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Imagination in History: Teodoro Agoncillo

-Imagination is as important and necessary in the writing of history as


it is in the writing of fiction, drama, or poetry.
-George Bernard Shaw: Imagination in history is something to be
deplored since history deals primarily and supremely with facts.
-History is not a matter of compiling and reciting facts, or marshaling
them in a time- sequence, and of allowing them to speak for
themselves.
-It should provide not only the bones, but also the flesh and blood of
those moments which once were here but are now only memories.
-History requires a disciplined imagination.
-History thus conceived is a creative endeavor.
-Imagination is conditioned by the facts. The two are inseparable.
-Interpretation is an aspect of historical imagination.
-Imagination not based on facts is wild.
-There is no such thing as complete history. History as actuality is
partially recaptured by the historian through a careful and judicious
use of data. It is a recreation of the past.
-Historians study facts thoroughly and intensely in order to go into or
to participate in the events or in the lives of men he intends to write
about.
-Without this imaginative understanding, it would be impossible for any
historian to communicate with his subjects and, ultimately, to re-live
the past.
-It should have basis in the logical imperative. The imagination is
anchored upon reasoning that issues from the nature of the subject
under study.
1. No two historians confronted with the same set of facts, would arrive
at exactly the same interpretation
2. Interpretations vary in proportion to their ability to write effectively
and clearly.

Thus, each generation writes its own history and contributes its own
interpretations.
-R.G. Collingwood coined the term interpolation it is the insertion of
statements between those made by a historians authorities or sources.
-Any interpolation that is not necessitated by the evidence is not
historical imagination but a literary one such as that employed by
fictionists, poets, dramatists, and historical novelists.
-The difficulty of employing historical imagination lies not so much in
the absence of documentary evidence as in the lack of restraint on the
part of the historian.
-Prior knowledge of that particular time and of the subsequent times is
needed.
-The use of this aspect of historical imagination is important not only in
literature , but also in history. For history is not a mere compilation of
cut-and-dried facts and puled one on top of another, but a recreation of
what the historian believes to be significant.
-History, to be worthy of its name, must be written with imagination,
with verve and color as primary sources would allow.
-The advance of the scientific spirit after Darwin led to the
positivistic doctrine of the scientific method in history.
-The obsession of the academic historians was the mechanics of
history, and thus, obsessed they forget or deliberately submerged the
equally important element of art in history.
-Danger of overemphasizing the value of accuracy is that it tends to:
stifle the creative spirit of the student whose minds are drowned by
facts without being allowed to weave them into an artistic whole.
-The only scientific part of history is that which deals with spade work
and the sifting of facts, the rest belongs to the humanities.
-Soul is necessary to it as to a poem or work of art, and the
individuality of the writer should be reflected in it.
Nascent Philippine Nationalism

1872 -1896
Political Ideas of :
1. Sanciano y Goson of Manila
2. Lpez Jaena of Iloilo
3. Marcelo Del Pilar of Bulacan
4. Rizal of Laguna
-The consequence of the Cavite Mutiny of 1872 and the
demonstration against the friars of 1888 was the proscription or
deportation of prominent Filipinos.
-They tried to call attention to the shortcomings and buses of the
administration of the Philippines and to get the government to adopt
what they considered to be the necessary reforms.
1. Gregorio Sanciano y Goson was one the earliest propagandists.
-He compiled a series of studies on the revenue laws of the Philippines
into a book the, El progreso de Filipinas, Madrid 1881.
-He pointed out that the official practice exempted Spaniards and
Spanish mestizos in the Philippines from the tribute and forced labor
imposed on Filipinos and Chinese residents.
-Natives were subject to tribute, while the landowners who derived a
substantial income from their farms paid no property tax whatever.
-Filipinos were characterized as indios or indolent. Yet it was a result of
being deprived of the natural incentives and normal rewards of labor.
-The colonial system failed to provide economic enterprise with the
most elementary facilities of transport and communication.
-Gregorio wrote about the effect of the tobacco monopoly.
-Later, the tobacco monopoly was abolished and it was substituted by
the cdula personal as a source of revenue. They extended this cdula
to all.
-They reduced the duration of forced labor from 40 days to 15 days a
year and also made Spaniards liable to it equally with Filipinos.
2. Graciano Lpez Jaena was a native of Iloilo and came to Spain
originally to study medicine.

-He devoted almost all his attention and energies to the propaganda
for reforms.
-First editor of the La Solidaridad.
-Says that the Spanish government was far more interested in
repression than in stimulation.
-The government allowed the disastrous monetary situation which
allowed foreign merchants to drain good money out of the country and
replace it with Mexican dollars.
-He pointed out that popular education and the use of common
language
was neglected.
-Upper ranks of the colonial civil service were taken by Spanish
officials.
-Only at the lowest level of local government was any initiative or
scope given to natives.
-He motioned that the remedy to this situation was to allow the
Filipinos the capacity to think and act for themselves, let the freedoms
championed by liberalism be extended to them: freedom of speck and
the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of trade.
-Essential that the Filipinos be permitted to trade with each other and
travel from any part of the islands to any other part.
-Notes the right of the Filipinos to possess and develop the natural
resources of their land is a right conceded by Nature.
-Lpez is taking a stand on what he conceives to be the natural rights
of Filipinos as Filipinos.
3. Marcelo H. Del Pilar studied law in the University of Santo Tomas.
-Believed that the principal obstacle to the Philippine progress was the
Spanish regular clergy, who used their position of dominance.
-The clergy used their influence to prevent the introduction of liberal
reforms.
-He could see no way but to expel the friars from the colony altogether.

-He believed that Filipinos should seek to better their condition by


peaceful rather than violent means.
-The reforms he wanted were substantially those proposed by Sanciano
and Lopez.
-The disappointing results of the propaganda campaign were turning
his thoughts more and more toward revolution.
4. Jose Rizal was the principal protagonist of the movement.
-His father and elder brother were well-to-do inquilinos of the
Dominican estate of Calamba.
-Began his medical studies at the University of Santo Tomas
-His most widely read contributions to the propaganda were Noli Me
Tangere and El Filibusterismo
-He believed in the fundamental change in the relationship between
the colony and the mother country.
-The Filipinos were forced to abandon their own for an alien culture.
-They had lost confidence in their past, faith in their present, and hope
in their future.
-The Filipinos remained passive and apathetic.
-Filipinos were not national because they were not yet conscious of
nationality.
-During Rizals time, the Filipinos had become conscious of themselves
as a nation.
-Psychological trigger: the Spaniards and added insult to injury.
-They began to treat Filipinos with contempt as essentially inferior
beings. That natives lacked not only capacity for virtue but even the
talent for vice.
-They wounded the Filipino amor propio his self-esteem and personal
dignity.
-Conscious now of their common misery, Filipinos began to agitate for
reforms on a national scale.

-Spanish were opposed to any change in the colonial administration.


-How did Spain propose to stop progress in the Philippines?
1. Keep the Filipinos ignorant
-Imparted ignorance rather than knowledge
2. Keeping them poor
-It produced what it was designed to prevent
-Riches make men cautious and conservative, while poverty breeds,
radical ideas, a desire to change the existing order of things.
-Where there is wealth and abundance there is less unrest and fewer
grievances.
3. Not allowing them to increase in numbers
-Filipinos were actually increasing in number.

4. By dividing them against themselves.


-The very attempt to create regional division strengthened national
unity, for it meant sending native troops from one island to another,
and this intermingling of Filipinos.
-Every increase of pressure built up a greater counter-pressure.
-It reached a point where change was inevitable.
-The choice was no longer whether change would occur but merely
what kind of change it was to be.
-The Philippines would be compelled to seek by force of arms its
complete independence.
-This was one direction impending change could take: separation from
Spain.
-It would sever a historic bond between Spain and the Philippines,
which had been forged by 3 centuries of coexistence.
-The only way to keep Filipinos loyal to Spain was to grant them equal
citizenship with Spaniards.
-Rizal proposed that it to be set up as an ultimate goal to be achieved
by a series of reforms.

-Filipinos, he said, do not have the Spaniards alone to blame for their
state of subjection.
There would be no masters if there were no slaves.
-Filipinos must be willing to accept its responsibilities.
-Freedom means undergoing a slow and painful process of selfdiscipline.
-They should devote some time and effort to cultivating in themselves
the virtues that enable a people to govern themselves.
-One of these virtues was economia: the prudent husbanding of
limited resources.
-transigencia: the spirit of give and take, the willingness to
compromise.
-Democracy is government by discussion: the people or their
representatives meet to debate several different courses of action and
decide on one. It is a series of mutual concessions and compromises.
-Spanish people destroyed the indigenous culture and substituted an
alien culture in its stead.
-On the other hand, Spanish colonial rule developed the Filipino
nationalism by supplying the movement for reforms and the
subsequent separatist movement with their frame of reference and
their principles.
-The ideas of human equality, civic freedom and the rule of law, ideas
Hellenic and Christian became an integral part of Philippine Culture.
-Shortly after his return to the Philippines in 1892, Rizal was arrested
and banished to Dapitan.
-Between his arrival and arrest, Rizal founded the La Liga Filipina
1. To unite the whole archipelago into one compact, vigorous and
homogenous body
2. Mutual protection in every want and necessity
3. Defense against all violence and injustice

4. Encouragement of instruction, agriculture, and commerce


5. Study and application of reforms.
-Andres Bonifacio was active in recruiting members. Bonifacio was
giving out that the Ligas object was revolution.
-The Liga dissolved and before Rizals departure, Bonifacio organized a
new society, the Katipunan.
-Dr. Pio Valenzuela was dispatched to Dapitan to ask Rizal to head
the revolution.
-Rizal refused because he believed that the revolution was premature.
-He volunteered as a surgeon for Cuba.
-The Katipunan was discovered.
-Teodoro Patino betrayed it to Father Mariano Gil, an Augustinian
priest in Tondo. (August 19 1896)
-Rizal was executed on December 30 1896.

Rizal In the Context of Nineteenth-Century Philippines


-Essays purpose to single out some major economic, political, cultural,
and religious developments that influenced Rizals growth as a
nationalist.
Economic Development
-Growth of the export economy brought increasing prosperity to the
Filipino middle classes, as well as the British and American merchants
who organized it.
-Brought in machinery and consumer goods to the Philippines.
-Agricultural products: Rice, sugar, abaca from Central Luzon,
Batangas, Bikol, Negros, and Panay.
-Kasama or share tenants

-Rizals Chinese ancestor was Domingo Lam-co


-He saw that Rizals father had rented over 390 hectares of land
-It was not the kasama who would challenge for friar ownership, but
the prosperous inquilinos.
-Their motive would be as much political as economic- to weaken the
friars influence in Philippine political life.
Political Developments
-In Spain, liberals and conservatives succeeded each other at irregular
intervals.
-Both parties used the Philippines as a handy dumping ground to
reward party hangers-on with jobs.
-Each new government brought another whole new mob of job-seekers
to the Philippines, ready to line their pockets with Filipino money before
being replaced.
-Filipinos were deprived of those few positions.
-With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 the easy passage between
Spain and the Philippines made these officials birds of prey, staying
long enough to feather their nests.
-Corruption of the government was its inability to provide for basic
needs of public works, schools, etc.
-The guardia civil became an oppressive force in the provinces.
-The antiquated system of taxation in effect penalized modernization,
and the taxes never found its way to the public.
-Expensive protective tarrifs forced Filipinos to buy expensive Spanish
textile.
-Filipinos increasingly no longer found any compelling motive for
maintaining the Spanish colonial regime.
Cultural Development
-There was a rapid spread of education during 1860.

-The propagation of the liberal and progressive ideas written about


from Europe by Rizal or Del Pilar.
-Only 5% of the Filipinos could communicate in Spanish.
-The return of the Jesuits was a major influence to educational
development.
-They were expelled in 1768 and returned 1859.
-They returned to the Philippines with and ideas and methods new to
the educational system.
-Took over the Ayuntamiento in 1859 and renamed in Ateneo
Municipal.
-Under the new educational institution the Escuela Normal de
Maestros to provide Spanish-speaking teachers.
-It represented a hope of progress in the minds of many Filipinos.
-Jesuit sources frequently complained about the opposition that the
graduates of the Normal School met from many parish priests.
-Franciscan Fr. Miguel Lucio y Bustmante proclaimed the danger
of studying and learning Spanish.
-Filipino nationalists were much less appreciative of the other
educational institutions run by the Dominicans.
-Nationalist leaders Fr. Jose Burgos and Fr. Mariano Sevilla came
from the university of Santo Tomas without ever having studied
abroad.
-Marcelo H. Del Pilar, Emilio Jacinto, and Apolinario Mabini
obtained their education in San Jose, San Juan de Letran, and
Santo Tomas.
-Spanish official Juan de la Matta had proposed the closing of these
institutions as being nurseriesof subversive ideas.
-Seeing the liberties enjoyed in the Peninsula, they became more
conscious of the servitude which their people suffered.
-Fr. Jose Burgos emphasized the need for Filipinos to look to their
heritage.

-Rizal joined a historical consciousness formed by German


histiography.
-In his edition of Antonio de Morgas Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas
he outlines the process by which he had to come to seek a foundation
for his nationalism in the historical past.
Religious Developments
-Education produced an ilustrado class. This ilustrado were increasingly
antifriar at times even anticlerical or anti-Catholic.
-Spanish colonial government leaned more heavily on what had
always been a mainstay of Spanish rule- the devotion of Filipinos to
their Catholic faith.
-Rafael Izquierdo and Juan Alaminos expressed that the Filipino
faith verged on fanaticism, and they make the Indio believe that only
in loving the Spaniards can he save his soul in the next life.
-Rizal had a land dispute with the Dominican hacienda of Calamba.
-Paciano Rizal wrote to Jose at the height of the Calamba hacienda
dispute. He warns that bishop Nozaleda was planning to end the
antifriar campaign of La Solidaridad. (?)
-The propagandists were heirs of the conflict between the Filipino
secular priests and Spanish friars that led to the martyrdom of Burgos,
Gomez, and Zamora in 1872.
-It was in that conflict that the seeds of nationalism came to full flower
among the Propagandists.
-Burgos influence: An intramural ecclesiastical controversy into a clear
assertion of Filipino equality with the Spaniard into a demand for
justice.
-It was archbishop Basilio Sancho de Sta. Justa that mass produced
the Filipino clergy which compromised their quality.
-But once the number of friars began to increase again after 1825 a
series of moves to deprive the Filipinos of the parishes once more
succeeded each other for the next 50 years.

-It was under Pedro Pelaez that they were attempting to disprove the
age-old accusation against them by showing that they were equal in
ability to the friars.
-Pelaez died in the earthquake of 1863.
-A year later, Jose Burgos defended the memory of Pelaez and calling
for justice to the Filipino clergy.
-With Burgos we see the first articulation of national feeling, of a sense
of national identity.
-We find numerous close connections between the activist Filipino
clergy led by Burgos and the next generation of Filipinos who led the
Propaganda of the 1880s and 1890s.
-Paciano was living in the house of Burgos in 1872.
-Toribio H. Del Pilar and Fr. Mariano Sevilla were exiled to Guam.
Marcelo lived with them as a student.
-The Propagandists were also heirs to the liberal reformists of the
1860s.
-They were the modernizers who desired to bring to the Philippines
economic progress, a modern legal system, and the modern liberties
freedom of the press, of association, of speech, and of worship.
-Most of the men who appear prominently among the liberal reformists
were criollos Spaniards born in the Philippines.
-Wished to see the liberties that had been introduced to the Philippines
to be extended to Spanish Philippines. Men like Joaquin Pardo de
Tavera, Antonio Regidor, Burgos.
-Generally antifriar, these reformists saw in the friars obstacles to
progressive reforms and modern liberties.
-It was with enthusias that they welcomed the new governer, Carlos
Ma. De la Torre with enthusiasm.
-He was appointed by the anti-clerical liberals who had made the
Revolution of 1868 in Spain. He introduced some liberal reforms.

-Both the clergy and the reformists were deceived. He was suspicious
of both groups and had put them under secret police surveillance.
-He was succeeded by Gen. Rafael Izquierdo who ended even the
appearances of liberty of expression allowed by De la Torre.
-The local mutiny over local grievances happened in Cavite.
-Their execution manifested Izquierdos conviction that the friars were
a necessary political instrument for maintaining the loyalty of the
Filipinos to Spain.
-Fr. Pedro Dandan and Fr. Mariano Sevilla reappear in the public
eye. Fr. Dandan would die fighting in the mountains in 1897. Fr. Sevilla
would work to rally Filipinos to resist the Americans.
-Since the Propaganda Movement was also heir to the liberal reformist
tradition, the degree to which the Propagandists were truly
nationalists.
-Governor Taft, Gen. Franklin Bell, and Gen. Smith singled out the
Filipino priest as the most dangerous enemy and the soul of the Filipino
resistance.
1. Reformist All thinking Filipinos with any interest in the country can
be called reformists.
2. Liberal Almost all were anticlerical and most are reformist.
3. Anticlerical
4. Modernizing Desire of all liberals and nationalists.
-It was mostly an economic goal and interest in progressive economic
measures.
5. Strictly Nationalist Almost all nationalists were liberals. Almost all
were in favor of modernization.
-Harshest condemnation of Spanish misgovernment came from the
friars. It was only when the cause of the reform began to take on antifriar and nationalistic overtones that they opposed it.
-Religious orders feared liberalism because church property were
oftentimes confiscated in Europe in the name of new freedom.

-When Spanish regime fell under the onslaught of the Revolution,


conservative modernizers had no regrets.
-T.H. Pardo de Tavera was among the first to accept a position in the
American government. (Secretaty of Foreign Affairs)
-Jose Ma. Basa was among the first to petition the American consul in
Hong Kong for an American protectorate over the Philippines.
-The kalayaan they looked for might not be the same concept as the
independencia conceived by Rizal, Bonifacio, and Mabini. But the
freedom they longed for was far nearer to the nationalists idea of
independence. (?)
The Historians Task in the Philippines
-In 1949, Catholic bishops opposed the use of government funds to
publish Rafael Palmas biography of Rizal because of the books antiCatholicism.
-Rizals consciousness of the need to know his peoples past that made
him interrupt his work on El Filibusterismo. It was written to point
toward a solution exposed in Noli Me Tangere.
-Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas was written to unveil that history tht had
been hidden from the eyes of Filipinos by neglect or distortion.
-Having acquired an understanding of their past, Rizal hoped that
Filipinos would be able to judge the present.
-He would show his countrymen that, from a Filipino point of view,
Spanish rule had failed to fulfill its promises of progresss for Filipinos.
-The knowledge of their past nurtured a consciousness of being a
people with a common origin and a common experience constituting
the national identity around which the future nation could arise.
-He was able to share his people a sense of national identity, which
impels nations to do great deeds.
-Bonifacio, Jacinto, and other Filipinos of the revolutionary generation
found much of their literary and nationalist inspiration in Rizals
writings.
-Achievement by history: understanding of our past, cultivation of our
national identity, and inspiration for the future.

-William Henry Scott entitled one of his works the Cracks in the
Parchment Curtain.
-He says, that a documentary curtain of parchment, at first sight, a
documentary conceals from modern view the acticities and thought of
Filipinos and reveals only the activities of Spaniards.
-But many cracks in that parchment allow the perceptive investigator
to glimpse Filipinos acting in their own world.
-Research on Philippine history is disproportionate.
-Revolution took place in all of the Philippines, such a history will show
the different degrees and kinds of nationalist response in different
regions.
Method in History
-Documents are not self-interpreting, and therefore, need a human
interpreterthe historian.
-He brings with him his biases and prejudices.
-The method in its simplest terms requires the historian to base himself
on documentation and to draw the evidence for his assertions or
interpretations from the facts found in documents.
-Historian should demonstrate in detail how he bridges the gap
between the documentation and the conclusions he draws from it.
These include literary works, books of prayers, even folk art.
-A historians nationalist commitment, if not too narrowly conceived,
ought to make him put new questions to the past.
-This historians questions may shed new light on his peoples problems
of the past.
-Pedro Paterno (supposed pre-hispanic past) and Jose Marcos false
documents on history (Code of Kalantiyaw).
-The code of Kalantiyaw found its way into history textbooks and was
exposed in 1968 by William Henry Scott in his Prehispanic
Sources for the History of the Philippines.

-Marco also wrote a series of supposed works of Fr. Jose Burgos. Among
these was a pseudonovel La Loba Negra. an alleged account of
Burgos trial and other dozen pseudoworks.
-Such attempts to make history nationalist as those of Paterno and
Marco, and their perpetuators, are clearly futile.
-Reconstructing a Filipino past, however glorious in appearance, on
false pretenses can do nothing to build a sense of national identity.
-A truly Filipino history, it is said, cannot but be a history of the Filipino
masses and their struggles.
-Allows only a one-dimensional consideration of such real and complex
issues as Spanish obscurantism and American imperialism.
-The historian needs a preliminary hypothesis from which to investigate
the past.
-The hypothesis must have sufficient breadth of vision to encompass all
the facts.
-A true peoples history, therefore, must see the Filipino people as the
primary agents in their historynot just as objects repressed by
theocracy or oppressed by exploitative colonial policies.
-Religious values have not simply led to docility and submission but
also to resistance to injustice and to the struggle for a better society.
-It will take seriously peoples movements that articulate their goals in
religious terms and not merely in Marxist accents.
-It will be able to recognize and criticize when needed, the role religion
both official and folk varieties of Christianity and Islam.
-A truly nationalistic history will try to understand all aspects of the
experience of all the Filipino people.
-It will acknowledge what is valuable as well as what is harmful in the
Filipino past.
-It should aim to undergird the formation of a society that provides
justice and participation not only to the elites of power, but to every
Filipino.
-Present the Filipino past in all its variety.

-By depicting the whole of reality, history will make it possible to


reform and reshape that society toward a better future. The historian
as nationalist can do no less.
The Philippines in Maritime Asia to the Fourteenth Century
-Philippines did not exist in the tenth century. It only received its name
during the colonization of Spain.
-Social features: Family ties, body tattooing, and slave raiding.
-It contained elements of social organization, material life, and
interisland contacts.
Localities and Leadership
-Belong to the Austronesian family of languages.
-Linguistic affinity stems from Southern China, ancestors of most
Southeast Asians.
-Practice of cognatic kinship in which families trace descent through
both the male and female lines. Both sons and daughters may have
inheritance rights.
-People who were not biologically related can make new claims on each
other through fictive kinship which creates ritual brothers,
godmothers, and godfathers.
-Religion was animistic seeing and worshipping divinity in the
surrounding environment.
-Ancestor worship was a spiritual expression of kinship ties that were
relied upon and imposed duties in daily.
-Low population density, yielded a patchwork of human settlements,
often along rivers and initially isolated from each other.
-Mindset: People felt strongly attached to their own locality and didnt
feel it to be less important than other larger or more powerful
settlements.

-Historian Oliver Wolters describes it as Every center was a center in


its own right as far as its inhabitants were concerned, and it was
surrounded by its own groups of neighbors.
-The person capable of mobilizing people to achieve these goals was
described as chief or big man. A person who exhibited unusual
achievement in warfare and trade.
-Datu the power conveyed by ancestors could be claimed by anyone
with talent.
-Women were central to community life as well. They were likely to
become prominent in ritual specialists with power to access and
influence the spirits existing in nature.
-Gender regimes were vitally important to the states relationship with
and control of society.
-Busy harbors enriched and empowered the coastal datu. He
demanded tribute from visiting merchants and enforced his authority
through armed force.
-Allowed datus to style themselves as royalty, maintaining a court and
richly rewarding followers.
-There were networks of personal loyalties, marriage alliances held
together by personal achievement and diplomatic skill.
-Warfare was a frequent part of this jockeying for position but it usually
took the form of raids to seize people, who were in short supply, not
the conquest of land that was plentiful.
-Community was defined and space was organized by personal
relationships, not territorial boundaries.
Localization and the Growth of Regional Networks
-Asian trade routes multiplied that effect by bringing knowledge of new
belief systems and ways of governing.
-Southeast Asia could be characterized as a crossroads, a place where
local and foreign ideas, goods, and people interact to produce cultural
and social change.

-Some people felt the crossroads characterization implied a lack of


identity, suggesting that Southeast Asians were easily shaped by
foreign influence.
-All societies change through contact with outsiders: Southeast Asias
geography simply exposed it to much more contact than most other
places.
-Perhaps as a result, fluidity continued to characterize local polities,
and outsiders relatively easily became insiders through marriage,
commerce, or possession of useful expertise.
-Foreign ideas and practices adopted by Southeast Asians were
precisely those that enhanced their existing values and institutions.
-The first transformative localization in Southeast Asian statecraft
occurred when indian merchants and Brahmans (priests) frequented
Asian ports.
-Hindu religious beliefs and political practices that enabled local rulers
to enhance bother their spiritual power and political authority.
-We adopted Hindu modes of worship by association with a particular
god and participation in his divinity.
-Titles adopted from Sanskrit enabled the most powerful datus to
distinguish themselves and their kin groups as royalty no nobility
classes with an enhanced capacity to transfer political power to their
descendants.
-The divine ruler made his stature clear to the populace by building
religious monuments and temples proclaiming his devotion to deities.
-The localization of Indian beliefs and practices did not replace the old
culture, but added new meaning and utilities to it.
-Stakes became higher in the endless datu competition as Hindu, and
later Buddhist, religio-political practices made possible large-scale
polities.
-Java and Cambodia were home to land-based kingdoms ruled by
divine kings supported by large populations engaged in wet-rice
agriculture.

-Divine kinship enabled the growth of wider networks of personal


loyalities called mandalas. Example: Angkor in Cambodia and
Srivijaya in Indonesia
-Small trading centers allowed the formation of an elite class, and they
rose and fell in power as they competed with one another.
-All polities were dependent on networks of personal loyalty and
characterized by a local mindset, with each center under its own ruler
a pattern that best represents the Philippine experience.
-Spaniards highly centralized, autocratic kingship vs. typical datu with
local following = Spanish rule nearly succeeded in obscuring the
cultural and political links of the Philippine archipelago with the rest of
maritime Asia.
-Philippines was indeed part of the maritime Asian trading network.
-It was a sparsely populated archipelago of local communities that
spoke different languages but shared many of the cultural traits,
values, and rpactices outlined above.
-Goverened by kings in the manner of the Malays.
Early Communities in the Philippine Archipelago
-An early settlement in the Philippines was referred to as barangay
settled together in a community ranging from 30 to 100 households.
-Permanently settled upriver farmers practiced swidden cultivation, in
which parts of the forest were cut down and cultivated and then
allowed to lie fallow to regenerate.
-Power and spirituality in the archipelago were interwoven in an
animistic world permeated with religious belief.
-Visayans had a pantheon of divinities, which they referred to with
Malay-Sanskrit word diwata.
-Tagalogs called these anito and had a principle deity among them,
Bathala, derived from the Sanskrit noble lord.
-Offerings were made routinely and individually to diwata or anito.
-The datu would sponsor a feast, an event that demonstrated the
obligations and exercise of power in early Philippine societies.

-Feasting fulfills both societys duty to its divinities and the datus
obligation to share his wealth with the community.
-The spirit ritualist baylan in Visayan and catalonan in Tagalog was
typically an elderly woman of high status or a male transvestite.
Social Startification: A Web of Interdependence
-Datus were part of a hereditaty class that married endogamously.
-Datuship included military, judicial, religious, entrepreneurial roles.
-Success and power always depended on an individuals charisma and
valor.
-Antonio Pigafetta, a chronicler noted that, Kings know more
languages than other people.
Staff:
Atubang sa datu the chiefs minister or privy counselor.
The steward was called paragahin one who collected tribute and
crops.
Bilanggo the sheriff
Patawag town crier
Ropok charmed which causes the one who receives it to obey
Panlus a spear which causes leg pains to the victim who steps on it.
Bosong causes intestinal swelling
Hokhok to kill with a breath or touch of hand
Kaykay- to pierce through somebody by pointing at him
-Datus were self-made men: There is no superior who gives him
authority or title, beyond his own efforts and power.
-Datus added a tattoo with each military victory.
-Maharlika likely to do military service

-Lower status Timawa who did labor in the datus fields


-Timawa could not bequeath wealth to their children because
everything formally belonged to the datu.
-A man of timawa birth might rise to datuship if he had the right
qualities and opportunities.
-Tao the mass of society, who owed tribute to the datu and service in
general to the upper classes.
-Slaves / esclavo
-The judicial system consisted solely of the datu. Most crimes were also
inflicted on the family.
-People could also be purchasedthere was a large regional trade in
human labor
-There was a system of interdependence marked by mutual obligations
up and down the social ladder.
Trade, Tribute, and Warfare in A Regional Context
-At the beginning of the tilling season, no strangers were allowed in a
village while ceremonies were conducted for a productive harvest.
-Upon pain of death, strangers were warned away during the funeral of
a datu.
-Slaves born within a household were considered part of the family and
were rarely sold.
-A slave is also to be sacrificed during the burial of a datu.
-Datus who controlled harbors, collected trade duties, and imported
goods grew in material wealth and status.
-Increased commerce attracted more people to the settlement and
stimulated cottage industries to supply and equip the traders.
-Alliances were made, often through marriage, for friendship and help
against mutual enemies.

-A datu was liable to fall to an externally sponsored rival if unsuccessful


in war.
Connections within and beyond the Archipelago
-We could see the communities of the archipelago participating
according to their economic and geographical opportunities and
priorities as did all local centers in the region.
-Philippine contact with China began during the Tang dynasty.
-Chinese currency and porcelains from this period have been found
from Ilocos in the North to the Sulu archipelago in the South.
-Butuan a gold mining and trading center in northeastern Mindanao
that sent its first tribute mission to China in 1001.
-When Chinese trading vessels began sailing directly to S.E. Asian
producers, it eliminated the need for an entrepot.
-This boosted the importance of smaller trading centers like Butuan
and gave the chinese merchants dominance in regional shipping.
-We specialized in metallurgy and shipbuilding.
-In the 11th and 12th century, Malays from Brunei settled in Tondo.
-Islam was also beginning to spread through the trading and ruling
networks.
An Early Legal Document
-In 1986, an inscribed copperplate measuring 8x12 inches was found in
Laguna province near Manila.
-It is written in old Malay.
-It dates to 900 C.E. and is the oldest Filipino document.
-Is a document that records Namwrans debt to the chief Dewata.
Because of Namwrans death he was represented by his wife Lady
Angkatan.
-Document demonstrates political hierarchy and networks.

-Small barangays were often linked through networks of datus, while


retaining a high sense of locality and resolute independence.
-We see a state formation in kinship practices, religious beliefs, and
systems of socio-economic status and dependency.
-Increasing trade from the 12th century which resulted to growing
populations, social stratification, political innovation and the
concentration of political power.
The Noli Me Tangere as Catalyst of Revolution
-Purpose of Noli: To provide a catalyst for a revolution, to start the
process that would lead to the emancipation of the Philippines.
-Rizal had already concluded to the futility of the goals sought by many
of his fellow-Filipinos, who hoped to obtain from Spain reforms.
-By the time he brought the novel into its final form, he had already
opted for ultimate separation from Spain.
-There remained no choice except a revolution, and the Noli was the
first step toward that goal.
-Amado Guerrero: Rizal failed to state categorically the need for
revolutionary armed struggle to effect separation from Spain.
-William Taft and W. Cermeron Forbes: Rizal never advocated
independence nor did he advocate armed resistance to the
government.
-They present only certain aspects of Rizal.
-Rizal as early as 1886, had already determined that there was no
future for the Philippines in union with Spain.
1. The failure to distinguish between what Rizal were able to say
publicly and what they felt privately.
2. The failure to read Nolis and his other writings within the context of
his personal correspondence at the time he was publishing.
3. The failure to see the Noli not simply as an independent work but as
part of a well-thought-out long-range plan.

Noli as Charter of Nationalism


-In 1884 his speech at the Madrid banquet, Rizal still expresses hope
for reforms from Spain.
-In Noli, he does seek for reforms, demands even, but from Filipinos
rather than from Spaniards.
-It calls on the Filipino to regain his self-confidence, to appreciate his
own worth, to return to the heritage of his ancestors, to assert himself
as the equal of the Spaniards.
-The Filipinos should be aware of what was wrong with Philippine
society, not only Spanish abuses, but Fiipino failures as well. But his
purpose went beyond that.
-In a letter to Blumentritt, Rizal registers a glimmer of hope that the
separation of the Philippines from Spain might come about by a
peaceful and gradual development.
-Pablo Feced and Vicente Barrantes criticized the Noli Me Tangere.
-Noli does not have as its goal the glorification of the race any more
than it does the mere condemnation of Spanish oppression.
-A sound nationalism had to be based on an accurate and unsparing
analysis and understanding of the contemporary situation.
Noli and Fili: Action with Vision
-Noli was not meant to stand alone. Rizal had in mind a sequel.
-Sketch of the present state of our country.
-I must first make known the past, so that it may be possible to judge
better the present and to measure the path which has been traversed
during three centuries.
-He would publish instead a scholarly analysis of the Philippines at the
Spanish contact, using Morgas book as a base.
-Noli had shown the Filipinos their present condition under Spain.
-Morga would show them their roots as a nation.
-Rizal would chart the Filipino course for the future in El Filibusterismo.

-He shows two possible courses remaining


1. The solution of Padre Florentino
2. The solution of Simoun
-Rizal cannot five detailed instructions. Rather, he gives the vision and
makes his act of faith in the Filipino and in the God of history.
-Ibarra the idealist, working for reforms under Spanish auspices and
representing the mind of Rizal.
-Elias, the man of action, represents Bonifacio.
-Leon Ma. Guerrero points out that Ibarra fails in his reform program
and opts for violence, it is Elias who tried to dissuade him, urging that
he will lead his countrymen into a bloodbath, and that it will be the
defenseless and innocent who will most suffer.
-He had decided on separation from Spain when he published the Noli.
-He originally intended to propose the solution in his second novel, but
then realized that he could only do so after having laid further
groundwork.
1. Awaken national consciousness
2. Undergird solid historical foundation
3. Remained the course of action to be explored
-The Filipino people, he says, must endure and work. It is not a passive
endurance, but an active resistance.
But it is true that we must win it by deserving it, exalting reason and
the dignity of the individual, loving what is just, what is good, what is
great, event to the point of dying for it.
-The point is not to shed other peoples blood, but to be ready enough
to shed ones own for the people that one will have the courage to
resist any attack on human dignity, on the freedom that belongs to
every man and woman.
Reformist of Revolutionary?

False dilemmas:
1. To be reformist meant to engage in futile tinkering with the political
and economic structures of society through parliamentary means,
political bargaining and intrigue.
2. To be revolutionary was to take up arms against the government, the
establishment, those in power.
-As expressed in the mouth of Padre Florentino: Revolution is not
primarily an armed struggle to shed other peoples blood, but a
willingness to risk shedding ones own blood for the sake of the people.
-There was conflict between Marcelo H. Del Pilar and Rizal in 1891.
The fact is that my man has been formed in libraries, and in libraries
no account is taken of the atmosphere in which one must work.
-But it was not enough to have his ideals proposed to his countrymen
in writing; it was necessary to put them into action there in the
Philippines.
-He returns to the Philippines in 1892 to activate the La Liga Filipina.
-The call of the Liga was for national unity, dedication to economic,
educational, and other reformsnot begging them from the Spaniards,
but the Filipinos undertaking them themselves; on the other, the
Filipinos must defend one another against all violence and injustice.
Conclusion:
-Rizal retained the ideals of long-range preparation.
-Spanish Judge comments that Rizal limits himself to condemning the
present rebellious movement as premature and because he considers
its success impossible at this time.
-For Rizal, it was a question of opportunity, not of principles or
objectives.
-He maintained to the end that the revolutionary goal was to create a
nation of Filipinos conscious of their human and national dignity and
ready to sacrifice themselves to defend it.
Veneration Without Understanding

-Rizal repudiated the revolution.


-The Philippine revolution has always been overshadowed by the
omnipresent figure and the towering reputation of Rizal.
-Rizal repudiated the one act which really synthesized out nationalist
aspirations, and yet we consider him a nationalist leader.
An American-Sponsored Hero
-It was Gov. W.H. Taft who in 1901 suggested to the Philippine
Comission that the Filipinos be given a national hero.
-Americans chose him over other contestants because Aguinaldo was
too militant, Bonifacio too radical, Mabini unregenerate.
1. Act 137 Organize the political district and named it the province of
Rizal in honor of the most illustrious Filipino.
2. Act 243 Authorized a public subscription for the erection of a
monument in honor of Rizal in the Luneta.
3. Act 345 Set aside the anniversary of his death as a day of
observance.
-In the book The Philippine Islands Governer Cameron Forbes wrote
that The American administration has lent every assistance to this
recognition.
-Rizal never advocated independence, nor did he advocate armed
resistance to the government.
-They favored a hero who would not run against the grain of American
colonial policy.
-Complemented the Sedition Law which prohibited the advocacy of
independence and the law prohibiting the display of the Filipino flag.
-To have encouraged a movement to revere Bonifacio or Mabini would
ot have been consistent with American colonial policy.
-Rizal relegated other heroes to the background.
-Rizal belonged to the right social class- the class that they were
cultivating and building for leadership.

-There was a need for a superhero to bolster the national ego.


-Orthodox historians have presented history as a succession of exploits
of eminent personalities, leading many of us to regard history as the
product of gifted individuals.
The Role of Heroes
-With or without these specific individuals the social relations
engendered by Spanish colonialism and the subsequent economic
development of the country would have produced the nationalist
movement.
-Rizals execution only added more drama to the events of the period.
-Mass action is not the utterances of a leader; rather these leaders
have been impelled to action by the historical forces unleashed by
social development.
-The creative energies of the people who are the true makers of their
own history.
-But he is not a hero in the sense that he couldve stopped and altered
the course of events.
-The revolution broke out despite his refusal to lead it and continued
despite his condemnation of it.
-History is made by men.
Innovation and Change
-Rizal lived in a period of great economic changes. National awakening
caused by the English occupation of the country, the end of the galleon
trade, and the Latin-American revolutions.
-In addition, non-Spanish houses monopolized the import-export trade.
These non-Spanish interests increased cosmopolitan penetration.
-European and American financing were vital agents in the emerging
export economy.
-Abaca and sugar production increased. From 3,000 piculs a year to
2,000,000 in 4 decades.

-Improved communication + road systems + railroad lines +street cars


+ postal services during the same period.
-This has set the stage for cultural and social change. The cultivation of
cosmopolitan attitudes and heightened opposition to clerical control.
The Ideological Framework
-Economic prosperity spawned discontent when the native
beneficiaries saw a new world of affluence opening for themselves and
their class.
-They attained a new consciousness, a new goalthat of equality with
the peninsulares.
-Manifestation of the desire to realized the potentialities offered by the
period of expansion and progress.
-Anti-clericalism became the ideological style of the period.
-Rizal expressed its demands in terms of human liberty and human
dignity and thus encompassed the wider aspirations of the people.
-He couldve not have transcended his class limitations, for his cultural
upbringing was such that affection for Spain and Spanish civilization
precluded the idea of breaking the chains of colonialism.
-He had to become a Spaniard first before becoming a Filipino.
Concept of Filipino Nationhood
-The development of the concept of national consciousness stopped
short of real decolonization
-Social conditions demand that the true Filipino be one who is
consciously striving for the decolonization and independence.
-Filipino originally referred to the creoles or the Spaniards born in the
Philippines.
-The natives were called indios.
-In the end of the 19th century, hispanized and urbanized indios along
with Spanish mestizos and sangley mestizos began to call themselves
Filipinos.

-The original Circulo Hispano-Filipino was dominated by creoles and


peninsulares.
-The community came out with an organ called Espaa en Filipinas
which sought to take the place of Revista Circulo Filipino, which was
founded by Juan Atayde (a creole).
-The only non-Spaniard was Baldomero Roxas.
-Lopez-Jaena criticized their writing, which he believed showed more
sympathy for the peninsulares. He was referring to the Azcarrga
brothers, by which Claro M. Recto street got its name.
-Thus the formal beginning of the La Solidaridad. Its leaders were
indios with Lopez-Jaena as its first editor and later Marcelo Del
Pilar.
-The reformists could not shake off their Spanish orientation. They
wanted accommodation within the ruling system.
The Limited Filipinos
-Rizal was not really of the people based on education and property.
-The recognition of the masses as the real nation and their
transformation into real Filipinos.
-Filipino must undergo a process of decolonization before he can
become a true Filipino.
-As an ilustrado, Rizal was speaking in behalf of all the indios though
he was separated by culture and by property from the masses.
-His ilustrado orientation manifests itself in novels.
-All the protagnoists belonged to the principalia.
-Rizals class position, upbringing, and his foreign education were
profound influences which constituted a limitation on his
understanding of his countrymen.
-He condemned the Revolution because as an ilustrado he instinctively
underestimated the power and the talents of the people.
-He believed in freedom not so much as national right but as
something to be deserved.

-He did not equate liberty with independence. Rizal did not consider
political independence as a prerequisite to freedom.
He wrote on Dec. 12, 1896:
A people can be free without being independent, and a people can be
independent without being free.

Also in El Fili:
We must secure it by making ourselves worthy of it, by exalting the
intelligence and the dignity of the individual, by loving justice, right,
and greatness, even to the extent of dying for them.
-Rizals preoccupation with education served to further the impression
that the majority of the Filipinos were unlettered and therefore, needed
tutelage, before they could be ready for independence.
-Make itself worthy of these liberties.
-People should learn and educate themselves in the process of
struggling for freedom and liberty.
-Colonialism if the only agency still trying to sell the idea that freedom
is a diploma to be granted by a superior people to an inferior one after
years of apprenticeship.
The Precursors of Mendicancy
-Propagandists, in working for certain reforms, chose Spain as the
arena of their struggle instead of working among their own people,
educating them and learning from them, helping them to realize their
own condition.
-The elite had a sub-conscious disrespect for the ability of the people to
articulate their own demands and to move on their own.
-They felt that education gave them the right to speak for the people.
-They are not accustomed to the people moving on their own.
-The ilustrados were the Hispanized sector of our population, hence
they tried to prove that they were as Spanish as the peninsulares.

-They are no different from the modern-day mendicants who try to


prove that they are Amercanized.
Ilustrados and Indios
-Bonifacio, not as Hispanized as the ilustrados, saw in peoples actions
the only road to liberation.
-The Katipunan was a peoples movement based on confidence in the
peoples capacity to act in its own behalf.
-It was Bonifacio and the Katipunan that embodied the unity of
revolutionary consciousness and revolutionary practice.
-The indio as Filipino rose in arms while the ilustrado was still waiting
for Spain to dispense justice and reforms.
-The revolutionary masses proclaimed their separatist goal through the
Katipuan.
-Rizal should occupy his proper place in our pantheon of great Filipinos.
Blind Adoration
-We must always be conscious of the historical conditions and
circumstances that made an individual a hero.
-We must view Rizal as an evolving personality within an evolving
historical period.
Limitations of Rizal
-Unless we have an ulterior motive, there is really no need to extend
Rizals meaning so that he may have contemporary value.
-The nature of the Rizal cult is such that he is being transformed into
an authority to sanction the status quo by a confluence of blind
adoration and widespread ignorance of his most telling ideas.
The Negation of Rizal
-We cannot rely on Rizal alone. We must discard the belief that we are
incapable of producing the heroes of our epoch.
-The true hero is one with the masses, he does not exist above them.

-When the goals of the people are finally achieved, Rizal, the first
Filipino, will be negated by the true Filipino by whom he will be
remembered as a great catalyzer in the metamorphosis of the
decolonized indio.

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