Towards A Radical Rizal
Towards A Radical Rizal
Towards A Radical Rizal
Floro Quibuyen
http://www.philippinestudies.net
Fri June 27 13:30:20 2008
Towards a Radical Rizal
Horo Quibuyen
class is the Philippines' national hero, Dr. Jose Rizal, who "repudi-
ated the Revolution [and] placed himself against B O N ~ ~ Cand ~ O those
Filipinos who were fighting for the country's liberty." Because of
Rizal's anti-revolutionary stance, argues Constantino, "the general
regard for our revolution is not as high as it otherwise would be.
On the other hand, our understanding of Rizal and his role in our
national development remains superficial." Constantino, thus, blames
the Filipinos' misplaced veneration of Rizal as the key factor in their
lack of understanding and disregard for the Philippine Revolution.
But how did the people of the ~nete?XIth century perceive events?
Indeed, apropos of Agoncillo, what are the "historical facts"? What
was the nineteenth century reading of Rizal and the Philippine revo-
lution? We cannot simply presume a conflict of perspectives between
the illustrados and the masses, much less, uncritically presuppose a
homogeneity of perspectives, of theory and practice, among the
illustrados. What is needed is a "critical praxis hermeneutics" of the.
nineteenth century nationalist movement. Rather than re-viewing past
events from contemporary perspectives (whether Marxist or other-
wise), this article proposes to judge the d m t i s personae, the social
movements, and events of the nineteenth century in the iight of the
cultural milieu of the period-the Volksgeist, the standards and val-
ues of the people during that time. This is the critical interpretive
(hermeneutic) question.
As a theoretical handle to this interpretive task of analyzing the
problem of the nationalist past, specifically, the question of Rizal and
the masses in the Philippine Revolution framed within the politics
of decolonization, we rely on the G r a d concept of hegemony.
The term hegemony recurs in a multitude of contexts throughout
Gramsci's Prison Notebo6ks. However, as observed by T. J. Jackson
Lears (19851, the one that comes closest to a definition is Gramsci's
(197l, 12) oftquoted characterization of hegemony as:
26 January 1887
A peaceful struggle shall always be a dream, for Spain will never learn
the lesson of her South American colonies. Spain cannot learn what
England and the United States have learned. But, under the present
cixumstances, we do not want separation from Spain. All that we ask
is greater attention, better education, better government [officials], one
or two representatives [in parliament], and greater security for persons
and our properties. Spain could always win the appreciation of Filipi-
nos if she were only reasonable. But, qrcos olcU p & r c Jupiter, prius
dementat! (44).
in shaking off the yoke [of Spain entirely] since we should not obtain
[assimilation] and wen if we did (which is almost impossible) we
would work for independence,banding together, making ourselves into
apostles to gain men and money. For all this much study, a great deal
of tack and prudence and no boasting of our shength, will be required.
. . .
. . I think you understand me well enough. . I shall go, then, to
Manila and in all my acts keep ever in mind my duty as a separatist.
. . . You already have then (if these are your own ideas) a follower
around here who will work with constancy (Guemro 1%3,309).
From our first conversations I also gathered that the political campaign
we were then waging in the metropolis was not bad, rather it was
even suitable to justify our attitude when the day would come to work
for our separation. Moreover, it was good propaganda in the Philip-
pines so that our countrymen would realize that all our w t i o n s and
peaceful campaign to obtain freedom had reached their limit and had
been futile (Alzona 1971, 233-34).
From these lines, we can see the beginning of the Rizal-Del Pilar
conflict which eventually exploded into a major crisis in the Filipino
community in Spain .
In the Noli Me Tmgere (written during his first sojourn in Europe),
and prior to 1887, Rizal, like his fellow expatriates, had made a clear
distinction between .the Spanish government and the religious orders,
still holding hope for reforms from an enlightened government
(Ikehata 1989,91). But three mapr events that occurred after the Noli's
publication precipitated Rizal's turn to a more radical politics. The
most crucial of these was the Calamba hacienda case, which began
RADICAL RIZAL
shortly before Rizal's second departure for Europe (1888) and ended
in 1891, with the eviction, arrest and deportation of many Calarnba
tenants, including members of Rizal's family. The other incident, a
demonstration that got subdued as soon as it started, happened on
1 March 1888. It is consided by Coates (1968, 158) as "the first
public outcome of the influet~ceof the Noli," "an event of singular
significance known a s the Manifestation of 1888, when the
gobernadorcillos of Manila (the appointed head of the city's wards)
presented the Civil Governor with a ctition demanding the expul-
sion of the friars from the Philippines." The govenunent responded
by declaring the petition subversive a:.d arresting the petitioners,
twenty-eight of whom were promptly jailed. When Rizal learned of
how the Madrid Senate responded to tt-is travesty of justice in the
colony, he wrote bitterly to Blumenhitt:
23 June 1888 (London)
I believe that it is already late; the maprity of the Filipinos have al-
ready lost the hope they have pinned on Spain! Now, we await our
fate from God and from ourselves, but never any more from any Gov-
ernment! ( R h l Blumcntritt, 172).
Some days later, Rizal reiterates his point, connecting the current
struggle with the earlier movement of Burgos, which included Rizal's
brother Paciano:
PHILIPPINE STUDIES
Calamba townsfolk into submission, as had bear the case in the past,
the Dominican reaction galvanized them into a united front in defense
of their rights. It was the first time, notes Coates (1968, 167), that a
whole town in the Philippines resisted the powers that be. After Rizal
left again for E w p e (he did not want to, but he was urged by his
family and townmates to leave, for his and their own safety), it fell
upon Paciano and his brothers-in-law, "to advise and lead a strug-
gle which, in view of the power against which it was pitted, was
desperate and almost certainly hopeless" (167). When the Justice of
the peace court of Calamba ruled in favor of the tenants, the Do-
minicans brought the case to the Supreme Court in Manila, which
immediately deCided in the Dominicans' favor. The Calamba tenants
and the Rizal family, thus, had no recourse but to appeal their case
to the Supreme Court in Madrid. Unfortunately, when the conserva-
tive General Valeriano Weyler became the new Governor-General in
May 1888 (replacing the liberal General Terrero), he cast his lot corn:
pletely with the Dominicans One of his first acts was to enforce the
court-ruling for the eviction of the tenants. The first to fall was the
Rizal family.
This standard account cumes from the Rizal biographies by Coates
(1968) and by Guerrero (1963). It does not, however, give us a
glimpse of the political motivations of the Rizal family in spearhead-
ing the struggle against the Dominican corporation. A very reveal-
ing insider's account of how Rizal and his family thought and felt
about the Calamba hacienda case is given by their legal defender,
Felipe Buencamino, a highly v t e d lawyer in Manila. Buencamino
writes in his memoir (Sixty Yams of Philippine Histoty)7 that he de-
cided to m v e himself as the legal counsel for the Rizal family
when he realized that Rizal had a more radical agenda in resisting
the Dominicans, who after all were willing to come to a settlement,
but only with the ring-leaders, namely, the Rizals.
Buencamino relates that he took over the case from the Rizals'
original lawyer, Don Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista, who backed out
for fear of being denounced by the Dominican friars. Notwithstand-
ing what he was up against, Buencamino accepted the case, assured
by his friendship with all the magistrates of the Royal Audiencia of
Manila and with the Marquis of Ahumada, general segundo cabo [the
immediate head of the army and second in command to the captain
general and governor] of the Philippines at that time. As the Rizal
familfs lawyer, Buencamino immediately discerned Rizal's agenda:
RADICAL RIZAL
Dr. Rizal then conceived the first noble political thought of open hos-
tility to the clerical system of government that reigned in the country.
He advised his own parents as tenants of the Calamba estate not to
pay the friars' canon under the principle of their not being owners of
the estate. Following this action of Rizal's parents refusing to pay
canon, the friars sued them for ejectment. But what was behind Dr.
Rizal's idea was that he thought that the action of his parents would
be seconded by all or at least by the maprity of the tenants not only
of the Calamba estate, but also of the neighboring friars' estates in the
towns of Santa Rosa, BiAan, San Pedro Tunasan, Muntinlupa, Imus,
Tanza, and San Francisco de Malabon with their about 70,000 inhabit-
ants. Dr. Rizal thought that the thousands of tenants sued by the fri-
ars would call the attention of the government towards the friars'
abuses of usury and despoliation (1%9, 14).
private point of view, but from the political point of view. In other
words, he was pushing the Fapino people to the brink of a revolu-
tion through the simple act of the tenants8 refusing to pay the friais'
canon for their supposed estate which, to Dr. Rizal, were all plundered
in the manner he described the plunder of these estates in his famous
politico-sod book El F i l h s f m h o .
I told therefore Dr. Rizal's family that I could not under any manner
continue their defense because it would be useless for the object that
Dr. Rizal proposed (15). ,
The parents of Rizal, who refused to vacate their home, were bod-
ily carried out, their furniture and valuables thrown out of their
house. Henceforth they would live in Binondo, Manila, not far from
where Andres Bonifacio lived. When B0~faci0formed the Katipunan
after Rizal's arrest and deportation in 1892, two of Rizal's sisters
became members of the Katipunan's women's auxiliary? See the ac-
count of Rizal's grandniece, Asuncion Lopez Bantug, Lolo Jose; An
Intimate Portrait of Rivll (1982, 196, 199). The houses of those singled
out as ringleaders were destroyed, many burned to the ground. The
head of .the Rizal family, the seventy-eight-year old Don Francisco,
together with his eldest son, Paciano, and sons-in-law, Silvestre
Ubaldo and Antonio Lopez, were deported to the island of Mindoro.
What they did to Rizal's mother was worse, as Rizal himself recounts
to Blumentritt-
30 December 1891
They sent her from Manila to Sta. Cruz in La Laguna by mountain
road, going from town to town, because she did not identify herself
as Realonda de Rizal but simply as Teodora Alonzo! But she has al-
ways and always called herself Teodora Alonzo! Imagine an old
woman of more than sixty-four, going up and down mountain roads
with her daughter, guarded by constables! She asked to be allowed to
travel by steamship, offering to pay everything, even the constables'
fares, but the noble and Spanish 'gentlemen' did not allow it! (Guerrero
1%3, 298).
While this carnage was going on, Rizal was in Madrid, armed with
a power of attorney from Paciano, lobbying in behalf of the unfortu-
nate tenants, and representing his family in their final appeal to the
PHILIPPINE STUDIES
July 1890
I am thinking of returning [to the Philippines] as soon as possible, and
let'God say what is to happen. Graciano should do the same; instead
of going to Cuba& catch the yellow fever, he should go to the Phil-
ippines and let himself be killed in support of his ideas. .. . If one
must die, let one die at least in his country, for his country and in the
name of his country (Guerrero 1%3, 288-89).
RADICAL R U A L
7 October 1891
Not only ideas but whole articles have been printed in the Soli which
are against my opinions and convictions and I cannot make the fort-
nightly inconsistent. I prefer to enclose myself in solitude and retire-
ment rather than disturb the peace and harmony of the staff.
I have made up my mind how 1 should act, and that is to leave
the Filipinos in Madrid to direct policy, they know and understand it
so well (Guerrero 1%3, 269).
31 March 1892
How distressed I am to learn from your letter that over there you are
surrounded by opposition which prevents you from canying out your
ideas, instead of finding around you the solid support of those who
.
seem to love their native land . . this effete generation that precedes
us and which ought to pass away soon, still wants to leave us this
dismal legacy of slavery. It is because theu ideas of patriotism and
liberty are not dear, being influenced by the abominable considera-
tion of interest and family. . . . Now, it only remains for us to prevent
that such conservative ideas which are never patriotic, spread among
the youth and the next generation, for otherwise the salvation of our
native land would become an insoluble problem (RiLol-fellow reform-
ists, 667-68).
By late 1891, Rizal had burned his bridges to the Madrid reform-
ists. A surviving fragment of a letter, dated October 1891 and signed
La'ong Man [Ever Prepared]:
If our countrymen hope in us here in Europe, they are certainly mis-
taken. . . . The help we can give them is our lives in our own coun-
PHILIPPINE STUDIES
try. The error alI make in thinking we can help here, far away, is a
great mistake indeed. The medicine must be brought near to the sick
man. Had I not been unwilling to shorten the lives of my parents, I
would not have left the Philippines, no matter what happened. Those
five months I stayed there were a model life,a book wen better than
the Noli me tangere. The field of battle is the Philippines; there is where
we should be (Schumacher 1973, 233).
23 February 1892
What did we obtain fmm the campaigns of La Solidaridad, except
Weylerisms, the Law on Bandiby and the tragedy of Kalamba? It seems
to nre to parley with the government is only a waste of time (Guerrem
1%3, 313).
While in Hongkong, Rizal considered all his options and planned
his next moves, one of which included establishing a Filipino colony
RADICAL RIZAL
The split between Rizal and Del Pilar, as well as the horror of the
Calamba incident, inevitably led to the demise of the Propaganda
Movement in Spain. As to be expect&, after Rizal withdrew from
La Solidaridad, convinced that the only mcourse was to come home
and wage a more militant struggle, the bright lights of the paper such
as Antonio Luna and Graciano Lopez-Jaena abandoned Del Pilar.
Notwithstanding the dogged efforts of Del Pilar to keep it going, La
Solidaridad eventually declined. Ilustrado financial backers in the
Philippines withdrew their support out of disillusionment, after they
had witnessed the Calarnba military atrocities. Del Pilar, however,
held on tenaciously until 1895, when the Cornite de Propaganda in
Manila, which had'been sending the funds, bluntly told him, through
Mabini, to close shop. Mabini wrote to Del Pilar, in no uncertain
terms, that Filipinos have transferred their hopes "to another direc-
tion" and have lost any expectations for the magazine, to which Del
RADICAL RlZAL
Pilar, at his wits end, replied with "uncontrollable rage and protes-
tations" (Ikehata 1989, 97). Them is an apocryphal story that in his
deathbed, shortly befom the outbreak of the revolution, Del Pilar fi-
nally embraced the separatist cause, his last words were reportedly:
"Insurrection is the only solution." This, however, is disputed by his
biographer, Lea Zapanta (1967; cited in Ikehata 1989, 80) who de-
clares that there is no evidence whatsoever for this story.
A misunderstanding had arisen concerning the Rizal-Del Pilar con-
flict, in which, contrary to fact, Rizal was viewed as the assimilationist
and Del Pilar the separatist. According to Coates (1968, 195, n.11,
"Part of the reason for this misunderstanding is due to the fact that
Del Pilafs relatives were prominent members of the Katipunan, and
found themselves later in a position to assert that on the contrary it
was their relative who was the progressive and Rizal the waverer.
This was not how it was seen in 1891."
Coates' observation, seconded by Schumacher (19731, Ikehata
(1989), Salazar (19831, and Corpuz (19891, is born out by Apacible's
testimony. In a speech he delivered at the University of the Philip-
pines during the observance of Rizal's birthday anniversary in 1935,
the 71-year old erstwhile member of the Rizal faction recalled:
In the famous election that lasted three days held in Madrid by the
Filipino colony to elect a Responsabk, a Filipino who would direct and
be responsible for the Philippine policy in Europe, there were two can-
didates: R i l and Marcelo H. del Pilar. Many of us who supported
Rizal's candidacy did so on the conviction that Rizal was a separatist
and the more radical one (Alzona 1971, 236).
.-.
Agondlb and Constantino Nationalism
Having laid down the historical context for Rizal's separatist per-
spective, we can now clarify the theoretical confusions and
historiographic errors of Agoncillo and Constantino. These flaws
spring from a dichotomizing and essentializing mind-set which com-
pulsively pits elite consciousness and politics against those of the
masses/subalterns. This mind-set ultimately explains*the failure of
both Agonallo and Constantino to understand the nature of Filipino
nationalism, specifically, the hegemonic process in the forging of the,
nation.
Agoncillo's dichotomizing pdilection leads him to construe the
Liga and the K a t i p ~ ~ asnpolitically and ideologically poles apart.
This is simply not true. Though short-lived, the Liga's impact, both
organizationally and ideologically, on Bonifacio's Katipunan was fun-
damental. The political platform of the Liga became, through the lead-
ership of Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto, the ideological cornerstone of
the Katipunan (Majul 1960; Guerrero 1963). In his annotations to
Morga, Rizal set down three theses: 1) that the people of the Philip
pines had a flourishing culture before the coming of the Spaniards;
2) that the Filipinos were decimated, demoralized and mined by
Spanish colonialism; and 3) that the present state in the Philippines
was not in all ways and necessarily superior to their past. These the-
ses, developed further in ha IndoZencia de 10s Filipinos and FilipiMs
Dentro de Cien Aiios, became the basis for recruitment to the
Katipunan To be accepted as a full-pledged member, the recruit must
answer correctly three questions 1) What was the condition of the
Philippines before the coming of the Spaniards? 2) What was the
effect of Spanish colonization? 3) Wherein lies the future of the Phil-
ippines? To pass this initiation test, the recruit must answer in ac-
cordance with the .theses laid down by Rizal.
Agonallo also obscures the fact that the founding members of the
Katipunan came from the Liga's ranks. The Katipunan has been r e p
resented by Agoncillo (1956, 1)as a "distinctively plebeian society!'
Agoncillo describes Bonifacio as "almost illiterate" and "belong[ing]
RADICAL RIZAL
to the lowest class" (283-84). But was Bonifacio a plebeian, let alone
illiterate? His father had sewed as Tondo's teniente mayor (vice
mayor). His p a m t s had enough means to send him to a private tutor
in the locality (Manuel 1955, 253). As a young man, Bonifacio was
literate enough in Spanish to be employed successively by two mul-
tinational firms then operating in Manila, Fleming & Co. and Fressel
& Co., as an "agent" and "brokef (de 10sSantos 1973,85). Bonifacio's
wife, Gregoria de Jesus, was the daughter of a landed gobernadorcillo
of Calo6can. Thus, Fast and Richardson (1979, 70) write that Bonifacio
"occupied a position closer to the center of the social pyramid than
to its base, closer to the petty-bourgeoisie than the proletariat." The
same thing can be said of virtually all the founding members of the
Katipunan (who were also founding members of the Liga). In fact,
two of Katipunan's founding members were from rich families. Pio
Valenzuela, the Secretary General of the Katipunan, obtained his li-
centiate in Medicine from the Universidad de Santo Tomas. His par-
ents "belonged to the local aristocracy of Polo, Bulacan." Restituto
Javier, another founding member, was the son of a Tondo property
owner. Emilio Jacinto, "the Brains of the Katipunan," and Ladislao
Diwa were both graduates of Colegio de San Juan de Letran and law
students at the Universidad de Santo Tomas. Clearly, the leadership
of the original Katipunan was not from the ranks of the "pobres y
ignorantes." In the Magdiwang and Magdalo factions of the
Katipunan in Cavite, the leadership was mostly from the landed lo-
cal elite, principales and schoolteachers. This pattern is replicated in
all the seven other provinces which figured in the Philippine revo-
lution (Fast and Richardson 1979; Guerrero 1977; Ochosa 1989).
There is of course nothing extraordinary about this. Virtually all
the nationalist movements and revolutions in the eighteenth and nine-
teenth centuries in Europe and in the Americas, as well as the more
contemporary liberation movements in the Third World were inspired
and led by middle class intellectuals--what Constantino would call
ilustrados. Of course many of the counter-revolutionaries also sprang
from the ranks of the bourgeoisie. But this only goes to show that
the bourgeoise, as Schumacher (1991) has pointed out is not a ho-
mogenous class, either in wealth or political persuasion. The same
thing can be said of their counterparts in the much earlier (1810)
Mexican revolution-the letrados and criollos like Miguel Hidalgo and
Ignacio Allende. Some ilustrados were extremely wealthy and be-
longed to the far right of the political spectrum among the Filipinos.
This highly privileged native elite never advocated independence and
PHILIPPINE STUDIES
were the first to shift their allegiance to the United States when it
became clear that the Revolution had been defeated. The first Fili-
pino members of the Philippine Commission, which governed the
Philippines after the American conquest, came from this wealthy and
conservative sector-Jose Luzuriaga, Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera,
Benito Legarda--and so did the rest who filled the native slots in
the American colonial bureaucracy. Others, though not as wealthy,
had enough means to study in universities, locally or abroad, even-
tually becoming the country's first professionals (doctors, engineers,
pharmacists, lawyers) and businessmen. These other ilustrados be-
came active participants of the revolution, such as Generals Antonio
Luna, Jose Alejandrino, Edilberto Evangelists, Mamerto Natividad,
Miguel Malvar, Pio Valenzwla, Vicente Lukban, and of course, Rizal's
brother, Paciano, etc. Who can accuse any of these ilustrados of be-
ing anti-revolutionary like their richer counterparts? Compare the
fortunes of these two segments of the ilustrado and see how
Constantino's misleading generalization arises from his gross abuse
of the term.
Is Constantino's essentialist notion of the ilustrado as a class cat-
egory meaningful at all? Apolinario Mabini was born poor and re-
mained poor all his life, but he was the legal luminary in m i d e n t
Aguinaldo's cabinet, and a highly educated and intellecwy sophis-
ticated writer. Was he not an ilustrado? Emilio Aguinaldo, on the
other hand, was from a cacique family, which played a prominent
role in Cavite local politics. Emilio's father had served several times
as town gobemadorcillo and he himself, like his brother Crispulo
before him, had served as cupitan municipal of his town. But Emilio
Aguinsldo was a school dropout, having failed his courses at Colegio
de San Juan de Letran His h w l e d g of Spanish was mediocre; thus,
he had not even bothered to read Rizal's novels (as he himself later
admitted). Was Aguinaldo an ilustrado? Schumacher (1991,252, n.12)
writes, "Though coming from a well-to-do landowning family,
Aguinaldo spent three years unsuccessfully at San Juan de Letran
College and with private tutors, yet never really learned Spanish
well."12 Bonifacio, T h e Great Plebeian," in contrast, had read exten-
sively, not only Rizal's writings, but also the histories of the Ameri-
can and French revolutions. On top of these, Bonifacio had the
distinction of being the first Filipino to translate Rizal's Mi Ultimo
Adios into the vernacular. Who among them was the ilustrado, the
land-owning but semi-literate capitan municipal Aguinaldo, or the
RADICAL R E A L
Notes
1. A good introduction to Craaned's ooncept of the "national-popular" is David
Forgaa' "National-papk Genealogy of a concept," in The C d h d S M k s RcPdrr
(1994). See also Ephrah Nimni's chspter 4 "Gramsd and the National Question" in
his k b m ond N ~ i s (1%). m
2. Unless otherwise indicated, quotations of Rizal's comeqxmdence are taken from
the JoseRizal NatiolrPl Centennial Commidon @UKOEnglish edition of Rizal's cor-
respondenae: Vol. II, Book 2 Parts 1 and 2, for "Ihe RizaCBumentritt correspond-
ence" (cited as RbLBlmcntdt); d Val. II, Book 3, for "Rizal's correspondence with
~~
fellow reformists" (cited as rrfonnists).
RADICAL RIZAL
3. See Del Pilafs major work, Im Sobcrenm Monacnl (1889); Monastic Saamignty
(1957) has both the Spanish text and Encamadon Alzona's English translation.
4. Del Pilar had two reasons: 1) he was escaping pemcution for his anti-friar ac-
tivities; 2) he was delegated by the Comitc & Propp~& an organization of reform-
minded ilustrndos in the Philippines, to set up La Solidaridpd. See John Schumacher (1973).
5. Jose Ma. Basa figured in the earlier anti-friar campaign which led to the execu-
tions of the three se& priests, Gomez, Burgos, and h o r a in 1872, and to the
deportations of suspected ilwtrPdos. Basa, who was among those deported, eventu-
ally settled down in Hong Kong.
6. See Chapter 10 of Leon Ma. Guerrero's Thc Fint Filipino (1%3) and Part 3, C h a p
ter 3 of Austin Coates' R i d . Philippine Nationalist and Martyr (1968).
7. Felipe Buencamino's memoir was originally written in Spanish. It was trans-
lated into English by Alfonso Lecaros and published by the Philippine Historical A s
sociation in 1%9 (with notes by Mauro Garaa) to commemorate the 110th Birthday
Anniversary of Buencamino. The 1%Q edition, however, does not indicate the date in
which ~u&caminofinished writing his memoir.
8. See the account of Rizai's grandniece, Asunaon Lopez Bantug, Ldo Jose: An In-
timate Portrait of R i d (1982, 1%; 199).
9. For a background to the Rizal-Del Pilar conflict, see John Schumacher (19731,
especially Chapter X, "Rizal Breaks With Del Pilar."
10. Rorentino and Alberto were a cousin and an unde, respectively, of Rizal's
mother.
11. "Voices crying in the dessert where all are lost" (Rizal Centennial Commission
translation).
12. For a background on Aguinaldo, see: Jonathan Fast and Jim Richardson (1979);
Nick Joaquin (1977); Carlos Quirino, (1%9); and Emilio Aguinaldo (1967).
References
Cited references:
Agoncillo, Teodoro A. 1956. The revolt of the masses: The story of Bonifacio and
the Katipumn. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press
. 1%0. h4alolos: Crisis of the Republic. Quezon City: University of the
Philippines Press.
PHILIPPINE STUDIES