Life of Rizal
Life of Rizal
Life of Rizal
*The noble mission pf Rizal is to alleviate the sufferings of his equal and avenging the victims of injustices and cruelties was
the cornerstone of his program to dignify men.
*Rizal sounds the call for individual regeneration with the following guiding principles:
1. man’s dignity is precious,
2. Respect for human rights is a must,
3. Every individual has a duty to love God,
4. Rizal emphasized the importance of man’s conscience and should not be sacrificed for glory,
5. Love of country is a national ideal,
6. Man should strive to attain the value of unity.
*Rizal insisted that education is the only instrument for social progress and took the following steps to improve the
education of the Filipino people:
1. He pleaded the government to take steps to improve the
Education of the filipino people.
2. He advanced all possible arguments in favor of the Filipinos need for education,
, 3. He appealed that filipino education is not contrary to Spain’s aim at Christianizing the Filipinos, and
4. He enriched his studies to abroad to see how education could bring social progress.
*For Rizal, the people’s welfare is the concern of governments. The following were his readings and observations regarding
colonial governments:
1. Colonies never understand their subject thus a colonizing country must know her colony,
2. The welfare of the country is suppressed for the interest of the state,
3. Failure to use prudence and tact in dealing with the people, and
4. Ruler’s lack of concern for the govern.
*With Rizal’s Nationalistic mission, he asked for the following reforms intended to instill in the minds of the Filipinos
courage, fortitude, perseverance, self abnegation and a broader outlook in life:
1. Greater attention, better education, better government employees, one or two representatives, and greater security to our persons
and properties,
2. He asked the following in his Noli: radical reforms in the armed forces, in the priesthood, administration of justice, paternal
treatment from the government, respect for man’s dignity,
More security for the individuals, less force in the armed forces, fewer
priviledges for the civil guards who so easily abuse what they have.
Ibarra learns from a schoolmaster of Father Damaso’s curricular meddling. Damaso insists on teachers beating children as discipline, and bans teaching
Spanish in favor of the native Philippine language, Tagalog. As alternative, Ibarra plans to build a secular school like the one Rafael always wished for.
Ibarra consults with church and government officials, fully intending to ignore their influence once the school’s built. Ibarra visits the Catholic cemetery and
learns Damaso had Rafael’s body exhumed, which has since been dumped in a lake. During the fiesta, Ibarra and local officials celebrate the opening of the
new school. As Damaso blesses the building with a sermon, the mysterious Elias arrives. Ibarra once saved Elias’s life during a fishing expedition. Elias
informs Ibarra that the others plan to kill Ibarra during the school’s christening. Ibarra disbelieves, but when a large boulder comes rolling at him as Elias
suggested, Elias shoves the man responsible in the way. The man dies, saving Ibarra’s life. The festival continues, but Ibarra is now aware of his foes.
At a dinner celebration held by Ibarra that night, Damaso arrives uninvited and begins insulting the new school, spouting racial insults to Filipinos as
“indios,” and besmirches Rafael’s death. The latter remark prompts Ibarra to attack Damaso, raise a knife to him and tell everyone Damaso exhumed
Rafael’s corpse. Ibarra nearly kills Damaso but Clara stops the blade before it stabs him. Afterwards, Ibarra is excommunicated. Tiago cancels the wedding
of Ibarra and Clara, and betroths his daughter to the Spaniard Linares. The Captain General visits San Diego from Spain, and is begged to punish Ibarra.
Since the General supports Ibarra’s school project, he refuses punishment and lifts the excommunication. Father Salvi hires Lucas, brother of the deceased
man who meant to kill Ibarra with the boulder, to frame Ibarra. Salvi is in love with Clara, and orchestrates an attack on the military barracks that he blames
on Ibarra. Salvi intends to take credit for saving the town from the attack he secretly started.
Following the siege, Ibarra is arrested as planned. He’s jailed and found guilty based on a vague letter he wrote to Clara. Elias returns and busts Ibarra out of
prison and they escape on a boat. Before fleeing town, Ibarra climbs onto Clara’s patio and bids adieu. Clara explains the she was blackmailed into releasing
the letter which led to Ibarra’s imprisonment. A man told Clara that her real father is Damaso, not Tiago. Clara relinquished the letter in order to keep this a
secret from Tiago and to honor her deceased mother. Clara expresses deep regret for her betrayal and reinforces her undying love for Ibarra. Ibarra and Elias
bid farewell and begin rowing into the night. As they travel, the debate the merits of revolution and whether a change within this system is better than
outright overthrowing it. During their discussion, the men are attacked by another boat. As a distraction, Elias decides to leap off the boat while Ibarra
continues rowing. Elias tells Ibarra to meet him on Christmas Eve in San Diego, where Ibarra’s grandfather is buried with his family fortune. Elias dives into
the water and is chased by the boat until the attackers spot blood in the water and assume Elias is dead.
In San Diego, Clara tells Damaso she cannot marry Linares because she’s not in love with him. Clara cites a newspaper falsely claiming Ibarra’s death as the
reason she no longer wishes to live, and joins a convent as a result. On Christmas Eve, Elias appears in the woods to meet Ibarra, who never shows up. Elias
is wounded and tells the young Basilio that he is about to die. Elias asks Basilio to burn his corpse along with Basilio’s mother’s, Sisa’s, on a pyre. As Elias
looks up to the sky dying, he utters: “I die without seeing dawn’s light shining on my country…You, who will see it, welcome it for me…don’t forget those
who fell during the nighttime.” Ibarra’s fate remains a mystery.
Summary of El Filibusterismo
El Filibusterismo comes with the Crisostomo Ibarra is back and as Simoun. During the period in between the story line of Noli Me
Tangere and El Filibusterismo which is 13 years, Ibarra left the Philippines and became a wealthy jeweler. He came back to the
Philippines as Senor Simoun, disguised with a beard. He seems to have long abandoned his once vision of ending the despotism of Spain
with words and peace. He becomes hungry for vengeance for all the misfortune our country has suffered under the tyranny of the
Spaniards. And near the end of the novel, when he discovers that his lover, Maria Clara, died in the convent, he becomes all the more
furious. Simoun is a confidant of the Captain-General. He encourages the government to make bad decisions and to abuse their power so
that it would spark a revolution among the masses. Basilio, now all grown up, is at first reluctant to join in on Simoun’s idea but ends up
being part of the plan. Simoun started planning uprisings and stashed guns in the shop of an ally. At the wedding reception of newlyweds
(the bride being the ex-girlfriend of one of the friends of Basillo—Isagani), Simoun tells Basilio that his plan was to conceal an explosive
which contains nitroglycerin inside a pomegranate-styled Kerosene lamp that Simoun will give to the newlyweds as a gift during the
wedding reception. The reception will take place at the former home of the late Captain Tiago, which was now filled with explosives
planted by Simoun. According to Simoun, the lamp will stay lighted for only 20 minutes before it flickers; if someone attempts to turn the
wick, it will explode and kill everyone—important members of civil society and the Church hierarchy—inside the house. Simoun leaves
the reception early and leaves a note with the words: “Mene Thecel Phares” which means “the future is predetermined” and is generally
implied that a bad event is going to happen. Simoun signed it with his real name “Juan Crisostomo Ibarra”. The people at the reception
were shocked because Ibarra is supposedly dead. One of the priests who knew Ibarra before the ending of Noli Me Tangere confirmed to
the people that it was the writing of Ibarra. The lamp started to dim… Outside the house, Basilio
was about to walk away because he knew the lamp was going to explode anytime soon when he saw
Isagani, the still heart-broken ex-boyfriend of the bride whose reception was still going on in the house of
Capitan Tiago. Isagani said that he just wanted to congratulate the newly-weds. Basilio who then feared for
the safety of his friend told him about the plan of Simoun. Isagani ran to the house. A priest was about to
fix the lamp but once Isagani got in, he found the lamp and threw it out the window into the river outside
the residence. Since the guards were chasing Isagani, he himself jumped out of the window into the river
as well. There was an uprising planned by Simoun during the time of the reception. The band got caught
and confessed that Simoun lead them. Ibarra was now wanted both as himself and as Simoun. Days passed
and a good priest found Simoun walking along the shore, wounded and weak. The noble priest tended to
Simoun while the latter explained that he is Ibarra and that he was greatly saddened and angry due to the
failure of the revolution and that he was questioning God as to why he was the one who is suffering and
not the ones who have forsaken the people of the Philippines. The priest explains that all punishments will
come in due time. Ibarra died as he weakly held the hand of the priest. The latter blessed the former and
threw away all the remaining jewels of Ibarra in the hopes that they may always be used for good.