Rizal and THE Underside of Philippine History
Rizal and THE Underside of Philippine History
Rizal and THE Underside of Philippine History
THE
UNDERSIDE
OF PHILIPPINE
HISTORY
Reynaldo
Ileto
Introduction
⬗ Philippines appeared transparent and knowable, a natural
consequence of being colonized for some 400 years by Spain and
America
⬗ Hispanization of the Phil. by John Phelan (1959) made us
review drastically the supposed effects of Spanish conquest.
⬗ 1872 - shift in consciousness from blind acceptance of Spain's
presence to an awareness of the causes behind the people's suffering
public execution of 3 reformist priests
⬗ 1872 to 1896 & 1898(revolution) - a nationalist spirit is born in
the struggle for independence
⬗ 1890 - introduction of Rizal: Filipinos had to move forward by being
aware of their origin "usable past" in effect privileged the status of
the illustrados-- liberal-educated elite that viewed itself as among
2
The power of king
bernardo
⬗ Bernardo del Carpio
- Spanish legendary hero
- King of the Tagalogs hidden or imprisoned
within a sacred mountain
- Haring Bernardo or San Bernardo
⬗ About a boy of enormous strength and limitless
energy who grows up unable to control or focus
these powers
3
⬗ Bernardo was separated from his parents
and was brought up by surrogates.
⬗ He served the king of Spain but remains brash
and uncontrolled during his youth.
⬗ He eventually learns to control his powers
and use them more effectively during the
events that lead him to reuniting with his parents.
⬗ Bernardo single-handedly liberated the
Spanish from French domination soon after
knowing of his parents’ identities.
4
Bernardo represents the
Filipinos
who fell from an original state of wholeness, came
under the domination of surrogates, and remained in
a state of darkness and immaturity until they
recognized their true mother again.
27
halus - "is to a certain extent covered by
Benedict the idea of smoothness, the quality of not
being disturbed, spotted, uneven or
Anderson
discolored"
“The treacherous men Jesus demonstrated fully
said His Divinity
Jesus of Nazareth and absolute kapangyarihan
Jesus Christ’s reply was, upon his mysterious
ego sum you are after utterance
It is I, he said, I. they all lost their loob.
29
⬗ In 1888-1892:
- Rizal’s writings during this period instill to many Filipinos pride in the
precolonial past.
- Rizal wanted these Filipinos to act, helped organized the movement
La Solidaridad.
⬗ 1889: Rizal has been considered as the second Jesus who will liberate
the people from misery.
⬗ In 1892:
- June 1892: Rizal was back in Manila, a week of freedom before his
arrest.
- Armed struggle is initiated by Bonifacio with the founding of the
Katipunan.
- Rizal founded La Liga Filipina, alongside with Bonifacio, a
warehouseman and a great admirer of Rizal.
--- When Rizal was deported to Dapitan, Bonifacio began to
30 organize segments of La Liga into revolutionary Katipunan.
WHY IS BONIFACIO NOT CONSIDERED AS
NATIONAL HERO?
⬗ Bonifacio was only named “Father of
Revolution”, for without him, Philippine
revolution would not became a reality at a time
when everybody seemed despair without doing
anything about it.
⬗ Rizal’s philosophy of education before Philippine
independence was a fitting rationalization of the
U.S. policy “benevolent assimilation”.
⬗ Rizal represented the aspirations of the emergent
31
The Meanings of Death
⬗ Context of Philippine rural life: faith healers,
seers, and possessors of powerful anting-
anting
⬗ Rizal
· Strong belief that he would not reach the age
of 30 when he was a just a boy
· Dreams of death
· Preparing himself for death
32 · “Laong Laan (Ever Prepared) is my real
Peasants of
Laguna
⬗ Rizal as the lord of a kind of
paradise in the heart of Mount
Makiling
“Dying is not an extinction of
self but a passage into a state
of pure, brilliant potency”
33
Why is the
dream of
1890
important?
Death of Jose Rizal
⬗ Sketch
o “The Agony in the Garden”
⬗ Notes
o “This is but the first station”
35
Trial
⬗ Rizal as “the soul of this
rebellion”
⬗ Dreamed of power, pomp, and
circumstance
⬗ As a superior being whose
sovereign commands are
obeyed without question
36
⬗ Governor-General
o Rizal as “the great agitator of the Philippines
who is not only personally convinced that he is
called to be the chose vessel of a kind of
redemption of his race, but who is considered by
the masses of the native population to be a
superhuman being”
⬗ Judge advocate general
o The idol of the ignorant rabble and even of
more important but equally uncultured individuals
who saw this professional agitator a superhuman
37 being worthy to be called the supremo
Manuel Alhama
⬗ Rizal tried to look serene,
composed
⬗ Rizal’s impending execution
quickly spread
⬗ Rizal refused to be brought
to the execution site in a
military wagon
38
⬗ Lakarin
o “We are walking the way to Calvary. Now,
Christ’s passion is better understood. Mine is very
little. He suffered a great deal more. He was nailed
to a Cross; the bullets will nail me to the cross
formed by the bones on my back.”
⬗ Serenity and self-control
⬗ Final words
o “Father, I forgive everyone from the bottom of
my heart.”
39
⬗ Dawn breaking in the east
⬗ Mi Ultimo Adios (My Last Farewell)
o Written on the eve of his death
o Repeating the extended Paalam scene in the
pasyon
o Parents, relatives, beloved, Motherland
Filipinas
⬗ Francisco Laksamana (Katipunan veteran,
1911):
o In 1896, when Rizal met his death, it is the
turn of the people to go willing to their deaths
40
⬗ December 1897 (Mahalagang Kasulatan)
o “The word named Jose Rizal, sent down by
heaven to the land of Filipinas, in order to spend his
whole life, from childhood, striving to spread
throughout this vast Archipelago, the notion that
righteousness must be fought for wholeheartedly.”
⬗ La Independencia and El Heraldo de la
Revolution (late 1898 and early 1899)
o Descriptions of the commemoration of Rizal’s
death in various towns
⬗ Batangas: “which made them recall the desert of
sorrows traversed by the Christ of our pueblo.”
41
Rizal’s Death as Re-enactment
of the Passion Story
⬗ Miguel de Unamano calls Rizal “the Tagalog
Christ suffering in the garden of Gethsemane”.
“Is Rizal’s death simply a re-enactment of the
passion story, although in different scale, the
expression of modern anticolonial sentiments in the
Christian idiom of self-sacrifice and salvation?”
⬗ Christ in the pasyón relates more to the halus
satria of Javanese mythology than to Spanish
models.
42
⬗ The signs Rizal shed looked equally to the past.
He fell lifeless at Bagumbayan and entered
the realm of pure potency.
He had arisen or would soon arise from his
garce and he had gone to Bernardo Carpio’s
cave.
He had gone to Mount Banahaw to join
another martyr Fr. Jose Burgos.
Rizal’s spirit could be reached for cured and
43 advices.
Rizal’s Death as Central Events
of the Revolution
⬗ Death in the Battle – personal loyalty to leaders
or plain fanaticism.
Speaks of the revolution as the pasyón if
Inang Bayan (mother country) in which all of
her sons participate; Rizal was the model of
this behavior.
Veterans of Katipunan were known as “men
of anting-anting”. Like other relics of the war,
they were sediments of a powerful time and
44 Rizal was the prime source of this power.
Problem of the Early Southeast
Asia
⬗ Landscape was highly decentered, with many
small states and regional identities existing in
isolation and in endemic conflict among
themselves.
⬗ Problem: How to extend social ties and create
more complex identities.
⬗ Unification was made possible when Hinduized
men made a correspondence between their
superior spiritual property and atman by
45
participating in the god Shiva’s sakti.
⬗ Not only did the pre-Spanish chiefs attributed
their prowess to divine forces but also many
rebel leaders.
⬗ Rizal as “center”
He is a product of colonial order who heralded
the birth of modern Southeast Asian
nationalism.
Signs he scattered like gestures, works, even
his absences and his death generated
46 meanings that linked narratives of the
⬗ In a country without a tradition of hierarchy, Rizal
became the necessary center, the “ancestors”
being the source of kapangyarihan for leaders of
peasant movements against both foreign and
local oppressors.
Lantayug proclaimed himself as reincarnation
of Rizal
Flor Intrencherado claim as emperor of the
Philippines and his powers were derived from
Rizal and Fr. Jose Burgos and the holy ghost
Indeed, so much of what undergirds present
historical writing will have to be brought to light
47 and challenged be imagined that these peasant
48