Jose Rizal and Philippine Nationalism - Bayani and Kabyanihan
Jose Rizal and Philippine Nationalism - Bayani and Kabyanihan
Jose Rizal and Philippine Nationalism - Bayani and Kabyanihan
• Maniklad,
• Hanagan
• Kinaboan
• Luto
• Lunugum
• 1) Maniklad, ang pinakamababang uri ng bayani na nakapatay ng isa o
dalawang kaaway, karaniwang siya ay nakasuot ng putong na pula at
dilaw;
• But, among his best works, two novels stood out from the rest – Noli Me
Tángere (Touch Me Not) and El Filibusterismo (The Reign of the Greed). In
both novels, Rizal harshly criticized the Spanish colonial rule in the country
and exposed the ills of Philippine society at the time.
"What is most admirable in Rizal, "wrote
Rafael Palma
• is his complete self-denial, his complete abandonment of his personal
interests to think only of those of his country.
• But in him, the voice of the species was stronger than the voice of
personal progress or of private fortune, and he preferred to live far
from his family and to sacrifice his personal affections for an ideal he
had dreamed of.
Some of his services and contributions to
Filipinos are:
• PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION
• SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
• COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
• RIZAL AWAKENED THE MIND AND PERSPECTIVE OF FILIPINOS
TOWARDS NATIONALISM
WHY IS RIZAL OUR GREATEST
HERO?
• In an article entitled, “Who Made Rizal Our Foremost National Hero
and Why? ”the author, Esteban A. de Ocampo, denies the claim
that Rizal is a made-to-order national hero manufactured by the
Americans, mainly by Civil Governor William Howard Taft. Instead, he
defended Rizal as the country’s foremost hero.
• "De Ocampo’s justification is founded on the definition of the term
“hero,” which he took from the Webster’s New International Dictionary
of the English Language, that a hero is "a prominent or central
personage taking admirable part in any remarkable action or event".
Also, "a person of distinguished valor or enterprise in danger". And
finally, he is a man "honored after death by public worship, because of
exceptional service to mankind".
Why is Rizal a hero, more correctly, our
foremost national hero?
• It was said in the article that he is our greatest hero because
he took an “admirable part” in the Propaganda Campaign from
1882-1896. His Noli Me Tangere (Berlin, 1887) contributed
tremendously to the formation of Filipino nationality and was said to
be far superior.
• Rizal received from Antonio Ma. Regidor and Professor. Ferdinand
Blumentritt. Regidor, a Filipino exile of 1872 in London, said that "the
book was superior" and that if "don Quixote has made its author
immortal because he exposed to the world the sufferings of Spain,
your Noli Me Tangere will bring you equal glory…"
Why is Rizal the greatest Filipino hero that
ever lived?
• De Ocampo claims that "he is a man honored after death by public
worship, because of exceptional service to mankind". It was said that
even before his execution, Rizal was the already acclaimed by both
Filipinos and foreigners as the “foremost leader of his people".
• Dr. Frank C. Laubach, an American biographer of Rizal, spoke of the hero’s
courage in the following words:
• Then in his Dapitan exile when he was tempted to escape, and said "No",
not once but hundreds of times for four long years, and when, on the way
to Cuba, Pedro Roxas pleaded with him to step off the boat of Singapore
upon British territory and save his life, what an inner struggle it must have
caused him to answer over and over again, "No, no, no!" When the
sentence of death and the fateful morning of his execution brought the
final test, he walked with perfect calm to the firing line as though by his
own choice, the only heroic figure in that sordid scene.
• "To the bigoted Spaniards in Spain and in the Philippines, Rizal was
the most intelligent, most courageous, and most dangerous enemy of
the reactionaries and the tyrants; therefore he should be shot publicly
to serve as an example and a warning to those of his kind. This was
the reason why Rizal, after a brief mock trial, was sentenced to death
and made to face the firing squad at Bagumbayan Field, now Luneta,
in the early morning of December 30, 1896.
• Even before the outbreak of the revolution against Spain in
1896, many instances can be cited to prove that his country here and
abroad recognized Rizal’s leadership.
• In the early part of 1899 he was unanimously elected by the Filipinos
in Barcelona and Madrid as Honorary President of La Solidaridad.
• History tells us that the revolutionary society known as
Katipunan likewise acknowledged Rizal’s leadership and greatness by
making him its honorary President and by using his family name
Rizalas the password for the third-degree members.
A year after Rizal’s execution,
• Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo and the other revolutionary chiefs exiled to
Hong Kong held a commemorative program on December 29, 1897 on
the occasion of the First Anniversary of the hero’s execution and
martyrdom.
• Then on December 20, 1898 at the revolutionary capital of
Malolos, Pres. Aguinaldo issued the first official proclamation making
December 30 of that year as "Rizal Day". The same proclamation
ordered the hoisting the Filipino flags at half-mast "from 12:00
noon on December 30, 1898" and the closing of "all offices
of the government" during the whole day of December 30.
• We are all aware of some Filipinos who, every now and then, argue
that Andres Bonifacio, and not Jose Rizal, deserves to be
acknowledged and canonized as our first national hero. They maintain
that Rizal never held a gun, a rifle, or a sword in fighting for the liberty
and independence of our country in the battlefield. Our greatest
hero was a pacifist and a civilian whose weapon was his
quill.
THANK YOU