Philippine History: Spaces For Conflict and Controversies
Philippine History: Spaces For Conflict and Controversies
Philippine History: Spaces For Conflict and Controversies
SPACES FOR
CONFLICT AND CONTROVERSIES
Chapter 3
• To interpret events using primary sources.
“CODE OF KALANTIAW.
Datu Bendehera Kalantiaw, third Chief of
Panay, born in Aklan, established his own
government in the peninsula of Batang, Aklan
Sakup. Considered the First Filipino Lawgiver, he
promulgated in about 1433 a penal code now
known as Code of Kalantiaw containing 18
articles. Don Marcelino Orilla of Zaragoza, Spain,
obtained the original manuscript from an old
chief of Panay which was later translated into
Spanish by Raphael Murviedo Yzamaney”
Making Sense of the Past:
Historical Interpretation
PERSPECTIVITY
MULTI-
personalities, development, cultures, and societies from different
perspectives. This means that there is a multitude of ways by
which we can view the world, and each could be equally valid,
and at the same time, equally partial as well. Historical writing is,
by definition, biased, partial, and contains perceptions. The
historians decides on what sources to use, what interpretation to
make more apparent, depending on what his end is. Historians
may misinterpret evidence, attending to those that suggest that
a certain event happened, and then ignore the rest that goes
against the evidence. Historians may omit significant facts about
their subject, which make the interpretation unbalanced.
Historians may impose certain ideology to their subject, which
may not be inappropriate to the period the subject was from.
Historians may also provide a single cause for an event without
considering other possible causal explanation of said event.
These are just many of the ways a historian may fail in his historical
inference, description, and interpretation. With multi-perspectivity
as an approach in history, we must understand that historical
interpretations contain discrepancies, contradictions, ambiguities,
and are often the focus of dissent.
Exploring multiple perspectives in history require
PERSPECTIVITY
MULTI-
incorporating source materials that reflect different views of an
event in history, because singular historical narratives do not
provide for space to inquire and investigate. Different source that
counter each other may create space for more investigation and
research, while providing more evidence for those truths that
these sources agree on. Different kinds of sources also provide
different historical truths—an official document may note
different aspects of the past than, say, a memoir of an ordinary
person on the same event. Different historical agents create
different historical truths, and while this may be a burdensome
work for the historian, it also renders more validity to the historical
scholarship.
Taking this in close regard in the reading of the historical
interpretations, it provides for the audience a more complex, but
also a more complete and richer understanding of the past.
Case Study 1:
Where Did the First Catholic Mass Take Place in the
Philippines?
Toward the end of the nineteenth century and the start of the
twentieth century, together with the increasing scholarship on the
history of the Philippines, a more nuanced reading of the available
evidence was made, which brought to light more consideration in
going against the more accepted interpretation of the first Mass in the
Philippines, made both by Spanish and Filipino scholars.
It must be noted that there are only 2
primary sources that historians refer to identifying
the site of the first Mass. One is the log kept by
Francisco Albo, a pilot of one of Magellan’s ship,
Trinidad. He was one of the 18 survivors who
returned with Sebastian Elcano of the ship Victoria
Francisco Albo
after they circumnavigated the world . The other,
and one more complete, was the account by
Antonio Pigafetta, Primo viaggio intorno al mondo
( First Voyage Around the World ). Pigafetta, like
Albo was a member of the Magellan expedition
and an eyewitness of the events, particularly, of
the first Mass.
Antonio Pigafetta
First Voyage Around the World Ship Victoria
Primary Source:
Albo's Log
Source: "Diario ó derotero del viage de Magallanes desde el cabo se S. Agustín en el
Brazil hasta el regreso a Espana de la nao Victoria, escrito por Frandsco Albo," Document
no. xxii in Colleción de viages y descubrimientos que por mar los Españoles drsde fines del
siglo XV, Ed. Martin Fernandez de Navarrete (reprented Buenus Aires 1945, 5 Vols.) IV, 191-
225. As cited in Miguel A. Bernard "Butuan or Limasawa? The site of the First Mass in the
Philippines: A Reexamination of Evidence" 1981, Kinaadman: A Journal of Southern
Philippines, Vol. III, 1-35.
2. They went instead that same day southwards to another Francisco Albo
small island name Suluan, and there the anchored. There they
saw some canoes but these fled at the Spaniards' approach.
This island was at 9 and two-third degrees North latitude.
Primary Source:
Albo's Log
3. Departing from those two islands, they sailed westward to
uninhabited island of "Gada" where they took in a supply of
wood and water. The sea around that island was free from
shallows. (Albo does not give the latitude of this island, but
from Pigafetta's testimony, this seems to be the "Acquada" or
Homonhon, at 10 degrees North latitude.)
Francisco Albo
5. Sailing southwards along the coast of that large island of
Seilani, they turned southwest to a small island called
"Mazava." That island is also at the latitude of 9 and two-thirds
degree North.
Primary Source:
Albo's Log
6. The people of taht island of Mazava were very good. There
the Spaniards planted the cross upon a mountain-top, and
from there they were shown three islands to the west and
southwest, where they were told there was much gold. "They
showed us how the gold was gathered, which came in small
pieces like peas and lentils."
8. From there they sailed westwards some ten leagues, and Francisco Albo
there they say three ialets, where they dropped anchor for the
night. In the morning they sailed southwest some 12 leagues,
down to a latitude of 10 and one-third degree. There they
entered a channel between two islnds, one of which was
called "Matan" and the other "Subu".
Primary Source:
Albo's Log
Antonio Pigafetta
4. Monday, March 19 - In the afternoon of their second day on
that island, they saw a boat coming towards them with nine
men in it. An exchange of gifts was effected. Magellan asked
for food supplies and the men went away, promising to bring
rice and other supplies in "four days.“
Primary Source:
Pigafetta's Testimony on The Route of
Magellan's Expedition
Thus, it is easy to see what Pigafetta meant by sailing "toward Antonio Pigafetta
the west southwest" past those islands. They left Homonhon
sailing westward towards Leyte, then followed the Leyte coast
southward, passing between the island of Hibuson on their
portside and Hiunangan Bay on their starboard, and then
continued southward, then turning westward to "Mazaua.“
Primary Source:
Pigafetta's Testimony on The Route of
Magellan's Expedition
10. Thursday, March 28 - In the morning of Holy Thursday,
March 28, they anchored off an island where the previous
night they had seen a light or a bonfire. That island "lies in a
latitude of nine and two-thirds towards the Arctic Pole (i.e.,
North) and in a longitude of one hundred and sixty-two
degrees from the line of demarcation. It is twenty-five leagues
from the Acquada, and is called Mazaua.”
Antonio Pigafetta
12. Thursday, April 4- they left Mazaua, bound for Cebu. They
were guided thither by the king of Mazaua who sailed in his
own boat. Their route took them past five "islands" namely:
"Ceylon, Bohol, Canighan, Baibai, and Gatighan."
Primary Source:
Pigafetta's Testimony on The Route of
Magellan's Expedition
13. At Gatighan, they sailed westward to the three islands of
the Camotes Group, namely, Poro, Pasihan and Ponson. Jere
the Spanish ships stopped to allow the king of Mazaua to
catch up with them, since the Spanish ships were much faster
than tje native balanghai- a thing that excited the admiration
of the king of Mazaua.
2. Friday, March 29- "Next day. Holy Friday," Magellan sent his
slave interpreter ashore in a small boat to ask the king if he
could provide the expedition with food supplies, and say that
they had come as friends and not as enemies. In reply the king
himself came in a boat with six or eight men, and this time
went up Magellan's ship and the two men embraced. Another
exchange of gifts was made. The native king and his
companions returned ashore, bringing with them the two
members og Magellan's expedition as guests for the night.
One of th two was Pigafetta.
The year 1872 is a historic year of two events: the Cavite Mutiny and
martyrdom of the priests: Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos, and Jacinto
Zamora, later on immortalized as GOMBURZA. These events are very
important milestones in Philippine history and have caused ripples
throughout time, directly influencing the decisive events of the
Philippine Revolution toward the end of the century. While the
significance is unquestioned, what made this year controversial are
the different sides to the story, a battle of perspectives supported by
primary sources. In this case study, we zoom in to the events of the
Cavite Mutiny, a major factor in the awakening of nationalism among
the Filipinos of that time.
Spanish
The documentation of Spanish historian Jose Accounts
Montero y Vidal centered on how the event was of the
an attempt in overthrowing the Spanish Cavite
government in the Philippines. Although regarded Mutiny
as a historian, his account of the mutiny was
criticized as woefully biased and rabid for a
scholar. Another account from the official report
written by then Governor General Rafael Izquierdo
implicated the native clergy, who were then,
active in the movement toward secularization of
parishes. These two accounts corroborated each
other.
Primary Sources: Excerpts from Montero’s
Account of the Cavite Mutiny
Source: Jose Montero y Vidal, “Spanish Version of the Cavite Mutiny of 1872,” in Gregorio
Zaide, Documentary Sources of Philippine History, Volume 7 (Manila: National Book Store,
1990), 269-273.
Excerpts
from the
…It seems define that the insurrection was Official
motivated and prepared by the native Report of
clergy, by the mestizos and native lawyers, Governor
and by those known here as abogadillos… Izquierdo on
the Cavite
Mutiny 1872
Governor General Rafael
The instigators, to carry out their criminal
project, protested against the injustice of the
government in not paying the provinces for their
tobacco crop, and against the usury that some
practice in documents that the Finance department
gives crop owners who have to sell them at a loss.
They encouraged the rebellion by protesting what
they called the injustice of having obliged the workers
in the Cavite arsenal to pay tribute starting January 1
and to render personal service, from which they were
formerly exempted…
Up to now it has not been clearly determined if they
planned to establish a monarchy or a republic,
because the Indios have no word in their language to
describe this different form of government, whose
head in Filipino would be called hari; but it turns out
that they would place at the head of the government
a priest…that the head selected would be
D. Jose Burgos, or D. Jacinto Zamora…
Such is… the plan of the rebels, those who guided
them and the means they counted upon for its
realization.
It is apparent that the accounts underscore
the reason for the “revolution”: the abolition of
privileges enjoyed by the workers of the Cavite
arsenal such as exemption from payment of
tribute and being employed in polos y servicios, or
force labor. They also identified other reasons
which seemingly made the issue a lot more
serious, which included the presence of the native
clergy, who, out of spite against the Spanish friars,
“conspired and supported” the rebels. Izquierdo,
in an obviously biased report, highlighted that
attempt to overthrow the Spanish government in
the Philippines to install a new “hari” in the persons
of Fathers Burgos and Zamora. According to him,
native clergy attracted supporters by giving them
charismatic assurance that their fight would not
fail because they have God’s support, aside from
promises of lofty rewards such as employment,
wealth, and ranks in the army.
In the Spaniard’s accounts, the event of
1872 was premeditated, and was part of big
conspiracy among the educated leaders,
mestizos, lawyers and residents of Manila and
Cavite. They allegedly plan to liquidate high
ranking Spanish officers, then kill the friars. The
signal they identified among these
conspirators of Manila and Cavite was the
rockets fired from Intramuros.
The accounts detail that on 20 January 1872,
the district of Sampaloc celebrated the feast of the
virgin of Loreto, and came with it were some fireworks
display. The Caviteῆos allegedly mistook tis as a signal
to commence of the attack. The 200-men contingent
lead by Sergeant Lamadrid attacked Spanish officers
at sight and seized the arsenal. Izquierdo, upon
learning of the attack, ordered the reinforcement of
the Spanish forces in Cavite to quell the revolt. The
“revolution” was easily crushed, when the Manileῆos
who were expected to aid the Caviteῆos did not
arrive. Leaders of the plot were killed in the resulting
skirmish, while Fathers Gomez, Burgos, and Zamora
were tried by a court-martial and sentenced to be
executed. Others who were implicated such as
Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, Antonio Ma. Regidor, Jose
and Pio Basa, and other Filipino lawyers were
suspended from the practice of law, arrested, and
sentenced to life imprisonment at the Marianas Island.
Izquierdo dissolved the native regiments of artillery by
Peninsulares.
On 17 February 1872, the GOMBURZA were
executed to serve as threat to Filipinos never to
attempt to fight the Spaniards again.
Ang Pag-aaklas sa
Kabite ng 1872
Differing Accounts of the Events of 1872
Excerpts
Tavera is of the opinion that the Spanish friars and Izquierdo from Pardon
used the Cavite Mutiny as a way to address other issues by
blowing out of proportion the isolated mutiny attempt. During
de Tavera's
this time, the Central Government in Madrid was planning to Account of
deprive the friars of all the powers of intervention in matters of the Cavite
civil government and direction and management of
educational institutions. The friars needed something to justify
Mutiny
their continuing dominance in the countr, and the mutiny
provided such opportunity.
Differing Accounts of the Events of 1872
Jose Rizal is identified as a hero of the revolution for his writings that center on
ending colonialism and liberating Filipino minds to contribute to creating the
Filipino nation. The great volume of Rizal's lifework was committed to this end,
particularly the more influential ones, Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo.
His essays vilify not the Catholic religion, but the friars, the main agents of
injustice in the Philippines society.
It is understandable, therefore, that any piece of writing from Rizal that
recants everything he wrote against the friars and the catholic church in the
Philippines could deal heavy damage to his image as a prominent Filipino
revolutionary. Such document purpotedly exists, allegedly signed by Rizal a
few hours before his execution. This document, referred to as "The
Retraction," declares Rizal's belief in the catholic faith, and retracts
everything he wrote ageinst the church.
Source: Translated from the document found by Fr. Manuel Garcia, C.M. on 18 May 1935
Primary
source:
Jose Rizal
The
Balaguer
Doubts on the retraction document abound,
especially because only one eye witness
Testimony
account of the writing of the document exists-
that of the Jesuit friar Fr. Vicente Balaguer.
According to his testimony, Rizal woke up several
times, confessed four times, attended a mass,
received communion, and prayed the rosary, all
of which seemed out of character. But since it is
the only testimony of alledgedly a " primary"
account that Rizal ever wrote a retraction
document, it has been used to argue the
aunthenticity of the document.
Source: Michael Charleston Chua " Retraction ni Jose Rizal: Mga Bagong Dokumento at
Primary
Pananaw," GMA News Online, published 29 December2016. source:
Eyewitness
Most Illustrious sir, the agent of cuerpo de Vigilancia stationed Account of
in Fort Santiago to report on the events during the [ illegible] the Last hours
day in prison of the accused Jose Rizal, informs me on this date
of the following:
of Rizal
Rizal may not have been officially part of the Katipunan, but the
Katipuneros showed great appreciation of his work toward the
same goals. Out of the 28 members of the leadership of the
Katipunan ( known as the Kataas-taasang Sanggunian ng
katipunan ) from 1892 to 1896, 13 were former members of La
Liga Filipina, Katipuneros even used Rizal’s name as a password.
In 1896, the Katipuneros decided to inform Rizal of their plans to launch the
revolution and sent Pio Valenzuela to visit Rizal in Dapitan. Valenzuela’s
accounts of his meeting with rizal have been greatly doubted by many
scholars, but according to him, Rizal objected to the plans, saying that
doing so would be tantamount to suicide since it would be difficult to fight
the Spaniards who had the advantage of military resources. He added
that the leaders of the Katipunan must do everything they could prevent
the spilling of Filipino blood. Valenzuela informed Rizal that the revolution
could inevitably break out if the Katipunan were to discovered by the
Spaniards. Rizal advised Valenzuela that the Katipunan should first secure
the support of wealthy Filipinos to strengthen their cause, and suggested
that Antonio Luna be recruited to direct the military movement of the
revolution.
Case Study 4:
Where Did the Cry Rebellion Happen?
Accounts of the
Bonifacio then asked the people to give a pledge that they were to
revolt. He told them that the sign of slavery of the Filipinos were (sic) Cry
the cedula tax charged each citizen. “If it is true that you are ready
to revolt… I want to see you destroy your cedulas. It will be a sign
that all of us have declared our severance from the Spaniards.
Pio Valenzuela
Source: Pio Valenzuela, “Cry of Pugad Lawin,” in Gregorio Zaide and Sonia Zaide,
Documentary Sources of Philippine History, Volume 8 ( Manila: National Bookstore, 1990 ),
301-302
The first place of refuge of Andres Bonifacio, Emilio Jacinto, Procopio
Bonifacio, Teodoro Plata, Aguedo Del Rosario, and myself was Balintawak,
the first five arriving there on August 19, and I, on August 20, 1896. The first
place where some 500 members of the Katipunan met on August 22, 1896,
was the house and yard of Apolonio Samson at Kangkong. Aside from the
persons mentioned above, among those who were there were Briccio
Pantas, Alejandro Santiago, Ramon Bernardo, Apolonio Samson, and others.
Here, views were only exchange, and no resolution was debated or
adopted. It was at Pugad Lawin, the house, store-house, and yard of Juan
Ramos, son of Melchora Aquino, where over 1,000 members of the
Katipunan met and carried out considerable debate and discussion on
August 23, 1896. The discussion was on whether or not the revolution against
the Spanish government should be started on August 29, 1896… After the
tumultuous meeting, many of those present tore their cedula certificates and
shouted “Long Live the Philippines! Long Live the Philippines!”
From the eyewitness accounts presented, there is indeed marked
disagreement among historical witnesses as to the place and time of the
occurrence of the Cry. Using primary and secondary sources, four places
have been identified: Kangkong, Pugad Lawin, and Bahay Toro, while the
dates vary: 23, 24, 25, or 26 August 1896.