The document summarizes the Bud Dajo Event, which was a 1906 counterinsurgency action by the U.S. Army against Moro Muslims in the Philippines. Around 900 Moro refugees, mostly women and children, had traveled to Bud Dajo volcano to escape American rule. The U.S. military attacked with artillery, gunboats, and rifles, massacring nearly all of the Moro civilians with few American casualties. While the U.S. viewed it as a military battle, historians now consider it an indiscriminate massacre against Moro civilians who were seeking independence and to practice their religion and culture free from American authority.
The document summarizes the Bud Dajo Event, which was a 1906 counterinsurgency action by the U.S. Army against Moro Muslims in the Philippines. Around 900 Moro refugees, mostly women and children, had traveled to Bud Dajo volcano to escape American rule. The U.S. military attacked with artillery, gunboats, and rifles, massacring nearly all of the Moro civilians with few American casualties. While the U.S. viewed it as a military battle, historians now consider it an indiscriminate massacre against Moro civilians who were seeking independence and to practice their religion and culture free from American authority.
Original Description:
This is a case study of the Bud Dajo incident, if it is a battle or a massacre?
The document summarizes the Bud Dajo Event, which was a 1906 counterinsurgency action by the U.S. Army against Moro Muslims in the Philippines. Around 900 Moro refugees, mostly women and children, had traveled to Bud Dajo volcano to escape American rule. The U.S. military attacked with artillery, gunboats, and rifles, massacring nearly all of the Moro civilians with few American casualties. While the U.S. viewed it as a military battle, historians now consider it an indiscriminate massacre against Moro civilians who were seeking independence and to practice their religion and culture free from American authority.
The document summarizes the Bud Dajo Event, which was a 1906 counterinsurgency action by the U.S. Army against Moro Muslims in the Philippines. Around 900 Moro refugees, mostly women and children, had traveled to Bud Dajo volcano to escape American rule. The U.S. military attacked with artillery, gunboats, and rifles, massacring nearly all of the Moro civilians with few American casualties. While the U.S. viewed it as a military battle, historians now consider it an indiscriminate massacre against Moro civilians who were seeking independence and to practice their religion and culture free from American authority.
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Introduction:
The Bud Dajo Event is one of the historical events in
the Philippines being unknown to most of its people. Despite the happenings in the Battle of Bud Dajo and number of casualties involved it remained blurry in the eyes of common people. Until the September 09, 2016 when Pres. Rodrigo Roa Duterte brought up the topic during the meeting of ASEAN leaders in Laos. Hence, this issue was used to show the United Nation and United States what really is human-rights, due to the continues intervention of the United States and UN in the issue of Extra-judicial Killings that degrades “human-rights” (based from ABS-CBN Continuation… The Battle of Bud Dajo , also known as the Moro Crater Massacre, was a counter insurgency action fought by the United States Army against Moros. Moros are the muslim tribes who have resisted the longest against authority, specially Christian authority that threatens to change the way of life. Under the supervision of their datus and sultans, they are the people who refuse to be forced to change their faith and culture. The Spanish were the first to fight them, unable to convert them and so began constant war and insurrection. The Americans inherited the conflict, especially as baptist missionaries aggressively pushed their faith in the people of the Philippines. In this event many suffers from slavery, and many people died just because they are Discussion
During the peak of the U.S. pacification campaign for Moros to
follow their ideal governance, hundreds of Moros travelled 6 miles away from Jolo to reach Bud Dajo and became refugees. Bud Dajo is one of the extinct volcano present in Jolo, Sulu’s capital. With it’s enormous crater it provides an ideal hiding place for almost 900 Tausugs, which consist mostly women and children who neglected the idea of American’s to control and rule their lives. The Tausugs uses the features of the volcano as a way of protecting and securing their community with the presence of steep slopes and thick forest. Thus, sites of bountiful vegetation provides enough nutrients and food for hundreds of families who lived in the crater. Bud Dajo Event as a Battle Moro Wars is a series of scattered campaigns involving American troops and Muslim bands on Mindanao, Philippines. Their actions were unconnected with those of the Filipino revolutionaries who conducted the Philippine-American War, it is that the Moro fought for their religious beliefs rather than political reasons. At the point when power over the Philippines went to the United States in 1898 after the Spanish-American War, the United States initiated a policy intended to assimilate the Moro into the Philippine nation and to control some fuedal practices such as slave trading… Likewise as stated by Llanes (2016) in his article in Inquirer. Net, Three columns of American troops moved up Bud Dajo from different sides and encountered fierce resistance from barricades blocking the approach to the crater. When overwhelmed with heavy bombardment and sniper fire, the Moros “sallied forth into the open with kris and spear.” On the second day, in the approach taken by a certain Major Bundy, “200 Mohammedans died here before the quick-firing guns and the rifles of the attackers.” In continuation, He writes: “A large band of Moros fortified Bud Dajo and defied the authorities to subject them to any law. The American garrison at Jolo was reinforced by the addition of two battalions of infantry and preparations were made for a decisive assault on the Moros... As supported by a statement given by Prof. Michael Charleston ‘Xiao’ Chua (2016) in an Interview in ABS-CBN, “they are considered as civilian, but were forced to fight for their sake. Some of them have the weaponry to fight which makes it look like stand at the cloud”. Bud Dajo Event as Massacre According to Robert Fulton in 2011 the Battle of Bud Dajo occurred March 5-8, 1906. It set the U.S. Armed force. U.S. Naval force, and the Philippine Constabulary against 800-1,000 nonconformist Muslims who had fortified the highest point of a tough, 2,175 feet high dormant volcano on the island of Jolo in the southern Philippine Islands. Although it started as an genuine military challenge, it finished as an awful and horrendous, one-sided massacre, without a small Muslims left alive... In connection, "Slaughter is a good word," American author Mark Twain wrote in 1906 to describe the Bud Dajo massacre, after anti-imperialist media outfits in the U.S. published the anecdotes of the successful, at least on the part of the colonial government in the archipelago, military operation... As stated by Llanes (2016), “After the engagement the crater was a shambles. Moros were piled five deep in the trenches where they had been mowed down by the artillery and rifle fire. The American attack had been supported by two quick-firing guns from the gunboat Pampanga and examination of the dead showed that many of the Moros had as many as 50 wounds. Of the 1,000 Moros who opened the battle two days previously, only six men survived the carnage.” In continuation, Hurley’s judgment of the event is significant. He states: “By no stretch of the imagination could Bud Dajo be termed a ‘battle.’ Certainly the engaging of 1,000 Moros armed with krises, spears and a few rifles by a force of 800 Americans armed with every modern weapon was not a matter for publicity. The American troops stormed a high mountain peak crowned by fortifications to kill 1,000 Moros with a loss to themselves of 21 killed and 73 wounded! The casualty reflects the unequal nature of the battle. Synthesis The Bud Dajo Event is typically a battle that leads to a massive killings of Moros. The Moros based from the events doesn’t want to fight the American Colonizers. Their act of moving towards the mountain doesn’t mean they are going to create a rebellious act against the Americans but rather they are just bounded by their religion and belief. All throughout their journey to Bud Dajo they only want peace and independence for their people. As stated earlier they believe that paying the cedula for the Americans only means that they are offering and accepting them as the source of their sovereignty and not the gift of sovereignty offered by their God Allah. On the other hand, the Americans misunderstood the concept of the Moros and treat it as a act of disobedience and force them to attack the village in Bud Dajo. This event can’t be blamed only on the American side only, the leaders of the tribes which are the datus and sultan has their own mistake. Thus, their people think that they are not good leaders and being paid by the American Colonizers. The act of Moros is an act of defending themselves and their independence to live. Americans use so much force just to prove that their own agenda of Pacification was contradicted. Hence, leading their motion to a one sided battle and massacre. Conclusion Philippine History is a prestigious thing that the Filipino people have because it allows us to gain valuable perspectives on the problems of our society. History imparts information on what happened in the past that we need to learned the importance and significance of it and used as inspiration in the future. Massacre is an indiscriminate and brutal slaughter of people. The best known of the American-Moro battles occurred in March 1906 at the top of Mount Dajo on the island of Jolo was an example of a massacre. It was started with prodigious energy on both sides during a day and half, American Arms ended with a complete victory while in the Moros nothing was left alive. It was one of the bloodiest incidents in the History of the Philippines wherein 900 Moro killed including children and women by the troops under General Leonard Wood, fighting ceased thereafter. The massacre in the Bud Dajo put a greater impact and significance on the Filipino Muslim. The history of massacre in the Philippines was an unforgettable event because it gives dramatic preview of past that happened in our country. History might not repeat itself in the Philippines because Southeast Asia is home to most of the world’s Muslims. The Bud Dajo Event doesn’t want us to focus to the notion whether it is a battle or a massacre, but rather it opens a greater challenge to the future generation. It opens the idea of having equal human rights to every being in this world; rights to live what they believe and rights to have their own independence.