GRP 3 REPORT The Morga and RIzals Search For Origins
GRP 3 REPORT The Morga and RIzals Search For Origins
GRP 3 REPORT The Morga and RIzals Search For Origins
PRESENTED BY:
● ELQUIERO ● GOLLOSO
● GONZALGO ● FERATERO
● AREVALO ● PARENAS
● JAMISOLA, C. ● VILLARANDA
● POLO ● SICAD
● SABEROLA ● BUHAYO
Table of contents:
THE MORGA AND THE PACTO DE
RIZAL’ S SEARCH
1 2
SANGRE
FOR ORIGINS
3
ENGKANTOS
4 CHANGING IMAGE OF
JOSE RIZAL
ICE BREAKER
JUMBLED WORD!!!
1. TOPAC ED SANGRE
ICE BREAKER
JUMBLED WORD!!!
1. TOPAC ED SANGRE
PACTO DE SANGRE
ICE BREAKER
PUZZLE!
2 The Pacto de Sangre in the Late
Nineteenth-Century Nationalist
Emplotment of Philippine History
Legazpi signed an agreement of peace and amity with Tupas and other
chieftains. The agreement, according to “Philippine History” by Teodoro
Agoncillo, includes provisions as follows;
•The Filipinos promise to be loyal to the King of Spain and the Spaniards
• Filipinos promise to help the Spaniards in any battle against an enemy;
and in return, the Spaniards promise to protect the Filipinos from all
enemies.
•A Filipino who has committed a crime against a Spaniard should be
turned over to Spanish authorities, while a Spaniard who has committed a
crime against a Filipino should be turned over to the Filipino chieftain.
2 PACTO DE SANGRE
History
2 PACTO DE SANGRE
History
It was believed that the first blood compact took place in 1521
between Magellan and Rajah Kolambu, at Limasawa Island,
wherein the first Catholic Mass on Philippine soil was held. But
then at present, "RA 9093 declares March 16 of every year as a
working special public holiday for the City of Tagbilaran and the
province of Bohol to be known as the blood compact day, and for
other purposes."
2 PACTO DE SANGRE
History
PICTOWORD!
PICTOWORD!
PICTOWORD!
PICTOWORD!
PICTOWORD!
PICTOWORD!
3 COCKFIGHTS AND ENGKANTOS:
Gambling on Submission and Resistance
What is “Preternatural”?
3 domains:
1. Supernatural – God’s unmediated actions
2. Natural – what happens always or most of the times
3. Preternatural – what happens rarely but nonetheless by
the agency of created beings and spirits such as angels,
demons, ghosts and other terrestrial beings.
3 COCKFIGHTS AND ENGKANTOS
Summary
Colonial society and its relative peace made room for the
possibility that natives could stake a claim on a parcel of land to
become an independent cultivator. Natives did imbibe the concept
of private proprietorship and of land as inheritable property. Indios’
smallholdings were demarcated from lands owned by the native
elite. The native peasants also engaged in land disputes and the
idea of old peasant autonomy had been born.
3 COCKFIGHTS AND ENGKANTOS
Summary
Indios have the idea that to work for Friar Power was to
enjoy the enchantment and protection of the Hispanic
shamans as if the monastic states were a reincarnation of
the barangay under the direction of men of power. Being
protected from colonial governmental demands was
another benefit of being in the circle of Spanish magical
men.
Attachment to the monastic estates was also a source
of pride and privilege. Landless indigenous revolted by
escaping beyond the control of the colonial state because
they could not stand the conditions of the friar estates.
3 COCKFIGHTS AND ENGKANTOS
Relevance To Current Society
As a result, as time goes on, the Filipino people get more afraid and
uneasy to the point where it becomes a barrier and the foundation for
achieving various goals in life. Filipinos would need to say "tabi po" if they
did something as simple as tripping over a mountain of earth or strolling
through a large tree at night for fear of upsetting the environmental
spirits that live there.
3 COCKFIGHTS AND ENGKANTOS
WRITER, HERO,
MYTH, AND
SPIRIT: 4
THE CHANGING IMAGE OF JOSE RIZAL
Presented by:
● VILLARANDA
● SICAD
● BUHAYO
Studying Rizal: From Course Work to
Fieldwork
Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo
have fascinated and eluded generations of
scholarly readers since their first publication
in Germany in the 1890s. Since that time,
they have withstood waves of adulation,
vilification, and dismissal, followed by
nationalist reappropriation and finally
canonization, while continuing to reward new
Smita Lahiri
Ph.D. candidate, Department of readers with pleasure and abundant
Anthropology, Cornell University interpretive possibilities.
More than Rizal's explicit
polemics, it was the Noli's story
of an intellectual-returned to the
Philippines from overseas-
pushed to radicalism by the
corruption of Spanish rule in
In the Noli Me Tangere and El
the Philippines, which
Filibusterismo (as the two
demonstrated Rizal's keen social
novels are nicknamed), Rizal
intelligence and command over
overtook his teachers and The Noli Me Tangere both
the intellectual currents of his
superiors. Writing in Spanish, depicts how the friars
time.
he cast off the intellectual maintained the colonial
hegemony of Spain in the hierarchy by withholding access
Philippines with every to Latin and Spanish from the
appearance of effortlessness. vast majority of Filipinos and
illustrates that Filipinos
nonetheless managed to
produce
new and destabilizing meanings
from the language and religion
of their colonizers.
Popular veneration of Rizal was viewed rather ambivalently by
historians as a form of patriotic nationalism distorted by superstition
and credulity. Perhaps this view unconsciously mimicked the attitudes
of the seventeenth-century Spanish chroniclers who were both
appalled by the pagan religion of the Filipinos and reassured by its
apparent monotheism.