no pnes1 oatr,ot wtlo 9,,ve tho t 11, Utt/mo Ad,as 1.111 r1,~1ll1 .-nd 1.1no.., 1uch 1 He the ooem .,,..,;n publ :shed ,~ ,he first time ,,, U Jndependencv CGen Anton,o uin, • ,,..,;,ptp •t) on ~ ,Ollmbef 2!>, 1198 Fuewcll 10 you all. from my soul tom away. Friends of my childhood in the home dt>po<>esscd! Give thanks that I rest from the v,e~momc ,lav' Farewell to Lhcc, too. sweet fncnd. that hghtc~ed mv Beloved creatures all, (are,..cll1 l11 death then: " ""t' "J\ ,