Life of DR Jose Rizal
Life of DR Jose Rizal
Life of DR Jose Rizal
June 19, 1861- moonlit of Wednesday between eleven and midnight Jose Rizal
was born in the lakeshore town of
Calamba, Laguna
June 22, 1861- aged three days old, Rizal was baptized in the Catholic
church
Father Rufino Collantes- a Batangueo, the parish priest who baptized Rizal
Father Pedro Casanas- Rizals godfather, native of Calamba and close friend
of the Rizal family
Lieutenant-General Jose Lemery- the governor general of the Philippines
when Rizal was born
RIZALS PARENTS
Don Francisco Mercado (1818-1898)
-born in Bian, Laguna on May 11, 1818
-studied Latin and Philosophy at the College of San Jose in Manila
-became a tenant-farmer of the Dominican-owned hacienda
-a hardy and independent-minded man, who talked less and worked more, and was
strong in body and valiant in spirit
-died in Manila on January 5, 1898 at the age of 80
-Rizal affectionately called him a model of fathers
7. Jose (1861-1896)
-the greatest Filipino hero and peerless genius
-nickname was Pepe
-lived with Josephine Bracken, Irish girl from Hong Kong
-had a son but this baby-boy died a few hours after birth; Rizal named him
Francisco after his father and buried him
in Dapitan
8. Concepcion (1862-1865)
-her pet name was Concha
-died of sickness at the age of 3
-her death was Rizals first sorrow in life
9. Josefa (1865-1945)
-her pet name was Panggoy
-died an old maid at the age of 80
10. Trinidad (1868-1951)
-Trining was her pet name
-she died also an old maid in 1951 aged 83
11. Soledad (1870-1929)
-youngest of the Rizal children
-her pet name was Choleng
-married Pantaleon Quintero of Calamba
Rizal always called her sisters Doa or Seora (if married) and Seorita (if
single)
Francisco Mercado and Teodora Alonso Realonda married on June 28, 1848, after
which they settled down in
Calamba
The real surname of the Rizal family was Mercado, which was adopted in 1731 by
Domingo Lamco (the paternal
great-great grandfather of Jose Rizal), who was a full blooded Chinese)
Rizals family acquired a second surnameRizalwhich was given by a Spanish
alcalde mayor (provincial governor)
of Laguna, who was a family friend
RIZALS ANCESTRY
FATHERS SIDE
Domingo Lamco
Ines de la Rosa
(a Chinese immigrant from
(Well-to-do Chinese
the Fukien city arrived in
Christian girl of Changchow
Manila about 1690)
Juan Mercado
(Rizals grandfather)
Cirila Alejandro
Had thirteen children, the
youngest being Francisco
Mercado (Rizals
father)
2
MOTHERS SIDE
Lakandula
(The last native king of Tondo)
Eugenio Ursua
(Rizals maternal Benigma
Great-great Grandfather of (a Filipina)
Japanese Ancestry)
Manuel de Quintos
Regina (a Filipino from
Pangasinan)
Lorenzo
Alberto Alonso
Brigida (a
prominent Spanish Filipino
mestizo
of Bian)
3
(1) hereditary influence
(2) environmental influence
(3) aid of Divine Providence
MARTYRDOM OF GOM-BUR-ZA
Night of January 20, 1872- about 200 Filipino soldiers and workmen of the
Cavite arsenal under the
leadership of Lamadrid, Filipino sergeant, rose in violent mutiny because
of the abolition of their usual
privileges
Fathers Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora- were executed at
sunrise of February 17,
1872, by order of Governor General Izquierdo
The martyrdom of Gom-Bur-Za in 1872 truly inspired Rizal to fight the
evils of Spanish tyranny and
redeem his oppressed people
Rizal dedicated his second novel, El Filibusterismo, to Gom-Bur-Za
INJUSTICE TO HEROS MOTHER
Before June, 1872- Doa Teodora was suddenly arrested on a malicious
charge that she and her
brother, Jose Alberto, tried to poison the latters perfidious wife
Antonio Vivencio del Rosario- Calambas gobernadorcillo, help arrest
Doa Teodora
After arresting Doa Teodora, the sadistic Spanish lieutenant forced
her to walk from Calamba to Santa
Cruz (capital of Laguna province), a distance of 50 kilometers
Doa Teodora was incarcerated at the provincial prison, where she
languished for two years and a half
Messrs. Francisco de Marcaida and Manuel Marzan- the most famous
lawyers of Manila that defend
Doa Teodora
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Rizal cultivated his literary talent under the guidance of Father
Sanchez
Father Jose Vilaclara- advised Rizal to stop communing with the
Muse and pay more attention to more
practical studies
Rizal studied painting under the famous Spanish painter, Agustin
Saez, and sculpture under Romualdo
de Jesus, noted Filipino sculptor
Rizal carved an image of the Virgin Mary on a piece of batikuling
(Philippine hardwood) with his pocket-
knife
Father Lleonart- impressed by Rizals sculptural talent, requested
him to carve for him an image of
Sacred Heart of Jesus
-In 1875, inspired by Father Sanchez, Rizal wrote more poems, as such:
1. Felicitacion (Felicitationi)
2. El Embarque: Himno a la Flota de Magallanes (The Departure: Hymn to
Magellans Fleet)
3. Y Es Espanol; Elcano, el Primero en dar la Vuelta al Mundo (And He is
Spanish: Elcano, the First to
Circumnavigate the World)
4. El Combate: Urbiztondo, Terror de Jolo (The Battle: Urbiztondo, Terror of
Jolo)
-In 1876, Rizal wrote poems on various topics-religion, education, childhood
memories and war. They were as follows:
1. Un Recuerdo a Mi Pueblo (In Memory of My Town)- a tender poem in honor of
Calamba, the heros natal town
2. Alianza Intima Entre la Religion y la Buena Educacion (Intimate Alliance
Between Religion and Good Education)-
Rizal showed the importance of religion in education
3. Por la Educacion Recibe Lustre la Patria (Through Education the Country
Receives Light)- Rizal believed in the
significant role which education plays in the progress and welfare of a nation
4. El Cautiverio y el Triunfo: Batalla de Lucena y Prision de Boabdil (The
Captivity and the Triumph: Battle of Lucena
and the Imprisonment of Boabdil)- this martial poem describes the defeat and
capture of Boabdil, last Moorish sultan of
Granada
5. La Entrada Triunfal de los Reyes Catolices en Granada (The Triumphal Entry
of the Catholic Monarchs into
Granada)- this poem relates the victorious entry of King Ferdinand and Queen
Isabel into Granada, last Moorish
stronghold in Spain
-A year later, in 1877, Rizal wrote more poems. It was his last years in Ateneo.
Among the poems written that year were:
1. El Heroismo de Colon (The Heroism of Columbus)- this poem praises Columbus,
the discoverer of America
2. Colon y Juan II (Columbus and John II)- this poem relates how King Kohn II of
Portugal missed fame and riches
by his failure to finance the projected expedition of Columbus to the New World
3. Gran Consuelo en la Mayor Desdicha (Great Solace in Great Misfortune)- this is
a legend in verse of the tragic life
of Columbus
4. Un Dialogo Aluviso a la Despedida de los Colegiales (A Farewell Dialogue of
the Students)- this was the last
poem written by Rizal in Ateneo; it is a poignant poem of farewell to his
classmate
Al Nio Jesus (To the Child Jesus)- this poem was written in 1875
when Rizal was 14 years old; it was
a brief ode
A La Virgen Maria (To the Virgin Mary)- another religious poem
which doesnt have exact date when it
was written
San Eustacio, Martir (St. Eustace, the Martyr)- a drama based on
the prose story of St. Eustace which
he wrote in poetic verses during the summer vacation of 1876 and
finished it on June 2, 1876
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April 1877- Rizal who was then nearly 16 years old, matriculated
in the University of Santo Tomas, taking
the course on Philosophy and Letters because (1) his father like
it (2) he was still uncertain as to what
career to pursue
Father Pablo Ramon-Rector of Ateneo, who had been good to him
during his student days in that
college, asking for advice on the choice of a career but
unfortunately he was in Mindanao
It was during the following term (1878-1879) that Rizal, having
received the Ateneo Rectors advice to
study medicine
During Rizals first school term in the University of Santo Tomas
(1877-1878), Rizal also studied in
Ateneo. He took the vocational course leading to the title of
perito agrimensor (expert surveyor)
Rizal excelled in all subjects in the surveying course in Ateneo,
obtaining gold medals in agriculture and
topography
November 25, 1881- the title was issued to Rizal for passing the
final examination in the surveying
course
Liceo Artistico-Literario (Artistic-Literary Lyceum) of Manila- a
society of literary men and artists,
held a literary contest in the year 1879
A La Juventud Filipina (To the Filipino Youth)- Rizal, who was then
18 years old, submitted this poem
-is an inspiring poem of flawless form. Rizal beseeched the Filipino youth
to rise from lethargy, to let genius fly
swifter than the wind and descend with art and science to break the chains that
have long bound the spirit of the people
-this winning poem of Rizal is a classic in Philippine literature for two
reasons: (1) it was the great poem in
Spanish written by a Filipino, whose merit was recognized by Spanish literary
authorities (2) it expressed for the first time
the nationalistic concept that the Filipinos, and not the foreigners, were the
fair hope of the Fatherland
The Board of Judges, composed of Spaniards, was impressed by
Rizals poem and gave it the first prize
which consisted of a silver pen, feather-shaped and decorated
with a gold ribbon
El Consejo de los Dioses (The Councils of the Gods)- an allegorical
drama written by Rizal which he
entered in the literary contest of Artistic-Literary Lyceum in
1880 to commemorate the fourth centennial of
the death of Cervantes
-was a literary masterpiece based on the Greek classics
The prize was awarded to Rizal, a gold ring on which was engraved
the bust of Cervantes
D.N. del Puzo- a Spanish writer, who won the second prize
Junto al Pasig (Beside the Pasig)- a zarzuela which was staged by
the Ateneans on December 8, 1880,
on the occasion of the annual celebration of the Feats Day of the
Immaculate Conception, Patroness of
the Ateneo
- Rizal wrote it as President of the Academy of Spanish Literature in
Ateneo
A Filipinas- a sonnet written by Rizal for the album of the Society
of Sculptors; in this sonnet, he urged all
Filipino artists to glorify the Philippines
Abd-el-Azis y Mahoma- Rizal composed a poem in 1879 which was
declaimed by an Atenean, Manuel
Fernandez, on the night of December 8, 1879, in honor of the
Ateneos Patroness
Al M.R.P. Pablo Ramon- Rizal composed a poem in 1881, as an
expression of affection to Father Pablo
Ramon, the Ateneo rector, who had been so kind and helpful to him
Vicenta Ybardolaza- a pretty girl colegiala who skillfully played
the harp at the Regalado home, whom
Rizal was infatuated in Pakil
Rizal mentioned Turumba (wherein the people dancing in the streets
during the procession in honor of the
miraculous Birhen Maria de los Dolores) in Chapter VI of Noli Me
Tangere and Pagsanjan Falls in his
travel diary (united StatesSaturday, May 12, 1888), where he
said that Niagara Falls was the greatest
cascades I ever saw but not so beautiful nor fine as the falls
at Los Baos, Pagsanjan
Compaerismo (Comradeship)- Rizal founded a secret society of
Filipino students in University of
Santo Tomas in 1880
Companions of Jehu- members of the society whose after the valiant
Hebrew general
Galicano Apacible-Rizals cousin from Batangas who is the secretary
of the society
UNHAPPY DAYS AT THE UST
-Rizal found the atmosphere at the University of Santo Tomas suffocating to his
sensitive spirit. He was unhappy at this
Dominican institution of higher learning because (1) the Dominican professors were
hostile to him (2) the Filipino students
were racially discriminated against by the Spaniards (3) the method of instruction
was obsolete and repressive
-In Rizals novel, El Filibusterismo, he described how the Filipino students were
humiliated and insulted by their
Dominican professors and how backward the method of instruction was, especially in
the teaching of the natural sciences.
He related in Chapter XIII, The Class in Physics
This can be very exhaustive as I deal with historical facts apropos of the
relationship of Jose Rizal with the University of
Santo Tomas. I am indebted to Fr. Fidel Villaroel, OP, the eminent historian and
former archivist of the UST Archives for
giving me the distinct privilege (without going through the norms and policies) of
touring the archives and letting me
examined some important documents pertaining but not principally to the history of
the Philippines. As a pioneering
institution of learning from the martyrdom of Gomez, Burgos and Zamora, to the
propaganda movement, to the
revolution of 1896, to the birth of the Republic in 1898, to the commonwealth
period and finally to the restoration of
7
independence in 1946 it is therefore presumptuous to assume the UST has had a
hand in the making of the history of
the Philippines.
As what Fr. Villaroel said, none of the biographers and historians took the time of
looking into the original academic
records of Rizal. Neither there were efforts on their part to make a study on UST
based on the archival records of the
Pontifical University. It has been treated inadequately, at times, with a good
deal of misunderstanding, exaggeration or
prejudice.
The second confusion was their failure to understand the underlying principles
behind the anti-friars and anti-UST writings
of Rizal particularly the El Fili.
After seeing the documents at the UST Archives and reading Fr. Villaroels well-
written study on Rizal and the University
of Santo Tomas, I can only scoff at those who bask at their ignorance and use many
of the myths to advance their cause.
Such is the case of some pexers here who undoubtedly use these myths for their own
good. In the words of Dr. Serafin
Quiason, former chairman of the National Historical Institue, it is a great virtue
of his (Fr. Villaroel) study that he sweeps
away many of the myths which have passed for facts for almost three quarters of a
century. He has solved many difficult
questions and the readers can be grateful for a valuable and devoted piece of
work.
This thread intends to rectify some issues pertaining to the negative pictures
projected about Rizals relationship with his
alma mater, the University of Santo Tomas based on the study by Fr. Villaroel who
had diligently dug through the archival
materials of UST and Archivo de la Provincia del Sto. Rosario. Was Rizal
discriminated and treated shabbily by the
Dominicans? Why did he leave UST? Why did he criticize the University years later?
How are the stories of El
Filibusterismo to be understood?
MYTH:
Rizal complained about his grades in UST and was discriminated and treated shabbily
by the Dominicans.
FACTS:
(1) Rizal entered the UST in 1877, enrolling in the Pre-Law Course, which was made
up of philosophical subjects. The
course was commonly called metaphysics. He passed the course brilliantly with the
highest grades in spite of his initial
indifference to philosophy and his youthful distractions through the year. Then he
opted for the career of medicine. And in
1878-1879 he took simultaneously the Pre-Medical Course and the First Year of
Medicine; this was against the rules, but
Rizal was favored with a dispensation. The Pre-Medicine Course was also called
Ampliacion, because the student, having
taken already Physics, Chemistry and Natural History in the high school, now took
an advanced course on the same
subjects (Rizal did not take in Santo Tomas the class of physics described in El
Fili but rather in Ateneo).
In his courses of medicine, Rizal was a good student, above-average, though not
excellent; but none of his classmates
were excellent either. Summing up, in the 21 subjects taken in UST, Rizal obtained
one aprobado (passing grade), eight
bueno (good), six notable (very good) and six sobresaliente (excellent). Majority
of students in Rizals time, or in any time,
would have been satisfied with the above grades. It is possible that Rizal was not,
but it is a fact that he never complained
about his grades, there is not a single word in his works showing displeasure at
the unfairness of UST.
Yet many of his biographers are angry, unreasonably angry (including anti-ust
pexers?) at the treatment given to the
national hero by his alma mater. How could Rizal, after a perfect record of
Excellent in the high school (Ateneo) now
receive such low grades at UST? The critics had to look for an explanation, and
since they did not find fault in Rizal, then
they had to blame the Dominicans and UST. And from Retana to Austin Craig, from
Frank Lauback to Austin Coates and
to quite a long line of Filipino biographers (with some exceptions), we only hear
the same repeated lamentation that every
school child must now learn in the textbooks: that Rizal was below his usual
standards, and for the extremely serious
charge that the Dominican professors were hostile to him and the Filipino
students were racially discriminated (Zaide),
and that there was excessive harping on the alleged intellectual superiority of
the Spanish (because he was white) to the
Filipino, a brown man, and Indio (JM Hernandez), and so on. An objective historian
must squarely face and honestly
answer these grave statements, which sound like accusations.
Was Rizal far below his usual standards? What standards, in the first place? If
by usual standards we mean the grades
of his Ateneo high school studies, the comparison is unfair. Nobody places
elementary or high school standards against
college or University standards. They belong to different levels. At Ateneo
municipal, Rizal was excellent, though not the
only excellent student. At the UST, none of his classmates ever got near to keeping
a straight record of Excellent. And this
was because Medicine was a different kind of stuff altogether.
(2) It can hardy be said that Rizal was discriminated and treated shabbily by the
Dominicans since he was granted the
rare privilege of studying simultaneously in the Preparatory Course of Medicine and
the First Year of Medicine.
Records likewise show that six Spaniards were enrolled with Rizal in the first year
of Medicine, of whom three were
Peninsular and three Philippine-born. If the criticism of some biographers were
true, these six students would have been
favored by the friars. Yet at the end of the fourth year there remained only one
Philippine-born Spaniard, Jose
Resurreccion y Padilla, who managed to get only a poor passing grade (aprobado),
last among successful students, and
who in the following year received a crushing suspenso. It would be unkind to
rejoice over failures, whether of Spanish or
of Filipinos, but the biographers of Rizal will not be convincing unless they prove
with valid documents the existence of
racial discrimination in UST in the 19th century when it came to academic grades.
(3) Rizals inclinations and abilities must be taken into account. While he was
undoubtedly inclined to, and remarkably
fitted for, the arts and letters, he was not much attracted to Medicine. Perhaps
says Leon Ma. Guerrero Medicine was
not his real vocation. Medicine was a convenient career taken up in consideration
of the poor health of Rizals mother,
whom he wanted to help, and eventually helped as a physician.
(4) When Rizal transferred to Spain and continued his studies at the University of
Madrid, he showed there similar
characteristics. He was sobresaliente in the humanistic studies (literature,
languages, history), while in Medicine he fared
worse than at the University of Santo Tomas. Ye no historian or biographer has ever
complained about his poor
performance in Madrid or hinted that Rizal was discriminated against in that
Central University.
(5) Rizal had Dominican friends in the persons of Fr. Evaristo Arias and Fr.
Joaquin Fonseca. It was while studying at
UST that Rizal obtained public recognition as a poet. It was the Dominican; Fr.
Arias who helped him cultivate his craft in
poetry. During his Thomasian years, Rizal composed the best poems of his pre-
European period, one of them being A la
Juventud Filipina, winner of the first prize in the contest organized by the Liceo
Artistico-Literario in 1879.
MYTH:
Rizal is said to have left UST for the following reasons:
a. because a certain professor of UST caused him displeasure (P. Pastells, SJ,
1897)
b. because the atmosphere in UST (meaning Thomistic atmosphere) suffocated him,
and it is presumed that
because of it he left (E. Retana, 1907)
c. because in his class of medicine the lay professor made a statement contrary
to the textbook and then he refused
to permit discussion or to give explanations; so Rizal decided he was wasting
his time to remain in the University
(Craig, 1909)
d. because he found unfriendliness in the University, (Lauback, 1936)
e. because UST could not give fuller learning to the youth, and its
usefulness was almost, if not altogether nil. (D.
Abella, 1965)
FACT:
Twenty authors quoting from the same erroneous source commit the same error twenty
times over. Therefore, what the
quoted authors have said must be submitted to scrutiny. More significantly, all the
authors quoted above have one thing in
common: none of them quote any historical source, like words from Rizals
correspondence, his articles, etc. If any source
is ever mentioned it is infallibly the novel El Fili.
But is there not, we ask, a better source to support historical facts than a novel?
In the present case, there seems to be no
other, and for one fundamental reason: because Rizal never revealed in clear terms
why he left the Philippines in 1882.
Neither he nor his brother Paciano, nor his uncle Antonio Rivera, nor his most
intimate friends. Not a clear word from
them, who were the only persons who could have known. This fact leads us to
conclude that the writers who put the
blame for Rizals departure on the University of Santo Tomas are only guessing,
honestly guessing of course, but
mistakenly.
It is almost needless to enter into discussion with those writers who lay the
responsibility for Rizals departure at the door
of UST. But let us face the question squarely.
(1) It has been stated that a certain professor, more concretely a lay professor of
medicine, disagreed with the textbook
and refused to entertain discussion on the topics of his subject (so Pastells and
Craig). This professor is identified by
Craig as one who, some years later, was classmate of Rizal at the University of
Madrid. He was Dr. Jose Franco who, as
professor of Rizal in Santo Tomas, had threatened to fail the whole medical class
(P. Pastells). But granting that Professor
Franco was speaking seriously, it is quite improbable that Rizal decided to leave
the Philippines for an incident with one
professor, who besides did not fail him in the final examinations. Rizals
companions and friends did not seem to have
noticed any misunderstanding between Rizal and any professor, as shown in a letter
of Jose M. Cecilio: Your departure
without notice has caused surprise among many friends to the point of stirring
their curiosity. They ask whether there were
serious matters going on which prompted you to leave.
(3) That the UST did not provide fuller learning to its students, and that this
prompted some of them like Rizal to go
abroad, as suggested by some authors, might be as true then as it can be true at
any other period of her history. This can
also be said of any Philippine university today. The temptation to try better
institutions abroad is always better, and those
who can afford it, occasionally fall for it. There is no denying that, in the last
quarter of the 19th century, Europe offered to
the students of science, philosophy, literature and every aspect of material
progress, horizons of learning that no colonial
land in other continents could possibly give in such measure. But if many student
like Rizal went abroad is search of fuller
learning and profited from that experience, it would be wrong to conclude that a
university like UST was therefore
worthless. Whether by choice or by the force of circumstances many more students
stayed behind than left for Europe,
and those who remained received a tertiary education of such quality that enabled
them to become builders of the
Philippine Republic. Thomasians trained here and only here were Pedro Pelaez and
Jose Burgos, Apolinario Mabini and
Cayetano Arellano, Manuel Araullo and the Mapa brothers, Sergio Osmena and Manuel
L. Quezon, Leon Maria Guererro
and Anacleto del Rosario, Felipe Calderon and Epifanio de los Santos, etc. and most
of the men of the Malolos Congress,
all belonging to the generation of Rizal.
Until further historical research can project more light on the life of Rizal,
little more remains to be said on this point. This
little more is reduced to the following: If neither the UST records nor the
correspondence of Rizal with Paciano and his
family nor his letters to or from his intimate friends can support the alleged
misunderstanding between Rizal and the
University; if those documents do not explain the reasons for Rizals departure for
Spain, then i believe that the only valid
recourse left to the historian is the recourse to the oral tradition. And two
traditions come handily on our way, one
preserved in Rizals own family and another in the University of Santo Tomas.
MYTH:
The Class of Physics (Chapter 13) in El Filibusterismo is autobiographical of
Rizals stay in UST and that Rizals anti-
friars and anti-UST writings are reflective of how the national hero loathed the
University.
FACT:
(1) While in Europe (1882-1892), Rizal changed considerably in at least one aspect,
in his attitude towards religion. He
gave up some basic and essential tenets of his faith and ceased to be a practicing
Catholic. This was due mainly to his
continuous association with many rationalist thinkers and liberal politicians of
Spain and other countries of Europe. A new
rationalistic approach to life and his affiliation to freemasonry accentuated his
anti-clerical sentiments and his antipathy for
the Catholic Church, for her belief and external manifestations (dogmas, rites and
rituals and devotional life). These
changes in Rizal must be taken into account when assessing his ironic criticism of
the Church, the religious Orders and
the University of Santo Tomas. History showed that the attacks thrown by
propagandists at Santo Tomas, particularly the
Church, were just part and parcel of the clash between liberalism and Thomism. And
that the attack thrown at Santo
Tomas , which was under the Royal patronage of Spain, was not unique since every
university in Europe like Oxford
received the same fate for upholding Thomism. The Vatican in an encyclical endorsed
Thomism as an instrument to
counteract rationalism, which at that time began to penetrate all spheres of
society.
(2) Crucially affecting this new attitude of criticism were the events that
occurred in Calamba from 1887 onwards as a
result of the famous agrarian litigation between his family and the Dominican
Hacienda. Whatever reasons for dissension
might have existed in previous years due to worsening economic conditions affecting
the country at large, Rizals personal
intervention in the affair in 1887 precipitated the legal suit. The case ended in
the courts with an adverse sentence against
the family and other tenants and the tragic deportation of some of Rizals
immediate relatives. That social question and
lawsuit had nothing to do with the UST, but it surely soured Rizals pen when
writing about an educational institution that
was run by the owners of Calamba Hacienda. We have here another factor for his
critical attitude; again he had not in
mind any past academic experience.
(3) The novel El Fili was written precisely during the years of the Calamba
agrarian crisis (any student of literature or a
practicing writer would agree that if there are things that affect the
consciousness of a writer, it would be the moment, the
milieu, and the race).
The Class of Physics is the subject of chapter 13 of the Fili, a subject that
some historians and biographers have used
and abused lavishly. They have a reason, because the story comes in very handily to
illustrate the student years of Rizal
at the UST, regardless of the novelistic character of the source.
The practical question here is whether the story of the Class of Physics really
happened on even one day, whether it
reflects educational methods practiced in UST in the 19th century, or whether Rizal
was just creating a scene suitable to
the aims of the novel, that is, to attack and discredit the religious institutes.
Some biographers easily believe Retanas
remark that this chapter is an accurate picture of what happened in the Pontifical
University of Manila when Rizal studied
there. a remark written of course, when Retana had turned into a bitter enemy of
the religious orders.
But even taking for granted that Rizal based his story on some incident that
happened during his university years, this is
no reason to conclude that the general life of the University was similar. And as
for the bleak picture of the physical
classroom itself, the UST still possess the schedules of classes in those years,
and the Class of Physics is invariably
assigned to the Physics Laboratories, not to an ordinary classroom.
Finally, Austin Coates statement that this chapter of the Fili is clearly
autobiographical is totally unacceptable, if by
autobiographical he meant that the experience of Placido was actually felt by Rizal
personally or by some of his
classmates. And the reason is very simple: Rizal did not take Physics at the UST.
He had taken that course at the Ateneo
10
Municipal in 1876-1877. Rafael Palma who took up Physics and Chemistry in 1890 at
Ateneo Municipal, a little over ten
years after Rizal, recalled later that the laboratory materials in use at the
Ateneo for teaching Natural History and Physics
were very poor (Rafael Palma, My Autobiography, Manila 1953).
The whole chapter is a caricature, very useful for the aims of the novel; it is not
Rizals biography.
11
-it was published in two textsSpanish and Tagalogthe Spanish text was the
one originally written by Rizal in
Barcelona, the tagalog text was a Tagalog translation made by M.H. del Pilar
Basilio Teodoro Moran- a friend of Rizal in Manila and the publisher
of Diariong Tagalog where Rizal
sent this article
Diariong Tagalog- the first Manila bilingual newspaper (Spanish and
Tagalog)
Los Viajes (Travels)- Rizals second article for Diariong Tagalog
Revista de Madrid (Review of Madrid)- Rizals third article written
in Madrid on November 29, 1882 but
returned to him because the Diariong Tagalog had ceased publication
for lack of funds
Rizal received sad news about the cholera that was ravaging Manila
and the provinces according to
Pacianos letter, dated September 15, 1882
Another sad news from the Philippines was the chatty letter of
Chengoy recounting the unhappiness of
Leonor Rivera
In one of his letters (dated May 26, 1882), Paciano advised his
younger brother to finish the medical
course in Madrid
Rizal left Barcelona in the fall of 1882 and established himself in
Madrid, the capital of Spain
LIFE IN MADRID
November 3, 1882- Rizal enrolled in the Universidad Central de
Madrid (Central University of Madrid) in
two coursesMedicine and Philosophy and Letters
Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando- Rizal studied painting and
sculpture
Rizals only extravagance was investing a few pesetas for a lottery
ticket in every draw of the Madrid
Lottery
Rizal spent his leisure time reading and writing at his boarding
house, attending the reunions of Filipino
students at the house of the Paterno brothers (Antonio, Maximo
and Pedro) and practicing fencing and
shooting at the gymnasium
Antigua Caf de Levante-during the summer twilights, this is where
Rizal sipped coffee and fraternized
with the students from Cuba, Mexico, Argentina, etc
On Saturday evenings, Rizal visited the home of Don Pablo Ortiga y
Rey who lived with his son (Rafael)
and daughter (Consuelo)
Circulo Hispano-Filipino (Hispano-Philippine Circle)- a society of
Spaniards and Filipinos which Rizal
joined shortly after his arrival in Madrid in 1882
Me Piden Versos (They Ask Me For Verses)- upon the request of the
members of this society, Rizals
wrote this poem which he personally declaimed during the New
Years Eve reception of the Madrid
Filipinos held in the evening of December 31, 1882
-in this sad poem, Rizal poured out the cry of his agonizing heart
Rizal economized on his living expenses, and with the money he
saved, he purchased books from a
second-hand book store owned by a certain Seor Roses
Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms Cabin and Eugene Sues The Wandering
Jew- these two books
aroused Rizals sympathy for the oppressed and unfortunate people
FIRST VISIT TO PARIS (1883)
-During his first summer vacation in Madrid, Rizal went to Paris, gay capital of
France
-The prices of food, drinks, theatre, tickets, laundry, hotel accommodations, and
transportation were too high for Rizals
slender purse so that he commented in a letter to his family: Paris is the
costliest capital in Europe.
June 17 to August 20, 1883- Rizal sojourn in Paris
Hotel de Paris- located on 37 Rue de Maubange wherein Rizal billeted
but later, he moved to a cheaper
hotel on 124 Rue de Rennes in the Latin Quarter
Laennec Hospital- where Rizal observed Dr. Nicaise treating his
patients
Lariboisiere Hospital- where Rizal observed the examination of
different diseases of women
Rizal was impressed by the way the Spanish Mason openly and freely c
riticized the government policies
and lambasted the friars, which could not be done in Philippines
March 1883- Rizal joined the Masonic lodge called Acacia in Madrid
Rizals reason for becoming a mason was to secure Freemansorys aid
in his fight against the friars in the
Philippines
Lodge Solidaridad (Madrid) Rizal transferred where he became a
Master Mason on November 15,
1890
February 15, 1892- Rizal was awarded the diploma as Master Mason by
Le Grand Orient de France in
Paris
Science, Virtue and Labor- Rizals only Masonic writing; a lecture
which he delivered in 1889 at Lodge
Solidaridad, Madrid
After Rizals departure for Spain, things turned from bad to worse in
Calamba: (1) harvests of rice and
sugarcane failed on account of drought and locusts (2) the
manager of the Dominican-owned hacienda
increased the rentals of the lands (3) a dreadful pest killed
most of the turkeys. Due to hard times in
12
Calamba, the monthly allowances of Rizal in Madrid were late in
arrival and there were times when they
never arrived
June 24, 1884- a touching incident in Rizals life in Madrid wherein
he was broke and was unable to take
breakfast
-Rizal attended his class at the university, participated in the contest in
Greek language and won the gold medal
Evening of June 25, 1884- a banquet was sponsored by the Filipino
community to celebrate the double
victory of the Filipino artist in the National Exposition of Fine
Arts in MadridLunas Spoliarium winning
the first prize and Hidalgos Christian Virgins Exposed to the
Populace (Virgenes Cristianas Expuestas al
Populacho), second prize
November 20, 21, and 22, 1884- the serene city of Madrid exploded in
bloody riots by the students of the
Central University
These student demonstrations were caused by the address of Dr. Miguel
Morayta, professor of history,
at the opening ceremonies of the academic year on November 20, in
which he proclaimed the freedom
of science and the teacher
The Rector, who also took the side of the students, was forced to
resign and was replaced by Doctor
Creus, a very unpopular man, disliked by everybody
November 26, 1884- Rizal wrote the recounting tumultuous riots to his
family
June 21, 1884- Rizal completed his medical course in Spain; he was
conferred the degree of Licentiate in
Medicine by the Universidad Central de Madrid
The next academic year (1884-1885), Rizal studied and passed all
subjects leading to the degree of
Doctor of Medicine but he did not present the thesis required for
graduation nor paid the corresponding
fees, he was not awarded his Doctors diploma
June 19, 1885- on his 24th birthday, Rizal was awarded the degree of
Licentiate in Philosophy and Letters
by the Universidad Central de Madrid with the rating of
Excellent: (Sobresaliente)
November 26, 1884- a letter to Rizals family written in Madrid
wherein he said My doctorate is not of
very much value to me because although it is useful to a
university professor, yet, I believe they
(Dominican friarsZ) will never appoint me as such in the College
of Santo Tomas. I say the same thing
of philosophy and letters which may serve also for a professorship,
but I doubt if the Dominican fathers
will grant it to me.
13
April 22, 1886- Rizal wrote a fine poem A Las Flores de
Heidelberg (To the Flowers of Heidelberg)
In the spring of 1886, Rizal was fascinated by the blooming flowers
along the cool banks of the Neckar
River. Among them was his favorite flowerthe light blue forget-
me-not
Wilhelmsfeld- a mountainous village near Heidelberg where Rizal
spent a three-month summer vacation
Dr. Karl Ullmer- a kind Protestant pastor where Rizal stayed, who
became his good friend and admirer
June 25, 1886- Rizal ended his sojourn at Pastor Ullmers home
May 29, 1887- Rizal wrote from Munich (Muchen) to Friedrich
(Fritz), son of Pastor Ullmer
July 31, 1886- Rizal wrote his first letter in German (which he had
improved after his stay with the
Ullmers) to Professor Blumentritt, Director of the Ateneo of
Leitmeritz, Austria
Aritmetica (Arithmetic)-Rizal sent this book he mentioned and was
published in two languages
Spanish and Tagalogby the University of Santo Tomas Press in 1868.
the author was Rufino Baltazar
Hernandez, a native of Santa Cruz, Laguna
August 6, 1886- the famous University of Heidelberg held its fifth
centenary celebration
CHARACTERS OF NOLI
The Noli Me Tangere was a true story of the Philippine conditions during
the last decades of Spanish rule
Maria Clara-was Leonor Rivera, although in real life she became
unfaithful and married an Englishman
Ibarra and Elias- represented Rizal himself
Tasio-the philosopher was Rizals elder brother Paciano
Padre Salvi-was identified by Rizalists as Padre Antonio Piernavieja, the
hated Augustinian friar in Cavite
who was killed by the patriots during the Revolution
Capitan Tiago-was Captain Hilario Sunico of San Nicolas
Doa Victorina- was Doa Agustina Medel
Basilio and Crispin- were the Crisostomo brothers of Hagonoy
Padre Damaso- typical of a domineering friar during the days of Rizal,
who was arrogant, immoral and
anti-Filipino
15
RIZALS GRAND TOUR OF EUROPE WITH VIOLA (1887)
May 11, 1887- Rizal and Viola left Berlin by train
Dresden- one of the best cities in Germany
Prometheus Bound-painting wherein Rizal was deeply impressed
Teschen (now Decin, Czechoslovakia)- next stopover after leaving
Dresedn
LEITMERITZ
At 1:30pm of May 13, 1887- the train, with Rizal and Viola on
board, arrived at the railroad station of
Leitmeritz, Bohemia
-for the first time, the two great scholarsRizal and Blumentrittmet in
person
Professor Blumentritt- a kind-hearted, old Austrian professor
May 13 to May 16, 1887- Rizal and Viola stayed in Leitmeritz
Burgomaster- town mayor
Tourists Club of Leitmeritz-which Blumentritt was the secretary;
Rizal spoke extemporaneously in
fluent Germany to the officers and members
Dr. Carlos Czepelak- renowned scientist of Europe
Professor Robert Klutschak- an eminent naturalist
May 16, 1887 at 9:45 AM- Rizal and Viola left Leitmeritz by train
PRAGUE
Dr. Willkomm- professor of natural history in the University of
Prague
According to Viola, nothing of importance happened in this city
VIENNA
May 20, 1887- Rizal and Viola arrived in the beautiful city of
Vienna, capital of Austria-Hungary
Vienna was truly the Queen of Danube because of its beautiful
buildings, religious images, haunting
waltzes and majestic charm
Norfentals- one of the greatest Austrian novelists was favorably
impressed by Rizal, and years later he
spoke highly of Rizal, whose genius he so much admired.
Hotel Metropole- where Rizal and Viola stayed
In Vienna, Rizal received his lost diamond stickpin
RIZAL IN ITALY
June 27, 1887- Rizal reached Rome, the Eternal City and also called
the City of the Caesars
Rizal was thrilled by the sights and memories of the Eternal City.
Describing to Blumentritt, the grandeur
that was Rome, he wrote on June 27, 1887
16
June 29, 1887- the Feast Day of St. Peter and St. Paul, Rizal
visited for the first time the Vatican, the
City of the Popes and the capital of Christendom
Every night, after sightseeing the whole day, Rizal returned to his
hotel, very tired. I am tired as a dog,
he wrote to Blumentritt, but I will sleep as a God
After a week of wonderful sojourn in Rome, Rizal prepared to return
to the Philippines. He had already
written to his father that he was coming home
18
Rickshaws-popular mode of transportation drawn by men that Rizal did
not like in Japan
April 13, 1888-Rizal left Japan and boarded the Belgic, an English
steamer, at Yokohama, bound for the
United States
Tetcho Suehiro- a fighting Japanese journalist, novelist and champion
of human rights, who was forced
by the Japanese government to leave the country
-passenger which Rizal befriended on board the Belgic
April 13 to December 1, 1888- eight months of intimate
acquaintanceship of Rizal and Tetcho
December 1, 1888- after a last warm handshake and bidding each other
goodbye, Rizal and Tetcho
parted waysnever to meet again
LIFE IN LONDON
May 25, 1888- a day after docking at Liverpool, Rizal went to London
Rizal stayed as guest at the home of Dr. Antonio Ma. Regidor, an
exile of 1872 and a practicing lawyer
in London. By the end of May, Rizal found a modest boarding place
at No. 37 Chalcot Crescent, Primrose
Hill
Dr. Reinhold Rozt- librarian of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
an authority on Malayan languages and
customs
-He was impressed by Rizals learning and character and he gladly
recommended him to the authorities of the
British Museum. He called Rizal a pearl of a man (una perla de hombre)
Both good and bad news from home reached Rizal in London. Of the bad
news, were the injustices
committed by the Spanish authorities on the Filipino people and
the Rizal Family
The greatest achievement of Rizal in London was the annotating of
Morgas book, Sucesos de las
Islas Filipinas (Historical Events of the Philippine Islands),
which was published in Mexico, 1609.
September 1888- Rizal visited Paris for a week in order to search
for more historical materials in the
Bibliotheque Nationale
Rizal was entertained in this gay French metropolis by Juan Luna and
his wife (Pas Pardo de Tavera),
who proudly showed him their little son Andres (nickname Luling)
December 11, 1888-Rizal went to Spain, visiting Madrid and Barcelona
Rizal met, for the first time, Marcelo H. del Pilar and Mariano
Ponce, two titans of the Propaganda
Movement
19
December 24, 1888-Rizal returned to London and spent Christmas and
New Years Day with the
Becketts
Rizal sent as Christmas gift to Blumentritt a bust of Emperador
Augustus and a bust of Julius Caesar to
another friend, Dr. Carlos Czepelak (Polish scholar)
The Life and Adventures of Valentine Vox, the Ventriloquist-a
Christmas gift from Rizals landlady,
Mrs Beckett
1. A La Defensa (To La Defensa), April 30, 1889- this was a reply to an anti-
Filipino writing of a Spanish author
Patricio de la Escosura which was published by La Defensa on March 30, 1889
2. La Verdad Para Todos (The Truth For All), May 31, 1889- Rizals defense
against the Spanish charges that the
native local officials were ignorant and depraved
3. Vicente Barrantes Teatro Tagalo, June 15, 1889- in this article, Rizal
exposes Barrabtes ignorance on the
Tagalog theatrical art
4.Una Profanacion (A Profanation), July 31, 1889- a bitter attack against the
friars for denying Christian burial to
Mariano Herbosa in Calamba because he was a brother-in-law of Rizal. Herbosa,
husband of lucia died of cholera on
May 23, 1889
5. Verdades Nuevas (New Truths), July 31, 1889- a reply to Vicente Belloc
Sanchez letter published in La Patria,
Madrid newspaper, on July 4, 1889, which asserted that the granting of reforms in
the Philippines would ruin the
peaceful and maternal rule of the friars
6. Crueldad (Cruelty), August 15, 1889- a brilliant defense of Blumentritt
from the scutrillous attack of his enemies
7. Diferencias (Differences), September 15, 1889- a reply to a biased article
entitled Old Truths published in La
Patria on August 14, 1889, which ridiculed those Filipinos who asked for reforms
8.Inconsequencias (Inconsequences), November 30, 1889- a defense of Antonio
Luna against the attack of Pablo
Mir Deas in the Barcelona newspaper El Puieblo Soberano
9. Llanto y Risas (Tears and Laughter), November 30, 1889- a denunciation of
Spanish racial prejudice against
brown Filipinos
10. Ingratitudes (Ingratitude), January 15, 1890- a reply
to Governor General Valeriano Weyler who,
while visiting Calamba, told the people that they should not allow themselves to
be deceived by the vain promises of
their ungrateful sons.
WRITINGS IN LONDON
While busy in research studies at the British Museum, Rizal received
news on Fray Rodriguez unabated
attack on his Noli
La Vision del Fray Rodriguez (The Vision of Fray Rodriguez)-pamphlet
wrote by Rizal which
published in Barcelona under his nom-de-plume Dimas Alang in order to
defense his novel
20
-In La Vision del Fray Rodriguez, Rizal demonstrated two things: (1) his
profound knowledge of religion (2) his
biting satire
Letter to the Young Women of Malolos- a famous letter wrote by
Rizal on February 22, 1889 in
Tagalog
-this letter is to praise the young ladies of Malolos for their courage to
establish a school where they could learn
Spanish, despite the opposition of Fr. Felipe Garcia, a Spanish parish priest of
Malolos
The main points of this letter were: (1) a Filipino mother should
teach her children love of God, fatherland,
and mankind (2) the Filipino mother should be glad, like the
Spartan mother, to offer her sons in the
defense of the fatherland (3) a Filipino woman should know how
to preserve her dignity and honor (4) a
Filipino woman should educate herself, aside from retaining her
good racial virtues (5) Faith is not merely
reciting long prayers and wearing religious pictures, but rather
it is living the real Christian way, with good
morals and good manners
Dr Reinhold Rost, editor of Trubners Record, a journal devoted to
Asian studies, request Rizal to
contribute some articles. In response to his request, the latter
prepared two articles(1) Specimens of
Tagal Folklore, which published in the journal in May, 1889 (2)
Two Eastern Fables, published in June,
1889
March 19, 1889- Rizal bade goodbye to the kind Beckett Family and
left London for Paris
RIZALS SECOND SOJOURN IN PARIS AND THE UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION IN 1889
-In March, 1889, it was extremely difficult for a visitor to find living quarters
in Paris
KIDLAT CLUB
March 19, 1889-the same day when he arrived in Paris from London,
Rizal organized his paisanos
(compatriots) into a society called Kidlat Club
Kidlat Club-purely a social society of a temporary nature
-founded by Rizal simply to bring together young Filipinos in the French
capital so that they could enjoy their
sojourn in the city during the duration of the Universal Exposition
INDIOS BRAVOS
Rizal was enchanted by the dignified and proud bearing of the
American Indians in a Buffalo Bull show
Indios Bravos (Brave Indians)- replaced the ephemeral Kidlat Club
-its members pledged to excel in intellectual and physical prowess in order
to win the admiration of the foreigners
-practised with great enthusiasm the use of the sword and pistol and Rizal
taught them judo, an Asian art of self-
defense, that he learned in Japan
R.D.L.M SOCIETY
Sociedad R.D.L.M. (R.D.L.M Society)- a mysterious society founded
by Rizal in Paris during the
Universal Exposition of 1889
-its existence and role in the crusade reforms are really enigmatic
-Of numerous letters written by Rizal and his fellow propagandists, only
two mentioned this secret society, as
follows (1) Rizals Letter to Jose Maria Basa, Paris, September 21, 1889 (2)
Rizals Letter to Marcelo H. del Pilar, Paris,
November 4, 1889
According to Dr. Leoncio Lopez-Rizal, grandnephew of the hero, the
society has a symbol or countersign
represented by a circle divided into three parts by two semi-
circles having in the center the intwerlocked
letters I and B meaning Indios Bravos and the letter R.D.L.M.
placed outside an upper, lower, left and
right sides of the circle
The letters R.D.L.M. are believed to be the initials of the
societys secret name Redencion de los Malayos
(Redemption of the Malays)Redemption of the Malay Race
It was patterned after Freemasonry. It had various degrees of
membership, with the members not
knowing each other.
21
The aim of the secret society, as stated by Rizal, was the
propagation of all useful knowledgescientific,
artistic, and literary, etc.in the Philippines. Evidently, there
was another aim that is, the redemption of
the Malay race
It must be noted that Rizal was inspired by a famous book entitled
Max Havelaar (1860) written by
Multatuli (pseudonym of E.D. Dekker, Dutch author)
Letters from home which Rizal received in Brussels worried him. (1)
the Calamba agrarian trouble was
getting worse (2) the Dominican Order filed a suit in court to
dispossess the Rizal family of their lands in
Calamba
In his moment of despair, Rizal had bad dreams during the nights in
Brussels when he was restless
because he was always thinking of his unhappy family in Calamba
Rizal feared that he would not live long. He was not afraid to die,
but he wanted to finish his second novel
before he went to his grave.
In the face of the sufferings which afflicted his family, Rizal
planned to go home. He could not stay in
Brussels writing a book while his parents, relatives, and friends
in the distant Philippines were persecuted
July 29, 1890- another letter to Ponce written at Brussels by
Rizal, he announced that he was leaving
Brussels at the beginning of the following month and would arrive
in Madrid about the 3rd or 4th (August)
To my Muse (A Mi)- 1890, Rizal wrote this pathetic poem, it was
against a background of mental
anguish in Brussels, during those sad days when he was worried by
family disasters
22
MISFORTUNES IN MADRID (1890-91)
-Early in August, 1890, Rizal arrived in Madrid
-Upon arrival in Madrid, Rizal immediately sought help of the Filipino colony, The
Asociacion Hispano-Filipina, and the
liberal Spanish newspaper in securing justice for the oppressed Calamba tenants
BIARRITZ VACATION
-To seek solace for his disappointments in Madrid, Rizal took a vacation in the
resort city of Biarritz on the fabulous
French Riviera. He was a guest of the rich Boustead family at its winter residence
Villa Eliada
23
Rizal met two compatriots while in Ghent, Jose Alejandro (from
Pampanga) and Edilberto Evangelista
(from Manila), both studying engineering in the world-famed
University of Ghent
F. Meyer-Van Loo Press (No. 66 Viaanderen Street)-a printing shop
that give Rizal the lowest quotation
for the publication of his novel, who was willing to print his
book on installment basis
August 6, 1891-the printing of his book had to be suspended because
Rizal could no longer give the
necessary funds to the printer
Valentin Ventura- the savior of the Fili
-When Ventura learned of Rizals predicament and immediately sent him the
necessary funds
September 18, 1891- El Filibusterismo came off the press
-Rizal immediately sent on this date two printed copies to Hong Kongone
for Basa and other for Sixto Lopez
Rizal gratefully donated the original manuscript and an autographed
printed copy to Valentin Ventura
La Publicidad- a Barcelona newspaper, wherein it published a
tribute eulogizing the novels original style which is
comparable
only to the sublime Alexander Dumas and may well be offered
as
a model and a precious jewel in the now decadent literature of
Spain
El Nuevo Regimen- the liberal Madrid newspaper that serialized
the novel in its issues of October, 1891
Rizal dedicated El Filibusterismo to Gom-Bur-Za (Don Mariano
Gomez, 73 years old; Don Jose Burgos, 35 years old; Jacinto
Zamora, 37 years old)
The original manuscript of El Filibusterismo in Rizals own
handwriting in now preserved in the Filipiana Division of the
Bureau of Public Libraries, Manila. It
consists of 270 pages of long sheets of paper
Two features in the manuscript do not appear in the printed book,
namely: the FOREWORD and the
WARNING. These were not put into print to save printing cost
The title page of El Filibusterismo contains an inscription written
by Ferdinand Blumentritt
El Filibusterismo is a sequel to the Noli. It has little humor, less
idealism and less romance than the Noli
Me Tangere. It is more revolutionary, more tragic than the first
novel
The characters in El Filibusterismo were drawn by Rizal from real
life. Padre Florentino was Father
Leoncio Lopez, Rizals friend and priest of Calamba; Isagani, the
poet was Vicente Ilustre, Batangueo
friend of Rizal in Madrid and Paulita Gomez, the girl who loved
Isagani but married Juanito Pelaez, was
Leonor Rivera
NOLI ME TANGERE
EL FILIBUSTERISMO
The original intention of Rizal was to make the Fili longer than
the Noli
The friends of Rizal and our Rizalistas today differ in opinion as
to which is the superior novelthe Noli or
the Fili. Rizal himself considered the Noli as superior to the Fili
as a novel, thereby agreeing with M.H. del
Pilar who had the same opinion
September 22, 1891-four days after the Fili came off the press,
Rizal wrote to Blumentritt: I am thinking
of writing a third novel, a novel in the modern sense of the word,
but this time politics will not find much
space in it, but ethics will play the principal role.
October 18, 1891- Rizal boarded the steamer Melbourne in Marseilles
bound for Hong Kong
-during the voyage, Rizal began writing the third novel in Tagalog, which he
intended for Tagalog readers
The unfinished novel has no title. It consists of 44 pages (33cm x
21 cm) in Rizals handwriting, still in
manuscript form, it is preserved in the National Library, Manila
-The story of this unfinished novel begins with the solemn burial of Prince
Tagulima. The hero of the novel was
Kamandagan, a descendant of Lakan-Dula, last king of Tondo
-It is said that Rizal was fortunate not to have finsihed this novel,
because it would have caused greater scandal
and more Spanish vengeance on him
Makamisa- other unfinished novel of Rizal in Tagalog written in a
light sarcastic style and is incomplete
for only two chapters are finished. The manuscript consists of 20
pages, 34.2cm x 22cm
24
Dapitan-another novel which Rizal started to write but it is
unfinished, written in ironic Spanish. He wrote
it during his exile in Dapitan to depict the town life and customs.
The manuscript consists of 8 pages,
23cm x 16cm
A novel in Spanish about the life in Pili, a town in Laguna, is
also unfinished. The manuscript consists of
147 pages, 8 x 6.5, without title
Another unfinished novel of Rizal, also without title is about
Cristobal, a youthful Filipino student who has
returned from Europe. The manuscript consist of 34 pages, 8 x 6
25
The Hong Kong Telegraph- a British daily newspaper whose editor
is Mr. Frazier Smith, a friend of
Rizal
-Rizal contributed articles to this newspaper
Una Visita a la Victoria Gaol (A Visit to Victoria Gaol)- Rizal
wrote on March 2, 1892, an account of
his visit to the colonial prison of Hong Kong
-in this article, Rizal contrasted the cruel Spanish prison system with
the modern and more humane British prison
system
Colonisation du British North Borneo, par de Familles de Iles
Philippines (Colonization of
British North Borneo by Families from the Philippine Islands)- an
article in French which Rizal
elaborated on the same idea in aonther article in Spanish,
Proyecto de Colonizacion del British North
Borneo por los Filipinos (Project of the Colonization of British
North Borneo by the Filipinos)
La Mano Roja (The Red Hand)- Rizal wrote in June, 1892, which was
printed in sheet form in Hong
Kong
-it denounces the frequent outbreaks of intentional fires in Manila
Constitution of La Liga Filipina- the most important writing made by
Rizal during his Hong Kong
sojourn, which was printed in Hong Kong, 1892
-to deceive the Spanish authorities, the printed copies carried the false
information that the printing was done by
the LONDON PRINTING PRESS
Domingo Franco-a friend of Rizal in Manila whom the copies of the
printed Liga constitution were sent
DECISION TO RETURN TO MANILA
May, 1892- Rizal made up his mind to return to Manila.
This decision was spurred by the following: (1) to confer with Governor
Despujol regarding his Borneo
colonization project (2) to establish the La Liga Filipina in Manila
(3) to prove that Eduardo de Lete was
wrong in attacking him in Madrid that he (Rizal), being comfortable
and safe in Hong Kong, had
abandoned the countrys cause
Letes attack, which was printed in La Solidaridad on April 15, 1892,
portrayed Rizal as cowardly,
egoistic, opportunistica patriot in words only
June 20, 1892- Rizal wrote two letters which he sealed, inscribed on
each envelope to be opened
after my death and gave them to his friend Dr. Marques for
safekeeping
The first letter, addressed TO MY PARENTS, BRETHREN, AND FRIENDS. The
second letter,
addressed TO THE FILIPINOS
June 21, 1892- Rizal penned another letter in Hong Kong for Governor
Despujol, incidentally his third
letter to that discourteous Spanish chief executive
26
The governing body of the league was the Supreme Council which had
jurisdiction over the whole
country. It was composed of a president, a secretary, a treasurer,
and a fiscal. There was a Provincial
Council in every province and a Popular Council in every town
The duties of the Liga members are as follows (1) obey the orders
of the Supreme Council (2) to help in
recruiting new members (3) to keep in strictest secrecy the
decisions of the Liga authorities (4) to have
symbolic name which he cannot change until he becomes president of
his council (5) to report to the
fiscal anything that he may hear which affect the Liga (6) to
behave well as befits a good Filipino (7) to
help fellow members in all ways
27
Florencio Namanan- the real name of Pablo Mercado
-a native of Cagayan de Misamis, single and about 30 years old. He was
hired by the Recollect friars to a secret
mission in Dapitanto introduce himself to Rizal as a friend and relative, to spy
on Rizals activities, and to filch certain
letters and writings of Rizal which might incriminate him in the revolutionary
movement.
As physician in DapitanRizal practiced Medicine in Dapitan. He had
many patients, but most of them
were poor so that he even gave them free medicine.
-As a physician, Rizal became interested in local medicine and in the use
of medicinal plants. He studied the
medicinal plants of the Philippines and their curative values.
August 1893- Rizals mother and sister, Maria, arrived in Dapitan
and lived with him for one year and a
half. Rizal operated on his mothers right eye
Rizal held the title of expert surveyor (perito agrimensor), which
obtained from the Ateneo
-In Dapitan, Rizal applied his knowledge of engineering by constructing a
system of waterworks in order to furnish
clean water to the townspeople
Mr. H.F. Cameron-an American engineer who praised Rizals
engineering
COMMUNITY PROJECTS FOR DAPITAN
When Rizal arrived in Dapitan, he decided to improve it, to the best
of his God-given talents and to
awaken the civic consciousness of its people
(1) Constructing the towns first water system
(2) Draining the marshes in order to get rid of malaria that infested Dapitan
(3) Equip the town with its lighting systemthis lighting system consisted of
coconut oil lamps placed in the dark
streets of Dapitan
(4) Beautification of Dapitanremodeled the town plaza in order to enhance its
beauty
28
Andres Bonifacio- the Great Plebeian, sowing the seeds of an
armed uprisingthe secret
revolutionary society, called Katipunan, which he founded on July
7, 1892
May 2, 1896- a secret meeting of the Katipunan at a little river
called Bitukang Manok near the town of
Pasig, Dr. Pio Valenzuela was named emissary to Dapitan, in order
to inform Rizal of the plan of the
Katipunan to launch a revolution for freedoms sake
June 15, 1896-Valenzuela left Manila on board the steamer Venus
To camouflage Valenzuelas real mission, he brought with him a
blind man Raymundo Mata and a guide,
ostensibly going to Dapitan to solicit Rizals expert medical
advice
June 21, 1896-evening, Dr. Pio Valenzuela arrived in Dapitan
Rizal objected to Bonifacios audacious project to plunge the
country in bloody revolution because he was
of sincere belief that it was premature, for two reasons: (1) the
people are not ready for a revolution (2)
arms and funds must first be collected before raising the cry of
revolution
29
August 30, 1896- sunrise, the revolutionists led by Bonifacio
and Jacinto attacked San Juan, near the
city of Manila
-in the afternoon, after the Battle of San Juan, Governor General Blanco
proclaimed a state of war in the first eight
provinces for rising in arms against SpainManila (as a province), Bulacan, Cavite,
Batangas, Laguna, Pampanga,
Nueva Ecija, and Tarlac
Rizal learned of the eruption of the revolution and raging battles
around Manila through the newspapers
he read on the Castilla. He was worried for two reasons: (1) the
violent revolution which he sincerely
believed to be premature and would only cause much suffering and
terrible loss of human lives and
property had started (2) it would arouse Spanish vengeance
against all Filipino patriots
August 30, 1896- Rizal received from Governor General Blanco two
letters of introduction for the
Minister of War and Minister of Colonies, which a covering
letter which absolved him from all blame for
the raging revolution
September 2, 1896- the day before Rizal departure for Spain,
Rizal, on board the Castilla, wrote to his
mother
-At 6:00pm, Rizal was transferred to the steamer Isla de Panay which was
sailing for Barcelona, Spain
The next morning, September 3, this steamer left Manila Bay
The Isla de Panay arrived at Singapore in the evening of September
7
Don Pedro Roxas- rich Manila creole industrialist and Rizals
friend that advised him to stay on
Singapore and take advantage of the protection of the British law
Don Manuel Camus- headed several Filipino residents in Singapore,
boarded the steamer, urging Rizal
to stay in Singapore to save his life
The Isla de Panay, with Rizal on board, left Singapore at 1:00pm,
September 8
September 25, 1896- Rizal saw the steamer Isal de Luzon, leaving
the Suez Canal, crammed with
Spanish troops
September 27, 1896- Rizal heard from the passengers that a telegram
arrived from Manila reporting the
execution of Francisco Roxas, Genato and Osorio
September 28, 1986- a day after the steamer had left Port Said
(Mediterranean terminus of the Suez
Canal), a passenger told Rizal the bad news that he would be
arrested by order of Governor General
Blanco and would be sent to prison in Ceuta (Spanish Morocco),
opposite Gibraltar
September 29, 1896- Rizal wrote in his travel diary: There are
people on board who do nothing but
slander me and invent fanciful stories about me. Im going to
become a legendary personage
September 30, 1896- at 4:00pm, Rizal was officially notofied by
Captain Alemany that he should stay in
his cabin until further orders from Manila
-about 6:25pm, the steamer anchored at Malta. Being confined to his cabin,
Rizal was not able to visit the famous
island-fortress of the Christian crusaders
October 3, 1896- at 10:00am, the Isla de Panay arrived in
Barcelona, with Rizal, a prisoner on board
The trip from Manila to Barcelona lasted exactly 30 days. Rizal
was kept under heavy guard in his cabin
for three days
General Eulogio Despujol- military commander of Barcelona who
ordered his banishment to Dapitan in
July 1892
October 6, 1896- at 3:00am, Rizal was awakened by the guards and
escorted to the grim and infamous
prison-fortress named Monjuich
About 2:00 in the afternoon, Rizal was taken out of prison by the
guards and brought to the headquarters
of General Despujol
Colon- a transport ship back to Manila
Rizal was taken aboard the Colon, which was full of soldiers and
officers and their families.
October 6, 1896- at 8:00pm, the ship left Barcelona with Rizal on
board
LAST HOMECOMING AND TRIAL
-Rizals homecoming in 1896, the last in his life, was his saddest return to his
beloved native land. He knew he was facing
the supreme test, which might mean the sacrifice of his life, but he was unafraid
-The trial that was held shortly after Rizals homecoming was one of historys
mockeries of justice
30
Chief Justice Loinel Cox- denied the writ on the ground that the
Colon was carrying Spanish troops to
the Philippines
November 3, 1896- the Colon reached Manila, where it was greeted with
wild rejoicings by the Spaniards
and friars because it brought more reinforcements and military
supplies
November 20, 1896- the preliminary investigation on Rizal began
Colonel Francisco Olive-the judge advocate
Two kinds of evidence were presented against Rizal, namely
documentary and testimonial. The
documentary evidence consisted of fifteen exhibits, as follows:
(1) A letter of Antonio Luna to Mariano Ponce, dated Madrid, October 16, 1888,
showing Rizals connection with the
Filipino reform campaign in Spain
(2) A letter of Rizal to his family, dated Madrid, August 20, 1890, stating that
the deportations are good for they will
encourage the people to hate tyranny
(3) A letter from Marcelo H. del Pilar to Deodato Arellano, dated Madrid, January
7, 1889, implicating Rizal in the
Propaganda campaign in Spain
(4) A poem entitled Kundiman, allegedly written by Rizal in Manila on September 12,
1891
(5) A letter of Carlos Oliver to an unidentified person dated Barcelona, September
18, 1891, describing Rizal as the man
to free the Philippines from Spanish oppression
(6) A Masonic document, dated Manila, February 9, 1892, honoring Rizal for his
patriotic services
(7) A letter signed Dimasalang (Rizals pseudonym) to Tenluz (Juan Zuluetas
pseudonym), dated Hong Kong, May 24,
1892, stating that he was preparing a safe refuge for Filipinos who may be
persecuted by the Spanish authorities
(8) A letter of Dimasalang to an unidentified committee, dated Hong Kong, June 1,
1892, soliciting the aid of the
committee in the patriotic work
(9) An anonymous and undated letter to the Editor of the Hong Kong Telegraph,
censuring the banishment of Rizal to
Dapitan
(10) A letter of Idefonso Laurel to Rizal, dated Manila, September 3, 1892, saying
that the Filipino people look up to him
(Rizal) as their savior
(11) A letter of Idefonso Laurel to Rizal, dated Manila, September 17, 1893,
informing an unidentified correspondent of
the arrest and banishment of Doroteo Cortes and Ambrosio Salvador
(12) A letter of Marcelo H. del Pilar to Don Juan A. Tenluz (Juan Zulueta), dated
Madrid, June 1, 1893 recommending
the establishment of a special organization, independent of Masonry, to help the
cause of the Filipino people
(13) Transcript of a speech of Pingkian (Emilio Jacinto), in reunion of the
Katipunan on July 23, 1893, in which the
following cry was, uttered Long Live the Philippines! Long live Doctor Rizal!
Unity!
(14) Transcript of a speech of Tik-Tik (Jose Turiano Santiago) in the same
Katipunan reunion, where in the katipuneros
shouted: Long live the eminent Doctor Rizal! Death to the oppressor nation!
(15) A poem by Laong Laan (Rizal), entitled A Talisay in which the author makes the
Dapitan schoolboys sing that they
know how to fight their rights
The testimonial evidence consisted of the oral testimonies of Martin
Constantino, Aguedo del Rosario,
Jose Reyes, Moises Salvador, Jose Dizon, Domingo Franco, Deodato
Arellano, Ambrosio Salvador,
Pedro Serrano Laktaw, Dr. Pio Valenzuela, Antonio Salazar, Francisco
Quison, and Timoteo Paez
November 26, 1896- after the preliminary investigation, Colonel Olive
transmitted the records of the case
to Governor Dominguez as special Judge Advocate to institute the
corresponding action against Rizal
After studying the papers, Judge advocate General, Don Nicolas de la
Pea, submitted the following
recommendations: (1) the accused be immediately brought to trial (2)
he should be kept in prison (3) an
order of attachment be issued against his property to the amount of
one million pesos as indemnity (4) he
should be defended in court by an army officer, not by a civilian
lawyer
The only right given to Rizal by the Spanish authorities was to choose
his defense counsel
December 8, 1896- Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception, a list of 100
first and second lieutenants in
the Spanish Army was presented to Rizal
Don Luis Taviel de Andrade- 1st Lieutenant of the Artillery, chosen by
Rizal to defend him
-brother of Lt. Jose Taviel de Andrade, Rizals bodyguard in Calamba in
1887
December 11, 1896- the information of charges was formally read to
Rizal in his prison cell, with his
counsel present
Rizal was accused of being the principal organizer and the living soul
of the Filipino insurrection,
the founder of societies, periodicals, and books dedicated to
fomenting and propagating ideas of
rebellion.
December 13, 1896- Dominguez forwarded the papers of the Rizal case to
Malacaang Palace
December 15, 1896- Rizal wrote the Manifesto to His People in his
prison cell at Fort Santiago,
appealing to them to stop the necessary shedding of blood and to
achieve their liberties by means of
education and industry
December 25, 1896- a dark and cheerless Christmas for Rizal, his last
on earth, was the saddest in
Rizals life
December 26, 1896- at 8:00am, the court-martial of Rizal started in the
military building called Cuartel de
Espaa
Lt. Col. Togores Arjona- considered the trial over and ordered the hall
cleared. After a short deliberation,
the military court unanimously voted for the sentence of death
31
December 28, 1896- Polavieja approved the decision of the court-
martial and ordered Rizal to be shot at
7:00 in the morning of December 30 at Bagumbayan Field (Luneta)
MARTYRDOM AT BAGUMBAYAN
-After the court-martial, Rizal returned to his cell in Fort Santiago to prepare
his rendezvous with destiny
-During his last 24 hours on earthfrom 6:00am December 29 to 6:00am December 30,
1896he was busy meeting
visitors
Santiago Mataix- Spanish newspaper correspondent
Pearl of the Orient Sea- Rizal called the Philippines
Pearl of the Orient- Rizals last poem in an article entitled
Unfortunate Philippines published in The
Hong Kong Telegraph on September 24, 1892
32
=Rizal took his last breakfast on earth. After this, he wrote two letters, the
first addressed to his family and the second
to his older brother Paciano.
=Josephine Bracken, accompanied by a sister of Rizal (Josefa), arrived.
Josephine, with tears in her eyes, bade him
farewell. Rizal embraced her for the last time and before she left, Rizal gave
her a last gifta religious book, Imitation
of Christ by Father Thomas a Kempis
6:00am
= As the soldiers were getting ready for the death march to Bagumbayan, Rizal
wrote his last letter to his beloved
parents.
About 6:30am
=a trumpet sounded at Fort Santiago, a signal to begin the death march to
Bagumbayan, the designated place for the
execution
=Rizal was dressed elegantly in black suit, black derby hat, black shoes, white
shirt and black tie. His arms were tied
behind from elbow to elbow. But the rope was quite loose to give his arms
freedom of movement
Dr. Felipe Ruiz Castillo- a Spanish military physician, asked Rizal
permission to feel his pulse and was
amazed to find it normal showing that Rizal was not afraid to die
7:03am
=Rizal died in the bloom of manhoodaged 35 years, five months and 11 days
ROMANCES OF RIZAL
First romancethat painful experience which comes to nearly all adolescents
Julia
-from Dampalit, Los Baos, Laguna
Segunda Katigbak
-Rizal first romance that was then sixteen years old
-a pretty fourteen-year old Batanguea from Lipa
-In Rizals own words: She was rather short, with eyes that were eloquent and
ardentat times and languid at
others, rosy-cheeked, with an enchanting and provocative smile that revealed
very beautiful teeth and the air
of a sylph; her entire self diffused a mysterious charm.
-she was the sister of Rizals friend, Mariano Katigbak
-close friend of Rizals sister Olimpia, was a boarding student in La Concordia
College
-engaged to be married to her town mate, Manuel Luz
*The love of Rizal and Segunda was indeed a Love at first sight
*The last time they talked to each other was one Thursday in December, 1877
when the Christmas vacation was
about to begin
*Rizal returned home, dazed and desolate, with his first romance ruined by his
own shyness and reserve.
Miss L (Jacinta Ibardo Laza)
-young woman in Calamba
-Rizal describe her as fair with seductive and attractive eyes
*After visiting her in her house several times, Rizal suddenly stopped his
wooing, and the romance died a natural
death
33
*Rizal gave two reasons for his change of heart namely (1) the sweet memory of
Segunda was still fresh in his heart
(2) his father did not like the family of Miss L
Leonor Valenzuela
*During Rizal sophomore year at the University of Santo Tomas, he boarded in the
house of Doa Concha Leyva in
Intramuros wherein the next-door neighbors of Doa Concha were Capitan Juan and
Capitana Sanday Valenzuela
-charming daughter of Capitan Juan and Capitana Sanday Valenzuela from Pagsanjan,
Laguna
-a tall girl with a regal bearing
-Rizal sent her love notes written in invisible inkink consisted of common table
salt and waterthe secret of reading
any note written in the invisible ink by heating it over a candle or lamp so that
the words may appear
-Orang was her pet name
-Rizal stopped short of proposing marriage to Orang
Leonor Rivera
-Rizals cousin from Camiling, Tarlac
*In 1879, at the start of his junior year at the university, Rizal lived in Casa
Tomasina at No. 6 Calle Santo Tomas,
Intramuros owned by his uncle Antonio Rivera
-a student at La Concordia College, where Soledad, youngest sister, was then
studying
-born in Camiling, Tarlac on April 11, 1867
-she was a frail, pretty girl tender as a budding flower with kindly, wistful eyes
-in her letters to Rizal, she signed her name as Taimis in order to camouflage
their intimate relationship from their
parents and friends
-died on August 28, 1893
Consuelo Ortiga y Perez
- a young woman in Madrid
-prettier of Don Pablo Ortiga y Reys daughters
-Rizal was attracted by Consuelos beauty and vivacity
-Rizal composed a lovely poem on August 22, 1883 dedicated to her, entitled A La
Seorita C.O.y.P (to Miss
C.O.y.P) expressing his admirations for her
*Before Rizal romance with Consuelo could blossom into a serious affair, he
suddenly backed out for two reasons: (1)
he was still engaged to Leonor Rivera (2) his friends and co-worker in the
Propaganda Movement, Eduardo de Lete,
was madly in love with Consuelo and he had no wish to break their friendship
because of a pretty girl
Seiko Usui
-Rizal affectionately called her O-Sei-San
-a pretty Japanese girl that Rizal saw walking past the legation gate
-Rizal was attracted by her regal loveliness and charm
-a lonely samurais daughter of 23 years old and had never yet experienced the
ecstasy of true love
-Rizal saw in her the qualities of his ideal womanhoodbeauty, charm, modesty and
intelligence
*The beautiful romance between Rizal and O-Sei-San inevitably came to a dolorous
ending. Sacrificing his personal
happiness, Rizal had to carry on his libertarian mission in Europe, leaving behind
the lovely O-Sei-San
-married Mr. Alfred Charlton, a British teacher of chemistry, and was blessed by
only one childYuriko
-died on May 1, 1947 at the age of 80
Gertrude Beckett
-oldest of the three Beckett sisters
-called Gettie or Tottie by her friends
-a buxom English girl with brown hair, blue eyes, and rosy cheeks
-Rizal affectionately called her Gettie, in reciprocation; she fondly called him
Pettie
*Rizal suddenly realized that he could not marry Gettie for he had a mission to
fulfill in life
Petite Suzanne Jacoby
-pretty niece of his landladies
*Rizal found certain bliss in the company of this pretty Belgian girl
*Rizal might flirted with Petite Suzanne, but he could not stoop low to a deceptive
amorous relationship
-she fell in love with Rizal and cried when Rizal left toward the end of July, 1890
for Madrid, stopping for a few days in
Paris
Nellie Boustead
-the prettier and younger daughter of Eduardo Boustead
-Rizal found her to be a real Filipina, highly intelligent, vivacious in
temperament, and morally upright
-also called Nelly
*Rizal wrote to his intimate friends, except Professor Blumentritt, of his love for
Nellie and his intention to propose
marriage to her
*Rizals marriage proposal failed for two reasons: (1) he refused to give up his
Catholic faith and be converted to
Protestantism, as Nelly demanded (2) Nellys mother did not like Rizal as a son-in-
law
Josephine Bracken
-an Irish girl of sweet eighteen, slender, a chestnut blond, with blue eyes,
dressed with elegant simplicity, with an
atmosphere of light gayety.
-born in Hong Kong on October 3, 1876 of Irish parentsJames Bracken, a corporal in
the British garrison and
Elizabeth Jane Macbride
-she was adopted by Mr. George Taufer, who later became blind
*Rizal and Josephine fell in love with each other at first sight
*After a whirlwind romance for one month, they agreed to marry but Father Obach,
the priest of Dapitan, refused to
marry them without the permission of the Bishop of Cebu
*Since no priest would marry them, Rizal and Josephine held hands together and
married themselves before the eyes
of God. They lived as man and wife in Dapitan
34
-Rizal wrote a poem for Josephine
*In the early part of 1896, Rizal was extremely happy because Josephine was
expecting a baby
*Unfortunately, Rizal played a prank on her, frightening her so that she
prematurely gave birth to an eight-month baby
boy who loved only for three hours
*The lost son of Rizal was named Francisco in honor of Don Francisco (heros
father) and was buried in Dapitan
RIZAL AS A MASON
-In Spain, Rizal came in close contact with prominent Spanish liberal and
republican Spaniards, who were mostly
Mason.
-Rizal was impressed by the way the Spanish Masons openly and freely criticized
the government policies and
lambasted the friars, which could not be done in Philippines
-Rizals reason for becoming a mason was to secure Freemasonrys aid in his fight
against the friars in the Philippines.
Since the friars used the Catholic religion as a shield to entrench themselves in
power and wealth and to persecute the
Filipino patriots, he intended to utilize Freemasonry as his shield to combat
them
-As a mason, Rizal played a lukewarm role in Freemasonry
RIZAL AS MUSICIAN
-Rizal had no natural aptitude for music, and this he admitted. But he studied
music because many of his schoolmates
at the Ateneo were taking music lessons.
-By sheer determination and constant practice, Rizal came to play flute fairly
well. He was a flutist in various impromptu
reunions of Filipinos in Paris.
RIZAL AS HISTORIAN
-Rizals research studies in the British Museum (London) and in Bibliotheque
Nationale (Paris) enriched his historical
knowledge. His splendid annotations to Morgas book showed his familiarity with
the basic principles of historiography.
-As Rizal once told Isabelo de los Reyes: A historian ought to be rigorously
imparted I never assert anything on my
own authority. I cite texts and when I do, I have them before me.
-His knowledge of foreign languages enabled Rizal to read historical documents
and books in languages in which they
were originally written
35