JR'S Childhood: His Birth, Ancestors, and Family Name Rizal
JR'S Childhood: His Birth, Ancestors, and Family Name Rizal
JR'S Childhood: His Birth, Ancestors, and Family Name Rizal
Education
1. Devotion to religion
Rizal grew up a devoted Catholic.
At an early age, he began to take part in the family and Catholic prayers.
Manong Jose
4. Artistic Talents
Sketches with his pencil, mould in clay, and wax objects
Turned a spoiled religious banner into a better one
Appreciates the art in this world
The incident about his clay and wax images
First poem by Rizal
Wrote a Tagalog comedy
6. In his solitude
Listened to the birds
Happy moonlit nights at the azotea
Reflect on the mistreats of Spaniards
Misdeeds awakened his boyish heart to fight tyranny
Daily life in Binan
To My Fellow Children
Background
From an early age, Jose Rizal displayed a great talent for various forms of
art such as sketching and sculpturing. It was also apparent early on that he had a
great skill for writing and literature. He practiced by writing verses on loose
pieces of paper and the textbooks of his sisters. He was also encouraged in his
poetic pursuits by his mother. Rizals first poem was Sa Aking Mga Kabata
which he wrote at the age of eight.
Message
This poem is a display of Rizals nationalism and love for his country. He
uses the poem to extol the virtues of the native tongue. He also uses his verses
as an opportunity to voice his concerns for the Filipino people, particularly asking
them to pursue liberty as well as admonishing those who feel no love for their
mother language.
Analysis
a) Stanza 1
Rizal praises language here as he calls the language of a country
as something heaven-sent. He goes on to say that loving ones native
tongue goes hand-in-hand with a desire for liberty and freedom for their
nation. He then uses the imagery of a bird flying into the sky as a symbol
for the pursuit of independence.
b) Stanza 2
Here Rizal places the highest degree of importance on language,
calling it the final judge of a nations people. What Rizal is trying to
impart here is that the true value of a people can be derived from its
language. He sees this power of language in all the people of the world
who were born free and aspires to the same freedom for his fellow
Filipinos who were oppressed by Spain at the time.
c) Stanza 3
Rizal uses this stanza as a rebuke and as a challenge. One of his
most famous quotations, he brands those who do not love their native
language as a smelly fish, or malansang isda. He looks down upon those
who feel this way, seeing them as less than human. He proposes that all
people should strive to enrich their native tongue. He emphasizes the
magnitude of this responsibility by using the image of a mother feeding her
infant to demonstrate his point. Like mothers to their young, we, the
people, must devote our time and efforts towards developing our native
tongue in order for it to flourish.
d) Stanza 4
Rizal defends Tagalog, his native language, as the equal to any
other, whether it may be Latin, English, Spanish, or even the language of
the angels. Here Rizal reiterates his ideas from the first stanza, how
language is a gift from heaven. He sees all languages as a blessing from
God and as such, they must all be valued equally.