Imperial PDF
Imperial PDF
Imperial PDF
COLONIZATION PROCESSES
IN SAMAR
REYNALDO H. IMPERIAL, Ph.D.
A. Hispanization Process
Until the close of the nineteenth century, Spain's colonial interests in
the Philippines centered on the religious, economic and political activities in
Manila, which means that most parts of the country remained free from
Hispanic influence, either through administrative or political means. 1 One
clear angle of the Hispanization process was Spain's negligence of the
countryside's rich natural resources. Spain solely attached more attention
to the unpredictable resources of the Acapulco trade. In this light, Manila
remained a somnolent port between China and Mexico - meaning
"this superficial commerce did little to develop the productive capacity
(potential) of the countryside. But it stimulated an unforeseen migration
that directly affected village economics. Merchants were reinforced by
artisans, coolies and farmers."2
28
SPANISH AND AMERICAN COLONIZATION 29
fications to the native society lagged behind the religious changes. While
Manila evolved into a legal and cultural expression of Hispanic civilization
and culture, beyond the city's walls existed an ambience almost unaffected
by Spanish colonial activities. Consequently, many of the colony's provinces
remained backwaters.
Because the Spanish empire lost vast possessions in the New World in
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Madrid assessed the direction of
Spain's colonial policies in the Philippines. With the liberation of most of
Spain's colonies in South America, Madrid maximized the utilization of the
resources of the remaining colonies. Hence, there was a shift of interest
in the Philippines -from religion to agriculture and commerce. Increased
production of cash crops, like tobacco, hemp, copra, sugar, and coffee
was highly encouraged to support the dwindling economy of the Iberian
monarchy. Accompanying these productive activities were Spain's estab-
lishment of institutions integrating both political and economic dependency
of the country. Moreover, roads, bridges, ports and markets were cons-
tructed. Included in this infrastructure program was the development of
legal-bureaucratic structures which oversaw the steady flow of activities
in the cash crop economy.4 Such modifications started in the 1880s.
Consequently, the country opened its ports to world trade and commerce
because the necessary elements for commercial transactions were all set.
The resulting changes stimulated the Filipinos to experience incipient
forms of national consciousness, triggered by the general increase in the
composition of the ilustrado or principaliaS and the growing rate at which
rural Filipinos required to render labor for the various economic and pro-
ductive activities of the country. The involvement of the people in these
structures grew into proportions arousing in the Filipino intellect a sense
of nationalism and revolutionary consciousness which became evident in
the Reform Movement and the revolution of 1896, where people started
questioning and repudiating Spain's forces of colonial oppression.
A facsimile copy is in the Divine Word University Museum, Tacloban City, Leyte.
See also, John N. Schumacher, Readings in Philippine Church History (Quezon City:
Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1979).
4 Benito Legarda, Jr., "Foreign Trade, Economic Change and Entreprenuership
in the 19th Century Philippines, Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, 1955.
This provides an ample discussion of the various economic activities which the Span-
ish regime engaged in the country which was directed at producing export crops
for the world market.
s A convenient survey of the political system under Spain is in_ Edward Bourne,
"Historical Introductions," Philippine Islands 1493-1898, 56 vols. Emma Blair and
Alexander Robertson (eds.) (Cleveland, Chicago: The. Arthur H. Clark and Com-
pany, 1903-1909) I: 49-56. Also in Onofre D. Corpus, The Philippines (New Jersey:
Prentice Hall, Inc., 1965).
30 ASIAN STUDIES
the captain general, giving signs of joy because of our arrival. Five of them
ornately adorned remained with us, while the rest [to get] some others who
were reasonable men, ordered food to be served before them, and gave
them red capes, mirrors, combs, bells, ivory, bocasine and other things.
When they saw the captain's courtesy, they presented fish, a jar of palm
wine which they call uraca and coconuts. They had nothing else then,
but made signs with their hands that they would bring umay or rice and
coconuts and many other articles of food within four days.
The Franciscans felt the Jesuits used religion to convince the people
to trade with ·them, with the latter at a disadvantage. They also felt that
the rc.sidenci«S · wete not fully used in converting souls to the faith, but in
negotiating, transacting, and finalizing trade and commercial activities.
When the Fr:ancis.cans took over, they put an end to these activities and
rescinded commerce. The cold and reluctant acceptance of the people to
the missionary efforts of the Franciscans soon found expressions in .the
various attempts of local traders to challenge the authority of the priests in
the pueblos. The Franciscans failed to see one thing; by stopping the flow
of trade and commerce in Samar, they were directly working against the
interests of local elites, who acted as middlemen in the exchange of com-
modities between the interior producers and the pueblo priests. The interior
producers were affected because their produce stopped generating income. 14
Bruce Cruikshank discussed the roles of the Jesuit order in the social
and economic activities of the Samareiios.ts He noted that the Franciscan
order, with their vows of poverty and emphasis on religious activities,
12 "The expulsion of the Jesuits, ( 1768-1769) ," The Philippine Islands ed. by Blair
and Robertson, 50:269-273. See also Cantius Kobak, Samar Materials from the Spa-
nish Era. This coilection is in DWU-Museum. Kobak documents this source as:
"Bull of Suppression of the Jesuits and other Implementing Decrees," Cedula Book
of 1771·1778, pages 170-196b.
13 Historical Data Papers. Catbalogan (Manila: Philippine National Library, 1951).
This is a collection of historical and social histories of the different provinces of the
country which were prepared by the public school teachers in fulfillment of President
Elpidio Quirino's instructions. While the materials are good reference materials, ::are
was taken in handling the data from this source, since the teachers who collected
the data were not abreast with historical methodology. The page numbers given in
this dissertation follows that of the xeroxed copy which the DWU-Museum holds.
14 Pedro Jagor, Viajes por Filipinos (Madero: Imprinta Estereotypia y Galiano
Puastan, de Ariban y Ca., 1878), p. 225. Also in: Bruce Cruikshank, "A History of
Samur Islands," Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconcin, 1975, p. 32.
15 Cruikshank, Ibid., pp. 32-33.
SPANISH AND AMERICAN C_OLONIZATION
sqwed th~. see~s of disconte_nt .~nd rebellion in the people .wh.ich :were ex:-
pressed in the various .(arms. of .revolts ,ill the 18~~ .• and 189<?s. : ·
However, to say that these were the only, cau~~ of tp.e revolutionary
fervor. of the Samareiios js to miss the truism thfl,t the people pad been
freedom fighters even before the ~oming of the .&paniards.
Extant records in the National Archives described valorous accounts of
the defense of the natives against invasion of "Moros" from Mindanao. From
the fifteenth century to the sixteenth century, the Muslims continually raided
and plundered the western and northern portions of Samat. 16 They came to
Samar because of their growing slave trade business and their interest to
rob the people of whatever treasures they possessed. When the Spanish
missionaries established their foothold in Samar, they became targets of
the piratical raids because of the ransom money that they were. able to
exact from the order for their release.t7
The Spanish administrators in the province as well as in Manila were
alarmed over the increased piratical raids in the eighteenth century that theY.
sought assistance from the King of Spain. The King decided to issue a
Royal Decree on July 31, 1766, which expressed his desire to prevent the
unabated intrusion of the "Moros" in Samar.' 8 He said that it was time
for the Spanish forces to use full power to end these raids. Subsequently,
a boatload of soldiers was dispatched to the Philippines with the expressed
mission to assist the soldiers initially deployed in Samar. With the sub-
sequent fortification of the coastal towns, the piratical raids decreased, and
at the turn of the century, Samar was no longer besieged by the pirates.
After this period, the Spanish authorities in Manila concentrated on the
secular activities in the island and sought to include the province as one
of its tribute-sources.
Consequently, in 1771, Governor Arda of Samar's military district
fc;rmed a flotilla of light gunboats to protect the coastal towns and organized
the Armada de Pintados for the Visayas. 19 Watch towers were constructed
to alert the people of the coming of the pirates. The priests in the pueblos
of Catubig, Catarman, Laoang, Capul, Pambujan, Catbalogan, Basey,
Balangiga, and Borongan were active in all these activities. The church
bells were rung to signal the people to prepare for battle and the churches
16 "Moro Raids in Samar, 1751-1765," Philippine Islands ed. by Blair and Ro-
bertson, 48:49.
17 Cantius Kobak (trans.), "An Account of the Ransom of Don Miguel del
Castillo, Alcalde Mayor of Catbalogan from the Hands of the Muslims," Leyte-
Samar Studies, 12 (1978), pp. 61-67.
18 "Mora Raids Repulsed, 1751-1765,'' Philippine Islands, Blair and R_obertson,
eds., 48:52.
19 Manila, Philippine Nation~! Archives, Cedulario 1766-1778, Expediente 15, PP-
148-183.
34 ASIAN STUDIES
the vital link between Manila and Samar. Such a situation proved difficult
to handle, especially with the emergence of hostilities between the Spanish
forces and the Samareiios.
The first and major organized uprising in the country happened in
Samar on June 1, 1649.25 Montero y Vidal in his Historia de Filipinas
said: 26
The first region to declare war against us is the province of Ibabao,
which is in the island of Samar in the northern portion of the province.
Montero y Vidal also added that the revolt was a reaction of the
natives against oppression embedded in the public works project of the
central government which he felt was unwarranted because the people
clamored for protection and defense of their coastal pueblos against anv
form of interference.27 Obviously, the authorities believed that it could only
be done if the financial position of the government would improve after losses
in the galleon trade.
These losses incurred by the galleons in the seventeenth century paved
the way for the decision of Manila to maintain a shipyard in the province, as
it was one of the provinces where the galleons got agricultural products,
especially copra and hemp for export in the foreign ports. Consequently,
this needed the drafting of carpenters and workers from the pueblos of
Samar.28 The people naturally disliked this political compulsion. Never-
theless, they supplied the shipyard with the required manpower of one
man for every village. Such a gesture was shortlived. The natives .decided
to fight against this unjust scheme. Actually, the people only waited for a
trusted leadership. And Sumoroy provided the qualities of a good leader
and fighter. Sumoroy led the Samareiios to fight against conscription and
forced taxation. They agreed to end the simpler expression of exploitation in
the pueblo-the parish priest and his church. Father Miguel Barberan
became the target. 29 Sumoroy hurled a javelin at the priest after his Sunday
mass which pierced his breast and instantly killed the latter.
Such a valorous manifestation of inflicting destruction upon a seemingly
unconquerable institution, the church, served as an example for the Samar-
enos who subsequently defied the orders of the governor-general of Samar.
In effect, the people of the other provinces in the Visayas and in Luzon
defied the Spanish decree one after the other.30 The failure of the govern-
25 HDP, Palapag, p. 136.
26 "The Insurrection of the Filipinos, 1674 1678," The Philippine Islands ed. by
Blair and Robertson, 38: 117-118.
27 The moros plundered and burned the towns of Catubig, Catarman, Calbayog,
Capul and Pambujan.
28 Op. cit., HDP, Palapag, p. 136.
29/bid.
36 ASIAN STUDIES
ment to pacify the rebellious fervor. of these people immediately forced them
to require the Spanish priests in Samar and in other rebel strongholds to
leave their churches. The exodus of these priests occasioned the burning
of the churches.
Naturally, the beleaguered governor of the province asked for reinforce-
ments from Cebu and Manila. Before aid arrived, the rebels sought refuge
in the forests. A running battle, therefore, ensued between the two factions.3 1
The revolutionary zeal of the Samarefios fanned the stamina of the people
of Camarines and lbabao to replicate the achievements of their fellow rebels.
Sumoroy's revolutionary career ended abruptly because his brother-in-
law bartered the fighter's life from Spanish authorities with a few pesetas.32
The soldiers captured him eventually and was executed in the public square
of Calbayog.
The Spaniards in publicly executing Sumoroy thought that such an· ex-
perience would prevent them from defying their orders again. However,
from this time on, the history of Samar was full of minor uprisings which
the Spanish governor of .the province dismissed as isolated expressions of
the people's ignorance of the law. Also, since most of the manifestations of
unrest emanated from the interior dwellers, they were considered insignificant
when compared to the peaceable coastal dwellers. However, this situation
was intermittently defied by even the coastal dwellers, as they were dissatis-
fied with the colonial rule of Spain expressed in its oppressive and unjust
system of taxation and tribute collection.33 The Samareiios felt that while
they contributed to the up-keep of the government, they were. still in the
quagmire of poverty and underdevelopment.
On August 7, 1873, the Governor of the Visayas ordered Sr. Enrique
de la Vieja, governor of Samar, to investigate the truth of the existence of
subversive movements in the island.34 He was· ordered to confiscate firearms
owned by the natives. This order· came about due to resurgence of rebel
movements in the island, which gained more members from the ''ignorant
masses", who were promised by some leaders a better government and
a richer life. The leaders of such a movement lectured on detachment' of
the pr~sent world and enjoined the people to ~ork with fervor fm:. the
establishment of a· better government to be led by a great ruler in the
30"The Insurrection of the Filipinos in the 17th Century, 1674-1683," The Philip-
pine Islands, 38: 1060-1067. ·
31Jbid., pp. t2(}:i21.
32 Op. Cit., HDP, Palapag, p. 138. .. . ..
33 The relevant archival materials are in 19 unnumbered legajos of Sediciones Y
Rebelliones, 1884-1896; PNA. · · ··
34 Manila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, bundle 1840-1892, Exp. 1. folder 1-216.
(Order of Governor Enrique de Ia Vieja to investigate subversive activities in Samar,
August 7, 1873).
SPANISH AND' AMERICAN COLONIZATION 37
For the churches of the towns to consolidate and expand their religious
involvement in the island, Sr. Adolfo Rodrigues decreed the political re-
organization of the townships by dividing them, for the authorities to manage,
identify, and monitor the movement of the people (natives) by the parish
priest.40 Thus, the towns of Catbalogan, Zumaraga, Calbiga, Paranas, San
Sebastian, and Dapdap were subdivided into political districts. The governor
believed that the earlier political subdivision of the province into townships
facilitated the movement of insurrectos in i:he towns since the boundaries
of the political units were not clearly defined. With this reorganization,
it would be easier for the government to identify and to keep track of the
movement of the people in their jurisdiction.4t
On November 1883, Dionisio Mendiola sent three prisoners to Cat-
balogan to seek audience with the Spanish Governor, Enrique Chacon, and
to answer the charges of inciting people to subversion and rebellion as
phoney by informing the government about the advent of a new king called
Conde Legnes because they worked closely with Isidro Reyes, whom Men-
diola in January 1843, imprisoned in Catbalogan. 42 Reyes was accused of
promising miraculous recovery from various ailments, attracting people and
gaining financial profit from the same from August to October 1883. He
was well received by the people as shown by the number of people who
visited him bringing eggs, hens, rice, and other foodstuff.
Actually, Mendiola instructed Bio Bismar, head of guardia civil in
Gandara,43 to establish an outpost at the Lapinit river to contain the rebels
and prevent them from moving and affecting other people in other sitios
or towns.
The uprising in Gandara occurred because of the issuance of a general
decree which imposed a monthly due of 20 centavos on each adult member
of the town. 44 The people got furious with this decree because they generally
suffered from dire poverty. They saw clearly the consequences of the scheme:
their lives became miserable; therefore, all would be deprived of food
and other basic needs.
In the beginning, the failure of the people to pay their regular con-
tributions to the government was not a result of the people's resistance.
In reaiity, the initial problem centered on their failure to produce enough
agricultural products to support their everyday needs. 45 Furthermore, the
40 Manila, PNA, Expedientes Gobenwtivos. Exp. 25, bundle 1884-1886 (Order of
Adolfo Rodriguez, Governor of the P.I., May 24, 1844).
41/bid.
42 Manila, PNA, Expedientes Gobernativos, Exp. 24, bundle 1884-1886 (Mendiola
to Chacon, November 1883).
43Jbid.
44Jbid. See also PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, unnumbered legajo, bundle 1883-
1887. (Report of Mendiola about the Gandara uprising, undated).
45 On November 9, 1985 for instance, Enrique Chacon reported:
SPANISH AND AMERICAN COLONIZATION 39
governor's staff codd not effectively reach the population, but still they
demanded from them contributions.
Before the late nineteenth century prosperity in the trade and sale of
abaca, tribute payments were hard to collect. In 1832, as a case in point,
a governor of Samar commented that any collection of tribute on Samar was
a miracle because it was not possible to remedy the situation using force.46
Resorting to force only encouraged people to flee into the interior. In any
collection scheme, the government never tolerated remiss payers and granted
exemptions. About 1845, the principalia of Gandara requested not to pay
the year's tribute because the typhoon destroyed their crops. The governor
replied harshly :47
. . . rare is the year without one, two or three baguios which destroy
the crops, leaving the pueblos virtually in a state of languor from the
loss of their harvests. But these people are never in absolute misery nor
denied recourse because of the fertility of the wil and abundance of
other resources to which only their lack of stimuli makes them indif-
ferent. . . .
of fully armed soldiers and the parish priest of Gandara, 267 person were
captured and taken to Catbalogan. From the interrogation that followed,
Governor Chacon learned that the devotees believed that:57
this island on which they lived were going to sink, the world was going
to end. To evade this first cataclysms, they moved to the visita of Bonga
when each paid one-half real to register and for expenses of this organiza-
tion. Those that preached in this meeting were Locreo, Nicolas, ltamon
and Carlos, all from Gandara.....
Governor Chacon condtided that these people were simply deluded· by
some who were out to exploit them. 58 All were ordered to return to their
respective visitas and live a peaceable life. Chacon hoped that the situation
in the island would be greatly improved.
However, the leaders of this meeting eluded captivity. On March 19,
the pueblo officials and cuadrillos59 of Gandara who carried out mapping
operations, for the leaders of the Bonga meeting encountered a group of
armed men and women in one of, the pueblo's sitios. .. The scouts pursued
them, but decided to backtrack since the armed group outnumbered them.60
This gtoup, ·which in the beginning started with a · purely religious
theme, evolved into a political force which challenged the supremacy of the
Spanish rule in the island. This group was led by Locreo. In attracting more
adherents to the cause, Locreo said: 6 1
A gre~t city would ~ppear th~t they would return to the ancient customs
and dress, that the prices of· commOdities would decline and that they
would grow strong and numerous enough to kill the .gobernadorcillo of·
Gandara and the authorities. ·•.:
It was clear that Locreo envisioned the possibility of a counter. institu-
tion, the structure of which would fr~ the people from all forms of economic
and political oppression. However, while the process of change was not dear,
it was definite that change could only come by a definitive change of the
poor's ~onditions: death of. the .gobern¢orcillo and resistance against authbr-
ities. The goal was to topple the old order (Spanish) by replacing }t with
a new. one. Moreover, it needed the ~oncerted action of the people to enable
the leadership to fulfill its plans. · · · · ··
Governor Chacon, as in tlie Bonga encounter, teacted quickly, with .1,\
reinforcement of 125 guardia civiles from Cebu, he set out to meet the
57 Kobak, Exp. 123, legajo, 5528. Chuikshank in his dissertation identified this
document in his book to be taken from the Archivo Historico-Nacional, ·Uttramar,
Spain.
58 Ibid.
59 Cuadrillos are local or town· policemen. · ·
60 Manila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, bundle 1884-1896, unnumbered ilegajo.
(Report of Mendiola about Bonga encounter, March 1.2, 1884). · ··
61 Ibid.
42 ASIAN STUDIES
rebels. 62 Upon arrival, he was met by 1,500 men drawn on the beach in a
battle formation. The rebels were asked to surrender, but they refused. The
use of force by the Spanish soldiers became necessary: rifles and bolos
clashed. In the end, three rebels died, 23 wounded and 95 captured. The
rest fled. The Spanish soldiers reported no casualty.
When Chacon assessed the outcome of the encounter, he deplored the
death of these men. 63 However, he believed that the uncivilized acts of the
Samarefi.os dramatized the looseness of the morality and the lack of religious
discipline that he expected the people to value. He, therefore, asked the
various chiefs of the guardia civiles in the sub-districts to be on their posts
and to report other untoward incidents in their respective area of juris-
diction.
The governor noted that the well-to-do people's leaders were the insti-
gators of several acts against the authorities.64 He warned and asked them
to cooperate fully with the government in its civil and religious activities.
General Chacon, in a letter to the Sr. Teniente de la Guardia del
Distrito de estas Islas, reported that he be given the authority to fully
exercise his discretion to arrest similar problems in the future without prior
approval or permission from central authority. 65 He declared that the distance
from Manila and time lost in the dispatch of request for military action
proved crucial in the easy suppression of rebellion. Thus, the Governor-
General of the island, commanding the resurgence of the rebellious activities
of the people and the rule of force necessary to check the "sedition schemes
of the ignorant Samarefi.os", empowered Chacon with the authority to use
his best discretion in an armed confrontation with the Samarefi.os.66
Chacon thought that peace would soon happen in the island. However,
he was mistaken. By September of 1882, Borongan became the site of a
Dios-dios movement. Active preaching and recruiting characterized the activ-
ities of the movement.67 Like Borongan, the leaders promised the emergence
of a new city and a new king. However, additional promises were given like
resurrection of those who died in the cholera epidemic, protection from
Spanish bullets, and use of magical prayer and supernatural intervention.68
62 Manila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, bundle 1884-1896, unnumbered legajo.
(Report of Enrique Chacon, March 28, 1884).
63 PNA, Manila, Expedientes Gobernativos, Exp. 24, bundle 1884-1886 (Enrique
Chacon's report, undated).
64 Ibid.
65 Manila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, bundle 1884-1886, unnumbered legajo,
April 7, 1844.
66 Ibid.
67 Manila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones, bundle 1884-1897, unnumbered legajo,
(Report of Enrique Chacon, October 15, 1884).
68 Sediciones Y Rebelliones. Ibid.
SPANISH AND AMERICAN COLONIZATION 43
An important aspect of their teaching was the need to use force and
violence in the creation of conditions that would permit the attainment of
a better condition and life. Thus, resistance and rebellion were more pro-
nounced in their teaching, superstition, and the religious aspect of the group
was given secondary importance.
On November 4, 1884, the parish priest of Borongan reported to.
Governor Chacon that his parishioners followed again their heretical prac-
tices. He said that the people had forgotten their Christian duties and neg-
lected to participate in the religious activities. The people, in their desire
to express their disgust over the ways in which the civil government and
the religious group conducted their work, sought to demonstrate their dis-
obedience by engaging in cockfighting, gambling, and drinking on Sundays.69
From extant records, the leader of these protests wanted to draw the civil
guards into their territory for a bloody hand-to-hand combat. This came
when soldiers came upon the suggestion of the local parish priest. The
movement was temporarily quelled.
The priest thought that people resorted to heretical practices because
they needed teachings on cathechism and its practices. To ensure this, the
Bishop of Cebu on November 20, 1884, declared that he would visit local
parishes and talk on the role of conversion to Catholicism.70 The bishop
decreed that the people should receive the holy sacrament, baptism, con-
firmation, and matrimony. He said that only these ignorant and Godless
people were in the fold of the church and that these people should also be
within the fold of the state.
A subsequent order was decreed by Governor Chacon. He instructed
the priests and the religious orders to participate in the formation of celdas
to track down the movement of the people in the towns. 71 They would
see to it that curfew was observed and bar outsiders without proper iden-
tification and legitimate business in the town. They were also ordered to
supervise the sanitation and cleanliness activities of the town. However,
these celdas were under the jurisdiction of the guardia civil.
Borongan was attacked twice in November. 72 The ensuing conflict
was more intense than the previous. Many people were killed because
rifles proved more lethal than bolos.
The government hastened to disperse the meeting of these people,
but favorable terrain and knowledge of various pathways helped them
69 Manila, PNA, Expedientes Gobernativo.r, bundle 1884 (Chacon's reaction to a
letter by the parish priest of Borongan, November 4, 1884).
70 Manila, PNA, Expedientes Gobernativos, bundle 1885-1896, unnumbered legajo
(Instructions of the Bishop of Cebu, November 20, 1884).
71 Manila, PNA, Memorias (Enrique Chacon, December 17, 1844).
72 Nanila, PNA, Sediciones Y Rebelliones bundles 1884-1890 and 1888, unnumbered
Iegajos (Report of Enrique Chacon, undated).
44 ASIAN S,1UD~ES.
forces in Luzon. They thought that the Americans were sincere when they
promised to .assist the Filipinos in their struggle to gain independence from
Spain.90 Emilio Aguinaldo, believing completely in America's promise,
urged all Filipinos to fully support the campaigns of the Americans, when
in reality Filipino troops liberated all provinces except Intramuros which
the Americans surrounded.9 1
Three months after Aguinaldo's return to the country, he held again
th~ helm of the revolutionary army's hierarchy. The people were, therefore,
challenged to rally behind his forces to wipe out the vestiges of Spanish
colonial rule. Soon Aguinaldo's rhetorical calls to arms spread like wild
fire. Almost before the outbreak of the Filipino-American war, 30,000
voluntarios pitched their camps in the different encampments of the revo-
lutionary army and carefully organized themselves into fighting units. 92
In August 1898, the Filipinos' sustained enthusiasm dismayed the
Spanish forces.9 3 When the Spaniard's last stronghold was almost vanquished,
the Filipino forces around Intramuros received an order from the Americans
to vacate tile trenches and outposts which they occupied leading to the fort
city. Emilio Aguinaldo did not know, at this point, that a clandestine plan
of surrender was arranged between the Spanish and American forces: The
Spaniards agreed with the Americans to stage a mock battle because they
loathed seeing themselves captured by the indios.
After the mock battle, with the victory of the American forces
secured, Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the country and estab-
lished the republic.94
The relation between the Filipino and American forces, as of late
December 1898, seethed with hostilities. The Filipinos, by then, knew
with certainty the implications of America's interest in the Philippines,
right after the conclusion of the peace talks in Paris.95 One major import
of this talk was the emergence of a treaty which thought of ending hos-
tilities between Spain and America by ceding the Philippines to the United
States, with the payment of $200,000. Such treaty when finalized by the
90 Emilio Aguinaldo discusses this position in his book- Resena Veridica de
Revolucion Filipina (Tarlak, 1898). See also, Teodoro Agoncillo, "Malolos: The Crisis
of the Republic," The Philippine Social Sciences and Humanities Review 25 ( 1960): 25.
91 Apolinario Mabini, The Philippine Sevolution (Manila: National Historical
Commission, 1969), p. 52.
92 Blount, p. 261. Also in Wolff, p. 132.
93 Mabini, op. cit., p. 53.
94 Aguinaldo's message at this juncture was obviously in keeping with his under-
standing of the alliance he negotiated with the Americans, specifically with Consul
General Spencer Pratt.
95 Maximo Kalaw, The Case for the Filipinos (New York: The Century Company,
1965), p. 59.
SF ANISH AND AMERICAN COLONIZATION 49
representatives of both governments awaited confirmation in the United
States Senate; it needed two-thirds vote for ready passage.96
With full consciousness, the Filipinos knew that the Treaty of Paris
signalled the eventual conquest of the Americans over the Philippines.
Consequently, America's intention to secure a foothold in the country
became fully manifest. It would be sheer insensitivity if a discerning eye
believed that the Americans never desired to manipulate the Philippines
and tum it into a colony, an interest which earlier reverberated. in the
statements of Senator Albert Beveridge of Indiana when he articulated
that:97
American factories are making more than the American people can use;
American soil is producing more than they can consume. Fate has written.
our policy for us; the trade of the world must and shall be ours. We will
cover the world with our merchant marines. We will build a navy to the
measure of our greatness. The · Philippines is logically our first target.
The Philippines is ours. Beyond them are China's illimitable markets.
Apparently, the actions of the American command in the Philippines
betrayed their true intentions. The gradual military build-up of their·· forces
and the issuance of President McKinley's proclamation of benevolent assi-
milation and the virtual occupation of Manila by the American forces under
General Green were received by the Filipinos and their leaders as virtual
signs of American occupation of the country.
As a reaction to this, General Aguinaldo issued statements protesting
the enemies' calculated moves to conquer the country. On January 5, 1899,
he issued a proclamation criticizing President McKinley's benevolent as-
similation proclamation: 98
The government of the Philippines has considered it a duty to set forth
to the civilized powers of the world the facts determining the rapture of
the amicable relationships with the army of the United States in these
islands, to the end that they may thereby reach the conclusion that I for
my part, have done everything possible to avoid it, although at the cost of
many rights uselessly sacrificed.
Again a discerning observer may notice that all along General Aguinaldo
still hoped the Americans would remain faithful to the oral promises given
him in Hongkong. Moreover, the same observer may see him insensibly
stupid oecause he lacks insight to discern several calculated moves of the
Americans against the vaunted independence.
Back in the United States, the pro-annexationist faction in the govern-
ment, after assessing their number in the coming discussions of the Senate
96 Blount, pp. 121-137. See also Agoncillo, pp. 353-359.
97 Wolff, p. 63.
98Jbid., p. 201.
50 ASIAN STUDIES
of the Treaty of Paris when it would convene in January 1899, knew that
they were one vote short of the two-thirds majority concurrence required
by their constitution. President McKinley was himself worried over the
situation because he deeply apprehended the growing public .ientiments
against the policy of colonialism.
In the evening of February 4, 1899, a skirmish happened between the
American and Filipino forces. Both Generals Otis and Aguinaldo were quick
to label the encounter as premeditated by the other side and both forces
did not want to fire the first bullet. The truth, however, as to its instigator
disseminated freely and pinpointed that the American forces deliberately
planned the attack under direct instructions from Washington.99 The out-
come of this initial encounter reached the American public, with the mass
media gloating over the savage attack inflicted on the American outposts
by Filipino troopers. This reached the ears of the American decision makers,
the real targets of this propaganda. On February 6, the U.S. Senate ratified
the Treaty. of Paris, with a margin of one vote in its favor, which opened
the formalization of America's colonial conquest of the Philippines.
During the night of the outbreak of the hostilities between the two
forces, Emilio Aguinaldo noted the fiasco of his peace-keeping efforts.
With the news of the ratification of the Treaty of Paris, he issued a state-
ment addressed to the Filipino army and the people. He declared: 100
No more can I deplore than this rupture of friendly relations. I have a
clear .conscience that I have endeavored to avoid it at all costs, using all
my efforts to preserve friendship with the army of occupation, even at
the cost of not a few humiliations and many sacrificed rights.
But it is unavoidable duty to maintain the integrity of the national honor
and of the army so unjustly attacked by those who, posing as our friends
and liberators, attempted to dominate us in place of the Spaniards.
While the Filipino fighters stood their ground against the onslaught
of the powerful war machines of the American army, a British observer
99 Agoncillo, p. 174.
100 Taylor, 2:163. Also in Agoncillo, p. 201.
SPANISH AND AMERICAN COLONIZATION 51
spotted some lopsidedness of the initial encounters between the two forces.
His observations of the fierce fighting ran as_ follow.s: llH
This is not war, it is simply massacre and murderous butchery.
True enough, they delivered deadly blows against the· Filipino forces
in the ensuing battles. However, the Filipinos stood defending themselves
by fighting bravely.
For General Otis, the present insurrection could be crushed in a
matter of three months using only about 30,000 soldiers. To ·him, the
uprising, being a Tagalog-led insurrection, was a local affair.103 By June
of the same year, he felt it would totally collapse. However, the subsequent
realities of fighting in the fields belied his skimpy analysis of the situation.
On August 15, faced with an insurrection which reached the Visayas, Gen-
eral Otis cabled Washington for an additional 60,000 troops.
Emilio Aguinaldo hurriedly pr~pared the country for war _against
American colonization. He reorganized the revolutionary army and assigned
a politico-military head for each province. It was here ·when Antonio Luna
became the Secretary of War.t04
As a result of this reorganization, many rie~ military leaders _were
appointed to head their respective provinces in the war preparation. One
such leader was Vicente Rilles Lukban whose preliminary activities in
Southern Luzon and Bicol provinces won him the appointment to serve
in 1898 as the politico-military head of Samar and Leyte. Consequently,
the history of Samar from 1898 to 1902 revolved around General Lukbari
who earned the distinction of being the most formidable leader of th~
revolution and the last general of the revolutionary army to be captured.