The Resolute Propagandist
The Resolute Propagandist
The Resolute Propagandist
Two young Doctors of Law, Pedro Paterno and Gergorio Sanciano, both Chinese
Mestizos endowed with nationalist sentiments were in Spain during with lull years
following the tragedies of 1872.
These two intellectuals were soon joined by Graciano Lopez Jaena, Jose Rizal, Pedro de
Gavantes and Eduardo de Zete.
Dr. Pterno published his first literary work which has a collection of verses entitled
Sampaguitas (1880).
Dr. Gregorio Sanciano wrote on a more serious theme: economic reforms to improve
political administration this book El Progreso de Filipinas (1881)
Sanciano defended the Indios from Spanish writers whose literary exaggerations
portrayed indolence as a national and racial trait of the natives.
He cited the tobacco monopoly and analysed its brutalizing consequences.
The works of Paterno and Sancianco clearly summed up the ideas that were recur in the
political and intellectual activities.
UNIFYING FORCES DURING THE UNORGANIZED YEARS
No formal organization to coordinate and direct their activities characterized the early
stages of Propaganda movement in Spain.
The most sympathetic to the cause of the Filipinos during the early years was Los Dos
Mundos where Graciano Lopez Jaena and Pedro de Gavantes were staff members.
Circulo Hispano Filipino led by Juan Atayde, a Spaniard born in the Philippines. It
published a short-lived newspaper, the Revista del Circulo Hispano-Filipino. When Rizal
arrived in Madrid, he saw that the Circulo had become more of a social group and he
tried in vain to strengthen its purpose.
1884 The victory of Luna and Resurreccion Hidalgo over all their Spanish competitors at
the Exposicion de Ballas Artes in Madrid was an occasion to be proud of Lopez Jaena
with his usual eloquence referred to their awards as a vindication of the Filipinos who
had usually been considered incapable of achievement in the arts and sciences.
March 1887 Rizals Noli Me Tangere was published which added fuel to heated
arguments between the pro and anti-propagandists. Father Salvador Font lashed at the
book claiming that it evoked memories of Cavite and sought to overthrow the yoke of
oppression. Del Pilar wrote a defense of the Noli emphasizing that Father Font was not
qualified to criticize the book because the friar himself admitted that the book offended
him.
The local strategy in organizing the Propaganda work was performed by Marcelo H. del
Pilar.
His duplos and essays which satirized local conditions were widely circulated in the
Tagalog provinces.
Del Pilar secretly organized the comite (Junta) de Propagand. The small but active group
used Manila and Malolos as centers of their operation.
Del Pilar was suspected of being the mastermind of secret meetings held in various
towns: of being the author of rebellious and slanderous essays: of having popularized the
Noli Me Tangere and being against the church and government.
Filipino Nationalists formally organized Rizal, the most scholarly of the group wielded
his pen as he researched among the Filipiniana collection of the British museum in
London. He wrote his principle essays for la Solidaridad, and published his annotation of
Antonio Horgas Sucesos de als Islas Filipinas and his novel El Filibusterismo when the
propaganda movement was at its weight. Thus, giving the movement more strength and
dignity. His annotation of Sucesos revealed the extent and painstaking researches he
made on the history of the Philippines.
This book became a good source of materials for the reformists in refuting prejudicial
comments. Such historical materials have inspired our countrymen and evoked pride in
our ancestry, antiquity and gentility of our culture.
The propagandists financial difficulties forced Rizal to comment that the majority talked
the great deal but were reluctant to help finance the movement.
The sympathizers among moneyed group were indeed Dominador and Pablo Rianzares
Bautista who finance La Solidaridad.
Rizal organized La Liga Filipina on July 3, 1892. His objectives according to its
constitution were: the unification of the whole archipelago into one compact, vigorous
and homogeneous body; mutual protection in every want and necessity; defense against
all violence and injustice encouragement of education, agriculture and commerce; and the
study and application of reforms.
The league was divided into three councils: Supreme, Provincial and Popular Council. Its
constitution defined the duties and rights of its members and officers.
However, La Liga was short-lived because of his exile La Liga Dapitan in 1892. Rizals
last desperate attempt to carry on Propaganda Movement in the Philippines had failed.
La Solidaridad folded up for lack of funds on Nov. 15, 1895. Lopez Jaena died of
fuberoulos two months later; Del Pilar died of the same disease, poor and hungry on 4
July 1896and Rizal was executed at the end of the same year.
RIZALS WRITING AND
The Resolute Propagandist
corrected the 1852 map of Mindanao which he brought him to Europe. He researched in
Psychology while he was in Leipzig. He concentrated his studies on the comparison of race
characteristics as influenced by government, history and language.
Six-Month Sojourn in the Philippines.
He arrived in Maniala on 5 August 1887. He opened a medical clinic, successfully
operated on his mothers eyes and established a gymnasium. As the controversy in his Novel
Noli Rizal got involved in the Kalamba agrarian controversy. The bold expose Rizal and security
for the Rizal Family became a problem and Rizal was advised to leave the country. He secretly
departed on 3 February 1888.
Rizal Become An Active Propagandist.
Rizal showed that the past of the Philippines revealed that even before coming of the
Spaniards the Filipinos already had a developed culture. While he was annotating Sucesos he
was also writing El Filibusterismo. He wrote The Philippines within a Century and The
Indolence of the Filipino People to answer criticisms against Filipinos and their culture. At the
same time he admitted their faults as in his Letter to the Woman od Malolos, and emphasized
the imperative need to enlighten his people.
He finally completed the Fili manuscript in July 1891 while he was in Brussels. The Fili
finally came out in September of the same year. El Filibusterismo is a strong indictment of
Spanish colonialism and native supporters and defenders of the system. It portrayed a society on
the verge of a revolution. After the Fili was published his desire to go home grew much stronger.
He planned La Liga Filipina and a Filipino community in Borneo while still in Hongkong. He
negotiated with the representatives of the North Borneo Company for permission to establish
Filipino colony in Borneo. He was granted permission by the British Governor to found a
settlement on a 190,000-acre property in North Borneo. He drafted the plan, he presumed that the
Filipino settlement would be a free and independent entity entering into agreement. The
agreement guaranteed the Liberty of Filipino settlers, the security of the land, the right to retain
their citizenship and protection of their rights. Rizal envisioned a colony complete with cities,
towns, districts, schools, churches, and a government structures, determined by the peoples own
custom and laws. However, the plan was disapproved by Governor Eulogio Despujol because the
Philippines was short of manpower and he considered it improper and impractical.
Rizal Comes Home.
The compulsion to come home took the better of Rizal. He was taking a big risk so he wrote two
letters both dated 20 June 1892 addressed to his parents and to a close friend. And entrusted the
two letters to a close friend, Dr. Lorenzo Periera Marques of Macao. In his letter to his parents he
stated that he wanted to bring his work to a climax and implied that he was ready to die for duty
and conviction.
Together with her sister Lucia, He arrived in the Philippines on Sunday 26, 1892. The following
his friends took him to visit Malolos, San Fernando, Tarlac and Bacolor where his exhorted his
countrymen to join La Liga Filipinas. The favourable reaction to his efforts encouraged him to
organize the league on 3 July 1892.
Rizal Is Arrested and Deported to Dapitan.
On 6th July Rizal was summoned to Malacanang Palace. He was confronted with the charge of
having brought with him from Hongkong leaflets entitled Pobres Frailes (Poor Friars). In spite
of his protestations of innocences, he was arrested and brought to the Royal Fortress of Santiago
for detention. On 14 July he was notified and deported for having a written and smuggled into
the country leaflets. He was summarily accussed of dedicating his second novel, El
Filibusterismo, to the memory of three priests who had been proven traitors to the nation but
whom extolled as martyrs.
He was also accused of advocating separation from Spain as the only means of salvation for the
Philippines. Thus was Rizal accused, judged condemned without trial. After an eight-day
confinement in Fort Santiago he was surreptitious escorted under heavy guard to steamship Cebu
for deportation to Dapitan in Mindanao.
THE NATIONALIST IN EXILE
Practical Nationalism In Dapitan
While in Dapitan, Rizal demonstration how much a citizen could to help community. He arrived
on the night of 17th July 1892. Soon he was practicing his professional as a doctor, farmer,
teacher, businessman, community development, leader, engineer, and scientist. He also found
time to study the Malayan Language and several Philippine dialects. He continued his artistic
pursuits in sculpture, painting, sketching, and writing poetry. He rendered free medical services
to the poor. Many of his patients in Talisay and Dapitan were too poor to pay and times he
provided them with medicine and drugs. He constructed small houses which he called casitas de
salud where his patients and families stayed during treatment period. He applied some of his
modern educational ideas to group of 16 selected boys whom accommodated near his own.
Applying his knowledge as a land surveyor (perito agrimensor), he planned new street layouts
and constructed them through the cooperative labor of the people. With the limited knowledge of
engineering, he conceived the idea of providing the town with a water system which was
completed in 1895 through the help of his pupils and the townspeople. He likewise set about
providing the town with a lighting system which consisted of coconut oil lamps placed in dark
streets. He invented a wooden machine for making bricks. He also introduced a hemp stripping
machine improve the abaca industry thus increasing the output of the abaca planters. He
promoted the establishment of a Dapitan farmers cooperative association. These work
experiences in Dapitan enhanced Rizals concept of practical nationalism.
Rizals Reaction to the Katipunan
On the eve of 21 June 1896, Dr. Pio Valenzuela visited Rizal in Dapitan to inform about the
founding of the Katipunan on 7th July 1892 which aimed at the separation of the Philippines from
Spain by means of revolution. Rizal considered the revolutions just and patriotic but when
Valenzuela informed him that the revolution might break out prematurely even without sufficient
arms, Rizal vigorously objected, stating that this would be veritable suicide.
End of Rizals Exile.
Inspite of the liberties extended to him by the Spanish government within the confines of
Dapitan. Rizal was not content because he was not a free man. Twice he wrote Governor General
Ramon Blanco: the first letter in 1894 sought his pardon, and the second in 1895 asked for his
release and a review of his case.
His Last Trip Home
On September 3, 1896, Rizal left for Barcelona on the board the Isla de Panay. As the ship was
nearing to Malta Island, the captain of the ship notified him that he was under arrest and was to
confine in the cabin. He had heard the rumors on board that the ship he was being blamed for the
outbreak of the revolution in the Philippines. The ship docked at Barcelona harbour on the early
afternoon of October 6, 1896, he was brought to the ss Colon bound for Manila which was
carrying soldiers to fight the Filipino Revolutionists.
On November 3, 1896 the ss Colon reached Manila and Rizal was brought directly to Fort
Santiago under heavy guard.
For the signing the fatal document ordering the execution of Rizal, Governor General Polavieja
won an internal Odium of the Filipino People. He and other Spanish officials who were
responsible for the death of Riza; will evermore remain as obnoxious villain in Philippine
history.