Rizal PMF
Rizal PMF
To:
Head of State Colleges and Universities
Head of Private Schools, Colleges and Universities
Office of the President Memorandum Order No. 247
Re: Implementation of Republic Act No. 1425
1. Enclosed is a copy of Memorandum Order No. 247 dated December 26, from the Office of the
President of the Philippines entitled, "Directing Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports and the
CHAIRMAN OF COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION to fully implement the Republic Act No.
1425 entitled "An Act to include in the curricula of all public and private schools, colleges and
universities, courses on the Life, Works and Writings of Jose Rizal, particularly his novels, Noli Me
Tangere and El Filibusterismo, authorizing the printing and distribution thereof and for other purposes"
for guidance of all concerned.
2. Strict compliance therewith is requested.
(sgd) MONA D. VALISNO
Commissioner
Officer-in-Charge
The main cause of the administrative system was the appointment of officials with inferior qualifications,
and without dedication to duty, and moral strength to resist corruption for material advancement.
These officials were given duties and powers and privileges.
Another is the Union of the Church and the State.
The principal officials of the Administrative system obtained their position by royal appointment, while the
rest of the position were either filled by the governor general himself or were sold to the highest bidder.
POLITICAL SYSTEM:
Spain governed the Philippines through the Ministro de Ultramar (Ministry of the
Colonies) that was established in Madrid on 1863. This body helped the Spanish
monarch manage the affairs of the colonies and govern the Philippines through a
centralized machinery exercising:
Executive
Legislative
Judicial and
Religious powers.
The Governor General appointed by the Spanish monarch headed the central administration in Manila, He
was the king’s representative in all state and religious matters and as such he exercised extensive powers.
He issued executive orders and proclamation and he had supervision and disciplinary powers over all
government officials. He was the commander in chief of the armed forces of the Philippines. He had supreme
authority in financial matters until 1784. He also exercised legislative powers with his cumplase. Cumplase is
the power of the Governor-General to disregard or suspend a Royal decree if the condition in the colony does
not warrant it.By which he could disregard or suspend any law or royal decree from Spain. An ex-officio
president of the Royal Audiencia until 1861. He enjoyed religious duty gave him the prerogative to nominate
priest to ecclesiastical positions and control the finances of the missions.
POLITICAL STRUCTURE DURING SPANISH REGIME
In terms of its Political Structure, Spain governed the Philippines through the Ministro de Ultramar.
Ateneo de Manila / Escuela Pia and College of San Juan de Latran - only school offering secondary education
in the Philippines
At the end of the Spanish period, the College of San Juan de Letran was the only official secondary school
in the Philippines although secondary education was offered at the Ateneo de Manila. Seven provinces had
private colleges and Latin schools for general studies, and Secondary Education for girls was furnished by
five colleges in Manila. These are:
Santa Isabel
La Concordia
Santa Rosa
Looban
Santa Catalina
Up the end of the Spanish regime, the University of Santo Tomas was the only institution in the University
level of Manila. Initially established solely for Spaniards and mestizos, it opened its doors to Filipino students
for decades before the end of the Spanish rule.
FELIPE BUENCAMINO
In 1820, he led the petition criticizing the Dominican methods of instruction in
UST, clamored for better professors and demanded government control their
University thru anonymous letters.
Jose Rizal’s patriotism is shown in this poem where he urges his fellowmen to strive and work for their country
whether in war or in peace. This poem was originally written in Tagalog as Imno sa Paggawa.
Noli Me Tángere
One of the most sought-after books in Philippine literature until today, is Rizal’s famous novel titled Noli Me
Tángere (Touch Me Not). Driven by his undying love for his country, Rizal wrote the novel to expose the ills
of Philippine society during the Spanish colonial era. At the time, the Spaniards prohibited the Filipinos from
reading the controversial book because of the unlawful acts depicted in the novel. Yet they were not able to
ban it completely and as more Filipinos read the book, it opened their eyes to the truth that they were being
manhandled by the friars. In this revolutionary book, you’ll learn the story of Crisostomo Ibarra, how he dealt
with Spanish authorities, and how he prepared for his revenge, as told in Rizal’s second book, El
Filibusterismo.
El Filibusterismo
This is Rizal’s sequel to his first book, Noli Me Tángere. In El Filibusterismo (The Reign of the Greed), the
novel exhibits a dark theme (as opposed to the hopeful atmosphere in the first novel) in which it depicts the
country’s issues and how the protagonist attempts a reform. The story takes place 13 years after Noli Me
Tángere, where revolutionary protagonist Crisostomo Ibarra is now under the guise of Simoun – a wealthy
jewelry tycoon. Because the novel also portrays the abuse, corruption, and discrimination of the Spaniards
towards Filipinos, it was also banned in the country at the time. Rizal dedicated his second novel to the
GOMBURZA – the Filipino priests named Mariano Gomez, Jose Apolonio Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora who
were executed on charges of subversion. The two novels of Rizal, now considered as his literary
masterpieces, both indirectly sparked the Philippine Revolution.
The Birth of National Consciousness
Filipino Nationalism
Filipino Nationalism is an upsurge of patriotic sentiments and nationalistic ideals in the Philippines of the 19th
century that came consequently as a result of more than two centuries of Spanish rule and as an immediate
outcome of the Filipino Propaganda Movement (mostly in Europe) from 1872 to 1892. It served as the
backbone of the first nationalist revolution in Asia, the Philippine Revolution of 1896.
The Creole Age (1780s-1872)
The term 'Filipino' in its earliest sense referred to Spaniards born in the
Philippines or Insulares and from which Filipino Nationalism began.
Traditionally, the Creoles had enjoyed various government and church
positions—composing mainly the majority of the government bureaucracy
itself. The decline of Galleon Trade between Manila and Acapulco and the
growing sense of economic insecurity in the later years of the 18th century
led the creole to turn their attention to agricultural production. Characterized
mostly in Philippine history as corrupt bureaucrats, the Creole gradually
changed from a very government-dependent class into capital-driven
entrepreneurs. Their turning of attention towards gild soil caused the rise of the large private haciendas.
The earliest signs of Filipino Nationalism could be seen in the writings of Luis Rodriquez Varela, a Creole
educated in liberal France and highly exposed to the romanticism of the age. Knighted under the Order of
Carlos III, Varela was perhaps the only Philippine Creole who was actually part of European nobility. The
court gazzette in Madrid announce that he was to become a Conde and from that point on proudly called
himself 'Conde Filipino'. He championed the rights of Filipinos in the islands and slowly made the term
applicable to anyone born in the Philippines. However, by 1823 he was deported together with other creoles
(allegedly known as Hijos del Pais), after being associated with a Creole revolt in Manila led by the Mexican
Creole Andres Novales.
Varela would then retire from politics but his nationalism was carried on by another Creole Padre Pelaez,
who campaigned for the rights of Filipino priests and pressed for secularization of Philippine parishes. The
Latin American revolutions and decline of friar influence in Spain resulted in the increase of the regular clergy
(friars) in the Philippines. Filipino priests were being replaced by Spanish friars and Pelaez demanded
explanation as to the legality of replacing a secular with regulars—which is in contradiction to the
Exponinobis. Pelaez brought the case to the Vatican almost succeeded if not for an earthquake that cut his
career short and the ideology would be carried by his more militant disciple, Jose Burgos. Burgos in turn died
after the infamous Cavite Mutiny, which was pinned on Burgos as his attempt to start a Creole Revolution
and make himself president or 'reyindio'. The death of Jose Burgos, and the other alleged conspirators
Mariano Gomez and Jacinto Zamora, seemingly ended the entire creole movement in 1872. Governor-
General Rafael de Izquierdo unleashed his reign of terror in order to prevent the spread of the creole
ideology—Filipino nationalism.
But the creole affair was seen by the other natives as a simple family affair—Spaniards born in Spain against
Spaniards born the Philippines. The events of 1872 however invited the other colored section of the Ilustrado
(intellectually enlightened class) to at least do something to preserve the creole ideals. Seeing the
impossibility of a revolution against Izquierdo and the Governor-General’s brutal reign convinced the ilustrado
to get out of the Philippines and continue propaganda in Europe. This massive propaganda upheaval from
1872 to 1892 is now known as the Propaganda Movement. Through their writings and orations, Marcelo H.
delPilar, Graciano Lopez Jaena and Jose Rizal sounded the trumpets of Filipino nationalism and brought it
to the level of the masses. Rizal’s Noli me tangere and El filibusterismo rode the increasing anti-Spanish
sentiments in the islands and was pushing the people towards revolution. By July 1892, an ilustrado mass
man in the name of Andres Bonifacio established a revolutionary party based on the Filipino nationalism that
started with ' los hijos del pais'—Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan. Ideology turned into revolution and gave
Asia its first anti-imperialist/nationalist revolution by the last week of August 1896.
WEEK 2
Causes of the Awakening of the Filipinos’ National Consciousness
The opening of Manila (1834) and other parts of the Philippine to foreign trade brought not only economic
prosperity to the country but also a remarkable transformation in the life of the Filipinos. As the people
prospered, their standard of living improved. They came into contact with foreign ideas and with travelers
from foreign lands. They read periodicals and books, including those brought in from abroad. As a result,
their mental horizons were broadened. They became discontented with the old order of things and wante d
social and political changes that were in harmony with the freer spirit of the times.
Economic prosperity produced a new class of Filipinos–the intelligentsia–educated, widely read, and
enlightened individuals. Many Filipinos had learned Spanish, and some knew other Western languages such
as French, English, and German. Boldly patriotic, they discussed social and economic problems and
advocated reforms to remedy the evils of colonialism. Many of them sent their children to colleges and
universities not only in Manila but in Europe too. From the intelligentsia came patriotic leaders who sowed
the seeds of Filipino nationalism. Among these were Father Pedro Pelaez, Father Jose Burgos, Dr. Jose
Rizal, Marcelo H. delPilar, the Luna Brothers (Juan and Antonio), Jose ma. Panganiban, Mariano Ponce,
Graciano Lopez Jaena and Pedro A. Paterno.
Through the newly opened ports of the Philippines streamed liberal and modern idea. These ideas were
contained in books and periodicals brought in by ships form Europe. These included ideas of freedom of the
American and French revolutions and enlightened thoughts of Montesquieu, Rousseau, Voltaire, Locke,
Jefferson, and other philosophers of freedom. The Filipinos began to wonder at the deplorable situation in
the Philippines. In their minds sprouted the aspirations for reforms, justice, and liberty.
The opening of the Suez Canal which was built by Ferdinand de Lesseps to world shipping on November 17,
1869, linked the Philippines closer to Europe. It promoted the flow of ideas of freedom into the Philippines.
Opening of the Philippines to world trade from 1834 to 1873
This stimulated the economic activities in the country which brought prosperity to some of the Filipinos but
most of all to the Chinese and the Spaniards. It resulted to the rise of a new social class referred to as “Middle
Class” or the “Illustrados”.
With the opening of the Philippines to world trade, European ideas freely penetrated the country in form of
printed books, newspapers, and treatises made available to the natives as they participated in the process
of exchange of goods and products. The new knowledge and current events they learned and acquired
outside affected their ways of living and the manner of their thinking.
The Rise of the Middle Class
The middle class or the Illustrado family sent members of their family particularly male children to study
abroad. These students would be exposed to European thoughts and would later lead in call for reforms
Filipino patriots and propagandist mostly came from this class.
Opening of Suez Canal
The Suez Canal was created by a French engineer named Ferdinand de Lesseps.
This man-made canal made transportation easier, making the transfer of goods and ideas better and faster.
With the opening of this canal, the distance of travel between Europe and the Philippines was significantly
shortened and brought the country closer to Spain. With this canal, the trip was reduced to only 32 days. The
opening of the Suez Canal facilitated the importation of books, magazines and newspapers with liberal ideas
from Europe and America which eventually influenced the minds of Jose Rizal and other Filipino reformists.
Political thoughts of liberal thinkers like Jean Jacques Rousseau (Social Contract), John Locke (/two
Treatises of Government), Thomas Paine (Common Sense) and others entered the country (Maguigad &
Muhi 2001; 62).
The opening of this canal in 1869 further stimulated the local economy which give rise—as already mentioned
above--to the creation of the middle class of mestizos and illustrados in the 19th century. The shortened
route has also encouraged the ilustrados led by Rizal to pursue higher studies abroad and learn liberal and
scientific ideas in the universities of Europe. Their social interaction with liberals in foreign lands has
influenced their thinking on politics and nationhood.
Liberal Regime of Carlos Ma. Dela Torre
The first-hand experience of what it is to be liberal came from the role modeling of the first
liberal governor general in the Philippines—Governor General Carlos Ma. Dela Torre. Why
Govenor Dela Torre was able to rule in the Philippines has a long story. The political
instability in Spain had caused frequent changes of Spanish officials in the Philippines
which caused further confusion and increased social as well as political discontent in the
country. But when the liberals deposed Queen Isabela II in 1868 mutiny, a provisional
government was set up and the new government extended to the colonies the reforms they
adopted in Spain. These reforms include the grant of universal suffrage and recognition of
freedom and conscience, the press, association and public assembly. General Carlos Ma. De la Torre was
appointed by the provisional government in Spain as Governor General of the Philippines (Romero et al 1978:
21).
The rule of the first liberal governor general in the person of General de la Torre became significant in the
birth of national consciousness in the 19th century. De la Torre’s liberal and pro-people governance had
given Rizal and the Filipinos during this period a foretaste of a democratic rule and way of life. De la Torre
put into practice his liberal and democratic ways by avoiding luxury and living a simple life. During his two -
year term, Governor De la Torre had many significant achievements. He encouraged freedom and abolished
censorship (Maguigad & Muhi 2001: 63). He recognized the freedom of speech and of the press, which were
guaranteed by the Spanish Constitution. Because of his tolerant policy, Father Jose Burgos and other Filipino
priests were encouraged to pursue their dream of replacing the friars with the Filipino clergy as parish priests
in the country (Zaide 1999: 217).
Governor De la Torre’s greatest achievement was the peaceful solution to the land problem in Cavite. This
province has been the center of agrarian unrest in the country since the 18thcentury because the Filipino
tenants who lost their land had been oppressed by Spanish landlords. Agrarian uprisings led by the local
hero, Eduardo Camerino, erupted several times in Cavite. This agrarian problem was only solved without
bloodshed when Governor De la Torre himself went to Cavite and had a conference with the rebel leader.
He pardoned the latter and his followers, provided them with decent livelihood and appointed them as
members of the police force with Camerino as captain.
It was during his term as governor general that freedom of speech was allowed among the Filipinos
De la Torre was a well-loved leader because he was concern with the needs of the natives
He ordered the abolition of flogging as punishment for military disobedience
He implemented the Educational Decree of 1863 and the Moret Law which delimit
The secularization of educational institutions and allowed the government to take control among
different schools and academic institutions.
NATIONALISM
According to Gellner, “nationalism” is not the awakening of nations to self- consciousness: it invents nations
where they do not exist. The drawback to this formulation, however, is that Gellner is so anxious to show that
nationalism masquerades under false pretences that he assimilates “inventions” to “fabrication” and falsity,
rather than to “imagining” and creation.
RIZAL AND NATIONALISM
Acquiring a better understanding of Rizal’s life demands a deeper and more profound analysis of his life and
writings. His firm beliefs were the results of what he had seen and experienced during his European days.
Thus, to clear up vague thoughts about him requires a glimpse into his past. Rizal was one of the elites who
demands changes in the Philippine government during the Spanish colonization.
Together with his other ilustrado friends, Rizal voiced the inclusion of Filipinos as representatives in
the Cortes.
Filipinization in churches and equal rights were among the requests made by Rizal to the Spanish
government.
Rizal fought for equality with the Spaniards. Rizal and his fellow ilustrados wanted to acquire the same
education and wealth as the Spanish students and families in the Philippines have.
The unheard cries of the natives and the increasing fame of Rizal fueled revolts in the country. The na tives
organized groups and continued to engage in bloody battles to acquire reforms and democracy. Rizal’s
writings made a huge impact on the minds of the native who wished to break free from the abuses of the
Spaniards. When Rizal was imprisoned, numerous plans to break him out of jail were initiated by the revolting
group but none of them prospered as Rizal preferred to engage in a bloodless battle for independence.
The dilemma that Rizal faced was depicted in his two famous novels, the Noli and El Fili
In Noli Me Tangere, Rizal was represented by both Elias and Ibarra.
In the chapter, “Voice of the Hunted,” Elias believed in the need for radical reforms in the armed
forces, priesthood, and administrative justice system. While, Ibarra did not agree with the reforms
Elias wanted and believed in the power of the authorities and the need for necessary evil.
In the chapter, “Elias’ Story,” Elias saw the need for an armed struggle and resistance against the
opposing forces while Ibarra disagreed and believed that education was the key to make the people
liberated, so he encourages the building of schoolhouses to educate those who are worthy of it.
In the chapter “Chase on the Lake,” Elias suddenly had a change of heart; he believed in reforms
while Ibarra became a filibuster, initiating revolution. This change of heart in Ibarra was a product of
hardships and the desire to attain personal vengeance
This trend of vagueness continued in the novel El Fili, were Rizal was reflected in the characters of
Simoun, Basilio, and Padre Florentino.
In the conclusion of the El Fili, Rizal has implied his resolution when in the story, he killed Simoun,
the promoter of revolution, and made Padre Florentino, an advocate of peace.
In real life, Rizal reiterated his stand regarding this issue in his December 15 Manifesto when he
declared that he was against the revolution, and he favored the reform programs, especially regarding
education.
In the process of making circumstances favorable for both, his appeal was for reforms and education. What
would liberate the people was the massive movement of the natives united against the oppressors. When
Rizal died, the natives were able to push through their freedom with their strong nationalism that had been
heated up and strengthened by his artistic and realistic viewpoints in his writings. He had influenced
numerous natives to fight for independence.
The result of independence was very sweet for the Filipinos who fought and died for it, and it was a regret
feel that Rizal was not able to see that the revolution that he did not favor was what liberated his people.
Nationalism usually springs from the consciousness of a national identity of being one people. It is that all
pervading spirit that binds together men of diverse castes and creeds, clans and colors, and unites them into
one people, one family, one nation with common aspirations and ideals (Anderson, 1983)
IMAGINED COMMUNITY
An IMAGINED COMMUNITY is a concept developed by Benedict Anderson in his
1983 book Imagined Communities, to analyze nationalism. Anderson depicts
a nation as a socially constructed community, imagined by the people who perceive
themselves as part of that group.
NATION
“An imagined political community- and imagined as both inherently limited and
sovereign”.
(Benedict Anderson, Imagined Community)
It is an anthropological spirit, then I propose the following definition of the Nation: it
is an imagined community-and imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign.
“Imagined” means that we will never meet the majority of the community members. It is imagined
because members cannot all know each other. The members of even the smallest nation will never
know most their fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them. Yet in the minds of their lives the
image of their communion
Nation as “limited” meaning that it co-exists with other nations on the same plane. Also, because of
finite boundaries.
“Sovereign” means that it is self-governing, not ruled by an outside power (as in imperialism) or by a
higher power (as in older religious world news.) It is imagined as sovereign because the
concept was born in an age in which enlightenment and Revolution were destroying the legitimacy
of the divinely-ordained, hierarchical dynastic realm. It is imagined as sovereign because it is not
religious or monarchic.
Finally, it is imagined as a community because, regardless of the actual inequality and exploitation
that may prevail in each nation is always conceived as a deep, horizontal comradeship.
as a cohesive whole
as represented by distinctive traditions, culture,
and language.
Genealogy of Rizal and His Descendants | The Chinese mestizo in Philippine history Introduction
GENEALOGY OF RIZAL AND HIS DESCENDANTS
Introduction
Jose Rizal lived in the nineteenth century, a period in history when changes in public consciousness were
already being felt and progressive ideas were being realized. Studying Rizal’s genealogy, therefore, will lead
to a better understanding of how Rizal was shaped and influence by his family.
LEARNING PROPER
As discussed in the previous modules, Rizal was born on June 19, 1861 in the town of Calamba, province of
Laguna. Calamba, the town with around three to four thousand inhabitants, is located 54 kilometers south of
Manila. It is found in a heart of a region known for its agricultural prosperity and is among the major producers
of sugar and rice, with an abundant variety of tropical fruits. On the Southern part of the town lies the majestic
Mount Makiling, and on the other side is the Lake called Laguna the Bay. The wonders of creation that
surrounded Rizal made him love nature form an early age. His student memoirs show how his love of nature
influenced his appreciation of the arts and sciences.
Rizal’s father, Francisco Mercado, was a wealthy farmer who leased lands
from the Dominican Friars. Francisco’s earliest ancestors were Siang-co and
Zun-nio, who later gave birth to Lamco. Lam-co is said to have come from
the district of Fujian in Southern China and migrated to the Philippines in the
late 1600’s. In 1967, he was baptized in Binondo, adopting “Domingo” as his
first name. He married Ines de la Rosa of a known entrepreneurial family in
Binondo. Domingo and Ines later settled in the estate of San Isidro Labrador,
owned by the Dominicans. In 1731, they had a son whom they named Francisco Mercado. The surname
Mercado, which means “market,” was a common surname adopted by many Chinese merchants at that time
(Reyno, 2012).
Francisco Mercado became one of the richest in Biñan and owned the largest herd of carabaos. He was also
active in local politics and was elected as capitan del pueblo in 1783. He had a son named Juan Mercado
who was also elected as capitan del pueblo in 1808, 1813, and 1823. (Reyno, 2012).
Juan Mercado married Cirila Alejandra, a native of Biñan. They had 13 children, including Francisco Engracio,
the father of Jose Rizal. Following Governor Narcisco Claveria’s decree in 1849 which ordered the Filipinos
to adopt Spanish surnames, Francisco Engracio added the surname “Rizal,” form the word “racial” meaning
“green field”, as he later settled in the town of Calamba as a framer growing sugar cane, rice, and indigo.
Being in a privileged family, Francisco Engracio (1818-1898) had a good education that started in a Latin
school in Biñan. Afterwards, he attended the College of San Jose in Manila. IN 1848, Francisco married
Teodora Alonso (1826-1911) who belonged to the one of the wealthiest families in Manila. Teodora, whose
father was a member of the Spanish Cortes, was educated at the College of Sta. Rosa. Rizal described her
as a “woman of more than ordinary culture” and that she is “a mathematician and has read many books”
(letter Blumentritt, November 8, 1888). Because of Francisco and Teodora’s industry and hard work, their
family became prominent member of the principalia class in the town of Calamba. Their house was among
the first concrete houses to be built in the town. Rafael Palma, one of the first biographers of Jose Rizal,
described the family’s house:
Saturnina Mercado Alonso Rizal – Hidalgo was the eldest daughter among the children of Francisco and
Teodora. She was married to Manuel Hidalgo and had five children. She reported daily events that happened
in Calamba and told stories about their life. She sends letters which contained stories and events that have
happened in Calamba. Saturnina is a very close sister of Jose Rizal, it was stated in one of the 9 letters that
they exchanged, she expressed that she was missing her brother when he was in Madrid. (Saturnina Rizal -
Wikipilipinas, 2011)
Paciano Rizal was the elder and only brother of Jose Rizal. He supported his brother financially when he was
in school. He was able to send him to Europe to study, with only 700 pesos. He was very supportive that he
gave up his dreams in studying and gave it to his brother. He was then tortured by the Spaniards when Jose
was kept imprisoned in Fort Santiago because he refused to condemn his younger brother. After the
execution of Jose Rizal, Paciano joined the revolution. He then died at the age of 79 due to Tuberculosis.
Jose Rizal’s other sisters namely; Narcisa, Olympia, Lucia, Maria, Concepcion, Josefa,Trinidad, and Soledad,
weren’t really involved too much in Rizal’s life. Narcisa was a teacher and a musician. It was said that she
could recite almost all the poems made by his younger brother. Olympia, was a telegraph operator from
Manila. Rizal approaches her and sometimes talks about his love life with Segunda Katigbak. Lucia was the
fifth of the Rizal family who was married to Mariano Herbosa. Maria, the sixth child, married Danile Faustino
Cruz of Binan Laguna.
Concepcion, who was the next child after Rizal, died when she was three. She was also known as “Concha”.
When Concha died of sickness in 1865, Jose mournfully wept at losing her. He later wrote in his memoir,
“When I was four years old, I lost my little sister Concha, and then for the first time I shed tears caused by
love and grief.” From Concha’s life we could learn that not a few children in those times died young. If records
are correct, more than ten of Rizal’s nieces and nephews also died young, not to mention that Jose’s child
himself experienced the same fate.
Josefa, also called “Panngoy” by her family, remained a spinster all throughout his life. She was a member
of Katipunan. Lastly, Soledad the youngest of them all was married to Panteleon Quintero, a native of
Calamba. She also became a teacher and it was said that she is the most educated among all the sisters.
Principalia Wealthy pure-blooded native supposedly descended from the kadatoan class
As the Spaniards lost economic power in the nineteenth century, they asserted dominance by virtue of their
race. This issue brought complications with the rising principalia and mestizo populations who realized their
indispensable position in society as movers and facilitators of the economy. The renegotiation continued
throughout the century as the mestizos and the principalia elite eventually demanded social recognition that
the pure-blooded Spaniards had consistently denied them.
These wealthy mestizos and members of the principalia continued to amass economic and cultural capital.
They also availed themselves the opportunity to obtain higher degrees of education not only in Philippines
but also in Europe. These activities augmented their relevance in society as it was from these ranks that
articulations of nationalism would emerge.
RIZAL IN EUROPE | THE PROPAGANDA MOVEMENT AND LA SOLIDARIDAD
Lesson VII: RIZAL IN EUROPE
INTRODUCTION
Jose P. Rizal was a traveller. In fact, he was considered as the “Most Travelled Filipino Hero”. He travelled
almost 20 countries and about 40 island cities. He became a reformist not only because of his isolation in the
Philippines, but also because of his journeys abroad. In this lesson, we are going to study Rizal’s experiences
in Europe. It is here in Europe where he has political ideals that have given way to nationalism. This will bring
us to a deeper understanding of how nationalism kindled his spirit.
LEARNING CONTENT
The First Voyage to Spain: Views and Impressions
Rizal had a secret trip. The parents of Rizal, Leonor, and the Spanish authorities did not know much about
his decision to move abroad. Just his older brother Paciano, Uncle Antonio Rivera (father of Leonor Rivera),
Sisters Neneng and Lucia, the Valenzuela family and their daughter Orang, Pedro A. Paterno, his companion
Mateo Evangelista, the Jesuit priest of Ateneo, and some intimate friends knew of his silent departure. Before
Rizal’s secret departure, he penned a letter of good-bye to his parents and his sweetheart, Leonor Rivera,
which had been handed over to them after he had sailed abroad.
Rizal left the Philippines to Spain on 3 May 1882. He was 20 years old at the time. The first leg of his journey
to Spain on the Salvadora ship proved to be a young man's learning experience. On his
travel documents, he used Jose Mercado as his name. His key reason for leaving the
Philippines was to move to the Universidad Central de Madrid, Spain, and to finish his
degree in medicine. This reflects Rizal's determination to attain achievements and
flourishing his academic standing. From our previous module, we can note that the
passion of learning originated from his mother. So Rizal brought this value until he grew
up. 16 passengers, including Rizal, were on board the steamer. He was the only Filipino,
the others were Spanish, British and Indian Negroes.
Keenly, an observer, made drawings of the things he saw — the coast of Manila Bay, the
coast of Palawan and Borneo, and his fellow passengers. Most of his fellow travelers
were foreign nationals and Spanish workers on their way back to Spain. Almost all of
them, he said, talked ill of the Philippines, where they had gone for monetary purposes.
He observed the people and places and compared them to those in the Philippines.
Singapore was Rizal's first stop on his trip to Europe, and he had to change ships. He
remained there for two days and, on May 9, 1882, stayed at the Hotel de Paz. While in Singapore, Jose had
the chance to visit the British Colony and was fascinated by its development and beautiful sites, including the
botanical garden, temples and art galleries. He even saw the founder of Singapore – Sir Thomas Stanford
Raffles. The people of Singapore seemed to have the trust of their British administrators, unlike the Filipinos
who feared their rulers.
In May 11, Rizal boarded the Djemnah, a vessel operated by Messageries Maritimes, a French company.
Comparing it to the Salvadora one, Rizal said it was bigger and cleaner. Its interior was carpeted and even
the bathrooms were excellent. French was mostly spoken on board because it was a French vessel. Jose
attempted to speak French to his fellow travelers, and he found that French he learned from Ateneo could
not be understood. He was in contact with a smattering of Latin and Spanish and with hand movements to
be understood. He tried to improve his communication by reading a French newspaper.
From Singapore, Djemnah made brief stops at Point de Galle (Punta De Gallo) and Colombo in Ceylon (now
Sri Lanka) where he went onshore for sightseeing. He said that Galle was a sleepy port. The Djemnah then
continued its crossing of the Indian Ocean and landed in present-day Yemen at the port of Aden. There Rizal
saw merchants selling lion and leopard skins. He found the city hotter than Manila. He saw camels for the
first time. He drank refreshments, cooled with ice split by a nail, which was placed by the sellers using bare
hands. He had a view of the Arabian Peninsula to his right and the African continent to his left as he
approached the Suez Canal. He said that Africa was an inhospitable but popular country. The sun was shining
over the Arabian Desert, and he could feel the heat rising from its sandy sands.
On June 2, 1882, the Djemnah went through the Suez Canal and Rizal landed at Port Said (Mediterranean
terminal of Suez Canal) in Egypt to see the sights of this part of the region. Port Said, he commented, was a
multicultural city. People spoke numerous languages, such as Arabic, Greek, Egyptian, Italian and Spanish.
He toured a number of churches, mosques and temples. He said the city was a blend of the vibrant traditions
of the East and the West.
On June 11, 1882, the Djemnah stopped by Naples in Italy, which Rizal admired
for the city's panoramic beauty of the bay and the liveliness of the inhabitants.
Rizal was fascinated by Mount Vesuvius, the castle of St. Telno, and the historic
sights of the city. The next day, Rizal got off at Marseilles, which was the end
of the Djemnah. He bade farewell to his fellow passengers and visited this French
town and saw for himself the Château d'If, the site of his favorite book, The Count
of Monte Cristo by Alexander Dumas. After spending three days in Marseilles,
Rizal boarded a train to Spain on June 15. His documents were reviewed by
immigration officers at the Spanish border in Portbou, in the Spanish province of
Catalonia. He noted the indifference of the Spanish immigration officers to their courteous French
counterparts.
On June 16, 1882, Rizal landed in Barcelona, the cosmopolitan capital of Spain’s Catalonia region and the
second largest city in Spain. Comparing it with the other European cities he saw so far, it was dim, filthy and
ugly. There were tiny inns, and the inhabitants were not very hospitable. He stayed in a dingy inn on the most
unattractive side of the area. The guests were indifferent to him, too. Since Rizal arrived during the summer
vacation for students, he traveled to other areas of the city and noticed that Barcelona, like other parts of
Spain, embraced freedom and liberalism, unlike the Philippines. At this point, he changed his unfavorable
opinion of the city and concluded that Barcelona was really a great city and that its people were open-hearted,
hospitable and brave. He enjoyed strolling along Las Ramblas Lane, the popular lane in Bacelona.
Rizal remained in Barcelona over the summer holidays. He met former classmates from the Ateneo who
brought him a party at their favorite café in Plaza de Cataluña. They shared toast and told Rizal about the
attractions and customs of the citizens of Barcelona. In contrast, Rizal brought the Philippines news and
gossips. Rizal got two bad news while in Barcelona. The first bad news was about the cholera epidemic that
destroyed Manila and the provinces. The second bad news was Chenggoy's chatty letter recounting the
unhappiness of Leonor Rivera, who was becoming thinner due to the loss of a loved one.
He found time to compose a nationalist essay named Amor Patrio (Love of Country) with the pen name Laon-
Laan. The essay was published in Diariong Tagalog on August 20, 1882. Encouraged by the positive
reception of his post, Francisco Calvo, the editor of the Diario asked Rizal for more posts. He has dutifully
submitted two papers entitled Los Viajes and Revista de Madrid (Review of Madrid). The last story never saw
print since the publication went out of business.
The University Student in Madrid
At the close of the summer break, Rizal moved to Madrid and, on 3 November 1882,
enrolled in two courses of Medicine and Philosophy and Letters at the Universidad
Central de Madrid. He has studied painting and sculpture and French, German and
English at the Academy of San Carlos. He also took lessons from a private coach who
instructed him shooting and fencing in the Sanz and Carbonell Halls. His appetite for
information was insatiable, considering the fact that Paciano had given him 700 pesos
and allowed himself to spend 35 pesos a month on food, clothes and books. Both his
expenses were seen down to the last peseta in his diary.
Rizal lived frugally, budgeting his income carefully. Since it was cold in Spain, Rizal took baths less frequently
than not. Baths were also a drain on the wallet, costing 35 centavos each. Rizal once boasted that his last
bath was a month ago. Perhaps his only addiction was a gamble in which he invested 3 pesetas (equivalent
to 1.02 peso) on a draw. Another thing he enjoyed was attending in plays at the Madrid Theaters.
He never lost time, either, and spent time visiting libraries, attending lectures, religious events and operas.
Rizal spent his leisure time by reading books, such as on military engineering to broaden his cultural
background. Also, his pastime was spent entertaining friends at the residence of Paterno or sipping coffee at
the Puerta del Sol. There was no time or money for women and wine.
Like the University of Santo Tomas, the Universidad Central de Madrid housed a combination of citizens of
different beliefs. There was a combination of socialists, progressives, republicans, monarchists, and radicals.
Rizal was drawn to the liberals, especially to Dr. Miguel Morayta, who was a champion of the freedom and
self-determination of all peoples. While liberal students, including those from South America and the Spanish
colonies, hailed Dr. Morayta as their champion, he was seen as a maverick by his colleagues. The university
authorities considered him a supporter of the anarchists and expelled him. Morayta 's followers fought with
their critics on campus and in the streets of Madrid.
Romantic Episode with Consuelo Ortiga
It has become a tradition for Rizal to frequent the house of Don Pablo Ortiga y Rey, a Spanish
liberal who lived in the Philippines during the tenure of Governor General Carlos Ma. De la
Torre. He came to his house every Saturday where he came to know about Don Ortiga's
two lovely daughters, Consuelo and Pilar. Rizal was drawn to Consuelo and gave flowers to
her. Rizal wrote her love poem A la Senorita C.O. Y R-The initials of Consuelo. However,
Rizal did not allow the romance to thrive because he was still engaged to Leonor Rivera. His
friend Eduardo de Lete was in love with Consuelo, too. He left Madrid for Paris in the summer
of 1883 to ignore Consuelo. Later she married de Lete, who later became Rizal’s secret
enemy.
Consuelo writes on Jan. 18, 1883: “Rizal talked with me for a long time, almost the whole night. He told me
that I was very talented, that I was very diplomatic, and that he was going to see if he could extract some
truth from me within two weeks; that I was mysterious and that I had a veil over my ideas …”
Meeting with Future Reformists: The Circulo Hispano-Filipino
Rizal’s encounter with fellow Filipinos and liberal Spaniards opened the way
for him to join the Circulo Hispano-Filipino. The collective was generally a
social conglomeration and organized casual programs that involved poetry
reading and debates. Discovering that Rizal was a poet, his members asked
him to write a poem. He wrote a poem for them that expressed the sentiments
of a poet who was forced to have something that would satisfy his listeners.
This poem was entitled Me Piden Versos (You Ask Me for Verses).
Inevitably, politics became part of the group 's discussion of the need for reform in the Philippines, and Rizal
became an active discussant. In later years, conservative elements in the Circulo distanced themselves from
the group that eventually faded away.
Entry into the Freemasonry
Many of the liberal and republican citizens whom Rizal met and made friends in Madrid were masons.
Freemasonry is banned by the Church because its views are contradictory to its teachings. Members of the
Masonic societies are considered sinners and are obliged to leave until they can receive any of the
sacraments. When they die, they are refused Christian burial and buried in non-Catholic cemeteries.
Rizal was impressed by the mason's vision on life and took the opinion that understanding should be obtained
by the light of rationality and the universal brotherhood of man. The masons criticized the Church for what
they thought was the propagation of moral superstition and obscurantism, or the covering of the truth behind
the veil of religion.
Government policies that promoted despotism have also been targeted. Rizal joined the Freemasonry in
1883 through the Acacia Lodge, which was based in Madrid. His Masonic name was Dimasalang
(unstoppable / untouchable). He entered the masonry because he opposed the activities of the many friars
in the Philippines. He believed in the ideals that fraternity was fighting for, and also because he wanted the
support of fellow masons who were influential in Spanish society. Since joining the Freemasonry, he avoided
going to church regularly and started to doubt matters of faith, God and religion choosing to accept them only
by the light of reason. Nevertheless, his faith in the presence of God remained deeply rooted in his deepest
convictions as seen in his writings and letters.
Rizal moved up the ranks of the Freemasonry and became master mason at the Lodge Solidaridad on
November 15, 1890. Two years later, while living in Paris, Rizal became master mason of Le Grand Orient
of France on 15 February 1892.
The Avid Book Collector
While in Spain, Rizal was introduced to further readings that broadened his academic scope. Though
squirting about food, garments, and living in the most humble homes, he wasted no money in purchasing
books from second-hand bookstores. He was able to acquire quite a library in time. Among his books was
The Holy Bible; The Lives of the Presidents of the United States from (George) Washington to (Andrew)
Johnson; The Complete Works of Voltaire consisting of nine volumes; The Complete Works of C. Bernard
(16 volumes); Complete Works of Horace (3 volumes); Ancient Poetry; Works of Thuycidides; The Byzantine
Empire; The Renaissance; Hebrew Grammar, The Characters of La Bruyere; History of the French
Revolution; Eugene Sue's The Wandering Jew; Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin; The Works of
Alexander Dumas; Louis XIV and His Court; and numerous books on medicine, politics, politics,
The books that most affected him were Beecher Stowe 's Uncle Tom's Cabin and Sue's The Wandering Jew,
close to El Filibusterismo, and the novels by the Spanish writer Benito Perez Caldos, one of which was
Desnerada, which inspired his two later novels, Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo. The novel Noli Me
Tangere was also influenced by Benito Pérez Caldós' novel Doña Perfecta, written in 1876, eleven years
before the publication of Noli Me Tangere. Doña Perfecta reveals the immense influence the church has
wielded. It also shows the disparities between the conventional, rural outlook and the new, urban outlook of
Madrid, the capital of Spain.
During Rizal’s time in Spain, his family went through a financial crisis in Calamba. In 1883, the world price of
sugar had fallen and the sugar had not been sold. The rent of land had risen that year. The concern was that
the manager of the Dominican estate made it more difficult for the Rizal family. According to Rizal's account,
the manager normally fell by asking his father for a free fat turkey. The pest destroyed most of the turkeys
that year, and those remaining are kept for breeding. That year, there was no turkey to give away. The
manager was dismayed at his boss, and for this reason he declined to give any thought, demanding that the
family of Rizal should pay the increased fee. As a result of the economic problems, Rizal’s allowance was
cut and Paciano had to sell his pony to pay for his brother's allowance.
The Speech that Attracted the Attention of Reactionary Spaniards in the Philippines
On June 25, 1884, Rizal joined a Greek university competition. With empty stomach, he participated in the
contest. In spite of the challenges, he won gold medal. On the evening of the same day, he gave an eloquent
speech at a banquet in honor of the Filipino painters Juan Luna and Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo, who received
top prizes at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts. Juan Luna won the first prize for his Spoliarium, which
portrayed the bodies of deceased Roman gladiators being carried out of the bowels of the Coliseum, while
Hidalgo won the second prize for his Virgenes Cristianas Exposiciones al Populacho (Christian Virgins
Unveiled to the Populace).
Rizal’s speech was his first address to a general
audience. Rizal extemporarily said that Luna and
Hidalgo were the pride of the Filipino people, and he
proved that genius is not the monopoly of any
race. The two painters, the titans of their craft, are the
creations of the Philippines and Spain, and their works
unite both cultures. Near the end of his speech, Rizal
scored with refined sarcasm the ill-wishers of the
Filipinos who were emerging as an intellectual force. In the end, Rizal shared the hope that someday Spain
will give the changes required by the Filipinos. At the end of his address, he gave a toast to Luna and Hidalgo,
for which there was a thunderous applause.
Rizal’s speech was mentioned in the newspaper El Liberal, and news of the case reached the Philippines.
Some of the elements in the Philippines were not satisfied, and Rizal was said to have made enemies with
his speech. It was said that Rizal can never return to the Philippines. Dona Teodora was fraught with fear,
and she had been unable to eat for days. She fell ill, and Paciano wrote to Rizal about the impact of his
homage to the two Filipino painters. He warned him to be more vigilant of his actions. He warned him to stop
writing papers that could offend the friars and other reactionary Spaniards, and that he should not fail in his
Christian duties, and eventually ordered her son to stop undertaking studies that could lead to his destruction.
Rizal had heeded these warnings, but he pursued his life as if he had been attracted to destiny.
Completion of Studies in Spain
Rizal completed his medical studies and was awarded the title of Licenciado in Medicina, which would allow
him to practice medicine. His academic records at the Universidad Central de Madrid are as follows:
Fifth year (1882-1883)
Continuation of Medical Course in the University of Santo Tomas
The degree of Licentiate in Medicine was conferred on June 21, 1884 with the rating of "Aprobado" or "Fair."
Rizal was actually granted lower grades in Spain than at the University of Santo Tomas.
Rizal continued to research subjects that would have led to a doctorate of medicine. He passed all the
subjects leading to the Degree of Medicine. His grades were:
He, however, was not conferred the degree of Doctor of Medicine for failure to present a thesis required for
graduation and pay for the corresponding fee.
Nevertheless, by obtaining a degree of Licentiate in Medicine, he became a full-fledged physician and
qualified to practice medicine. He was not interested in taking the post-degree of Doctor of Medicine because
such a degree is good only for teaching purposes, and he knew that no friar-owned university in the
Philippines would accept him for teaching position because of his brown color. In reality, the name "Dr. Rizal"
is a misnomer as he has never been given the title of Doctor. The inability to pay the related fees also
represented Rizal's financial troubles at the time. It was with the aid of his friend Maximo Viola who borrowed
him money that Rizal was able to acquire his medical degree and practice.
Rizal was also able to complete his education in Philosophy and Letters, where he received a higher degree.
On his 24th birthday, June 19, 1885, Rizal graduated from the Universidad Central de Madrid with
a Bachelor's degree in Philosophy and Letters (Licenciado en Filosofia y Letras). His grades were as
follows:
1882-1883
1883-1884
1884-1885
Literature Author
Ninay and Sampaguita Pedro Paterno
El Progreso de Filipinas Gregorio Sanciangco
Impresiones Antonio Luna
La Universidad de Pilipinas: Plano de Estudios Jose Maria Panganiban
Celebres Filipinos Mariano Ponce
Historia de Ilocos and El Folklore Filipino Isabelo delos Reyes
La Solidaridad
The reform movement was supported by foreigners like Dr. Miguel Morayta, the former
Spanish minister and professor and the Austrian ethnologist Ferdinand Blumentritt. On
December 13, 1888, an organization called "La Solidaridad" was born. It was headed
by Galicano Apacible. Jose Rizal who was in England at that time became its honorary
president. This organization gave birth to La Solidaridad, the newspaper. Its editor was
Graciano Lopez Jaena. Take note that La Solidaridad (organization) adapted a
newspaper La Solidaridad (newspaper). The Soli, as the reformists fondly called their
official organ, came out once every two weeks. The first saw print was published on
November 15, 1895. The Solidaridad’s first editor was Graciano Lopez Jaena. Marcelo
H. del Pilar took over in October 1889. Del Pilar managed the Soli until it stopped
publication due to lack of funds.
Jose Rizal, Marcelo H. del Pilar, and Mariano Ponce comprised the main staff of La Solidaridad. They were
called the “Glorious Trinity of the Propaganda Movement”.
Aims of La Solidaridad
1. To work for political and social reforms peacefully
2. To present the sad conditons in the Philippines so that Spain can remedy them
3. To oppose the evil influences of reaction and outmoded beliefs and practices
4. To advocate liberal ideas and progress
5. To champion the just aspirations of the Filipinos to life, democracy, and happiness
On February 15, 1889, the first issue of La Solidaridad came out and its editorial expressed its aim:
Our aspirations are modest, very modest. Our program, aside from being simple, is clear: to combat reaction,
to stop all retrogressive steps, to extol and adopt liberal ideas, to defend progress; in a word, to be a
propagandist, above all, of democratic ideas in order to make these supreme in all nations here and across
the seas.
The aims, therefore, of La Solidaridad are described as to collect, to gather, libertarian ideas which are
manifested daily in the field of politics, science, art, literature, commerce, agriculture and industry.
We shall also discuss all problems relating to the general interest of the nation and seek solutions to those
problems in high-level and democratic manner.
The contributors of the La Solidaridad were mostly Filipinos, such as:
Eduardo de Lete
Jose Alejandrino
In the last issue of La Solidaridad (November 15, 1895), M.H. del Pilar wrote his farewell editorial saying:
We are persuaded that no sacrifices are too little to win the rights and the liberty of a nation that is oppressed
by slavery.
Asociacion Hispano-Filipino
Other reformists headed by Miguel Morayta formed the Asociacion Hispano-Filipino in Madrid on January 12,
1889. The Asociacion drew up petitions instituting reforms. It succeeded in having passed a law making the
teaching of Spanish compulsory in the Philippines and laws improving the judiciary. The organization,
however, died out because of lack of funds and the change of government in Spain. Other reforms obtained
were the abolition of the tobacco monopoly in 1882; the tax reform of 1884 abolishing the tribute and its
replacement by the cedula or poll tax; the provincial reform of 1886 creating the office of civil governors and
reducing the alcalde mayor to the category of judges of first instance; the Royal Decree of 1887 extending
the Spanish Code to the Philippines; the Becerra Law of 1889 establishing the city governments of Cebu,
Iloilo, Jaro, Batangas, Legazpi, Nueva Caceres, and Vigan; and the Maura Law of 1893 introducing autonomy
to the municipal governments. These reforms did not address the demands of the Filipino reformists and their
calls remained unheeded because of Spain's preoccupation in other matters.
The Role of Freemasonry
Many of the Filipino reformists joined the Freemasonry as a mean of finding support from the Spanish liberals
who had become the masons themselves. Among the leading masons was Marcelo del Pilar, who was the
oldest. Already as early as 1856 these were masons in the Philippines. In Spain, Lopez Jaena established a
lodge named Revolucion, which was recognised in April 1889 by the Spanish lodge Gran Oriental Español.
Del Pilar, for his part, coordinated Unity, which included Rizal, Serrano Laktaw, Galicano Apacible and
Baldomero Roxas as participants. Serrano Laktaw, on the orders of Del Pilar, went to the Philippines in 1891
and established the lodge Nilad on 6 January 1892. The Filipino masons have promoted a dignified and
stable country with good governance. More Masonic lodges were founded in 1893; they authorized the entry
of women including Rosario Villaruel, Josefa Rizal, Marinao Dizon, Sixta Fajardo, Purificacion Leyva and
others.
MASONIC LODGES
Revolucion first masonic lodge in Barcelona founded by Lopez Jaena
In the centre of his suffering and his despondency. From Dr. Maximo Viola, who was going
to Berlin, Rizal got a telegram. This friend of Rizal's was a scion of the affluent San Miguel
Bulacan family. This means that he was rich. He was saddened to see Rizal living in
poverty and deplorably sickly due to lack of adequate nourishment when he arrived in
Berlin shortly before Christmas Day of 1887. Viola, being filled with sufficient money,
gladly decided to cover the printing expense of the Noli after seeing the plight of his
talented friend. He loaned Rizal some cash for living expenses as well. Thus, it happened
that Rizal and Viola were able to celebrate Christmas in Berlin in 1886 with a sumptuous
feast. Rizal put the final touches to his novel after the Christmas season. He omitted some
passages in his manuscript to save printing costs, including a whole chapter-"Elias and Salome.
The Noli was fully completed and ready for printing on February 21, 1887. Rizal went to numerous printing
shops in Berlin with Viola, the savior of the Noli, to survey the printing prices They eventually found a Berliner
Buchdruckrei-Action-Gesselschaft printing shop after a few days of enquiries, which paid the lowest cost that
is 300 pesos for 2,000 copies of the book. It must be noted that in Berlin, Germany, Noli Me Tangere was
published.
Rizal Suspected as Frenchy Spy
An unusual incident occurred in Rizal during the printing of Noli. One morning, the Berlin police chief paid a
surprise visit to Rizal's boarding house and demanded to see the passport of the latter. Unfortunately, Rizal
was unable to produce a passport, for he had none - it was possible to fly without a passport in those days.
The police chief then instructed him, within four days, to obtain a visa, or he would be deported. Rizal, followed
by Viola, then went to the Spanish embassy to request the assistance of the Spanish ambassador, the Count
of Benomar, who had agreed to deal with the matter. The ambassador, however, refused to keep his word,
and it turned out he had no authority to grant the appropriate passport.
Rizal introduced himself at the office of the German police chief at the expiration of the four-day ultimatum,
apologizing for his inability to acquire a visa, and respectfully asked the latter why he should be deported
when he had not committed any crime. The police chief told him that he had received intelligence reports that
he (Rizal) had made repeated visits to rural villages and cities, raising the suspicion of the German
government that he was a French spy because he had entered Germany from Paris, where he had been
staying for many years, and was clearly a lover of France, whose language and culture he knew so well. On
account of Alsace-Lorraine relations between France and Germany were strained at the time.
Rizal explained to the police chief, in fluent German, that he was not a French spy, but a Filipino physician
and scientist, especially an ethnologist. He toured the rural regions of the countries he toured as an
ethnologist to study the customs and life-styles of their everyday inhabitants. The police chief was delighted
and allowed him to remain openly in Germany, favourably impressed with Rizal 's description and intrigued
by his mastery of the German language and personal charisma.
Printing of the Noli Finished
Rizal oversaw the printing of the Noli, with the aid of Viola, after the incident of his aborted deportation as a
suspected French spy. They were at the printing shop proof-reading the printed pages day by day. On March
21, 1887, the Noli Me Tangere came off the press Rizal immediately sent the first copies of the printed novel
to his intimate friends, including Blumentritt, Dr. Antonio Ma. Regidor, G. Lopez Jaena, Mariano Ponce, and
Felix R. Hidalgo. In his letter to Blumentritt, dated March 21, 1887. he said: "I am sending you a book. It is
my first book, though I have already written much before it and received some prizes in literary competitions.
It is the first impartial and bold book on the life of the Tagalogs. The Filipinos will find it the history of the last
ten years. I hope you will notice how different are my descriptions from those of other writers. The government
and the friars will probably attack the work, refuting my arguments: but I trust in the God of Truth and in the
persons who have actually seen the sufferings at close range. I hope I can answer all the concepts have
been fabricated to malign us."
On March 29, 1887, Rizal, in token of his appreciation and gratitude, gave Viola the galley proofs of the Noli
carefully rolled around the pen that he used in writing it and a complimentary copy with the following
inscription: "To my dear friend, Maximo Viola, the first to read and appreciate my work - Jose Rizal."
Symbolisms of Noli Cover Page
Each element of the cover page has its own meaning or symbolism. Just one look at the cover, it already
tells us every bit of what's in the novel. Rizal also purposely designed the title to be placed diagonally so that
it can divide an upper and lower triangle. (Bernus & Hermoso, n.d.)
Symbol Meaning/Symbolism
1. Silhouette of a Filipina Believed to be Maria Clara or as the
“Inang Bayan” to whom Rizal dictates the
novel.
2. Bay Leaves/ Laurel Represents Honor and Fidelity
Leaves
3. Cross Represents the Catholic faith as it rises
above Inang Bayan and Filipinos (shows
dominance). It also symbolizes sufferings
and death.
4. Burning Torch Refers to the Olympic torch
Upper Triangle
Pertains to the awakening of Filipino
consciousness
This Represents
It also sheds light to the next of the
Rizal’s past life.
manuscript
5. Sunflower It symbolizes a new beginning
It is compared to the happiness of which
appears to be always bowing down.
6. Year 1887 Publication of Noli Lower Triangle
7. Bamboo Stalk It represents Filipino resiliency
Despite the sufferings, Filipinos can still This Represents
stand tall and firm Rizal’s current
8. Chain and Whip It symbolizes slavery and imprisonment situations
(Chain)
It represents the abuses and cruelties
done by the Spaniards and friars as
depicted in the novel (Whip)
9. Helmet It represents the helmet of Guardia Civil.
Symbolizes the arrogance of those in
authority
10. Hairy Legs It symbolizes the Legend of the Wolf
The wolf shape shifts just like how friars
hide their true nature and character
The Noli produced reactions from readers, Filipinos and strangers alike in the immediate
months and years after its publication in 1887. Answers varied from praise to outright
mockery. One sector that espoused utmost disdain for the novel was the Spanish clergy as
well as some Spanish colonial officials. It is thus understandable that in 1887, when Fray
Salvador Font, chair of the censorship board, banned the reading and possession of Rizal 's
book, Spanish friars vehemently prohibited the dissemination of the book. The book was
assessed and judged as pernicious by several other friars. In order to stop committing capital
sins, they told devout Catholics not to read the book. Not only did disapproval of the novel
from Spanish officials and scholars persist in the Philippines, it was also voiced in Spain.
Vicente Barrantes, who wrote several pieces in Spanish newspapers ridiculing Rizal's
inconsistencies, was a staunch opponent of the book. Barrantes described Rizal as man of
contradiction whose criticisms of friars and the Spanish regime were actually an insult to the
Filipino themselves.
The book was also attacked by Fr. Jose Rodriguez. As he was intimidated, he issued a
pamphlet titled "Caingat Cayo", which warned the Filipinos against reading the Noli. In 1889, Rizal published
his answer to Fr. Rodriguez in the pamphlet La Vision de Fr Rodriguez, a brilliant satire in which exposed the
ignorance of the friar (Agoncillo, 1990).
His novel also found passionate defenders among his peers, just as Rizal's
detractors came from diverse fields. His book was lauded by many of his
peers in the Propaganda movement Marcelo H. del Pilar, who also wrote
essays in response to the Noli critics, is one example. Support for the novel
was also shared by Rizal 's friend, Ferdinand Blumentritt, also an academic.
Blumentritt noted that Rizal's work "has been written with the blood of the
heart, and so the heart also speaks." Dr. Antonio Ma. Regidor, Filipino patriot
and lawyer, also read the novel. He felicitated Rizal saying "Every Filipino patriot will read your book with
amity and upon discovering in every line a veracious idea and in every word a fitting advice, he will be inspired
and he will regard you book as the masterpiece of a Filipino and the proof that those who thought us incapable
of producing great intellects are mistaken or lying. " (Zaide & Zaide, 1994).
As the Noli in the Philippines of the nineteenth century stirred outrage in social circles, it is surprising to learn
that the novel continued to be a topic of discussion and discussion well past its time. In the immediate years
after its publication, the Noli was translated into several languages. One of the earliest translations of the
novel was done in French. Many scholars posit that there were early attempts to translate the novel into
German (by Blumentritt) and even Tagalog (by Rizal's brother, Paciano) but these plans never came to
fruition. At the turn of the twentieth century, during the American colonial period, several other translations
and editions of the novel came out Arguably the most circulated versions were the English translations of
Charles Derbyshire. By the 1930s, Rizal's Noli and several Spanish editions, translations into English, French,
Japanese, and also into several languages in the Philippines including Tagalog, Cebuano Waray, lloko, and
Bikol.
Distribution of the novel to the Philippines
In the middle of the tight censorship imposed by the Spaniards, the story of how Noli
Me Tangere was spread in the Philippines can be traced to the efforts of Jose Basa,
the hero smuggler of the Propaganda movement, He was able to organize Hong
Kong-Manila trips for Filipinos through his contacts and flourishing business, which
became the route for subversive and anti-friar pamphlets to enter Filipinos' hands Noli
Me Tangere was one of them. The Filipino travelers who worked as couriers were
allegedly told to disembark the ships without the books commonly concealed in the
ship's coal bin. They would then hire a carretela and the books, usually placed inside
bun sacks, would be loaded to the carretela. Afterwards, they would pretend to forget
something in the ship. They would ask a permission from a crew member to walk back
to the ship leaving the buri sacks in the carretela After sometime, the cochero would
inspect the buri sacks and find the books. He would either dispose or leave them and
another arranged carretela would pick up the sacks for people to freely get copies, thus disseminating them
to Filipinos.
Impact of Noli Me Tangere
Noli Me Tangere is considered romantic, but because of its nature, it is more socio historical. Today, much
of the issues addressed in Noli can still be found. The novel quickly gained attention, but only a small number
of copies reached the Philippines, for it was forbidden to be read by the Spanish authorities, in particular the
friars whom Rizal mocked in the novel. Anyone who was found reading it was harshly disciplined. Naturally,
the ban made more Filipinos much more interested about the book. This is called Streisand effect. Originally,
Noli was written in Spanish, so the chance of Spanish officials reading it first was very high, which is what
Rizal chose to do. Copies of books have been redirected to churches, many have been burned, many anti-
Noli authors have been brought into the picture. At the time, Catholic figures in the Philippines viewed the
book as heretical, although it was considered rebellious and against the government by the Spanish colonial
authorities. From his book, they found their immorality, their bogus culture, and their vices were faithfully
mirrored in the novel. As Dr. Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera, an Insular, said:
"The prestige which the fnars had enjoyed and which was based only on the ignorance of the masses,
crumbled away when the private lives of the member of the religious orders in the provinces were
described in the pages of Rizal's book and the immorality and the viciousness of the friars were exposed to
the public view"
After publication, Noli me Tangere was considered to be one of the instruments that initiated Filipino
nationalism leading to the 1896 Philippine Revolution. The novel did not only awaken sleeping Filipino
awareness, but also established the grounds for aspiring to independence. Underground copies were
distributed, so Rizal decided to increase the price, the demand was so high.
The impact also included the expulsion of Rizal's clan in Calamba, Laguna. Extradition cases were filed
against him. This led to his decision to write the sequel of Noli Me Tangere, the El Filibusterismo. Unlike El
Fili, Noli Me Tangere was more delicate and did not invoke rebellion as El Fili does. So, to ensure
revolutionary ideas and patriotic reaction, Rizal redefined his careful concepts in Noli to aggression in El Fili.
Learning Content
Introduction
Upon knowing important details of the novel Noli Me Tangere, this chapter presents the
novel's plot, themes, and characters. The plot will provide a story of hope and struggle
against the backdrop of an elaborate setting filled with equally complex characters.
Through the novel's characters, varied point of views were gleaned from colonial life in
their different journey and through novel's themes, help you to better understand the
whole message of the novel that even up to present are worthy for discussion.
Lesson Proper
PLOT OF THE NOVEL NOLI ME TANGERE
The story of the Noli Me Tangere followed the life of Juan Crisostomo Ibarra after he returned to the
Philippines from studying in Europe. The novel opened with Capitan Tiago preparing a homecoming
gathering for the young ilustrado. Throughout the pages of the novel, the characters could be seen navigating
the complex realities of colonial Philippines. Ibarra was shown to be rekindling links with his betrothed Maria
Clara. But not everything was fine and dandy for Ibarra. Upon his return, he learned about the ills that plagued
his town as well as the abuses of the friars to which his late father fell victim to. Ibarra found an antagonist in
Padre Damaso, the former curate of San Diego who ordered that the corpse of his father be exhumed and
reburied in the Chinese cemetery.
Despite these personal travails, Ibarra persevered to fulfill the plan of building a school in San Diego, staying
true to his belief that education was crucial for his nation's progress. Ibarra almost got killed had it not for
Elias, a boatman who saved him Elias also previously cautioned Ibarra about his actions that could anger the
friars. After the incident, Ibarra organized a luncheon.
Here, another confrontation occurred between Ibarra and Damaso who attended the luncheon uninvited. In
a fit of Ibarra took a knife against Damaso's neck and threatened to slit his throat as he told everyone of the
abuses committed by Damaso and the desecration he did to Ibarra's father. Maria Clara calmed Ibarra and
prevented him from killing the friar. Damaso, in an act of revenge, persuaded Capitan Tiago, the father of
Maria Clara, to not allow his daughter to marry Ibarra.
After some time, a revolt was blamed on Ibarra, which caused his incarceration. With the help of Elias, he
escaped and went to see Maria Clara who was soon marrying the man her father chose for her. In a
heartbreaking confrontation, Ibarra and Maria Clara exchanged accusations and in the revealed that Damaso
was the true father of Maria Clara.
As turmoil and confusion engulfed the town, Maria Clara thought Ibarra had been killed. This caused her
endless grief. She asked to be confined to a nunnery lest she take her own life. It was later revealed that
Ibarra was not dead and that Elias was the one fatally shot. In the latter passages, the dying Elias was waiting
for Ibarra but instead, met and talked to the young Basilio. He instructed the orphaned boy (his mother Sisa,
who became insane looking for her young sons, had died) to find the treasure of Ibarra buried in the cemetery
and use it to get an education. He reminded Basilio to never lose hope and if one day, freedom and progress
would come to his country, to not forget those who labored in the night
Within this general contour of the narrative, Rizal wove a complex story and subplots. Reading through the
novel, different characters and their corresponding stories unfolded as told through the voice of an unseen
narrator. Truly, the Noli reflected the lives of people living in the complicated world of colonial Philippines.
CHARACTERS OF THE NOVEL
JUAN CRISOSTOMO IBARRA Y MAGSALIN (IBARRA)
Ibarra, a rich young mestizo who has just returned to the Philippines after studying in
Europe for seven years, is sophisticated, highly regarded, and highly idealistic. Due to his
extremely liberal education and contacts, the priests of San Diego all treat him with
considerable wariness. His father, Don Rafael, who was similarly idealistic, was branded
a subversive and a heretic by the oppressive priesthood and imprisoned, finally leading to
his death. Ibarra hopes to establish a school in San Diego to carry out the dreams and
aspirations of his father, but as a result of a plot led by the scheming Father Salvi, he
becomes embroiled in disputes with the church and is forced to leave San Diego Ibarra
usually wishes to work inside institutions to change the Philippines, rather than abolish them, in comparison
to his more radical friend Elias, but he changes to the values of Elias as the novel progresses.
MARIA CLARA
She is believed to be the daughter of Captain Tiago, a lady of high social status, and the
goddaughter of Father Dámaso. Actually, she is Father Dámaso's biological daughter, the
result of a scandalous arrangement between the old priest and the wife of Captain Tiago.
Maria Clara grew up alongside Ibarra and decided to marry him, but the marriage was
disapproved of by Father Dámaso. Her guardians set her up to be married to Linares, a
rich young man of Spanish descent, after Ibarra is excommunicated from the church, and
she tries to go along with the arrangement to avoid upsetting her father the weak-willed
Captain Tiago She is coerced into surrendering the letters Ibarra gave her as proof of his
guilt as Ibarra is put on trial for sedition. Ultimately, she refuses to marry Linares and enters a convent when
she learns about Ibarra's sudden death.
FATHER DAMASAO
Father Dámaso is an aged, power-hungry and shamelessly corrupt Spanish priest who, for
nearly two decades, has lived among the native Filipinos. The years have done little to
endear him or build much sympathy for his "flock," despite having spent all that time with
them. He is deeply racist, as well as petty and vindictive, and he thinks little about using his
immense influence to ruin the lives of others who have slighted him, regardless of how minor
the crime is. He masterminded the assassination of Don Rafael, Ibarra, then taunted the
younger Ibarra brazenly. Ibarra threatens him after he openly insults Ibarra 's father and he
excommunicates Ibarra from the church. He is also Maria Clara's godfather (and, technically,
the biological father), granting him control over her relationship with Ibarra.
ELIAS
Elias, an enigmatic character, is a man on the run from the law who, amid his firm religious
beliefs, resents both the Spanish colonial government and the Catholic Church. When Ibarra
bravely saves him from a crocodile, he crosses paths with the more temperate Ibarra. Elias
discovers a scheme against Ibarra's life and deals closely with him in the second half of the
book. He and Ibarra had some lengthy debates on the ethics of politics and government with a
more revolutionary approach held by Elias.
FATHER SALVI
A younger, more cunning Spanish priest who takes over the role of Father Damaso as San
Diego's Friar Curate. He is more dangerous than his predecessor in many ways, as he is a
more skilled strategist who uses his religious position for political influence and personal
vendettas. He frequently fights with the town's ensign for power His most significant role in the
novel comes through his plot to ruin Ibarra, who is engaged to Maria Clara who he is in love
with.
CAPTAIN TIAGO (DON SANTIAGO DE LOS SANTOS)
Capitan Tiago is a rarity to the fact that he is a rich Filipino native. Despite really showing little
regard for religion, he retains strong relations with high-ranking Catholic Church officials, and
shamelessly shares in the racial insults of others towards his own people. His primary interest
is to marry a wealthy man from a prominent family with his daughter, María Clara. This is one
of the key reasons that when he is branded a subversive, he is able to toss aside his loyalties
to Ibarra. As a possible new fit for his daughter, his desire for favorable social pairings makes
him easy to agree with Linares.
DOÑA CONSOLACION
Doña Consolacion, the combative wife of The Ensign, is an elderly Filipino woman who is
ashamed of her ethnicity and who pretends to be unable to understand Tagalog, her own native
tongue. She also argues with her husband and takes much of her husband's decisions for him.
She is proud, despite being portrayed as very ugly, and she demands respect from everyone.
Doña Victorina, a brave and determined social climber from the Philippines, is the wife of Tiburcio
de Espadaña, a fake doctor. Well past her prime, she depends on garish make-up to take on
the youthful façade. She eagerly seeks to marry her nephew to Maria Clara, perhaps as a way
to further advance her social standing.
CRISPIN
A young boy training to be a church keeper, Crispín and his brother Basilio are constantly
working to give help money to their demoralized mother, Sisa. Crispin is accused of taking
money from the church suitcases by the head sexton and is kept a virtual hostage until the
debt is settled. The night that he and his brother visited their mother, the head of the sexton
held them until the curfew essentially preventing the brothers from moving. The head sexton
beat him and he was never seen again afterwards, potentially dying at the hands of the
ruthless head sexton, even though another church official believed he had escaped.
BASILIO
Crispin's older brother is Basilio. Like his younger brother, he works like a sexton. Basilio takes
a desperate run to their home the night that Crispin is taken away and manages to find his
younger brother the next day, but his search efforts are fruitless. The next day, the Civil Guard
arrives to look for him and his brother. Fearing his life, he escapes to the forest where he goes
into hiding staying with a kind family until Christmas Eve When he eventually locates Sisa, he
discovers that she has gone insane because of her grief and is thus unable to recognise him
as her mother. He follows her to the trees, where she momentarily regains her wits, and then dies of shock.
SISA
She goes insane at the loss of her sons, the long suffering mother of sextons-in-training. Crispin
and Basilio. Poor and married to a brutal intoxicated man, she is only allied with her sons. She
wanders through the city, her clothing tattered and her hair disheveled, and calls for her sons.
She is unable to remember him until she finally encounters Basilio.
LT. GUEVARRA
The lieutenant of the Civil Guard is also a morally upright man of Spanish extraction who keeps
both Crisóstomo Ibarra and the late Don Rafael in high regard. He is one of the few who support
the Ibarras publicly and he is outspoken about his disapproval of the control of Father Dámaso.
He tells Crisóstomo Ibarra of his father's fate and of the role of Father Damaso in his passing.
LINARES
Dr. de Espadaña's nephew, a respectable young Spanish man. Like his uncle, he has forged
credentials and hopes to climb through the social ranks.
FATHER SALVI
A priest serving in the Binondo district in the city of Manila, Father Sibyla serves as a foil to the
otherwise largely corrupt Father Dámaso and the perverse Father Salvi as he is rational and
calm. Father Sibyla is an adept and shrewd orator who takes obvious delight in antagonizing
the pompous Father Dámaso at Ibarra 's return party.
Prepared by:
ANTHONY P. ANGELES
STELLA MARIE R. LUMABAN
RAY T. OBISPO, Ph. D
JEIZELLE MARIE T. QUINTO
DARIN JAN C. TINDOWEN, Ph. D
ALVIC B. TORRES
Course Instructor
Reviewed by:
Recommended by:
Approved by:
O God, wellspring of goodness and blessings, we give you thanks and praise as one Louisian
community. The graces You incessantly grant upon us and Your divine providence have sustained
our beloved University throughout the years of mission and excellence.
Having been founded by the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, we pray that You
keep us committed and dedicated to our mission and identity to serve the Church and the society
as we become living witnesses to the Gospel values proclaimed by Jesus. For if we are steadfast
in our good and beautiful mission, our works will bring success not only to ourselves but also to
those whom we are bound to love and serve.
Inspired by St. Louis our Patron Saint, who was filled with a noble spirit that stirred him to love You
above all things, may we also live believing that we are born for a greater purpose and mission as
we dwell in Your presence all the days of our life.
Grant all these supplications through the intercession of
Mother Mary and through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Lesson XI:
Learning Outcomes: At the end of this module, you are expected to:
1. Discuss the importance of Rizal’s annotations of Dr. Antonio Morga’s works in understanding our
Pre-Colonial society; and
2. Develop your own insights about our Pre-Colonial society.
LEARNING CONTENT
INTRODUCTION
D
uring the Spanish colonial period, Philippine history was primarily written by the Spaniards. Early
Spanish took note of the native’s appearance and way of life. However, many of these early histories
depicted the Filipinos in negative terms and often contained biases against the colonized people.
In this lesson you will learn about Jose Rizal’s annotation of Antonio Morga’s work, Sucesos de las Islas
Filipinas, which was an attempt to redress the biased view for the Filipinos and can be used even today to
derive insights useful for investigating pre-Hispanic history. Although Rizal’s annotations have been largely
disregarded his work has credited as the first Philippine history to be written form the viewpoint of a Filipino.
LESSON PROPER
A
ntonio Morga was a Spanish administrator who served in the Philippine in the
late sixteenth century. He was born in Seville in 1559 and began working for
the government in 1580. He served as the Lieutenant-Governor-second most
powerful position in the colony in the Philippines in 1953 and then as judge of the
Audiencia in 1598. By 1915, he moved to Mexico where he served as the president of
the Audiencia. He was later investigated for the corruption and was found guilty. Before
being sent to the gallows, however, he died in 1636.
Morga’s work, Sucesos de Las Islas Filipinas, was published in 16709 in Mexico and
consisted eight chapters. The first seven chapters dealt with the terms of the governors-general who had
served in the Philippines from the time Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in 1565 to Pedro de Acuna in 1606. The last
chapter, titled “An account of the Philippine Islands,”, provided ample descriptions of early Filipinos upon the
arrival of the Spaniards in the sixteenth century.
While at the British Museum in the late 1889, Rizal found a copy of the first edition of Antonio Morga’s Sucesos
de las Islas Filipinas and began copying the text by hand. He annotated the work along the way with the
intention of creating critical work on the history of the Philippines. Despite hopes of getting the work published
through the help of Antonio Regidor, Rizal ended up with no publisher when his annotations were done. By
September 1889, Rizal decided to publish the annotations himself in the Garnier Hermanos, a printing press
based in Paris.
The first reason, according to a Historian Ambeth Ocampo, was the fact that Morga’s work in its original
Spanish edition was rare. In fact, the original Spanish text had never been reprinted in full until Rizal published
his annotations in 1889. Second, unlike other early Spanish Chronicles written by ecclesiastics, Morga was
a civil administrator and therefore provided a secular view of historical events during the early Spanish
colonial period. This second reason relates to Rizal’s belief that a secular account was more credible than
those written by religious missionaries, which is the third reason for his choice. Fourth, it was more
sympathetic towards the natives in contrast to the biased accounts written by the friars. Finally, Morga’s work
was a fitting choice because he was an eyewitness ton historical events that occurred in the Philippines during
the period of early Spanish colonization.
There are several reasons why Rizal’s intent in annotating Morga’s work. First is to awaken the consciousness
of the Filipinos regarding their glorious ways of the past. Second, to correct what has been distorted about
the Philippines due to Spanish Conquest and third, to prove that the Filipinos are civilized/advanced even
before the coming of the Spaniards.
With the publication of his annotations to Sucesos, Rizal presented an outline of linear conception of history.
While Noli Me Tangere dealt with the nineteenth century of Rizal’s present and El Filibusterismo and the
essay titled “The Philippines a Century Hence” covered the future, the annotations of Sucessos tackled the
past. More than an attempt to write the country’s history, however, Rizal’s annotation of Morga’s Sucesos
must also be seen within the context of the Propaganda Movement. At a time when Filipino propagandists
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 6| 4
were clamoring for reforms in Spain, presenting a critical narrative of the country’s history might be considered
as an endeavor to create a sense of national consciousness or identity that was anchored on a glorious past.
Whereas early Spanish chronicles for being barbarians, Rizal’s copious notes of Sucesos revealed early
Filipino culture as rich and flourishing. Thus, Rizal’s annotations may be considered an effort to assert Filipino
identity within an oppressive colonial framework.
Our forefathers in the Pre-colonial Philippines have The Spanish missionaries have exploited the
already possessed a working judicial and legislative baybayin for their own ends, learning and using it
system. to translate their goals.
Our ancestors are very proficient in the art of war. The pre-colonial Filipinos had already established
Aside from wielding swords and spears they also trading and diplomatic relations with other countries.
know
In the rivers and the streams there are very large and Perhaps for the same reason, other nations have
small scorpions and a great hnumber of very fierce great esteem for lion and bear, putting them on
and cruel crocodiles which frequently get the natives their shields and giving them honorable epithets.
from their bancas on which they ride… However much The mysterious life of crocodiles, the enormous
the people may trap, catch and kill them, these size that it sometimes reaches, its fatidical aspect,
reptiles hardly seem to diminish in number. For this without counting anymore its voraciousness, must
reason, the natives build on the border of their rivers have influenced greatly the imagination of the
and streams in their settlements where they bathe, Malayan Filipinos.
traps and fences with thick enclosures and bars of
bamboo and timber within which they do their bathing
and washing, secure from these monsters which they
fear and respect to the degree of veneration, as if they
were somehow superior to them.
In addition, Rizal’s annotations should also be understood within the context of propaganda work
that Filipinos in Spain were engaged in. The annotations explored the possibilities of creating a Filipino
identity anchored clearly on a pre-Spanish past.
REFERENCES
Textbooks
Rhodalyn, Wani-Obias et al. (2018). The Life and Works of Jose Rizal. C& E Publishing, Inc
Ocampo, Ambeth.1998. Rizal's Morga and views of Philippine history. Philippine Studies
Venecarcion, Jaime B. 1983 and 1984. Ang Kasayksayan sa kasalukuyang henerasyon. Historical Bulletin
(Tomo 27 and 28): 13-27
Schumacher, John. 19978. The Filipino past and education for the future, 1887-1891. In The Propaganda
Movemnet, 1880-1895: The Creation of a Filipino consciousness, the making of the revolution, pp. 212-235.
Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press.
Online
Dr. Antonio de Morga's Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas retrieved October 30, 2020
https://www.slideshare.net/anandawisely/dr-antonio-de-morgas-sucesos-de-las-islas-
filipinas?fbclid=IwAR1sy1by0upRPHIZXCNmqWf0eNrlzN1SYyDz9g8gU4tqNw4T7QUnPCz3kn
Learning Outcomes: At the end of this module, you are expected to:
LEARNING CONTENT
QUESTION: Aside from the two famous literary works of Jose Rizal, the Noli Me Tangere and El
Filibusterismo, what other masterpieces do you know?
ACTIVITY
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I
t is indeed important for us to know some literary works of our national hero Dr. Jose Rizal. Through his
literary masterpieces, he voiced strong opposition to the abuse of Spaniards and conveyed messages
that he hoped would inspire his fellow countrymen. He used his intelligence to put into light the real
situation of Philippines and enlightened the minds of Filipinos.
For some, they do not consider Rizal as hero because he did not fight like
other brave heroes using other weapons and sacrificing their lives in bloody
battles. Instead, he fought with the principle “the pen is mightier than the
sword” in which he believed that not everything should be dealt with violence.
With this, he created provoking and powerful masterpieces which helped fight
against the colonizers in the past. The country’s national hero is always
remembered and looked upon with high regard for his contribution towards
the Philippine independence.
LESSON PROPER
T
he Philippines a Century Hence is an essay written by Philippine national
hero Jose Rizal to forecast the future of the country within a hundred
years. Rizal felt that it was time to remind Spain that the circumstances that
ushered in the French Revolution could have a telling effect for her in the
Philippines. This was published in La Solidaridad that starts by analyzing the
various causes of the miseries suffered by the Filipino people:
Deterioration and disappearance of Filipino indigenous culture – when Spain came with the sword and
the cross, it began the gradual destruction of the native Philippine culture. Because of this, the Filipinos
started losing confidence in their past and their heritage, became doubtful of their present lifestyle, and
eventually lost hope in the future and the preservation of their race.
Some questions then arise as to what had awakened the hearts and opened the minds of the Filipino people
with regards to their plight. Eventually, the natives realized that such oppression in their society by foreign
colonizers must no longer be tolerated. Another question in this essay is whether or not Spain can indeed
prevent the progress of the Philippines. And the answers are: First, Keeping the people uneducated and
ignorant had failed. National consciousness had still awakened, and great Filipino minds still emerged from
the rubble. Second, keeping the people impoverished also came to no avail. On the contrary, living a life of
eternal destitution had allowed the Filipinos to act on the desire for a change in their way of life. They began
to explore other horizons through which they could move towards progress. Lastly, Exterminating the people
as an alternative to hindering progress did not work either. The Filipino race was able to survive amidst wars
and famine, and became even more numerous after such catastrophes. To wipe out the nation altogether
would require the sacrifice of thousands of Spanish soldiers, and this is something Spain would not allow.
Spain, therefore, had no means to stop the progress of the country. What she needs to do is to change her
colonial policies so that they are in keeping with the needs of the Philippine society and to the rising
nationalism of the people.
In his most prescient essay, The Philippines A Century Hence, written in 1889 and in his December 15, 1896,
memorandum for use by his counsel, Rizal made the following predictions: One, “the Philippines will one day
declare herself independent”; two, “the great American Republic with interests in the Pacific…may one day
think of acquiring possessions beyond the seas”; three, “the Philippines will defend with indescribable ardor
the liberty she bought at the cost of so much blood and sacrifice”; four, “Japan will swallow us”; five, “[once
liberated] the Philippines will, perhaps, establish a federal republic”; and six, “[the Philippines] will, perhaps,
enter openly the wide road of progress and will work jointly to strengthen the Mother Country at home, as well
as abroad…”
SUMMARY
I. What will become of the Philippines w/in a century? Will they continue
to be a Spanish colony?
• For those who have a strong spirit over the liberty of the country,
independence was assured.
• but for those who are discouraged and disillusioned by sad
experience shall be a PRISON of the colony FOREVER.
II. Now then, are the Philippines in the same condition they were three
centuries ago?
PART II • For the liberal Spaniards: the ethical condition of the people remains
the same
• For the friars and their followers: they have progressed
• For many Filipino ethics: they have retrograded
A. Spaniards were able to take hold of the Philippines for three
centuries because Filipinos remained faithful, giving up their
liberty and their independence, in exchange of all the promises
given to them.
B. Filipinos sees the Spaniards as protectors but soon realizes that
they are its exploiters and executioners.
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 6| 11
C. Enlightenment is spreading and the persecution it suffers quickens
it.
III. If this state of affairs should continue, what will become of the
Philippines within a century?
• People start to awaken and if the government doesn’t change its acts,
a revolution will occur.
• What do the people like?
A. A Filipino representative in the Cortes and an authorized voice to cry
out against all kinds of abuses.
B. To practice their human rights.
Possible outcomes:
✓ The Philippines will remain under Spanish domination, but with
more law and greater liberty.
✓ They will declare themselves independent.
SUMMARY
The Philippines; A Century Hence contain the prediction of Jose Rizal about the Philippines 100 years
before its publication. He published the essay on September 30, 1889 under the La Solidaridad.
1. Using the past to understand the present thus predicting the future.
2. Filipinos have lost confidence in their past, lost faith in the present, and lost their hopes in the
future.
3. The Filipinos will still be under Spain if they will implement the freedom of press and the Filipinos
has representation in the Spanish Cortes. RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 6| 12
ANSWERS IN THE ACTIVITY
REFERENCES
Textbooks
Virlyn Francisco et al. (2018). Rizal, A modular Approach. MINDSHOPPERS CO., INC.
Rhodalyn, Wani-Obias et al. (2018). The Life and Works of Jose Rizal. C& E Publishing, Inc.
Ziade, G. F., & Zaide, S. M., (1994). Jose Rizal: Life, Works and Writings of a Genius, Writer, Scientist, and
National Hero. Quezon City: All-Nations Publishing Co., Inc.
Online
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippines A Century Hence, by Jose Rizal. Retrieved
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/35899/35899-h/35899-h.htm
Point de Galle: Sleepy port Inspirations of Rizal in making Dedication of each novel:
Naples: Panoramic beauty Noli: Noli- Philippines
Port Said: Multicultural city ✓ Stowe's Uncle Tom's El Fili- GomBurZa
Cabin
✓ Sue’s The Wandering
Jew
✓ Caldos' Doña Perfecta
Who is this?
Prepared by:
ANTHONY P. ANGELES
STELLA MARIE R. LUMABAN
RAY T. OBISPO, Ph. D
JEIZELLE MARIE T. QUINTO
DARIN JAN C. TINDOWEN, Ph. D
ALVIC B. TORRES
Course Instructors
Reviewed by:
Recommended by:
Approved by:
O God, wellspring of goodness and blessings, we give you thanks and praise as one Louisian
community. The graces You incessantly grant upon us and Your divine providence have
sustained our beloved University throughout the years of mission and excellence.
Having been founded by the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, we pray that You
keep us committed and dedicated to our mission and identity to serve the Church and the
society as we become living witnesses to the Gospel values proclaimed by Jesus. For if we are
steadfast in our good and beautiful mission, our works will bring success not only to ourselves
but also to those whom we are bound to love and serve.
Inspired by St. Louis our Patron Saint, who was filled with a noble spirit that stirred him to love
You above all things, may we also live believing that we are born for a greater purpose and
mission as we dwell in Your presence all the days of our life.
Lesson XII
Topic: Rizal’s Changing View on Spanish Rule and El Filibusterismo
LEARNING CONTENT
“You must shatter the vase to spread its perfume and smite the rock to get the spark!”
-Jose Rizal (El Filibusterismo)
T
he Spanish colonialism in Philippines has created uncertainties for many Filipinos. In their
lives, many Filipinos suffered, some were mistreated, discrimination was rampant, and
inequality prevailed. Born during the Spanish period, Jose Rizal died at the hands of
Spanish colonial oppression. He was able to create writings that represented the colonial rule of
the Spaniards from his encounters within and outside the Philippines. One of his popular novels,
El Filibusterismo (The Reign of Greed), a sequel to Noli me Tangere, was one of these.
Published in 1891, it continues the Noli's criticisms of the abuses and corruption perpetrated by
the Spanish government. This module addresses the pressing problems facing the Spanish
regime and how Rizal used them in writing El Filibusterismo as inspiration.
1. Racial Discrimination- The Filipino natives were commonly regarded by the Spaniards
as belonging to the lower race and haughtily called them Indios. The preconceived
notion of the Spanish colonizers that the natives could not rise beyond their limited
intelligence prompted the enlightened Filipinos to fight for equality. Jose Rizal's
annotation of Antonio de Morga's Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas denounced the Spanish
allegation that the Filipinos were savages and had no culture prior to the arrival of
Western colonizers.
2. Secularization Controversy- There were two kinds of priests in the Philippines serving
the Catholic Church. These were the regulars and the seculars. There were regular
priests belonging to religious orders. Spreading Christianity was their primary task.
Secular priests were of no religious order whatsoever. They were trained to run the
parishes specifically and were under the bishops' supervision.
When the bishops insisted on visiting the parishes that were run by regular priests,
conflict began. It was their duty to check the administration of these parishes, they
argued. But these visits were refused by the regular priests, saying that they were not
under the jurisdiction of the bishop. If the Bishops continued, they threatened to leave
their parishes.
In 1774, Archbishop Basilio Santa Justa decided to uphold the authority of the diocese
over the parishes and accepted the regular priests' resignations. His assignment was to
secular priests. The Archbishop hastened the ordination of Philippine seculars since the
seculars are not sufficient to fill the vacancy. On 9 November 1774, a Royal Decree
was also issued, providing for the secularization or transferal of any parish from regular
friars to secular priests.
As they found the Filipinos unfit for the priesthood, the regulars resented the change.
They cited the Filipinos' brown skin, lack of schooling, and poor knowledge, among
other factors. When the Jesuits returned to the Philippines, the controversy became
more serious. Due to some policies of the Order that the
Spanish authorities did not like, they were expelled from
the land.
These three issues gave inspiration to Rizal in writing El Filibusterismo. In fact, Rizal dedicated
his second novel to Gomez, Burgos, and Zamora (GomBurZa). Rizal was just 10 years old
when GomBurZa were executed. Their deaths awakened the fire that has been burning inside
the native Filipino people (Indios) for over 300 years of abuse and slavery. El Filibusterismo was
written in dedication to the three martyred priests Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos, and Jacinto
Zamora, whose deaths left an indelible mark in his mind. Like Noli Me Tangere, El Fili aims at
enlightening the society and bringing the Filipinos closer to the truth.
Rizal started writing the manuscript of his second book, El Filibusterismo, during his stay in
Calamba in October 1887 while practicing medicine. In 1888, he continued to compose it in
London wherein he made some changes in the plot and corrected some chapters already
written. He wrote further chapters in Paris, Madrid and Biarritz, where he finished the whole
manuscript on March 29, 1891. It took him three years to complete the book. When in Belgium,
he moved to Ghent, where the cost of living was lower. He moved to a low-cost boarding house
where he cooked his own meal. He and his boardmate, Jose Alejandrino, operated on biscuits
that had been rationed for thirty days, but ultimately lasted just fifteen days. (Zaide, 1999)
Rizal also sent free copies to Blumentritt, Ponce, Lopez Jaena, T.H.
Pardo de Tavera, Antonio and Juan Luna, Marcelo H. del Pilar and other
friends. The reformist community in Barcelona praised the novel saying
that it is comparable to the works of Alexander Dumas such as The
Count of Monte Cristo from which the novel received inspiration. The
Spanish newspaper El Nuevo Regimen serialized the novel during
October 1891. (de Viana, 2014)
We should note that to reach Manila, Noli was smuggled. The remaining
copies of El Filibusterismo were collected and sent to Manila to be
smuggled to Hong Kong. Almost all the crates were seized by the
authorities, relative to the Noli Me Tangere, and were destroyed. It was
much rarer than that of Noli, and there were a few copies sold for as
much as 400 pesetas.
The novel was devoted to the memory of GomBurZa, the three martyred
secular priests. Rizal said in the dedication that the involvement of the
priests in the Cavite mutiny was in question and hoped that their
identities would be explained sometime by Spain. Rizal perpetrated
factual inaccuracies, much as in Noli Me Tangere. On February 17,
1872, not February 28, the execution of the three priests took place. And
Father Gomez's age was 73 years, not 85; Fr. Burgos was 35, not 30
years old, and Father Zamora was 37, not 35 years old. A foreword and
a warning were absent in the printed novel to save on the printing cost.
The preface spoke of Filibusterism and that it was used by the Spanish
government to intimidate people into silence.
To the memory of the priests, Don Mariano Gomez (85 years old), Don Jose Burgos (30 years old), and
Don Jacinto Zamora (35 years old). Executed in Bagumbayan Field on the 28th of February 1872.
The Church, by refusing to degrade you, has placed in doubt the crime that has been imputed to you; the
Government, by surrounding your trials with mystery and shadows, causes the belief that there was some
error, committed in fatal moments; and all the Philippines, by worshiping your memory and calling you
martyrs, in no sense recognizes your culpability. In so far, therefore, as your complicity in the Cavite
mutiny is not clearly proved, as you may or may not have been patriots, and as you may or may not have
cherished sentiments for justice and for liberty, I have the right to dedicate my work to you as victims of
the evil which I undertake to combat. And while we wait expectantly upon Spain someday to restore your
good name and cease to be answerable for your death, let these pages serve as a tardy wreath of dried
leaves over your unknown tombs, and let it be understood that everyone who without clear proofs attacks
your memory stains his hands in your blood!
Simoun is outwardly a supporter of Spain, but secretly plans a horrific vengeance against the
Spanish authorities. His two obsessions are to save Maria Clara, his paramour, from the
convent of Santa Clara and to promote a revolution in the Philippines against Spain.
The El Filibusterismo tale begins on board a steamer ship sailing from Manila to Laguna de Bay
on the Pasig River. Among the passengers are Simoun; Doña Victorina, a pro-Spanish native
woman who is going to Laguna in search of her henpecked husband, Tiburcio de Espadaña,
who has deserted her; Paulita Gomez, her beautiful niece; Ben-Zayb (anagram of Ibañez), a
Spanish journalist who writes silly articles about the Filipinos; Padre Sibyla, vice-rector of the
University of Santo Tomas; Padre Camorra, the parish priest of the town of Tiani; Don
Custodio, a pro-Spanish Filipino holding a position in the government; Padre Salvi, thin
Franciscan friar and former cura of San Diego; Padre Irene, a kind friar who was a friend of the
Filipino students; Padre Florentino, a retired scholarly and patriotic Filipino priest; Isagani, a
poet-nephew of Padre Florentino and a lover of Paulita; and Basilio, son of Sisa and promising
medical student, whose medical education is financed by his patron, Capitan Tiago.
Simoun, a man of riches and intrigue, is a very close associate of the Spanish Governor
General and a confidante. He was dubbed the "Brown Cardinal" or the "Black Eminence" due to
his great influence in Malacañang. He encourages government corruption by using his riches
and political power, promotes the injustice of the masses, and accelerates the spiritual decay of
the world so that the people can become desperate and fight. With the aid of a rich Chinese
merchant, Quiroga, who aspires to be the Chinese Consul of Manila, he smuggles weapons into
the country. His first effort to launch the armed revolution did not materialize because he heard
the tragic news at the last hour that Maria Clara died in the nunnery. He did not send the signal
for an eruption of hostilities in his agonizing moment of bereavement.
Simoun is perfecting his plot to topple the government after a long period of sickness brought on
by the bitter loss of Maria Clara. He gave them a lovely lamp on the day of the wedding of
Paulita Gomez and Juanito Pelaez. Just he and his confidential allies, Basilio (the son of Sisa
who supported his revolutionary cause), realize that when the wick of his lamp burns down the
nitroglycerine concealed in his underground compartment, it will explode, burning the house
The poet Isagani, who was rejected by Paulita because of his liberal ideas, is standing outside
the house as the wedding feast begins, sorrowfully watching the merriment inside. He is warned
by Basilio, his friend, to go away because the lightened lamp will soon explode.
Isagani realizes, upon hearing the horrible secret of the lamp, that his beloved Paulita is in
grave danger. He rushes into the house to save her life, seizes the lightened lamp, and hurls it
into the river, where it explodes. It is thus discovered the revolutionary plot. The soldiers
cornered Simoun, but he escapes. Mortally injured, holding his treasure chest, he finds shelter
by the sea in Padre Florentino's house. However, the Spanish authorities have been informed of
his involvement in the house of Padre Florentino. By letter, Lieutenant Perez of the Guardia Civil
told the priest that he would come to arrest Simoun at eight o'clock that night.
The confession of the dying Simoun is excruciating and prolonged. It is already night when,
brushing the sweat from his wrinkled forehead, Padre Florentino rises and starts to meditate. He
comforts the dying man and says, "Señor Simoun, God will forgive you.He is conscious that
we're fallible. He has seen that you have failed, and we can see His divine grace in ordaining
that the penalty for your faults should come as death from the same ones you have instigated to
violence. One by one the best conceived, first by the death of Maria Clara, then by a lack of
planning, then in some strange way, has frustrated your plans. Let us bow to His will and be
grateful to Him!”
Padre Florentino sinks to his knees and prays for the dead jeweler, watching Simoun die happily
with a clean conscience and at peace with God. Then the priest takes the chest of treasures
and drops it into the water.
Father Fernandez was Father Evaristo Fernandez Arias, the only friar in the less unfavourable
light that Rizal painted. In the book, he had a moderating effect on Filipino students and was
viewed as fatherly and kind. The real Father Fernandez was a professor at the University of
Santo Tomas and was known to most alumni during Rizal's time. During the Philippine
Revolution he wrote a letter to General Emilio Aguinaldo on July 7, 1898 urging him "to abandon
the violence of war. He said that rebellion against legitimate authority was illicit." He said that
Spanish rule was "not tyrannical but constructive and benevolent." He reminded Aguinaldo that
he was affiliated to secret societies condemned by the Church under the penalty of
excommunication and that the Church condemns those that lay violent hands on the ministers
of God. He said that the revolutionists were depriving the priests of their freedom because they
were his prisoners.
The other friars were Fr. Camorra and Fr. Irene, who seemed to be shrewd, strong, and
unethical frailocracy figures. It was understandable for Rizal to have cast the Dominicans as
part of the villains because his family had been removed from their lands in the Dominican
estate of Calamba when he wrote the book.
Rizal's commentary on how it was being operated at the time was the state of the colonial
government. Because of the assistance of patrons, the governor general was incompetent and
secured his roles. Appointments to high offices can be obtained by a bribe network. As in the
case of Graciano Lopez Jaena and Marcelo H, the friars were so powerful that they should have
imprisoned a man. Del Pilar, who were told to be imprisoned because of their writing after they
angered the friars.
Fr. Florentino symbolized the secular priests of the Filipinos. Rizal offered him a solution in his
book, but only in a distant region facing the Pacific Ocean. A cross-section of colonial society at
the time was reflected by students at the University of Santo Tomas. They were influenced by
the young women of Malolos, who defied the local curate there when they advocated for a
Spanish language academy in the book. They embodied a cross-section of colonial society at
the period, belonging to diverse backgrounds. The characters of Rizal were also portrayed by
them. Isagani, the student who cast himself as a poet, represents Rizal's idealistic personality;
Pecson exposes Rizal's playful and cynical side of Rizal, while his serious side is Placido
Penitente.
The Cabesang Tales family symbolized the poor peasant farmers and the Calamba estate
tenants. Both the law and the lawless became prisoners of them. Estate managers come to
collect ever-increasing rentals while bandits enter to extort currency. The presence of bandits
The killing of Tandang Selo by a group of civil guards, including Tano, was evidently inspired by
a story in the Marianas in the 1870s in which a group of escaping prisoners were pursued by
civil guards. He was shot as he waved a spear. The soldier who shot him was Carolino, who
was Tano, the grandson of Tandang Selo. He must have been given his current name when he
was assigned to the Carolina Islands in the Pacific.
The involvement of Americans such as Mr. Leeds showed the impression of Rizal regarding
these foreigners who came to the Philippines to dazzle the people with pointless distraction,
such as the talking head display, then left with the hard-earned money of the inhabitants.
In his book, Rizal borrowed ideas from history as well. The blow-up of the house of Juanito
Pelaez was influenced in the 17th century by the Guy Fawkes Gunpowder Plot in England.
Fawkes wanted Catholic rule in England to be reinstated. By mining it with gunpowder, he
attempted to blow up Westminster Palace in 1605. He was deceived by hanging and sentenced
to death. Before his executioners could hang him, he killed himself by falling off the execution
table. Likewise, Simoun drank poison before the authorities could apprehend him.
As a novelist, Rizal demonstrated not just the Philippines, but other countries' knowledge and
depth of culture. In his fictional work, his historical experience added an aspect of both fact and
colour and showed his comprehension of cultural and historical changes. (de Viana, 2014).
Character/Event Allusion/Symbolism
Simoun Jose Rizal
Friars Dominicans
Fr. Sybila Fr. Bernardino Nozaleda
Oppressive professor in Physics Jose Franco
Fr. Fernandez Fr. Evaristo Fernandez Arias
Fr. Camorra and Irene Immoral members of frailocracy
Fr. Florentino Filipino secular priests
Students in UST Cross-section of the society at the time
Isagani Idealistic side of Rizal
Pecson Playful and Sarcastic side of Rizal
Placido Peniente Serious side of Rizal
Cabesang Tales Poor peasant farmers
Matang Lawin Laong
Blowing up of Juanito Pelaez house Guy Fawke’s Gunpowder Plot in England
Fr. Baltazar Archbishop Miguel de Benavidez
References
de Viana, A. V. (2014). Jose Rizal in Our Times: A Guide for the Better Understanding of the
Philippines Foremost National Hero. Mandaluyong City: Books ATBP. Publishing Corp.
Zaide, G. F., & Zaide, S. M. (1999). Rizal: Life, Works, and Writings of a Genius, Writer,
Scientist, and National Hero. Quezon City: All-Nations Publishing.
Lesson XIV
Topic: Indolence and Spanish Colonial rule
LEARNING CONTENT
"In the Philippines one's own and another's faults, the shortcomings of one, the misdeeds of
another, are attributed to indolence."
-Jose Rizal (The Indolence of the Filipinos)
A titled The Indolence of the Filipino (Sobre La Indolencia de los Filipinos in Spanish).
Indolence is the state of showing no real interest or effort (Cambridge Dictionary, 2020).
The purpose of writing is to explain the alleged idleness of his people during the Spanish
colonization. Simply put, this essay enumerates several reasons or causes of Filipinos’
Indolence. It was written as a response to the accusation of Indian or Malay indolence by José
Rizal. He acknowledges the existence of indolence among Filipinos, but for several rea sons it
could be attributed. The Indolence of the Filipinos is an analysis of the reasons why, as was
said, people did not work hard during the Spanish regime. Rizal pointed out that long before the
arrival of the Spanish, the Filipinos were hard-working. The Spanish government has led to a
decline in economic activity due to several causes. This essay shows the keen observation of
Rizal to Philippines as a colonial society.
In Chapter 1 of the essay, Rizal acknowledges the prior work of Gregorio Del Pilar and admits
that indolence does exist among the Filipinos, but it cannot be attributed to the troubles and
backwardness of the country; rather it is the effect of the backwardness and troubles
experienced by the country. Past writings on indolence revolve only on either denying or
affirming, and never studying its causes in depth. One must study the causes of indolence, Rizal
says, before curing it. He therefore enumerates the causes of indolence and elaborates on the
circumstances that have led to it. The hot climate, he points out, is a reasonable predisposition
for indolence. Filipinos cannot be compared to Europeans, who live in cold countries and who
must exert much more effort at work. An hour's work under the Philippine sun, he says, is
equivalent to a day's work in temperate regions. The approach of Rizal to the issue is what is
important to remember here. In tropics, the speed of life was slower because of the climatic and
even the European people wanted to slow down. He made a distinction between being
"indolent" as a response to environment for example and lack of love to work or avoiding it.
Rizal's other concept of indolence, "little love for work", should not reflect the physiological
response to heat. The change to working patterns in the tropical environment cannot be
understood because of exhaustion or little love for work.
Against foreign invaders and pirates, Spain did not secure the population. With no weapons to
protect themselves, they slaughtered the indigenous people, burnt their villages, and ravaged
their territories. As a result, the Filipinos were forced to become nomads i.e., a member of a
group of people who move from one place to another rather than living in one place all the time
(Cambridge Dictionary, 2020), lost faith in farming their lands or restoring the closed-down
factories and were merely submissive to God's mercy.
Whether it was to be called an education, there was a crooked system of education. Repetitive
prayers and other things that the students did not use to bring the country to success is what
was being learned in the classrooms. There were no courses in agriculture, industry, etc., which
during those periods were desperately needed by the Philippines.
A poor case of despising manual labor was the Spanish kings. At noon, the officials returned to
work and left early, all the time doing little in accordance with their obligations. Servants who
clothed them and fanned them, personal items they should have done for themselves, were
always trailing the women.
Rizal admitted that the Filipinos did not work so hard because they were wise enough to adjust
themselves to the warm, tropical climate. “An hour’s work under that burning sun, in the midst
of pernicious influences springing from nature in activity, is equal to a day’s labor in a temperate
climate.”
According to Alatas (2011), the theme of indolence, or the lazy native, in colonial scholarship
formed a vital component of the ideology of colonial capitalism. Rizal was probably the first to
deal with it systematically and sociologically.
Analysis
It is important to note that indolence in the Philippines is a chronic malady, but not a hereditary
one. Truth is, before the Spaniards arrived on these lands, the natives were industriously
conducting business with China, Japan, Arabia, Malaysia, and other countries in the Middle
East. The reasons for this said indolence were clearly stated in the essay, and were not based
only on presumptions, but were grounded on fact taken from history.
The absence of solidarity among the Filipino people is another factor we might add that
triggered this indolence. The people did not have the strength to combat the violent assaults of
the government and the other powers of society in the absence of peace and oneness. There
would also be no voice, no chief, to seed and nurture development, so that it could be harvested
in due time. The Philippines remained a nation in such a state that was lifeless, dying, merely
being, and not alive. As Rizal stated in conclusion, “a man in the Philippines is an individual; he
is not merely a citizen of a country.”
It can be clearly deduced from the writing that Spain is the cause of the indolence attributed to
our race: when the Filipinos decided to study and learn, there were no classes, and if there were
any, they lacked adequate funding and did not present more valuable knowledge; when the
Depending on the criterion on which such a label is based, it is not only the Philippines, but also
other nations, that can be considered indolent. Man cannot work without resting, and if he is
called idle, then we might conclude that all men are indolent. One cannot fault a nation that has
been stripped of its independence for losing its will to continue building its base on the backs of
its citizens, particularly when the fruits of its labor do not meet their lips. When we spend all our
lives worshiping such a barbaric and unjust civilization, imposed upon us by invaders who do
not even know our motherland, we are destined to tire after a while. We are not idiots, we are
not puppets who merely do as we are told to do – we are human beings who are guided by our
will to achieve our goals and who are committed to the protection of our race. When this basic
part of our life is denied to us who can fault us if we transform idly?
SUMMARY
✓ Hot Climate
✓ Galleon Trade
✓ Forced Labor
✓ Lack of protection against invaders
✓ Crooked Education
✓ Gambling
✓ Crooked Religion
✓ High Tax
References
Cambridge Dictionary. (2020, December 2). INDOLENCE | definition in the Cambridge English
Dictionary. Retrieved December 5, 2020, from Cambridge.org website:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/indolence
de Viana, A. V. (2014). Jose Rizal in Our Times: A Guide for the Better Understanding of the Philippines
Foremost National Hero. Mandaluyong City: Books ATBP. Publishing Corp.
On Eurocentrism and Laziness: The Thought of Jose Rizal > Articles |. (2011). Retrieved December 5,
2020, from Globalasia.org website: https://www.globalasia.org/v6no1/book/on-eurocentrism-and-
laziness-the-thought-of-jose-rizal_syed-farid-alatas
The Indolence of the Filipinos: Summary and Analysis. (2011). Retrieved December 5, 2020, from
Blogspot.com website: http://thelifeandworksofrizal.blogspot.com/2011/08/indolence-of-filipinos-
summary-and.html
Prepared by:
ANTHONY P. ANGELES
STELLA MARIE R. LUMABAN
RAY T. OBISPO, Ph. D
JEIZELLE MARIE T. QUINTO
DARIN JAN C. TINDOWEN, Ph. D
ALVIC B. TORRES
Course Instructor
Reviewed by:
Recommended by:
Approved by:
O God, wellspring of goodness and blessings, we give you thanks and praise as one
Louisian community. The graces You incessantly grant upon us and Your divine
providence have sustained our beloved University throughout the years of mission and
excellence.
Having been founded by the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, we pray
that You keep us committed and dedicated to our mission and identity to serve the
Church and the society as we become living witnesses to the Gospel values proclaimed
by Jesus. For if we are steadfast in our good and beautiful mission, our works will bring
success not only to ourselves but also to those whom we are bound to love and serve.
Inspired by St. Louis our Patron Saint, who was filled with a noble spirit that stirred him
to love You above all things, may we also live believing that we are born for a greater
purpose and mission as we dwell in Your presence all the days of our life.
Grant all these supplications through the intercession of
Mother Mary and through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Lesson XIV
RIZAL’S ABANDONMENT OF ASSIMILATION; COMPARISON OF NOLI
Topic: ME TANGERE AND EL FILIBUSTERISMO; The TRANSCENDENTAL
HERO
LEARNING CONTENT
What are the causes why Rizal abandoned the idea of assimilation?
What can you imagine for the Philippines if Rizal continued supporting the
assimilation?
For you, which novel gave a more impact to Filipinos, the Noli or El Fili?
What are the representations of Rizal as a national hero?
“If our countrymen hope in us in Europe, they are certainly mistaken… The field of battle is the
Philippines; this is where we should be.”
-Jose P. Rizal
INTRODUCTION
W
e can remember that one of the main goals of Propaganda movement was the
assimilation of Philippines by Spain. However, Filipinos found out that this movement
was futile and ineffective. So, they decided to find more ways to achieve equality and
fairness among Spaniards and Filipinos. Filipinos realized that to achieve this, Philippines must
be separated from Spain’s colonial fist. This paved way to the establishment of organizations that
Previous modules elaborately discussed the two famous novels of Rizal – Noli Me Tangere and
El FIlibusterismo. Rizal had differing experiences while writing the two novels. Both novels
provided great impact to Filipinos before. They paved the way to enlightenment of Spanish
colonial rule. We already know that these two are series of stories that reflected the Philippine
colonial situation. In this module, we are going to compare these two.
LESSON PROPER
T
he lack of substantial success in the Ilustrados and other propagandists' reform efforts led
many Filipinos to conclude that such campaigns were futile. This left them hopeless and
uninterested in the campaigns being supported.
Also, Filipinos were losing motivation in Spain. Others have chosen to engage in Filipino programs
in a passive manner, while others have wanted to pursue their own means of engaging in more
aggressive campaigns against Spain. Among the Filipino nationalists in Spain, this was the
situation. Personal rivalries among Filipinos also arose and became an obstacle to concrete plans
and actions being developed.
Graciano Lopez-Jaena and Jose Rizal's La Solidaridad was caused by withdrawal from
disagreement and differences in ideals and aspirations. This left Marcelo H. del Pilar to manage
the newspaper single-handedly. In addition, the desire of other Filipino nationalists to establish a
new organization to counter the Spanish rule resulted in setbacks on the efforts initiated by La
Solidaridad. Many believed that it would be better to be part of a new organization with members
united towards one goal instead of being in an organization where personal rivalries hinder
concrete actions toward greater nationalism.
The situation became more complicated for Rizal after his mother and sister were arrested in
Manila. After several days of imprisonment, they were asked to go back to the courts in their
province on foot before they were finally released. In a letter sent in 1981, Rizal wrote, “If our
countrymen hope in us here in Europe, they are certainly mistaken… the field of battle is the
Philippines; there is where we should be” This implies Rizal’s ideas on the abandonment of
assimilation. Realizing that all the movements they rendered in Spain were ineffective, he planned
to go back to Philippines and change the form of movement.
T
he two novels of Rizal have marked
differences. Both show
different aspects of Rizal.
The Noli Me Tangere
revealed a witty and romantic
Rizal. The second showed a
cynical and bitter Rizal. The Noli
Me Tangere reflected sensational
events in the Philippines and many
of its characters were drawn from
real individuals. (Espina-Clemente &
Cruz, 2019)
The Noli Me Tangere is labeled a love novel and the work of the heart by reviewers, while El
Filibusterismo was a political novel and a work of the mind. The Noli was a book of feelings
according to Zaide, and it has elements of freshness, color, and lightness. It also has a section
where a song written by Rizal was sung by characters like Maria Clara. This was Canto de Maria
Clara (Song of Maria Clara).On the other hand, El Filibusterismo portrayed Rizal's view of a
country full of bitterness, pain, violence, and sorrow.
Rizal spent more effort writing El Filibusterismo, if one looks at the making of the two novels. It
was emotionally difficult because Rizal's family was then in the process of being expelled from
their Calamba farm. He had virtually no support from home in Europe as his allowance from
Calamba did not arrive. He had just left the company of Filipino reformists in Spain when he was
printing the novel. The eviction of his family in Laguna and the perceived betrayal by the Filipino
community in Spain made him feel bitter. We can conclude that while writing it, Rizal's current
situation affected the theme or the emotion of the novel.
It is easy to discern Rizal's hardships when he was writing the manuscript of El Filibusterismo. In
the Noli Me Tangere, the ink Rizal used in writing was uniformly black. Many parts of the novel
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 8 | 6
were written only on the front of the paper. In El Filibusterismo, the ink used by Rizal turned pale
almost turning purple. He would have been diluting his ink to make it last longer. Many pages of
the manuscript were written on the back and front of the paper. In many instances, Rizal was
writing on the margins of the page. He even wrote on the back of scrap paper which should have
been discarded.
As to which was a superior novel, the critics remain divided until today. Rizal would say that the
Noli Me Tangere was better as did Marcelo H. Del Pilar. On the other hand, Blumentritt, Graciano
Lopez Jaena and Rafael Palma preferred El Filibusterismo. According to them, it had more
profound ideas and sublime thoughts. Nevertheless, both novels manifested Rizal's motives: the
Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo aimed to awaken the consciousness of the Filipinos by
making them aware of their conditions and the need to work for their own salvation. The two
novels were commentaries about Filipino society during the 19th century. While it condemned the
prevailing frailocracy and colonial domination by the Spaniards it also decried the vices of the
Filipinos, their cruelty towards fellow Filipinos, their colonial mentality, neglect of their own
heritage, and their submissiveness to the caprices of the Spaniards. The novels were a call for
the Filipinos to mend their ways and work for the happiness of their motherland. The awakened
national consciousness helped prepare the ground for future reformists and later the revolutionists
when the Katipunan was founded in 1892. (de Viana, 2014)
Rizal's aspiration for what is ideal never ended. This aspiration took the form of fighting against
injustice in society. His fervid goal while growing up and being educated was the liberation of his
fellow Filipinos from the bondage of political tyranny and the corollaries, misery, and ignorance
associated with it.
He was the "first Filipino" as evidenced by his novels, especially Noli Me Tangere. In this novel,
Rizal pictured the Philippines as a nation even though those who lived in it had no common name
yet to refer to themselves, apart from the pejorative terms indio and mestizo that the Spanish
colonizers called them. Rizal then was the first to imagine this social whole which explains why
he is remembered today as the first Filipino.
He was also the first one to use the term "Filipino." To prove that the Filipino natives had a culture
of their own prior to colonization. and that they were not inferior to the white man, he studied
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 8 | 8
Philippine history. His interest in this aspect of our nationhood was what compelled him to
annotate Antonio de Morga's Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. Rizal shattered the myth of the
indolence of the Filipinos because he believed that the Filipino is a worthy race. He likewise
intensively studied Tagalog and attempted to produce a comprehensive Tagalog dictionary to
slam the Filipinos who belittled their native tongue. He still embraced the term indio despite all
the negative connotations, and turned it to a term of dignity and nobility.
It is also noteworthy to mention that Rizal's foremost dream was for the Philippines to be known
as a nation of writers and intellectuals. He aimed at making the Filipino race known in the world.
Rizal's constant effort to improve himself showed how much he valued his own education. He
even took sculpting and painting aside from the prescribed academic subjects. To further improve
his craft, he learned other languages including German, which enabled him to translate Friedrizh
Schiller's Wilhelm Tell into Tagalog. And finally, he constantly kept himself updated on the current
trends in science and philosophy by reading and attending scholarly dialogues. Rizal hoped that
his achievements would influence all Filipinos to build a legacy.
• His social philosophy deals with man in society, influential factors in human life, racial
problems, social conflicts, and social justice. This also includes poverty and wealth, social
ideals, reforms, youth and greatness, history and progress, and the future Philippines.
• Colonies should not be abused but instead trained for self governance.
• Contrary to what the Spaniards taught, Rizal held that salvation was not only for the
Catholics; that fasting is not a sacrifice. He did not agree with the sale of religious items-
cross, medals, rosaries, and the like
• People should aim for the study of human behavior and the tendencies of being good and
evil.
• The body of knowledge that a person should acquire includes the wisdom of humanhood
developed through people's experiences in society.
• Education was foremost for Rizal. He believed that education is vital in national
development as it frees people from ignorance Education can save the country from
domination.
Rizal is the epitome of everything mentioned in the definitions of a hero. He is a towering figure
of the Propaganda Movement and in other affairs of the society. His works, achievements, and
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 8 | 9
contributions in various fields have been remarkably influential. Rizal, in the face of danger, was
bold despite the odds. And lastly, he was honored even more after his death because of the
legacies he left behind.
No law, executive order, or proclamation has been enacted or issued that officially proclaims any
Filipino historical figure as a national hero (NHCP, 2012). Thus, Rizal's title is sometimes
questioned. Accordingly, the title that Rizal holds is more of a tribute to the continued veneration
or acclamation of the people towards him. In 1898, General Emilio Aguinaldo issued a decree
that declares December 30 as a day of national mourning for the heroes and victims of the
Philippine Revolution, including Rizal. Then, in 1900, American governor general and chairman
of the 2nd Philippine Commission, William Howard Taft, suggested to revere Rizal as a national
hero. This is to recognize his contributions to the significant social transformations that took place
in the Philippines (NCCA, 2015). Instead of a single law hailing a national hero, laws and
proclamations were made in honor of all Filipino national heroes. In fact, 1996 was declared as
the "Year of the Filipino Heroes" in time for the centennial anniversary of the Philippine Revolution
marked by the Cry of Pugad Lawin in 1896. Then, August 30 was declared as the "National
Heroes Day."
Despite the absence of an official declaration, Rizal has been a symbol of what the Filipinos lack
as a race. This is ironic though since Rizal was in search of a true Filipino identity which turned
out to be his own self. To date, Rizal is the most popular Filipino whose portraits and monuments
are seen not only in the Philippines but around the world.
Rizal is a Filipino hero because he embodied the qualities of a true hero and made Filipinos realize
the best of what they can be despite the difficult social conditions. Both his struggles and triumphs
inspired and ignited the Katipunan-led revolution, making the Philippines the first independent
republic in Asia. Up to this day, it is still what Rizal fought for that leads this generation to continue
realizing his dream of a nation where every Filipino is truly free.
References
dan. (2016, October 12). Comparison of Noli Metangere and El... Retrieved December 12,
2020, from Graduateway website: https://graduateway.com/comparison-of-noli-
metangere-and-el-
filibusterismo/#:~:text=Noli%20is%20a%20love%20story,is%20thoughtful%2C%20discurs
ive%20and%20dialectal.
de Viana, A. V. (2014). jose Rizal in Our Times A Guide for Better understanding of the
Philippines' Foremost National Hero. Mandaluyong City: Books ATBP. Publishing Corp.
Espina-Clemente, J., & Cruz, G. C. (2019). The Life and Works of Rizal. Quezon City: C & E
Publishing.
The “Love-and-Hate” Relationship of Jose Rizal And Marcelo Del Pilar | OurHappySchool.
(2013). Retrieved December 11, 2020, from Ourhappyschool.com website:
https://ourhappyschool.com/history/love-and-hate-relationship-jose-rizal-and-marcelo-del-
pilar
Prepared by:
ANTHONY P. ANGELES
STELLA MARIE R. LUMABAN
RAY T. OBISPO, PhD
JEIZELLE MARIE T. QUINTO
DARIN JAN C. TINDOWEN, PhD
ALVIC B. TORRES
Course Instructor
Reviewed by:
Recommended by:
Approved by:
O God, wellspring of goodness and blessings, we give you thanks and praise as one
Louisian community. The graces You incessantly grant upon us and Your divine
providence have sustained our beloved University throughout the years of mission and
excellence.
Having been founded by the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, we pray
that You keep us committed and dedicated to our mission and identity to serve the
Church and the society as we become living witnesses to the Gospel values proclaimed
by Jesus. For if we are steadfast in our good and beautiful mission, our works will bring
success not only to ourselves but also to those whom we are bound to love and serve.
Inspired by St. Louis our Patron Saint, who was filled with a noble spirit that stirred him
to love You above all things, may we also live believing that we are born for a greater
purpose and mission as we dwell in Your presence all the days of our life.
Grant all these supplications through the intercession of
Mother Mary and through Christ our Lord. Amen.
LEARNING CONTENT
In your own perception, do you believe Rizal made a great impact to many people
even up to this day?
Are you in favor of making Rizal our official national hero?
What are the greatest contributions of Rizal in Philippine society?
Tomorrow we will be citizens of the Philippines, whose destiny will be beautiful because it will be
in loving hands…
-Jose P. Rizal
In this lesson, we will study about Jose Rizal and The Philippine Nationalism: Bayani and
Kabayanihan. These concepts are very important as there is seemingly call for redefined heroes
given the current affairs and circumstances our country face. Further, we will also explore
interesting facts about Jose Rizal that probably will make you more interested to his life.
Since the time of the declaration of Philippine independence, 109 years ago, many were
acknowledged as Filipino heroes, more so today, that every individual who become so popular or
the main character in any event is given the title “hero”. The meaning of the word "hero" has
diminished in the past. Today, to be given the noble title or that any just won a boxing match, one
need not die or do such a gallant act. Time has really changed and our norm for identifying a
Filipino hero is also changing. In his book about Rizal, Dr. Esteban de Ocampo, a renowned
historian, claimed that a hero means a famous or central individual who plays an admirable role
in some remarkable action or event; a person of distinguished worth or enterprise in danger or
strength in suffering; and a man honored by public worship after death because of exemplary
service to humanity. The true heroes of the history of the Philippines deserve to be named so
because they had no idea that they would one day be measured, they only acted on their beliefs.
The concept of honoring heroes came only to the Philippines in 1900, when in honor of the most
illustrious Filipino, the Philippine Commission, headed by William Howard Taft, approved Act No.
137 combining the districts of Morong and Manila to be named Rizal Province. This Act was
disputed by many, but the basis of the Commission was so strong that it has surpassed the
public’s questions.
During Marcos’ presidency, he tasked the National Heroes Commission to come up with the
criteria for national hero. On March 28, 1993, thru the President’s Executive Order No. 75, the
National Heroes Committee was created, commissioned to study, evaluate, and recommend
historical figures to be declared as national heroes. The Committee composed of worthy
members, with a series of discussions came up with the new criteria.
Ang isang bayani (hero) ay isang taong mayroong kabayanihan (heroism) at mayroong
kaugnayan sa pagiging magiting o matapang. Sa mitolohiya (mythology) at kwentong-bayang
Griyego, ang isang bayani ay orihinal na isang demi-diyos (demi-god), na ang kulto ay ang
pagiging isa sa pinakatangi-tanging mga tampok ng sinaunang relihiyon ng Gresya. Ang isang
demi-diyos ay ang anak na lalaki o babae ng isang magulang na mortal, na ang isang halimbawa
ay si Herkules (Hercules) ang na lalaki ng reynang mortal na si Alcmene at ang diyos si Zeus. Sa
paglaon, ang salitang bayani ay naging tumutukoy na sa mga sikat na tao sa lipunan.
One question arises. Was Rizal Deserving to be a National Hero? We must remember that no
law, executive order, or proclamation has been enacted or issued officially proclaiming any
Filipino historical figure as a national hero. However, because of their significant roles in the
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 8 | 5
process of nation building and contributions to history, there were laws enacted and proclamations
issued honoring these heroes. Therefore, even Jose Rizal, who was perceived to be the greatest
Filipino hero, was not expressly declared a national hero. The role he now occupies in the history
of the Philippines is a tribute to the people's continued veneration or acclamation in recognition
of his contribution to the important social transformations in our country. The following are some
of the great contributions of Dr. Jose Rizal in the Philippines.
For all Filipinos, many of Rizal's poems, letters and essays echo a sense of pride in keeping their
nation and themselves in high regard. He shows the sense of obligation to their country and to
themselves that Philippine people should have. Rizal expresses his views about love for one's
country to the reader in his piece entitled 'Love of Country'.
According to Austin Craig, Rizal ambitioned to make education accessible to all, the teaching
instinct that led him to act as mentor to the Filipino students in Spain and made him the inspiration
of a mutual improvement club of his young countrymen in London, suggested the foundation of a
school in Paris. Later a Pampangan youth offered him $40,000 with which to find a Filipino college
in Hong Kong, where many young men from the Philippines had obtained an education better
than their own land could afford but not entirely adapted to their needs. The scheme attracted
Rizal and a prospectus for such an institution which was later found among his papers not only
proves how deeply he was interested but reveals the fact that his ideas of education were
essentially like those carried out in the present public-school course of instruction in the
Philippines.
RIZAL 1013- Life and Works of Rizal Module 8 | 6
Rizal also showed his support to the group of women in Malolos when their petition of establishing
a school was denied by Gen. Weyler. He wrote a letter to the ladies in support to their courageous
action. Rizal preaches the need of education and said that “ignorance is slavery”. Rizal always
reminded his sisters the value and importance of education. He even recognized the importance
of industrial education as well. Rizal included this concept in the five purposes of the La Liga
Filipina which he founded, the development of instruction, agriculture, and commerce.
When Jose Rizal was deported in Dapitan in 1893, he devoted his time in teaching young children.
Rizal applied the learning he acquired in the different school that he visited during his travels. It
was in Dapitan particularly Talisay where Rizal used his talents and limited resources to serve his
countrymen during the four years of his exile. He practiced his profession as a doctor, farmer,
teacher, community developer, engineer, and scientist. Rizal opened a school for young boys in
the community. They were given subjects in reading, writing, arithmetic, geography, geometry,
languages, history and good conduct. Rizal even gave practical lessons on the use of their hands,
for he believed that education should be inculcated or integrated with the development of the
community. He also taught his students different kinds of sport activities such as boxing, swinging
on parallel bars and rings, swimming and arnis on account of his belief that a sound body makes
a sound mind. Rizal’s method of teaching is different compared from other schools of his time. He
saw to it that learning should be adaptable to the needs or actual life of the people. Rizal is not
just a conventional type of teacher; his visions were not just for himself but for the benefits of his
countrymen.
Social Entrepreneurship
Rizal formed Dapitan's first farmers’ cooperative the Sociedad de Agriculturos Dapitanos (SAD),
where capital was to be provided by Socios industriales (Industrial Partners) and Socio Accionistas
(Share Holders). January 1, 1895, the cooperative aimed to improve/promote agricultural products,
obtain their profits for them, provide capital for the purchase of these goods, and help to the extent
possible the harvesters and laborers by means of a store where articles of necessity are sold at
moderate prices.
Community Development
Rizal developed Dapitan's first park, complete with streetlamps and a garden/flower relief map of the
whole island of Mindanao. He built a one-doctor hospital and paid his own money for the medical
supplies and instruments. People of Dapitan are not charged of any consultation. An English man
who came for consultation was charged 500 duros for the extraction of his cataract. The money was
donated to Dapitan for the public lighting which they did not have.
It is also important to note that Jose Rizal has contributions to Natural Sciences. However, these
tend to eclipse with his various contributions to other fields. Students recognized and seemingly
more interested with the names of his girlfriends than the names of his scientific discoveries.
While in Dapitan, Rizal kept himself busy. He went into agriculture, fishing, and business, put up
a hospital, and even taught arts and sciences to pupils, as well as English and Spanish. It is here
where he studied nature extensively, researching and collecting specimens of plants, shells,
insects, birds, amphibians, and reptiles. In the process, he gathered up to 340 shells representing
more than 200 species. This collection is recognized as the richest private collection of Philippine
conchology of its time. He sent the various specimens they collected to the Ethnographic Museum
in Dresden, Germany for proper identification. In exchange for the specimens he submitted, Rizal
received books and medical instruments, as well as further advice on how to properly preserve
his specimens.
Hence, it is valuable to remember that his contributions in the field of Natural Sciences and how
people commemorate his legacies Philippine Independence are important in similar manner. The
following are the species named after Rizal:
References
Textbooks
Ariola, M. M. (2017). The Life and Works of Jose Rizal. Intramuros Manila: Unlimited Books
Library Services & Publishing INC.
Rhodalyn, Wani-Obias et al. (2018). The Life and Works of Jose Rizal. C& E Publishing, Inc
Online
FORBES, G. M. (2020, December 12). Rizal’s Thoughts on Education. Retrieved December 12,
2020, from Blogspot.com website: http://school-principal.blogspot.com/2011/06/rizals-
thoughts-on-education.html
Propesor Esteban A. de Ocampo: Rizalista at Mananalaysay. (2020). Retrieved December 12,
2020, from Muntingnayon.com website: https://muntingnayon.com/103/103937/
This is because Dr Jose Rizal didnt become our National... (2018, October 19). Retrieved
December 12, 2020, from Coursehero.com website:
❖ To understand fully the thoughts of Rizal, it is important to study the events during 19th century.
❖ Feudalistic patterns brought the existence of social classes.
❖ The difference of propagandist from a revolutionist is the manner of attaining objectives.
❖ Filipinos became more curious when Spaniards banned the circulation of Noli Me tangere
❖ Easy passage is the main advantage of Suez Canal
❖ A new group of middle class emerged when Philippines opened to world trade
❖ In the restructured social structure, Chino Infiel is the lowest rank
❖ Formation of La Liga Filipina triggered Spanish authorities to let Rizal be exiled.
❖ Rizal’s first teacher was his mother.
Imagined community
• “Imagined” means that we will never meet the majority of the community members
• Nation as “limited” meaning that it co-exists with other nations
• “Sovereign” means that it is self-governing
GOD BLESS!
RIZAL AND
THE THEORY OF
NATIONALISM
March 4, 2021
RZAL 1013
Alvic B. Torres
JOSE PROTACIO RIZAL MERCADO
Y ALONZO REALONDA
“Ricial” 7/11
Rizal=Ricial~ “field where wheat He had 9 sisters and
are cut while still green and 1 brother
sprout again” ~ ”Green field”
Answer: FALSE
WHAT IS LA LIGA FILIPINA? Search
Point de Galle: Sleepy port Inspirations of Rizal in making Dedication of each novel:
Naples: Panoramic beauty Noli: Noli- Philippines
Port Said: Multicultural city ✓ Stowe's Uncle Tom's El Fili- GomBurZa
Cabin
✓ Sue’s The Wandering
Jew
✓ Caldos' Doña Perfecta
Who is this?