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Philippine History

By Maria Christine N. Halili






Chapter I
Knowing Philippine History


1. Understanding History

It is by the possession and transmission of a culture that man
differs from other animals, and the first culture began with the
habitual use of tools and articulate speech (Pulmer, ed. 1965: 16).
For some writers like Nick Joaquin, history as culture is not
merely a chronological reconstruction of the past nor an analytical
interpretation of past events, but a process of creation or a
formation of culture, specifically a "national culture."
In its broadest meaning, history is the study of past events. It
generally presents the known past. What is unknown is yet to be
retrieved. The recording and analysis of experiences of a society
comprise the totality of a people's history.
In analyzing history, the use of correlated disciplines is
necessary to understand the reasons and consequences of human
actions. By referring to philosophies of history, the theories of
some great thinkers should be considered. In the investigation and
interpretation of the past, these theories could explain how and
why events happen in societies.
Arnold Toynbee's challenge and response theory is based on
the idea that man responds to the situation placed before him. His
actions are based on his thoughts. Thus, the society's way of facing
the challenges depending upon its capabilities uncovers the
pattern of the society's history. Mankind's approach in coping
with challenges determines history.
The 12-volume series of A Study of History (1934-61) is based
on Toynbee's thesis that history reflects the progress of
civilizations and societies. He viewed the past as a succession of
civilizations rather than political entities. For him, there were
patterns in the histories of various civilizations for which he came
to the conclusion that there appears to be laws governing the lives
of human civilizations. The general pattern shows the growth,
breakdown, and eventual dissolution of a particular civilization
leading to the formation of a new one. Based on his hypothesis,

the failure of a civilization to survive was the result of its inability
to respond to challenges.
Under various circumstances, a power will wish to extend its
influence at the expense of another. The threatened power will
then reevaluate the challenge and adopt the course of action to
curb the strategy of the opposing power.
To illustrate, the prehistoric men had shown their ability to
respond to the challenge of surviving amidst the conditions of the
environment. The use of crude stone tools, then later, highly
polished ones, and those made from metal and other raw
materials like clay soil, shows the capacity of human beings to
devise material equipment for subsistence.
The preservation of the man's material equipment is another
challenge that people have to face. Cultural artifacts made of
wood, barks of trees, and other organic materials decompose more
rapidly in hot and humid regions. Many of the objects left behind
by ancient societies are no longer existing as part of archaeological
record because they have disintegrated over time. This
predicament gives an incomplete view of the past. The response
include various kinds of information and techniques on how to
preserve the material legacy of the ancient past. Some of them are
best kept in their original sites like caves that were used for
habitation in the past. While, items such as potsherds (small
fragments of pottery), devices made of stone, metal, bones, and
teeth (covered with hard enamel) can most likely survive and be
presently known and retrieved through the untiring efforts of the
archaeologists.
In the struggle of dauntless Filipinos to regain the lost rights
and freedom during the Spanish era, the propagandists and
revolutionaries responded to colonial oppression by resisting. The
challenge was posed by the colonial subjugation of the Filipinos,
generally characterized by injustice and corruption. The response
was defiance to the prevailing rule.
Man's actions are not just involuntary movements especially
when time allows him to plan his next action. These responses
pass through the process of reasoning and analysis. Often, he
deals with other people to discuss on how to answer a certain
situation.
Associated with the aforementioned premises, the exchange
theory of Alvin Scaff may be carefully thought about. His
exchange theory refers to the systematic statement of principles
that govern the exchange of goods (tangible goods like property or
money and intangible goods like peace or prestige) between
individuals, between groups, between organizations, and even
between nations. This is based on the idea of reciprocity. Alliances
of people, communities as well as nations are rooted in the idea of
interchange.
There are some motivational forces found in the society
affecting the actions of people involved in the situation. A case in
point is the barter system, used in business transactions because
there was no currency during those days. Aside from domestic
trading existing among the barangays and the islands, the early
Filipinos also engaged in foreign trade with China, Japan, Siam
(now Thailand), Borneo, Sumatra, Cambodia, and other islands of
old Malaysia.
Another example in relation to this theory, Mrs. Corazon
'Cory' Aquino, wife of the slain opposition leader, was chosen as
the presidential standard bearer amidst high expectations that she
would free all political prisoners, abolish censorship of the media,
and institute legal proceedings to recover ill-gotten wealth taken
by corrupt public servants once elected into office.
For Georg Wilhelm Hegel (1770-1831), an idea is the moving
force of History. However, man has tasks to do so that events may
happen. Hegel's role of historical man follows a principle, which
he called Weltgiest or world spirit, which embodies ideals like
patriotism, heroism, and unity. Since historical individuals are
ideals and man follows his ideal, this thought, which is guided by
a particular ideal becomes what Hegel called as
Geisteswissenchaften or the world of Spirit of thought. This area of
thought is the thesis. This combines with a particular situation or
matter called Naturwissenchaften, the antithesis or the complete
opposite of the Geisteswissenchaften. By the combination of thesis
and antithesis, man achieves the synthesis, which is the historical
reality.
Applying this theory in history, there were guerilla fighters in
World War II who were guided by their sense of duty and
responsibility to lead the people during the warfare. The situation
was the Japanese invasion. The combination of their thoughts like
patriotism and heroism resulted to their historical acts, manifested
through their deeds and exploits in the battles that were fought
against the Japanese forces during the war era.

In understanding history, another theory to be considered is
the materialist concept of history or economic theory by Karl
Marx, another German philosopher. He asserts that the prevailing
economic system determines the form of societal organization and
the political and intellectual history of the epoch, which thus
attribute actions and events in history to economic motives. For
him, human interrelations depend on the material conditions of
their production. The struggle to maintain life is the most
enduring motivation for any human activity.
To cite an instance, the intensification of inter-island contacts
and the increasing specialization in craftsmanship by early
dwellers were brought about by economic consideration.
Centuries of trade and personal relations with Southeast Asian
neighbors led to the enrichment of Filipino life and culture. As
more dwellers traded with foreign merchants, influences in the
field of commerce, science, religion, language, and the arts became
more evident as they were transmitted to other members of the
society.
Another example is the Spanish colonial era. It has been said
that the three primary motives for vast exploration of lands were
for God, gold, and glory, but the main incentive was for economic
reasons. Colonies are the important sources of raw materials and
opportunities for investment. Spain was at the height of its power
in the 16
th
century since it exercised political and economic control
in its several colonies.
Another approach to historical studies is the method of
historiography developed by Fernand Braudel (1902-1985),
considered the father of historical structuralism. According to
Braudel, human actions are not only based on human decisions
but also on 'structures' that may be natural (like topography and
natural resources) or man-made (like existing laws and
technological devices). For example, men build houses for shelter.
Even if they want to construct high-rise condominiums in the area,
the builders have to consider the availability of resources, the
budget of the clients, and the building site, to narrje a few.
Furthermore, the introduction of new technology literally
transforms societies and thereby, history.
In the Braudelian approach, to achieve "total history" is to
integrate all aspects of man's past. This involves the study of
history in its total view made possible by examining the
circumstances underlying such political, economic, social, and
cultural events.
The pioneers of Philippine nationalist historiography
generally wrote in Spanish, and occasionally, in Tagalog. The
group in Spain included the Filipino propagandists Jose P. Rizal,
Marcelo H. del Pilar, Graciano Lopez Jaena, as well as Pedro
Paterno, T. H. Pardo de Tavera, Gregorio Sancianco y Gozon, and
among others.
For Rizal, history offers the key to national identity and the
basis for future development. In his writings, he used history to
show a uniquely Filipino culture, one which evolved through
centuries of contact with other Asians. He edited Dr. Antonio de
Morga's Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. His annotations of Sucesos was
Ms major historical work. He depicted the destructive effects of
western colonization on early Filipino societies.
Teodoro Agoncillo (1912-1985) is considered as the father of
Filipino nationalist historiography. He wrote the conditions of the
Philippine past by analyzing the conditions of the masses. His
efforts in rewriting history like other contemporary historians
were reactions to the traditional presentations of Philippine
history, being colonial and elitist.
Philippine history is a people's history. As defined by Renato
Constantino, history is "the recorded struggle of people for ever
increasing freedom and for newer and higher realization of the
human person." It is not about the story of man as the individual,
but man as the associated man. Man interacts with nature and
with other men, thus, consciously changing his own perspective
and to some extent, the system of environment.
Based on Constantino's supposition that "Philippine history is
a story of struggle," the study has to be reassessed with a
nationalist perspective in the interest of objectivity. This is to allow
the modern Filipino to form a clear picture of his ancestors'
conditions and sentiments from the point of view of Filipino
writers to correct some historical impressions made by colonial
historiography tending to racial bias.
***
History is not merely tin
1
woi \ >! heroes and great men as
elucidated by Constantino in his book the Philippines: A Pant
Revisited. He pointed out that the masses of individuals as well as
the social forces generated by collective lives and struggles have to
be included. Men must struggle together to survive the exigencies

of natural or social forces intervening their development. The
associated man, as part of the society, makes history through his
collective lives.
Constantino further mentioned that history is not necessarily
presenting a long, unbroken chain of events. It illustrates
movement of people and ideas over time and space. They may
even be in conflict with one another. It is now the task of the
historian to weave particular events into a total view so that these
experiences can be summed up and analyzed.
However, for Wilhelm Dilthey (1833-1911), absolute
objectivity is inconceivable. Since people grow up in cultural
environments, they have imbibed the prevailing worldview in
addition to their own nature. The worldview that they have
developed are colored with perspective from which people
understand their environments and the events that happen.
Clearly, this results to subjectivity according to Dilthey.
In conclusion, history can serve as a guide to present and
succeeding generations in facing the challenges of the times. By
projecting the people's aspirations, a people's history will enable
us to grasp the direction of the country's development and
identify the factors that impede real progress. Truly, the need for a
real people's history becomes more urgent as we Filipinos search
for truly Filipino solutions to the problems besetting our country.

2. Sources of History

Sources of information provide the evidence from which the
historian obtains facts about the past. In writing history, the
historian not only relies on past thoughts, rather, reenacts it in the
context of analyzing the documents and other records left. This is
an indispensable condition in the quest for historical facts.
Literature, sports, visual and performing arts like dance can also
be considered as visual records of a country's history and culture.
Printed sources for the study of early Philippine history can
be traced from the missionary chronicles published by the various
religious orders assigned to the Philippines, which include the
Augustinians, Franciscans, Dominicans, Jesuits, and Recollects.
Although generally viewed as moralistic and ethnocentric with
regard to description of Filipino culture and society, these records
provided valuable contribution for the study of history during the
Spanish period in the Philippines.
Friars of the religious orders who had later known the
dialects of the natives, recorded observations of Filipino society
and culture like Fray Juan de Plasencia (1589), a Franciscan and
Fray Pedro Chirino (1604), a Jesuit.

****
1I w only sociilnr histor ian in the islands before 1887 was Dr.
Antonio de Moi'j'.a with his Sucesos de las Islas Filipinos (Mexico,
1609), a book on 16
th
century Philippines.
The Filipino Muslims were able to preserve written materials
of great historical value. The first is the sarsila or tarsila, which is a
genealogical record of the sultans or datus who tried to preserve
the lineage of the ruling class like the Sulu Sarsila and the
Maguindanao Tarsila. Copies are in the possession of the existing
heirs. Translations are found in Najeeb Saleeby's works.
Another material is the kitab, a book attributed to the late
Hadji Butu Abdul Baqui, Wazir of the Sulu Sultanate, who tried to
record the historical and personal events of his time-the early 20
th

century.
Philippine Insurgent Records (renamed the Philippine
Revolutionary Records, now located in the National Library)
represents the records captured by the United States Army during
its suppression of the Filipino resistance against American
takeover of the Philippines from 1899-1903.
An important repository of Filipiniana materials is the
National Library, established in Manila on March 9, 1900 to honor
the memory of American military personnel killed during the
Filipino-American War. Years later, Public Law Act No. 1935,
mandated the creation of The Philippine Library, to consolidate all
libraries in the Philippine colonial government. Then, in 1916, the
colonial administration decided to merge The Philippine Library
with other entities and it came to be known as the Philippine
Library and Museum. However, in 1928, the Philippine
Legislature passed Public Law No. 3477 providing for the separate
entities to be called The National Museum and the National
Library.
Pursuant to Executive Order No. 486, s. 1951, issued by
President Elpidio Quirino and a follow-up order, Executive Order
No. 39, s. 1963 by President Diosdado Macapagal, public school

teachers throughout the Philippines were assigned to collect the
histories and customs of their localities. These records are now
known as the Historical Data Papers or Provincial Histories, intended
to replace government records destroyed during the World War II.
Sources of history may be classified as primary and
secondary. Primary sources are those that have witnessed the
event that took place or have been part of the incident being
studied. These include written records (e.g. narratives,
manuscripts, public documents, letters, diaries), fossils, artifacts,
and testimony from living witnesses. On the other hand,
secondary sources have not been part of the event being
considered such as magazines, newspapers, pamphlets,
typescripts, and articles written about the primary sources.
In the Philippines, aside from the National Archives, there
are other important repositories of historic documents, which
include the Archives of the Dominican Province of the Philippines
(Sto. Domingo Convent), the Archives of the University of Santo
Tomas, the Archives of the Province of Our Lady of the Most Holy
Rosary, the Jesuit Archives at the Ateneo de Manila University,
and the Archives of the Archbishopric of Manila. Primary and
secondary sources are also found in libraries as well as in private
collections.
Archaeology studies and reconstructs the cultural events of
the past through the material remains left by people.
Archaeologists study artifacts (material equipment made by
people of the past like tools, pottery, and jewelry) and fossils
(preserved remains of plants, animals, and people of a remote
geological past). Archaeological excavation refers to the systematic
recovery and study of these pieces of material evidence.
Prehistory, a term given by 19
th
century French scholars,
covers the past human experiences prior to the existence of written
records. The basic source of prehistory is prehistoric archaeology,
which is one of the fields of anthropological archaeology. It
studies societies at the time writing system has not yet been
invented. Societies with written records are being studied in
historical archaeology.
Archaeology gives us an idea on how things might have
looked like at a particular time. Cultural artifacts may be looked at
as concrete expressions of the ancient settlers' way in dealing with
the problem of adaptation to the environment. Their achievements
in material and social culture show much of their behavior, values,
and beliefs as well as their intellectual maturity.
Unfortunately, the reconstruction of Philippine prehistory
will always be incomplete. Many of the objects recovered have
disintegrated over time. Materials like wood, barks of trees, and
clothing decompose easily particularly in a tropical climate such
as ours. Devices made of stone, clay soil, metal and the like, can
survive the society that created it and thus, be presently known
through the efforts of the archaeologists.
Early archaeological undertakings in the Philippines began
with the first major expedition in 1881 by a Frenchman, Alfred
Marche in the island of Marinduque and the other sites in Central
Philippines. Most of his collections are now with the Musee de 1'
homme in Paris, and some in Madrid. There were also sporadic
finds and pot-hunting activities in various parts of the archipelago
prior to this major archaeological excavation. Feodor Jagor, a
German traveler, reported having encountered a priest in Naga,
Camarines Sur who collected artifacts from ancient graveyards.
Dr. Antonio de Morga, in his Sucesos de Las Islas Filipinas
(Historical Events of the Philippine Islands), described the ancient
artifacts that were recovered by farmers in Luzon, particularly in
Ilocos, Pangasinan,
I'a m pang, i and Manila. Phese were day vessels of dark brown
color and some marked with characters. These items are no longer
being manufactured in the islands.
Jose Rizal was noted to have found ground and polished
stone tools during his exile in Dapitan, Zamboanga del Norte.
The second major archaeological exploration was carried out
by Carl Guthe from the University of Michigan from 1922-1925.
With his team, they conducted several test-digs in Palawan, Bohol,
Northern Mindanao, and other places in Central* Philippines. The
purpose of this Michigan archaeological expedition was to collect
Chinese ceramics exported to the Philippines from China, to look
into the early Filipino-Chinese relationship. The collection,
resulting from the excavation, consisted of more than 30 cubic tons
of prehistoric artifacts. They are now kept at the University of
Michigan.
From 1926 to the outbreak of the Second World War, much of
the archaeological discoveries were done by Henry Otley Beyer
(1883-1966) born in Edgewood, Iowa who had married Lingayu

Gambuk, the 15-year- old daughter of a powerful Ifugao chief in
1910.
The discovery of a major archaeological site in Novaliches in
1926, resulting from the construction of a dam for Manila's water
supply, was Beyer's first archaeological research in the country. In
1947, Beyer published the Outline Review of Philippine Archaeology
by Islands and Provinces, a pioneering research activity in
Philippine prehistory.
Larry Wilson, a mining prospector, assisted Beyer in the
exploration of numerous Pleistocene sites in Northern Luzon. It
was Beyer who first disclosed the importance of Palawan in the
search of the early man in the Philippines.
All over the archipelago, the fossilized remains of large
mammals that roamed the islands during the Middle Pleistocene
Epoch have been discovered in the 1920s. The fossils of elephas,
stegodons, rhinoceroses, and deer have been discovered in
Cagayan, Pangasinan, Rizal, Panay Island, and in Northeastern
Mindanao. The elephas, stegodon, and rhinoceros are now extinct
in the country.
In Cabarruyan Island in Lingayen Gulf, a fossilized tooth of a
dwarf elephant was reported to have been retrieved. This specie of
dwarf elephant was subsequently identified and named Elephas
beyeri after H. Otley Beyer, considered as the Father of Philippine
Archaeology and Prehistory. Von Koenigswald, a paleontologist
known for his work on Java Man, gave the name for this specie.
After the Second World War, increased interest in the
prehistoric beginnings of the Philippines evolved. Archaeology
was later on introduced as part of the curriculum at the University
of the Philippines.
Wilhelm <.. Solheim II conducted the first postwar
excavations in Masbate Island from 1951 to 1953. Alfredo
Evangelista and E. Arsenio Manuel assisted him in undertaking
the work.
Between 1950 and 1954, Solheim was the research associate at
the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology of the University of
the Philippines and the librarian and curator of the American
Historical Collection of the U.S. embassy in Manila. His earliest
work in Philippine archaeology was in 1951, with the publications
on archaeological fieldwork in San Narciso, Tayabas (now
Quezon). His activities included extensive field experience in
Southeast Asia, as well as the various islands of the Pacific Region.
From 1958 to 1962, Robert B. Fox and Alfredo Evangelista,
both working for the National Museum of the Philippines,
undertook a series of test-digs in the caves of Cagraray, Albay, and
Bato, Sorsogon. Tradeware ceramics from China and Thailand
were recovered in Calatagan.
Fox led the Tabon Caves Archaeological Project in
Southwestern Palawan, resulting in the unearthing of late
Pleistocene human fossils and stone tools and implements.
Charcoal materials analyzed by carbon-14 technique revealed the
presence of man in the area between 22,000 to 24,000 years ago.
Human fossil bones of at least three individuals were found.
These included a large frontal bone, with the brows and part of the
nasal bones as well as fragments of a mandible and teeth.
Classified as modern man or Homo Sapiens, these are the earliest
known human inhabitants of the Philippines.
"Neil Mcintosh of the University of Sydney in Australia
undertook the analysis and X-rays of the Tabon skullcap and
mandible in 1975. Details showed the presence of a thin fissure on
the right side of the skull, which according to Mcintosh, may have
been the cause of death of the individual. It was probably due to a
fall or a bump on the head.
Other minor diggings and explorations followed in the 1960s,
particularly in the southern regions of the Visayas and Mindanao,
led by anthropologists of the University of San Carlos in Cebu and
Silliman University in Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental. In 1963-
1964, Marcelino Maceda of San Carlos University, technically
assisted by the National Museum, conducted archaeological
excavations at Kulaman Plateau in Bukidnon and recovered a
number of limestone burial jars. North of this place, Samuel
Briones, a graduate student at Silliman University reported the
presence of limestone burial jars in several caves he visited in 1966.
In Cebu, Karl Hutterer and Rosa Tenazas of San Carlos
University recovered prehistoric artifacts in the middle of Cebu
City. Tenazas carried out archaeological excavations in the Laguna
area and recovered valuable materials, mostly 10
th
and 14
th
century
artifacts in 1968-1969.
In I miery. Bat.mgas, .1 group of students from Ateneo de
Manila conducted archaeological diggings from 1968 to 1970. The
team was composed of Cecilia V. Locsin, Maria Isabel Ongpin, and
Socorro P. Paterno.

The National Museum of the Philippines, led by its chief
archaeologist Robert B. Fox, began a systematic archaeological
work in Cagayan Valley in the 1970s. This marked the ardent
quest for prehistoric man in the area. Comparable to those
previously reported animals (such as elephas, stegodons, and
rhinoceroses), new fossil discoveries such as those of crocodiles,
giant tortoises, pigs; and deer were found in Cagayan.
In 1971, Karl Hutterer returned to the site he previously
explored in Basey River in Southern Samar. The following year,
Wilhelm Solheim II and Avelino Legaspi dug in the area of Davao
del Sur. They found tools made from large shells, manufactured
through a flaking technique similar to that used in making stone
tools.

3. Unhistorical Data

There are some narratives that have been previously accepted
in Philippine history as facts but later were found out to be
historical errors. It is to the credit of many historians who
investigated and took position on what they have discovered in
their careful research. These unhistorical accounts include the
Maragtas (Story), the Code of Kalantiaw, and the Legend of
Princess Urduja.
Maragtas is about the 10 Malay datu from Borneo who settled
into the Philippine islands. According to the Maragtas, at around
1250 A.D., 10 Bornean datu and their families left their kingdom in
search of new homes across the sea to escape the merciless rule of
Sultan Makatunaw. Led by Datu Puti, the Borneans landed in the
island of Panay and bought the lowlands from the Ati king named
Marikudo in exchange for one gold saduk (native hat) and a long
gold necklace for Queen Maningwantiwan. After the land sale and
pact of friendship, the Atis went to the hills. The Malay datus
settled in the lowlands.
Datu Puti, Balensusa, and Dumangsil sailed northward to
Luzon and landed in the region around Lake Bonbon (Taal). There
they built their settlements. Dumangsil and Balensusa's families
occupied other neighboring regions now known as Laguna and
the Bicol Peninsula. Datu Puti left for Borneo after he knew that
his men were leading peaceful lives.
The other seven datu stayed in Panay. They divided the
island into three districts. Hantik (now Antique) was under Datu
Sumakwel. Datu Paiburong ruled Irong-Irong (now lloilo). Datu
Bangkaya governed Aklan (now Aklan and Capiz).
Led by Datu Sumakwel, a political confederation of
barangays (Madya- as) was formed for purposes of protection and
close family relations. The story as told by Father Santaren, further
described the expansion of the Malay settlers to other parts of the
archipelago. The legal code written by
Datu Sumakwel also known as the Maragtas Code was previously
known as the "oldest known written body of laws" in the
Philippines.
William Henry Scott (1921-1993) made the study of
prehistoric source materials for the study of Philippine history, the
subject of his doctoral dissertation at the University of Santo
Tomas. He defended his paper before a panel of well-known
historians on June 16, 1968. The panelists include leodoro
Agoncillo, Gregorio Zaide, Mercedes Grau Santamaria, Nicolas
Zafra, and Father Horacio de la Costa, SJ.
The research of Scott showed that Maragtas is not a
prehispanic document but a book written by Pedro Monteclaro, a
local historian of Panay. Monteclaro's publisher in 1907, noted that
this Maragtas should not be considered as facts, all of which are
accurate and true. The publisher pointed out that many of the
author's data do not tally with what we hear from old men. The
author wrote that two of his manuscripts were rotten and hardly
legible. None of these written materials were preserved for future
generations. He made no explanation about the date as well as the
origin of his sources. Neither were there claims to clarity. There is
no tradition of recording history nor legal decision in Panay
during the precolonial times. Thus, the Maragtas could neither
support the presence of any pre-Spanish Confederation ofMadiaas
(also spelled as Madyaas) nor uphold the existence of a Sumakwel
Code.
Previously regarded as the second oldest legal code in the
Philippines was the Code of Kalantiaw. This code was said to be a
set of ancient laws promulgated in 1433 by Datu Bendara
Kalantiaw (Spanish spelling, Calantiao) of Aklan, the third Muslim
ruler of Panay.
The code itself was contained in one of the chapters of the Las
Antiguas Leyendas de la Isla de Negros (Ancient Legends of Negros

Island) written by Fr. Jose Maria Pavon, a Spanish secular priest
who became a parish priest of Himamaylan, Negros Occidental in
1838-1839. Jose E. Marco of Negros Occidental discovered the
spurious Pavon manuscripts and presented it to Dr. James
Robertson, Director of the Philippine Library and Museum in 1914.
According to Marco's confession, he obtained the two manuscript
volumes from someone who had stolen them from the
Himamaylan conuento during the Revolution.
Director Robertson had the Pavon manuscripts published in
its English translation in 1917. The Philippine Studies Program of
the University of Chicago reprinted the translation in 1957.
Eventually, Filipino historians and textbook writers acknowledged
the authenticity of the Pavon manuscripts without any doubt.
In 1971, the late Ferdinand E. Marcos issued Executive Order
No. 294, which created the Order of Kalantiaw Award for services
in law and justice. He also issued Presidential Decree No. 105 in
1973, making the Kalantiaw Shrine in Batan, Aklan sacred. It
prohibited all forms of desecration including unnecessary noise
and violation of such would mean 10 years ol impi isonrnent.
Postage stamps, naval ships, paintings, and even beauty pageants
(I akambini ni Kalantiaw) were made to honor Datu Kalantiaw.
In the unprecedented doctoral study of Scott, he concluded
that the Pavon manuscripts were not genuine and that the Code of
Kalantiaw was a hoax. He presented his serious objections to this
fake code. They are as follows:

1. There is no evidence that Fr. Pavon, the alleged author
of the manuscript, was ever in the Philippines in 1838,
or parish priest of the town in 1839/ the dates of the
manuscript. The discoverer of the alleged manuscript,
Jose E. Marco, was also involved in the sale of other fake
historical documents. There is no historical evidence for
the existence of Datu Kalantiaw, or a code of his name
other than the documents presented by Jose Marco.
2. The contents of the manuscript are of dubious value. For
example, the author prays for the preservation of the
King of Spain in 1838 and dedicates a book to him in
1839, but Spain had no king between 1833 and 1874.
3. The author also states that the month of November was
called a bad month for it brought air laden with
putrified microbes of evil fevers. It was only in the 1850s
that Louis Pasteur discovered the theory of infectious
germs. The word "microbe" itself was invented by Dr.
Charles Emmanuel Sedillot. He proposed the term for
the first time in a lecture before the Academy of Sciences
in 1878.
4. The Kalantiaw Code contains many strange edicts that
contradict the character of the JFilipino. For example, the
code prescribed death penalty for the crime of
trespassing on the datu's house, but imposed only a
year's slavery for stealing his wife.

Eventually, Scott's doctoral dissertation was published by the
UST Press (Unitas, Vol. 41, 1968). The following year, it was
reissued with the title, Prehistoric Source Materials for the Study of
Philippine History (UST Press, 1969). The same book was published
in the second revised edition by New Day Publishers (Quezon
City) in 1984. In the last chapter of the book, Looking for the
Prehispanic Filipino issued in 1992 by New Day Publishers, Scott
wrote a chapter titled, Kalantiaw: The Code that Never Was. Scott's
conclusions have not been challenged by any historian to date.

Another narrative that many Filipinos have learned is about
the legendary warrior princess named Urduja. She has been
adopted as a symbol of a woman of distinguished courage, an
inspiration for women in the country.

Unfortunately, this tale is another historical error that has
created false impressions and should be corrected. The story
reportedly came from Muhammad Ibn Abdullah Ibn Batuta also
known as Ibn Batuta (1304- 1378), an Arab traveler from Morocco.
His book, Rihlah (Travels), includes
descriptions of the Byzantine court of Constantinople (now
Istanbul) and
the Black Death of Baghdad (1348).

According to his travel accounts, while somewhere in
Southeast Asian waters, he reached the land of Tawalisi after a
voyage of 71 days, and China was 15 days away with a favorable
wind. In Tawalisi, he mentioned a mysterious amazon named
Princess Urduja who would only marry the man who could beat
her in fistfights. She presided over a court so fascinating and

majestic. She gave Ibn Batuta gifts of silk, spices, sheep, buffaloes,
and two elephant-loads of rice.
The legend of Princess Urduja is quite amusing but historians
could not certify its authenticity. Modern historians agreed that
Princess Urduja was just an illusory creation of Ibn Batuta, a
contemporary of Marco Polo (1254-1324), the Venetian traveler
whose accounts in the East, particularly China (the English
translation of the original title of the book was The Description of the
World recorded by Rustichello, a romance writer from Pisa), drew
the attention of a great number of Europeans and stimulated
interest in Asian trade.
Efforts to correct historical errors are still ongoing. Many
historians even investigate for themselves the validity of sources
and data. The concern of historians has been to collect and record
facts about the past and to discover new facts with utmost care
and truthfulness. The damage caused by deception is surely
immeasurable but the blunder itself is a challenge that every
individual should face. The determination to uncover the past
necessarily involves the use of auxiliary disciplines and literary
forms.

Study Guides
A. Terms/Concepts to Understand Historical
structuralism Prehistoric archaeology
Primary and secondary sources B. Questions to Answer
1. Why did some civilizations fail to survive according to
Arnold Toynbee?
2. How do events happen in history according to Alvin
Scaff?
3. How can historical reality be achieved according to
Georg Hegel?
4. What is the motivation for any human activity according
to Karl Marx?
5. How can total history be achieved according to Fernand
Braudel?
6. Explain Renato Constantino's supposition that
"Philippine history is a story of struggle."
7. Give the brief history of Philippine archaeology.
8. What made William Henry Scott to conclude that
Maragtas is not a prehispanic document?
9. Why did Scott say that the Code of Kalantiaw was a
hoax?
10. Did Princess Urduja really exist in the past?


Chapter II
The Natural Setting and its People

1. How the Earth Was in the Beginning

The story of creation shows the formation of the world and
the infinite character of the Creator. The Holy Bible tells us that,
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth (Genesis
1:1)." The first part of the book relates the story of creation. God
created man in His own image, male and female. Adam and Eve,
the first man and woman, became the progenitors of mankind.
In Filipino mythology, creation stories were popularized by
various tribal groups of the islands. One Tagalog legend tells the
story of how Bathala created the Filipino people. In the beginning,
Bathala (god of the Sky), Aman Sinaya (goddess of the Sea), and
Amihan (Northeast Wind) were the only beings that existed.
Bathala and Aman Sinaya have been rivals for quite a time.
One day, Aman Sinaya decided to send her waves and storms
into the sky. In return, Bathala threw giant boulders to stop her.
This resulted to thousands of islands on the surface of the sea,
which became the Philippine archipelago. Amihan decided to stop
the battle and took the form of a bird. She flew back and forth
between them, which led to a closer sky and sea. Finally, both
deities agreed to end the fight.
As a friendly gesture, Bathala planted a seed underneath the
ocean and it grew into a bamboo reed. Amihan pecked the reed
after hearing voices from within the bamboo asking that they be
freed. The bamboo reed cracked and slit open. Inside were two
human beings. Amihan named the man Malakas (Strong) and the
woman Maganda (Beautiful) and then flew them onto one of the
islands.
Soon, Malakas and Maganda had a huge number of offsprings.
They asked their children to work in the fields but the latter
disobeyed. The man and woman prayed to their god Bathala for

guidance. Bathala told them to teach their children a lesson. This
would make them into what they are meant to be.
Malakas and Maganda grabbed spoon laddies and began to
give blows to all their children who started fleeing away. Some of
them hid under bamboo tables and became slaves. A few went
inside the burning cauldron and turned into Aetas. Others
climbed the rooftop and became the datu (chieftains) of the
villages; while some climbed on trees and became the commoners.
Those who ran to the mountains turned into hunters; while the
ones who stayed near the seashore turned into fishermen.
Based on a Visayan legend, there was also a mythical bird
named Mntiiiul searching for a place to rest but cannot find one.
Then, he pleaded the god of the sea, Kaptati, and the god of the
air, Magauayan to help him.
The gods, asserting their might in answering the bird's
request, showed their strength. The god of the sea created tidal
waves to beat the sky. In response, the god of the air threw the
waves back by whirlwinds of rock and soil. Dry land was built in
the process.
The fight continued for thousands of years, until Manaul
grew tired of it. He collected the rocks from the mountains and
dropped them on both gods. This ended the battle. The masses of
rocks thrown by the mythical bird became the islands of the
Philippine archipelago.
After getting exhausted, Manaul flew to a nearby grove of tall
bamboos to rest. When he alighted on the stalk, he heard a voice
coming from the bamboo, asking to be freed from within. The bird
pecked at the bamboo until it split apart. Out of the stalk came the
first man, Si-Kalac, and the first woman, Si-Kavay. They were
advised by the earthquake as well as the fish of the sea and the
birds of the air to marry so that they would multiply on earth.
They did, so Si-Kavay bore her first-born son Sibo. Satnar, their first
daughter came next.
Numerous legends explain how places got their names. In
many instances, the name of a place is derived from a brief form of
word linked to the story, for example Tagaytay from "taga ltay";
Mindoro, from the names of a couple Mina and Doro; and Manila,
from the word Maynilad (there are nilad plants in the place).
Legends and myths at times provide a fanciful counterpart to
actual explanations of things and events. The legend of Bernardo
Carpio, called Hari ng mga Tagalog (King of the Tagalogs) presents
an imaginative explanation of how the country was shaken by
earthquakes. According to the legend, Bernardo Carpio was
rebuked by the gods for his insolence and left endlessly chained in
the Montalban Gorge in Rizal Province. He was cursed to keep
two mountain walls from colliding. Whenever he pauses to regain
strength, the walls of Montalban Gorge start closing in. Carpio
pushes them back so that the mountains would not grind him into
pieces. As a result, the ground around him shudders.
The analytical study of geology commenced with the
publication of James Hutton's Theory of the Earth (2 volumes, 1795).
Hutton (1726-1797), a British geologist, formulated the
uniformitarian theory of geology, which maintains that the laws of
nature have remained constant. He further explained that the
physical and chemical processes that have acted throughout
geologic time are the same processes seen today. Taking the
hydrologic cycle for instance, condensation always precedes
precipitation. Processes such as volcanism and erosion that have
caused changes in the earth's surface had been operating in thr
same manner over a very long period of time. He rejected the
theory of catastrophism, which was the prevailing belief during his
time. Catastrophism asserts that only major catastrophes could
alter the formation of the earth.
Maps or charts covering the entire world or specific regions
are contained in an atlas. Ptolemy, an Alexandrian scholar,
produced the first collection of maps in about A.D. 150. In the 16
th

century, Gerardus Mercator used the term atlas in the title of his
collection of maps. The term was derived from the custom of
placing the Greek mythological figure Atlas holding the earth on
his shoulders on the title pages of map collections. The first
modern atlas titled, Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Theater of the Earth),
was published in 1570 by Abraham Ortelius, a Dutch cartographer.
Ortelius noticed that the American continents seemed to have
been disjoined from Europe and Africa. He realized that the coasts
of the three continents could be linked together like a huge jigsaw
puzzle.
Alfred Wegener (1880-1930), a German meteorologist, also
noted his inquiry regarding the three continents, which Ortelius
had noticed 300 years ago. He began to combine some
observations, which centered on the view that the east coast of
South America fits within the contours of the west coast of Africa.
This suggests that these continents may have been part of one huge

landmass. He postulated that these continents had simply drifted
apart over millions of years.
Wegener's theory of continental drift was contained in his
book, The Origin of Continents and Oceans, published in 1915. He
named the. supercontinent, Pangaea, a Greek word meaning "all
land." Pangaea had begun breaking up approximately 200 million
years ago, earlier into a northern portion, which he named
Laurasia, and a southern portion, termed Gondwanaland by the
Austrian geologist Eduard Suess.
Wegener supported his theory with fossil evidence. Plant and
animal fossils from the coastlines of South America and Africa
found to match. Fossils in unlikely climates fu rther defended his
claim, such as the discovery of tropical plant fossils in Antarctica
and of glacial deposits in Africa.
During Wegener's lifetime, his theory did not receive scientific
validation since the technological means to prove it had not yet
been developed. During those days, most people believed that all
earth's formations never moved.
Arthur Holmes (1890-1965), a British geologist advocated
support for Wegener's theory. In 1928, he proposed that the
convection currents within the earth's mantle driven by radioactive
heat might have caused the mechanism for continental drift.
In the 1950s, scientists began oceanographic research, which
revealed the phenomenon known as sea floor spreading. In the
1960s, the theory of plate tectonics was established. The plates of
the earth move. The theory explains th.it the lithosphere (the outer
layer of the earth) moves sideways above a less rigid layer called
the asthenosphere, which is under extreme pressure. Eventually,
the theory of continental drift gained far-reaching acceptance in the
field of science.
The surface of the earth is continually changing because of
forces either from the internal heat of the earth or the energy
produced by the sun. The first one results in the motion of tectonic
plates while the latter, involves the movement of water from the
earth's surface to the atmosphere and then back to earth, which is
also known as hydrologic cycle, which eventually results to the
washing out of soil.

2. Geological Foundation
Prior to the appearance of modern man in the Philippine
archipelago, history has to depend on the works of geologists. The
geologists seek to understand how the earth evolved into what it
is today and forecast possible geologic events. In Arthur Holmes'
book, The Age of the Earth (1913), he developed a geologic time
scale, which he continued to work on until 1959. The dates given
for certain geological formations are informed estimates, in terms
of years before the present (BP).
According to present estimates, the planet earth is between
4.6 and 4.8 billion years BP. The first dinosaurs were believed to
have appeared around 225 million years ago, during the Mesozoic
Era. At about 65 million years ago, the dinosaurs that once
occupied the valleys, plains, and swamps became extinct. It is
believed that these huge creatures perished with a huge meteorite
that hit the earth or with shattering volcanic eruptions.
The Philippine soil is composed of numerous rocks, which
came from regions far from the archipelago's present location. It
was during the Tertiary period(54 million-2 million years BP) of
the Cenozoic era that the land structure of the Philippines was
defined (looking like a nymph lying across the ocean).
In the northern part, the Philippine archipelago was believed
to be adjoined to Formosa (now Taiwan) during the Eocene (53-54
million years BP) and Oligocene epochs (37-38 million years BP).
However, the Formosan connection was severed during the
Miocene epoch (26 million years BP). The combined effects of
volcanism and other tectonic movements of the basement complex
brought about the disjunction.
As connections with other areas changed, the internal
structure of the archipelago also underwent changes with the
flattening of the crustal surface of the existing higher grounds
during the Pliocene epoch (7-13 million years BP). The emergence
of man on earth was estimated at 5 million years BP.
Pleistocene epoch (1.6 million years to 10,000 years BP), the
first division of the Quaternary period, is the epoch prior to the
Holocene epoch (10,000 years BP to the present). During the
Pleistocene epoch, the earth underwent a series of alternating
warm and cold climates. In Europe, scientists agree that there
occurred four cold phases known geologically as Gunz, Mindel,
Riss, and Wurm. In the United States, these cold phases were
known as Jerseyian, Kansan glacial, Ulinoian-Iowan glacial, and
Wisconsin glacial. Between the cold phases are the three
interglacial or warm periods. Each interglacial period lasted for
several thousands of years.

The Pleistocene marked the beginning of evolutionary
processes in both flora and fauna. The freezing of the northern and
southern hemispheres caused an extensive spread of sea ice in the
area and helped provide a suitable climate for ice-age animals like
the mastodon and saber-toothed tiger. In Asia, the Mongolian area
and the Himalayas were also topped with ice sheets. There was a
widespread distribution of glaciers in the higher regions of the
African continent.
In some regions of Africa and Asia, particularly along the
southern coasts, there were no ice sheets. Instead, the climatic
condition was characterized by extensive and continuous rain.
This phenomenon is known as the fluvial condition. Such condition
gave rise to the growth of rainforests and marshes, which favored
the survival of large animals.
Based on recent studies, the earth has undergone 20 cycles of
glaciation over the past two million years. During the Pleistocene,
the glaciers accumulated a big quantity of water in the form of ice,
causing water levels in the world's oceans to drop. The earth's
climate, which began warming some 18,000 years ago, caused the
oceans to regain their present levels. The movements of the water
resulting from vast glaciations and deglaciations in the temperate
region caused convergence, as well as the separation of
landmasses.
Some historians claim that the Philippines is a remnant of a
lost continent in the Pacific called Mu or Lemuria, the other
remnants are Marianas and other mid-Pacific islands, and Borneo,
Java, Sumatra, and the Celebes.
The adherents of the Pacific or Magmatic theory say that the
Philippines came into existence after the eruptions of volcanoes
beneath the Pacific Ocean in remote epochs. When the spewed
magma piled up and cooled down, this resulted to Philippine
island formation. This theory explains that the cores of our
mountain systems are similar to the rocks found beneath the
ocean.
On the other hand, the Asiatic Theory or Land Bridges
Theory states that the Philippines was once part of Continental
Asia. At the end of the last Ice Age, the ice sheets melted, causing
the sea level to rise and submerge the land bridges that had
connected the Philippines to the Asian mainland.
I )uring the glm lal periods, ocean levels were much lower,
thereupon exposing the Sunda Slu-ll and the Sahul Shelf. These
are extensions of continents otherwise known as continental
shelves.
In Asia, the Sunda Shelf, which is an extension of the coastal
shelf of Southeast Asia, included the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra,
Java, and Borneo to Palawan. From Borneo, the Philippines was
linked through a narrow projection of island now occupied by
Balabac, Palawan, and Calamianes. The continental shelf known
as Sahul Shelf is an extension of the coastal shelf of Australia. It
covered the islands of New Guinea and the Aru Islands of
Indonesia.
When the Sunda and Sahul Shelves were exposed, the land
bridges were believed to have connected most of Indonesia, New
Guinea, and Australia. Dark-skinned people, ancestors to the
Australoids, traveled across the bridges to New Guinea and other
islands of Melanesia. The Mongoloid people then populated New
Guinea and gradually journeyed to the southeast by sailing
canoes.
The Pleistocene lasted for a long period of time. At the height
of the interglacial period, a great river system flowed from the
interior of Asia mainland and Australia, pouring into the outlying
areas. The riverine connections brought about the drifting of
species of fish. This explains the striking similarities of fish fauna
in Eastern Sumatra with those in Western Borneo and species
found in the Philippines. Similarly, there is a close faunal and
floral relationship between Eastern Mindanao and North Borneo.
The existence of the shallow China Sea between the Asian
mainland and the Philippines, as well as the presence of a
foredeep at the eastern margin of the country, indicates that the
archipelago was once the edge of the Asian continental platform.
These reasons further support the Asiatic Theory or the Land
Bridges Theory that most scientists accept.

3. The Archipelago's Name
During the pre-Spanish era, early Chinese traders and
geographers already knew the Philippines. Sung Dynasty sources
in 982 A.D. referred the islands as Ma-yi. Chau Ju-kua, a Chinese
trade official, gave a detailed account of his travel to various parts
of the islands in 1225, which he called Ma-i.
In 1521, Ferdinand Magellan named the islands, Islas de San
Lazaro (Archipelago of St. Lazarus) when he first set foot on our
native soil. Many other names have been given to the archipelago.

The name Philippines came from the word Filipinos given by
the Spanish navigator Ruy Lopez de Villalobos in 1543 in honor of
Prince Philip of Asturias, who became King Philip II of Spain,
successor to King Charles I. The word Felipina was at first given by
Villalobos's men to refer to Leyte and Samar. Later, it was given to
the whole archipelago.
In 1751, Fr. Juan J. Delgado, a Jesuit historian called Manila,
Pearl of the Orient since it became a rich outlet of Asian trade even
prior to the coming of the Spaniards in the archipelago. Dr. Jose
Rizal, the country's foremost hero, gave the name Pearl of the Orient
Seas to his native land on the eve of his execution in 1896.
The name Filipinas first appeared in a rare map published in
Venice in 1554 by Giovanni Battista Ramusio, an Italian
geographer. The Spanish Filipinas or Felipinas was later changed to
Philippine Islands (P.I.) during the American colonial era. It was
renamed Republic of the Philippines (R.P.) after the recognition of
its independence in 1946.
There were some Filipinos who proposed new names for the
Philippines since the name of our country was given by the
colonizers. Artemio Ricarte, a Katipunan general, wanted it to be
called the Rizaline Republic, after Jose Rizal. Former President
Ferdinand Marcos proposed the name Maharlika (also the name of
his guerrilla group in World War II), after his dream of making
this nation great again.

4. Geography and Resources

The Philippines, found in the Western Pacific Ocean, has an
astronomical location of 4
0
23'-2125' N. Latitude and 116-127E.
Longitude. It is situated in the southeastern portion of Asia.
Taiwan bounds the country on the north, on the west by South
China Sea and Vietnam, on the east by the Pacific Ocean, on the
south by the Celebes Sea and Indonesia and, on the southwest by
Malaysia and Singapore. Because of its central location in the Far
East, the Philippines has been dubbed as the "Crossroads of the
Pacific."
The country is an archipelago of 7,107 islands and islets. It has
a total land area of 300,000 square kilometers. Manila is the capital
and largest city of the country. It is also the chief port and main
commercial center of the islands.
In 1948, Quezon City was declared as the capital of the
Philippines but on May 29,1976, President Ferdinand Marcos'
Decree No. 940 returned the national capital to Manila (a national
capital since 1595).
Luzon, the biggest of the three major geographical groups,
has an area of 141,395 square kilometers. Visayas has an area of
56,606 square kilometers; and Mindanao, with an area of 101,999
square kilometers. The northernmost point of the country is Y'Ami
Isle, which is 78 miles from Taiwan. The southernmost point is
Saluag Isle, only 34 miles east of Borneo.
The Philippines is in the middle of two opposing tectonic
plates, making it prone to seismic activity. Between tectonic plates
is a zone known as fault. The Philippine Fault stretches from
Luzon to the tip of Mindanao. The Marikina Valley Fault System,
which is located five kilometers east of Metro Manila branched
from the Philippine Fault.
I'he Philippines h.is the longest irregular coastline in the
world, 36,290 kilometers in length. This is longer than the coastline
of Great Britain and twice the coastline of the United States. The
country has 61 natural harbors (with 20 landlocked straits). Manila
Bay, the finest natural harbor in the Far East, has an area of 1,970
square kilometers.
Palawan, which forms the country's western boundary, has a
total of 1,768 islands and islets. It has marvelous subterranean
caves, unexplored dive sites, unpolluted beaches, and dense
tropical jungles. It is also a sanctuary to a variety of fauna and
flora.
The country has 16 regions, which include the IIocos Region,
Cagayan Region, Central Luzon, Southern Tagalog
(CALABARZON and MIMAROPA), Bicol Region, Western
Visayas, Central Visayas, Eastern Visayas, Western Mindanao (or
Zamboanga Peninsula), Northern Mindanao, Southern Mindanao
(or Davao Region), Central Mindanao (or SOCCSKSARGEN),
Caraga Administrative Region, Autonomous Region of Muslim
Mindanao (ARMM), Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), and
Metropolitan Manila. These regions are comprised of provinces,
which are subdivided into districts. The districts consist of
municipalities with a number of barangays. As of 2002, the
number of provinces has increased to 79, with the creation of
Compostela Valley in 2000 and Zamboanga Sibuguey in 2001.

The ARMM was created by Republic Act No. 6734 in 1989.
The region has jurisdiction over administrative organizations,
family relations, natural resources, economic, social and tourism
development. It does not have powers over certain matters,
including national defense and security, monetary and fiscal
policies, citizenship, international relations and foreign trade. The
ARMM is composed of the provinces of Maguindanao, Lanao del
Sur, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, and Basilan.
The Philippines is represented by a variety of ecosystems:
forests, ponds, grasslands, valleys, plains, rivers, and seas.
The La Mesa Nature Reserve Eco Trail, officially launched on
June 2, 2005 by the ABS-CBN Bantay Kalikasan Foundation, the
MWSS (owner of the forest reserve), and the Quezon City
government, is an eco tourism spot. The 2,700-hectare La Mesa
Watershed is now being run by the Maynilad Water Co. of the
Lopez group as part of its concession agreement with the
government. The ABS-CBN Foundation obtained a 15-year
management contract for the forest reserve five years ago to
shoulder the cost of further reforestation efforts and maintaining it
properly, along with the numerous partners, donors, and
volunteers. The La Mesa Watershed is the only forest reserve in
Metro Manila.
Forests on mountain slopes, characterized by a diversity of
natural vegetation, provide materials for food, medicine, and
building shelter and natural habitats tor wildlife. Some mountains
have been regarded as sites for spiritual regeneration. In the
Tagalog region, some people find Mounts Makiling and Banahaw
as mystic mountains for reflection and recreation. According to
legend, Mount Makiling in Laguna is the abode of a goddess
named Mariang Makiling who protects the forest that covers the
mountain. Mount Banahaw along the Quezon border is also
considered a powerful energy source for pilgrims, spiritualists,
and cults having a blend of both indigenous and Catholic beliefs
and rituals.
Three major mountain ranges are situated in Northern Luzon:
the Sierra Madre Range, the Cordillera Range, and the Caraballo
Range. The Sierra Madre, which is the largest and longest range in
the country, faces the Pacific Ocean on the eastern coast of Luzon.
It begins near Aparri and proceeds further through Isabela,
Cagayan, and Aurora provinces. The southern part of Sierra
Madre includes Aurora, Quezon, Bulacan, Rizal, and Laguna
provinces.
The Cordillera Mountains in the western part of Northern
Luzon are parallel to the Sierra Madre Range. The Cagayan Valley
occupies the region between these two mountain ranges. The
Cordillera extends from Ilocos Norte down to the Benguet and La
Union area. In the Cordillera Range, Mount Pulag, is the second
highest peak in the country.
The most productive gold and copper mines in the country
are located within the Cordillera region. Roads along the mountain
range are known for their zigzag curves. The famous Banaue Rice
Terraces, looking like stairways to heaven, is in the Cordilleras.
There are places where the rice fields reach from an altitude of
1,500 feet to 4,500 feet. The Ifugaos have built these terraces out of
the mountain slopes using the barest of tools over hundreds of
years. Their devotion for rice has compelled them to carve these
majestic terraces on which to plant. In regions inhabited by a pure
Ifugao population, the walls of the terraces are of round hard river
stones. One of the major appeals of the terraces to local and foreign
tourists is the hiking trail in the area.
The city of Baguio amidst the mountainous region of
Cordillera is one of the most popular vacation destinations in the
country. Owing to the scenic attractions as well as cool
temperature of the place, Baguio has become the "summer capital"
of the country.
The Caraballo Range, near Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya,
crosscuts the Sierra Madre at its middle section and the southern
end of the Cordilleras. To the south of Caraballo is the Central
Plain in Luzon.
On the southwestern coast of Luzon is the Zambales
Mountain Range. It extends from the shores of Western
Pangasinan to parts of Bulacan and Bataan. Luzon has a
mountainous extension to the southeast called Bicol Peninsula.
In the Visayas, tin- most prominent mountain ranges are
found across major islands The islands in the Visayas have
mountainous terrains except Samar and Bohol.
In Mindanao, there are four major mountain ranges: the
Diwata Range, the Tago-Apo Range, the Kalatungan-Kitanglad
Range, and the Daguma Range. The Diwata Range borders the
Pacific coast and west of it lies the valley of Agusan. Tago-Apo
Range forms a parallel ridge to Diwata Range. Located in the area

are the Balatukan Mountains, the volcanic peaks of Camiguin,
Kinabalin, Kumakata, and the Mount Apo in Davao del Sur,
which is also the highest mountain in the country (2,954 meters
high).
The Kalatungan-Kitanglad Mountain Range, which includes
Mounts Butig, Kidongin, and Ragang, is situated in the Lanao
provinces. The Daguma Range extends near Sarangani Bay in the
south. Volcanoes at the boundaries of Daguma Range are Mount
Blik, south of Cotabato City, and Mount Parker, west of General
Santos City.
The country has over 50 volcanoes wherein 22 are active. The
most active among them are Iraya in Batanes, Pinatubo in
Zambales, Taal in Batangas, Banahaw in Quezon, Mayon in Albay,
Bulusan in Sorsogon, Kanlaon in Negros, Hibok-Hibok in
Camiguin, Makaturing in Lanao, and Apo in Davao del Sur.
Mt. Pinatubo, which has been dormant for 611 years started
to emit fumes on April 2,1991 after a hydrothermal explosion at
the volcano's crater took place. The most destructive series of
eruptions were on June 12-15, 1991. Its ashfalls reached as far as
Metro Manila, Mindoro, Palawan, and Cambodia to the east,
worsening damage to the ozone layer.
Several places in the provinces of Zambales, Tarlac, and
Pampanga, including Clark Air Base in Angeles City were filled
with pyroclastic flows and lahar (an Indonesian term for volcanic
mud flow). Devastation to public and private properties was
greatly unfavorable, placing these areas under a state of calamity.
The lahar deposits along Mt. Pinatubo still cascades down the
lowlands after heavy rains. These volcanic mudflows are expected
to last for years. They continue to defy the billion-peso dike built
to contain lahar flows.
Taal Volcano, a regular tourist drawer, is a volcano within a
volcano. It is rising from a lake, which is the crater of a larger
volcano, now extinct. It is a part of a chain of volcanoes along the
western side of Luzon. Subsequent eruptions between 500,000 and
100,000 years have built up the current Mount Taal, on an island
known as Volcano island in the lake. Since 1572, Mt. Taal had 33
recorded eruptions with violent ones that occurred in 1749,
1754,1911, and 1965.
Mount Mayon, world famous for its near-perfect conical
shape, had its
first recorded eruption in 1616. The name was derived from the
Bicol word magayon (meaning beautiful). It continually emits a
plume of smoke even when it is not erupting. Mt. Mayon had a
history of at least 47 eruptions. In 1814, it erupted disastrously,
destroying five towns surrounding its base. During the height of
the volcano's fury, 1,200 people who took refuge inside the church
of the town of Cagsawa (now Daraga) were killed. The ruins of the
church tower solely remain above ground after the tragedy.
Kanlaon Volcano had erupted six times in 1985 and thrice in
1986. In 1989, it had a minor eruption. Fortunately, this did not
cause any destruction.
There are some volcanoes whose hot rocks beneath are being
penetrated by groundwater. When the heated underground water
reaches the surface, hot springs are formed. These hot springs are
used as baths in the houses and resorts around Mt. Makiling and
Mt. Bulusan.
Topographic elevations less than 600 meters in altitude are
considered hills. The most popular of these in the country are the
Chocolate Hills, with more than 1,000 of them in Bohol. During the
dry months of February until May, these dome-shaped limestone
hills turn chocolate-brown as the grasses wither. Thus, the name
was given to it.
Chocolate Hills is one of the geological monuments of the
country. The other four national geological monuments are Taal
Volcano in Batangas, Montalban Caves in Rizal Province, Sand
Dunes in llocos Norte, and Hundred Islands in Pangasinan.
The Department of Environment and Natural Resources
(DENR), Philippine Tourism Authority (PTA), and the National
Committee on Geological Sciences (NCGS) issued the declaration
of national geological monuments to highlight the protection of
geological structures and features with high scientific or
aesthetic/environmental value. These geological monuments
would serve not only as travel destinations in the country but also
as laboratories for geological research.
Large rivers traverse the principal islands of the country. The
Cagayan River, with a length of 513 kilometers, is the longest river
in the country. It flows from the Caraballo Mountains near the
Nueva Vizcaya-Nueva Ecija provincial boundary and proceeds
down into the Babuyan Channel in Northern Luzon. Other
important rivers in the country include Chico, Abra, Pampanga,
Bicol, Pulangi, and Agusan.

Between Samar and Leyte is the San Juanico Strait, the
narrowest strait in the world. Lagima de Bay is the largest
freshwater lake in Southeast Asia. The deepest among the lakes of
Laguna is Lake Calibato, which is 176 meters deep. This is brought
about by low silt inflow from its small watershed area. The
downstream flow of Lake Lanao propelling hydroelectric plants
supply around three-fourths of Mindanao's power requirements.
In the middle of the tropical blue and emerald green waters
of the Sulu Sea and Palawan lies the Tubbataha Reef, just one of
the sandbars and reefs known for its rich beautiful dive sites and
marine resources. Seabirds, turtles, giant clams, and other marine
animals have been settling in the area. The reef covers an area of
12 miles within the island municipality of Cagayancillo in
Palawan. In August, 1987, the reef was declared a national marine
park. It gained greater distinction and international recognition
when the UNESCO named Tubbataha a World Heritage Site.
Boracay is the perfect island getaway. It is known for its
warm blue waters, powder-fine white sand, and a palm fringed
four-kilometer beach. Located in Aklan province, Boracay is
accessible by air from Manila or Cebu.
The largest plain in the archipelago is the Central Plain in
Luzon, known as the "Rice Granary of the Philippines." The
surrounding greenery yields vegetables, tendrils, sprouts, flowers,
and fruits. Among the famous Philippine fruits are lanzones,
sweet mango, and the durian.
There are about 10,000 species of flowering plants and ferns
in the country. Among the flowers in the islands are the
sampaguita, gardenia, dama de noche, water lilies, orchids, and a
lot more. Of the 1,000 varieties of orchids that bloom in the
country, the ivaling-waling (Vandasanderiana) is regarded as the
"Queen of Philippine Orchids."
Famous of the Philippine woods is narra, proclaimed as the
country's national tree in accordance with an executive
proclamation of Governor General Frank Murphy dated February
1,1934.
Referred to as the forests of the sea, mangrove swamp forests
grow in saltwater or brackish water. The mangroves are among
the significant ecosystems that characterize the coastal areas of the
archipelago. They are considered minor forest type, compared to
mixed lowland tropical rainforest ecosystem.
Economically, the mangroves are beneficial, especially to the
coastal dwellers. They provide poles for shelter, wood for cooking,
charcoal as domestic energy source and as a source of income,
nipa sap for tuba and vinegar, nipa shingles for roofing, and
ground for aquaculture. Mangrove- dependent fishery products
include shellfish, shrimps, and mangrove crabs. These mangroves
likewise help prevent erosion of riverbanks.
Sea grass communities are dynamic ecosystems where
rhizomes and roots of sea grass stabilize the near-shore bottom.
Sea grass beds filter suspended sediments from the water. The
Philippines has 16 reported species of sea grass out of 58 known
worldwide. Sea grass is the only food of the dugong or sea cow.
The country abounds in animal life. Of the 201 species of
mammals in the country, 179 are terrestrial and 22 are marine. The
Philippine carabao, a swamp type of domesticated water buffalo
has long been an important work animal. Other animals include
several species of deer, wild and domesticated pigs, cattle,
rodents, reptiles, birds, and mollusks.
Some unique animals in the world are also found in the
Philippines: the tamaraw or Bubalus mindoretisis of Mindoro,
which looks like a dwarf carabao; the tarsier of Bohol, the smallest
monkey in the world; and the Calamian deer or Cervus
calamianensis (pilandok) of Palawan, the world's smallest deer.
Unfortunately, some animals are near extinction (called
endangered species), which include the Philippine eagle, the
tamaraw, and the tarsier. Ln 2004, the Convention of International
Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Appendix I released by the
Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau (PAWB) listed 27 species of
flora and fauna in the country.
There are about 25,000 species of insects in the islands. The
largest insect in the country is the giant moth (Attacus atlas), with a
wingspan of one foot. The largest and smallest bats in the world
are found in the country. The lesser flat headed bats or the lesser
bamboo bats weigh around 2 grams. The golden-crowned flying
fox weighs about 1.5 kilograms. It has a wingspan of 1.7 meters.
These two species of bats are found in Olongapo City, Zambales at
the Subic Bay Forest Reserve (SBFR).
The world's second largest after the Harpy eagle found in the
Amazon forests is the Philippine eagle (Pithecopaga jefferyi), found
in the jungles of Luzon and Mindanao. It has earned the title of
"King of Philippine Birds." It measures five and a half feet in

height and a wingspan of seven feet. It was previously called the
monkey-eating eagle. In the 1970s, its name was changed since it
was found out that it only ate monkeys occasionally. Its main food
consists of flying lemurs, lizards, and snakes. In 1996, the
Philippine eagle was officially named the national bird of the
country by virtue of a presidential proclamation.
Other interesting birds in the country are the kalaw, which the
Spanish colonizers dubbed as "clock of the mountains," the katala
(Philippine Cockatoo), which mumbles and croons like a man, and
the tiny Philippine falconet, only six and a half centimeters long.
Also found in the Philippines is the world's rarest shell,
called Glory of the Sea (Connus gloriamaris) and the Tridacna gigas,
which is the world's largest shell and has a length of one meter
and weighs 600 pounds. The smallest shell in the world, the
Pisidum, is also found in our country. It is less than one millimeter
in length.
In 1995, R. M. de la Paz and E. D. Gomez recorded a total of
2,140 species of Philippine fishes. Among the commercially known
fish found in numerous fishing grounds are the bangus (milkfish),
dalag (mudfish), dilis (anchovy), lapulapu (seabass), galunggong
(round scad), tanguingi (mackerel), tamban (Indian sardines), and
bariles (tuna).
Some of the endemic freshwater species are considered
endangered.
rhese include the Harengula tawilis, locally known as taivilis;
Mestichthys luzonensis, or simrapan; and pandaka pygmaea, the
pygmy goby.
Tawilis, a freshwater species of sardines, are found in Lake
Taal, Batangas. Sinarapan, the smallest commercial fish, can only
be found in Lake Buhi and Lake Bato, Camarines Sur. It measures
between 1 and 1.4 centimeters. The dwarf-pygmy goby or locally
known as tabios, the world's smallest vertebrate, which ranges
from 7.5 to 11 millimeters, is said to be dwelling in the Navotas
and Malabon Rivers. It is strongly believed that the tabios is
already extinct due to water pollution.
The world's largest fish is also found in the country. This is
the whale shark, which is 50 feet or more in length. It was first
sighted off the coast of Mariveles, Manila Bay, in 1816 by Filipino
fishermen, who called it pating bulik (striped shark).
The Philippine archipelago has rich deposits of gold, copper,
iron, lead, manganese, nickel, chromite, silver and other metals.
Non-metallic minerals include coal, salt, asphalt, asbestos, clay,
marble, and limestone.
Gold mining is an ancient industry in the country. Before the
coming of the Spanish conquerors, the Filipinos were already
mining gold in Paracale, Camarines Norte, in the mountains of
Northern Luzon and the islands of Masbate and Mindanao.
Mount Diwalwal located at Compostela Valley province has
been the site of gold rush since 1983. The Bureau of Mines
officially attributes the discovery of gold in the vicinity to the
members of the Mandaya tribe. Gold nuggets were found, and
those who have entered and engaged in small-scale mining were
able to gain a lot from this business venture.
Since pre-colonial times, the Igorots have been mining copper
in the mountains of Northern Luzon. Mankayan, the oldest and
largest copper mine in the country still exists. Other copper
deposits are found in the islands of Negros and Rapu-Rapu (part
of Albay) and the province of Zambales. Iron deposits are found in
Larap, Camarines Norte; San Miguel, Bulacan; Marinduque; and
Samar. The greatest iron-bearing area in the country is Surigao.
The world's largest deposit of nickel has been discovered in Nonoc
Isle, off the coast of Northern Mindanao. Vast marble deposits are
found in Mindoro, Romblon, Palawan, Cebu, and Bicol while
deposits of coal are in Cebu, Sorsogon, Masbate, and Sibuguey
Peninsula.
Potential oil and natural gas reserves are to be tapped in the
disputed Spratly Islands located in the South China Sea. It is an
archipelago of more than 100 islets, reefs and atolls, with a total
landmass of less than 5 sq km. The Philippines is one of the
claimants of these islands, along with China, Taiwan, Vietnam,
Brunei, and Malaysia. The dramatic increase of Philippine crude
oil production was primarily due to the development of deep-sea
oil deposits beneath the natural gas-bearing structures in the
Malampaya field.

5. Country's Climate
The Philippines, situated at the Torrid Zone, has a tropical
climate with a mean annual temperature of about 27'C (about
80F). Mountain slopes and peaks found in the archipelago are
cooler. The country has two seasons, dry and wet. In most of the
islands, rainy season occurs from May to November. During this
period, the wind blows from the southwest. Often, the country

experiences typhoons from the months of June to October. The dry
season occurs from December to April, when the wind blows from
the northeast.
When typhoon signal no. 2 is hoisted, classes at the pre-
school, elementary, and secondary levels in all public and private
schools are automatically suspended. In 2007, the National
Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) issued a memorandum
stating that information from the Philippine Atmospheric
Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration
(PAGASA) could be used as basis to recommend decisions to the
Department of Education (DepEd) and Commission on Higher
Education (CHED) concerning suspension of classes.

6. The Filipino People

In 2002, Philippine population is estimated at 78 million. The
country is inhabited by different ethnic groups. The Filipino
people is a harmonious mixture of diversity and homogeneity.
Despite of diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds, forces of
assimilation have constantly worked to overcome the differences.
Within the blood veins of the Filipinos are the blends of their
forefathers from Malay, Chinese, Negrito, Indian, European, and
American lineage. The intermarriage of a Filipino and a foreigner
did happen, owing to the strategic location of the country to
Southeast Asian neighbors and the colonial rule of Spain and
America. The intermingling of people resulting to adaptation of
different cultures made the country a melting pot of people and
culture.
Since the 19
,h
century, Filipinos have been referred to as the
Christianized Malays who constitute the bulk of the population.
They are the descendants of those who were colonized by Western
settlers. Numerically greater in number are the Visayans
(primarily in the central portion of the archipelago) and the
Tagalogs.
The Cebuanos, Ilonggos, and Waray-Waray comprise a big
number among the Visayans. In the Visayas, the Ilonggos live in
Western Negros, in Southern Mindoro, and in Panay Island while
the Cebuanos predominate in Cebu, Western Leyte, Bohol, Eastern
Negros, and in some coastal areas of Mindanao. The Waray-
Warays are in the provinces of Samar and Eastern Leyte.
Most of the Tagalogs live in Manila, in Central Luzon, and
Southern Luzon. People coming from certain provinces in the
Tagalog region like Batangas, Bulacan, and Quezon have
intonations of their own.
Phe Ilocanos are considered the third biggest group. They
live particularly in llocos Norte, llocos Sur, and La Union but
many have migrated locally and abroad.
Other members of the populace include the Pangasinenses,
Pampanguenos, Zambals, Ibanags (Cagayanos), and Bicolanos.
The Pangasinenses live in the Lingayen Gulf region of Pangasinan,
including the province of Pangasinan. Many of them have already
migrated in other provinces of Central Luzon. The Pampanguenos
or Kapampangans live in Central Luzon, particularly in the
province of Pampanga.
The non-Malay groups include people of Spanish and
Chinese descent. Today, the country has a growing number of
Filipino-Chinese who are engaged in various commercial
activities. They are part of the economically and politically
important minority.
Nature and ancestral beliefs have helped shape the lifestyle of
the tribal communities. The indigenous groups in various parts of
the archipelago have kept their own cultural tradition distinct
through the generations. Most of them maintain indigenous belief
system based on animism (worship of nature deities and spirits).
Included here are the various mountain people of Cordillera,
which consist of the Isnegs of Apayao; Kalingas of Kalinga;
Ifugaos, Igorots, Ibalois, Kankanays, and Bontoks of Benguet and
Mountain Province. The culture of the people in this region is
quite different from that of the lowland communities. Although a
number of the populace are Christians, still many of them are
pagans.
The Kalingas tattoo their bodies as a sign of bravery. For
them, prestige can be achieved through oratorical ability. The
Isnegs, like the Kalingas, tattoo their bodies as a status symbol.
The Ifugaos have a high regard for the family's honor and
dignity. They are forbidden to induce hostility, cause bloodshed or
practice adultery. Hagabi, a chair sculpted from a large mass of
wood, plays an important part in the lives of the Ifugaos. This
indicates the high position of the owner in the community.
The principal agricultural work of the Ifugaos is rice culture.
They also grow camote on hillsides where the soil need not be

fertile. Rice, on the other hand, requires irrigation and constant
care.
The Igorots live on rootcrops grown in their yard and on wild
pigs, deer, and fowl in the forest. The Igorots of the past engage in
headhunting to avenge the death of a kin or tribesman. This
custom is least practiced nowadays.
The Bontoks basically do hunting and agriculture for a living.
They perform rituals like bagbato to ensure a bountiful harvest and
the ulog, where the unmarried woman stays in a place called ulog
to receive male visitors and suitors.
The Ibalois and the Kank.mays of benguet and Southern
Mountain Province are considered the most sophisticated
mountain region people because they are the most exposed to
lowland life.
Although the people of Cordillera dwell in the highlands,
they no longer live in isolation. The influences of modern
civilization have ushered in new changes in their communities
through the years. Modern types of buildings are also found
elsewhere in the region. The young generations that have gone to
schools in the Christian lowlands have almost adopted the way of
life of the lowland communities.
Other indigenous groups are the Gaddangs of Isabela, the
Negritos or Aetas of Zambales and the hinterlands; the Mangyans
of Mindoro; the Tagbanuas, Batak, Tao't Bato, Molbogs and Jama
Mapuns of Palawan; Mamanwa (a Negrito group) of Surigao del
Norte; the Kalibugans, Subanuns, and Samals of Zamboanga del
Sur; the Manobos, Tirurays, Iranuns, and T'bolis of Maguindanao,
Cotabato, and Sultan Kudarat; Mandayas of Davao Oriental;
Bagobos and BTaans of Davao del Sur; Yakans of Basilan; the
Tausugs of the Sulu Archipelago; the Badjaos of the Sulu Sea; and
the Muslim groups of Mindanao.
The Mangyans belong to such tribes like the Alangan, Bangon,
Tau- Buid, Hanunuo, Tadyawan, Iraya, and Ratagnon. Each of these
tribes has its own language and customs. The Hanunuo (real
Mangyan) are found within the municipalities of Mansalay,
Bulalacao and some parts of Bongabong in Oriental Mindoro.
Christian lowlanders surround them on the east.
Various Mangyan groups have always been threatened by
inclement weather, limited food supplies and difficulties in
farming the rugged land. The economic activities of the Mangyan
centered on swidden farming however they also engage in
hunting and fishing. They believe in spiritual beings that can
influence their harvest. The Hanunuo Mangyans believe in a
Supreme Being Mahal na Makaako, the giver of life.
Peace and order in the Mangyan tribes are attributed mainly
to the people's being good-natured. When conflicts happen, this is
settled among the members of the community by the elder.
Offering a good meal may be enough to resolve minor disputes. In
cases of theft and adultery, the possible offenders may be
subjected to trial by ordeal.
The Yakans in Basilan traditionally wear colorful hand woven
clothes. Men and women wear narrow cut pants. The women wear
tight fitting short blouses partly covered with a wrap-around
material while the man wraps a sash-like cloth around the waist.
Nowadays, most Yakans wear western clothes and use their
traditional clothes for festivals.
The Maguindanaos constitute the largest Muslim group in the
country. The Maranaos meaning "people of the lake," live
principally near Lake Lanao. The Samals are in the Sulu
Archipelago. Traditionally, the Muslims built houses raised high
on poles above water. I hey used sailboats called vintaa, Though
majority of Muslim Filipinos live in Southern Philippines, there are
a number of Muslim communities in other areas of the country.
Leaders of tribal communities are chosen for their skills and
their ability to evoke support from the communal group.
Remnants of animism linger among some ethnic minorities in the
north and south. They believe in the existence of several unseen
beings bestowing blessings when honored and inflicting pain
when displeased.
The indigenous people have adapted to various ecological
zones ranging from coastal to rugged mountain highlands. They
prefer permanent settlements, except for Aetas who are highly
nomadic. Badjaos live in houseboats, while others live in pile
dwellings.
The Aetas have already established their intimate
relationship with the woodlands as forest foragers and hunters.
The Pinatubo Aetas continuously resist acculturation process.
They assimilate only the cultural elements compatible with their
needs like some techniques and rituals in agriculture, concepts of
spirits, curing, and burial rituals.
On the other hand, migration by Visayan settlers in
Mindanao during the American period eventually altered the

population profile in the region. Increased immigration from the
north drove more cultural communities in the hinterlands.
Ilocanos, Tagalogs, and Visayans settled in some provinces of
Mindanao like Davao Oriental and Davao del Sur.
In response to the call of preserving indigenous culture in the
country, some ethnic tribes specifically the Ifugaos initiated moves
adapting ancient practices with Christian religion, which scholars
refer to as inculturation.
High literacy in the country may be attributed to Filipinos'
love for education. Viewed as a key to progress, education is
believed to improve one's means of livelihood and status.
Elementary education in the Philippines is free and compulsory
for children ages 6 to 12. Filipino and English are the primary
languages of instruction.
Most Filipinos love the theater and the arts. Cultural activities
include dramatic presentations and readings, concerts, dancing,
art exhibits, and contests. Most of these are presented in school
and community theater stages and auditoriums like the Cultural
Center of the Philippines. There are some local playhouses like the
open-air theater at Fort Santiago. There are a number of art
galleries in Ermita and in Malate.
Filipino (formerly spelled Pilipino) is the national language of
the people although a good number of them are conversant in
English. The English language is commonly used for
governmental, commercial, and instructional purposes.
Some Filipinos are trilingual, speaking in Filipino, English,
and an indigenous language. Filipinos speak different regional
languages and dialects since the country has over HO local
dialects, Fhe widely spoken dialects are Tagalog, Cebuano,
llocano, Hlligaynon (also known as llonggo), Bicol, Waray,
Pampango, Pangasinense, and Maranao. Intermarriages, internal
migration, and language education have helped to reduce
language barriers.
In everyday communication, the Filipinos combine English
and I ilipino resulting to a lingo called Taglish (from Tagalog and
English). For instance, one could hear one say, "Happy ako for you.
Sana you won't forget us," (I'm happy for you. Hope you won't
forget us) or "Okey tia ang lahat, thank you sa iyo!" (Everything's
okay, thanks to you!).
Age is highly valued in Philippine culture. The word po, or its
variation ho is employed in conversation to show respect. The
close approximation of its English translation is Sir or Madam.
Adult male and female who are unfamiliar to the speaker are
greeted as mama and ale.
Siblings in the family are addressed according to their
position within the family hierarchy like kuya or manong for the
oldest brother and ate or manang for the oldest sister; diko and ditse
for the second brother and sister; and sangko and sanse, for the
third oldest brother and sister.
Traditionally, Filipinos have close family ties. Apart from
their blood relatives, Christian Filipinos adopt new kins (kumpadre
and kumare) through having sponsors (ninong and ninang) during
baptisms and weddings. They also extend help in the spirit of
bayanihan (cooperation). Family relationships usually extend to
third cousins. The social support provided by these kinship circles
is reflected in the absence of regular retirement homes.
-Filipinos are known for their hospitality. They receive their
visitors with warmth and friendship. They are also thankful to
those who have been good to them, manifesting the Filipino value
of utang na loob or one's debt of gratitude to those who have
contributed to their success. This often creates a long-term
relationship of giving and receiving between individuals or
families. The social values of loyalty, support, and trust are deeply
embedded among Filipino communities.
On some formal gatherings, Filipino men wear the barong
tagalog, which is an embroidered shirt made of either pineapple
fiber, cotton, or raw silk while women wear Filipiniana dress,
usually with long puff-sleeves. Filipinos wear Western clothing on
casual and semi-formal occasions.
The Filipina women have more rights being exercised in her
country than most of her counterparts in Asia. Because a woman's
lineage is equally valued, her rights to property and inheritance
are recognized. Filipina women are strongly represented in
politics, business, and in various fields. At home, the mothers
usually manage the family household and are the primary
caretakers of the children.

For centuries, the Filipinos kept faith in tin-
Almighty God. Throughout the good and bad times, they
can easily assimilate, bend but never break like the
strength of the narra and the resilience of the bamboo.

7. Theories on the Origin of Filipinos
Long before the Spanish colonizers came into the
Philippines, people with distinct cultures had already
inhabited the islands. The Migration Theory of H. Otley
Beyer, regarding the peopling of the archipelago became
the most widely known version in Philippine prehistory.
According to Dr. Beyer, the ancestors of the Filipinos
came in waves of migration.
First to reach the archipelago was the caveman
"Dawn Man" type, who was similar to the Java Man and
other Asian Homo sapiens of 250,000 years ago. Dr. Beyer
called the first Filipino the "Dawn Man," for he emerged
on the islands at the dawn of time.
Next to settle in the islands were the aboriginal
pygmy group or the Negritos. They were said to have
reached the islands before the land bridges from Malay
Peninsula, Borneo, and Australia disappeared. They
came between 25,000 and 30,000 years ago. They were
described to have black skin, darky kinky hair, round
black eyes, flat noses, and with a usual height of 5 feet.
Third to arrive were the seafaring and tool-using
Indonesian group who came about 5,000 to 6,000'years
ago. They came in two waves of migration, with type A,
arriving about 3,000 to 4,000 B.C. and type B, about 1,500
to 500 B.C. Indonesian A was tall, slender with light
complexion, and thin lips. Indonesian B was shorter, with
bulky body, dark complexion, and thick lips. They were
able to displace the Negritos to the mountains with their
more advanced culture.
The last to reach the archipelago were the seafaring
Malays who introduced the Iron Age culture. They
moved into the islands from 300 B.C. to the 14
th
and 15
th

centuries A.D.
Beyer's migration theory became popular and
unquestioned for quite a number of years. Presently, the
so-called waves of migration is now being dismissed
because there is no definite evidence, whether
archaeological or historical, to support it. No evidence of
any "Dawn Man" type (250,000 years ago) or hominid
species have been found in the country. So far, the oldest
human relic discovered is only about 22,000 BP.
In reality, Southeast Asian people shared many
customs and traditions without any ethnic group racially
or culturally dominant. It was the Western colonizers
who divided the Asian inhabitants into ethnic groups.

***
In place of the waves of migration theory, modern
scholars suggest the so-called core population theory.
According to this theory, the inhabitants of the
Philippines consist of a core population to which came
accretions of people who moved in from the region. The
movements of people were erratic rather than in
sequential waves.

The Southeast Asian people who reached the
Philippines during prehistoric times became the core
population. Each group, the Indonesians, Malays, and
others, stood as equal, without any of them racially or
culturally dominant.

***
Study Guides

Terms/Concepts to Understand Uniformitarian theory of geology
Magmatic theory World heritage site Continental drift theory Asiatic
theory Torrid Zone



This core population shared common cultural traits or base culture.
1'hey used similarly fashioned tools, pottery, and ornaments; and
upheld common beliefs and rituals. If there were some differences,
these may be due to some factors like adaptation to the environment.

Furthermore, the immigrants did not come into the archipelago in a
fixed period of time nor with a definite destination.

Inculturation
Questions to Answer
1. What do creation stories tell about the early Filipinos?
2. How does the country's geography affect the Filipino people?
3. Identify and describe the culture of the indigenous people of
the Philippines.
4. Why do modem day scholars oppose Beyer's waves of
migration
theory?



Chapter III

1. Cultural Evolution of the Early Filipinos
Through archaeological records and extensive researches, the
peopling of the Philippine archipelago could somehow be theorized.
Historians believed that during the Pleistocene epoch, the first
settlers of the Philippines came from the present-day islands of the
Malay Archipelago when sea levels were lower, creating land
bridges connecting to the Southeast Asian mainland. These
Paleolithic hunters may have followed herds of wild animals across
these land bridges to the Philippine Islands. Some of these early
migrations were made by the ancestors of the present-day people of
the Aeta and Agta tribes. These people continue to be primarily
hunters and food gatherers. Eventually they explored the new land
even more and sojourned in the islands after the land bridges had
disappeared with the rise of sea level brought by deglaciation
period. The Spanish colonizers of the 16
th
century called them
Negritos.
Some western historians assume that the aborigines of the
Philippines were the Australo-Melanesian people who are
distinctively small with dark skin and curly brown hair. They were
the ancestors of the people known today as Negritos or Aetas.
- The Mainland Origin Hypothesis by Peter Bellwood of the
Australian National University and K.C. Chang of Harvard
University maintains that the early inhabitants originated from
South China and Taiwan. From there they spread southward and
westward reaching Northern Philippines by about 5,000 B.C. to 4,000
B.C. and to Eastern Indonesia 4,500 years ago. They gradually
replaced the hunting and gathering populations.
The other hypothesis, the Island Origin Hypothesis, believes that
the prehistoric people originated and dispersed from an island in
Southeast Asia. Wilhelm Solheim II of the University of Hawaii has
been the leading proponent of this idea. He assumes that Proto-
Austronesian developed primarily in Northeastern Indonesia and
Mindanao Island, expanding northwards with a developing
maritime population through the Philippine Archipelago and into
Taiwan. From there they reached South China.
Solheim II believes that it was the Nusantao (the maritime-
oriented prehistoric people) who developed Proto-Austronesian as a
trade language along the coasts of Northern Luzon, Southern
Taiwan, and South China, between 4,500 and 5,000 B.C.

Pre-Colonial Philippines

Historians presuppose that between 30() and 2(X) B.C., inhabitants of
Malay-Polynesian descent settled in the Philippine archipelago. They
were mainly the agricultural and fishing people, others wandered
from place to place. There were 30 to 100 families in a society known
as barangay.
Tool assemblages, clothing, pottery, jewelry, and the like are
technological artifacts. These man-made objects illustrate the ability
of man to respond to the conditions of the environment. The
inhabitants of the islands had to adapt to their surroundings for
subsistence. Such technology that has been developed became a part
of civilization. Skills were handed down from generation to
generation. Whatever has been learned in the process is cultural in
nature. Of course, people are not born with culture. Through
practice, word of mouth, written text and rituals, culture is learned.
A country's past history unveils its cultural tradition.
Culture may be associated with manufactured materials, for
these are products of human behavior. Certainly, the structuring of
the early Filipino society has been achieved in response to the needs
of prehistoric Philippine communities.
Old Stone Age or Paleolithic Period (50,000-10,000 B.C.) is the era
of crude stone tools and weapons. In the Philippines, it was believed

to have started in Cagayan Valley. This can be inferred from the
archaeological materials unearthed in the area, bearing imprints of
human use. These traces show the emergence of people that once
wandered in the valley.
The study of tool assemblages indicates the dominance of flake
tools over large cobble tools. However, no fossil evidence of human
beings was found in the vicinity. Perhaps, they had migrated to
some other places, inasmuch as several wild animals were roving
along the area.
Man had no other tools than sharp edged stones that could be
held by the hand. Many kinds of stones, which naturally produce
sharp edges when broken or chipped (e.g. flint and chert), were
commonly used. Such implements are called core tools if the
remaining core itself is used as the tool. Pebble tools are those
rounded stones like those found in the riverbeds. They are called
cobble tools if these rounded stones are larger. Flake tools are skillfully
edged and shaped.
At the onset, man's principal way of adaptation to the
environment was by hunting. These stone tools could be used for
smashing the bones of animals and shellfish that they have gathered.
These implements may also be used in cutting, splitting, stripping,
and piercing wooden branches, palm leaves, and bamboo. Tree barks
were used for clothing.
Certainly, with the abundance of fish in rivers and seas,
methods of preparing food were conceived. Archaeological evidence
shows kinilaw to be the earliest method of preparing fish for
consumption where vinegar or lime juice enhances the taste of the
fish. In Mindanao, the juice of the tabon-tabon (Hydrophytune
orbiculatum), a green fruit, is added to remove the fishy smell. In
Leyte and Cebu, they use coconut milk.
The selection of the labon Cave Complex in Lipuun Point,
Quezon, Palawan, some 30,000 years ago is an example of prehistoric
planning for adaptation. The main chamber entrance is about 41
meters long. Sunlight enters into the interior area, making it
habitable and warm.
Upon its discovery in 1962, the present surface of the Tabon
Cave was noted to have been a habitat of the Tabon bird (also
known as the Philippine mound builder). The cave must have gotten
its name from this wild fowl.
New types of stone tools appeared in various parts of the
Philippines, more polished and highly specialized, primarily blade
and ax- and adzlike forms for forest clearing and boat making. The
smooth surface of this type of stone tools was made possible by
rubbing against another stone. This development resulted to the so-
called New Stone Age or Neolithic Period (10,000-500 B.C.) otherwise
known as Agricultural Revolution by anthropologists. Root crops like
taro (gabi) and yam (ubi) were among the important crops. This
period also indicates that upland rice farming has been developed,
although this practice did not appear at the same time in every area.
By striking the stones, sparks have been produced, which
resulted to the making of fire at will by the ancient settlers. Light and
heat became available any time of the day. The production of baked
clay pots in the New Stone Age implies that fire had been fully
utilized. The manufacture of pottery was made possible by a process
called kilning, which makes use of fire. Fire eventually changed the
lifestyle of the people, particularly in the preparation of their meals.
Thus, the inhabitants could already grill or boil their food. The slash-
and-burn agriculture practiced by the early settlers also caused them
to search for new land.
Jars as burial coffins for secondary burial were also made. Bones
of the departed were enclosed in these vessels after being buried
underground for a period of time. Closely related with burial
practices were bone washing and bone painting or dipping with
materials like sappan wood or red dye wood (Caesalpinia sappan) and
hematite (iron ore) for protection from decay.
In El Nido Cave, Palawan, painted bones were placed in small
niches inside the cave. In some areas of the archipelago, corpses
were interred directly into the ground in reclining or bent positions.
In all kinds of burial, funerary offerings or pabaon were included
such as clothes, food, and weapons. Many indigenous groups in the
interior mountains and coastal areas still practice this tradition in the
belief that the dead will use these materials when he sojourns
towards the "soul world." Others cover the faces of the dead with
thin sheaths of gold to prevent bad spirits from entering the body.
The Manunggul jar (now at the National Museum), an example
of funerary vessel dating between 890 B.C. and 710 B.C., is now
considered a National Cultural Treasure of the Philippines. I'he
upper portion of the jar has curvilinear incised st roll designs,
painted with red hematitite (iron oxide). On the lid cover is a form

of a boat with two human figures. The figure at the back is a
boatman steering the "ship of the dead." The figure in front is the
passenger whose arms crossed over his chest represent the soul of
the deceased whose bones were placed in the jar.
Philippine pottery shows a variety of shapes and decorative
techniques, such as Incision, stippling, applique, and impression by
rope and mat. Their designs were usually geometric. Subsequently,
pottery became more functional like the palayok for cooking, the
banga and tapayan for storing liquids. In Ilocos, the making of burnay
pottery lives on.
The Early Metal Age (500 B.C.) refers to the time in the
development of human culture where tools and weapons were made
of metal, which gradually replaced stone tools. The metal
implements at this stage were crudely fashioned.
The first metal to be widely used was copper. Raw copper was
then pounded into ornaments and to some extent into tools. Bronze,
made of imported tin and other metals like copper, emerged
simultaneously with copper as a result of interisland movements of
people. Although bronze had entered the Philippines, it did not
constitute a major technological phase in the development of Metal
Age in the country because of the preference of early inhabitants to
iron ore in tool making (200 B.C.).
Jewelry during the early phase of the Metal Age consists mainly
of beads. There were beads made of jade, stones, glass, shells, seeds,
twigs and stems, especially reeds of plants created into necklaces
and other ornaments. Only the beads made of semiprecious stones
endured decay in the graveyards and habitation sites.
Jewelry as an ancient art began as amulets and charms to ward
off bad spirits or to give supernatural powers to the wearer. In
particular tribes like the T'boli, they wore body ornaments to please
the gods and to signify the status of the wearer. It was only later
when personal adornments became purely decorative.
Ornaments of different kinds and designs (ranging from
earrings to necklaces and bracelets) were buried with basic metal
tools in various sites throughout the archipelago. There were
personal adornments made of materials like nephrite and carnelian
beads, which were available only through trade. This indicates that
the economic resources of the community had fairly advanced.
Jewelry at this period indicates the emergence of some kind of social
stratification.
The appearance and utilization of improved iron tools as the
major technological device for exploiting the environment constitute
the Developed Iron Age. As the use of iron became widespread,
community specialization emerged as shown by the advances in tin-
smithing, jewelry making, and in the utilization of resources.
Iron tools were recovered in Luzon (particularly in Bulacan,
Batangas, and Rizal areas). Tool specimens were also dug up in
Palawan and Masbate. The early Filipinos made metal implements
like knives (from simple to elaborate ones), the sumpak (blowguns),
the kalikot for pounding betel nuts into powder, and gongs to mark
the hours of the day and night.
Scholars contend that during this age important industries were
metalworking, pottery making, glassmaking, and tie-and-dye
weaving. Cloth weaving replaced the bark cloth beaters for
fashioning dress and other apparel. It is believed that the backloom
similar to that of the Ifugaos, Bontoks, and other Mindanao groups
was utilized. Fabrics and blankets were not only used for everyday
living but also for important rituals.
About the turn of the Millennium A.D., some families from
surrounding island kingdoms set sail in boats and established their
communities along riverbanks or on deltas. Filipino contacts with
other countries became intensified. The development of a relatively
efficient maritime transportation became the major impetus for inter-
island contacts and commerce especially with Asians. This phase of
Filipino prehistory is known to the anthropologists as the Age of
Contact (500-1400 A.D.), which is the period of trading relations with
neighboring islands, mostly by Asian traders.
Community life throughout the archipelago was dominantly
founded on trade and by increasing specialization in craftsmanship.
The common sharing of cultural orientation like religion and writing
was facilitated by intensive internal trade, principally between
riverine and coastal communities. The people of Southeast Asia
became highly nomadic because of water transportation.
For the natives to succeed in engaging maritime trade with their
Asian neighbors, they had to improve their seamanship and boat-
building skill. These early wooden watercrafts in the country were
called balangay. The balangay was basically a plank boat. It was
driven either by a sail or by paddling.
The discovery of balangay boats in Butuan, Agusan del Norte in
the late 1970s served as pieces of evidence to further prove the

technical know- how of the early Filipinos. The first boat, now
preserved and displayed in a site museum in Libertad, Butuan City
had a carbon-date of 320. While the second boat, which was dated
1250 A.D., has been transferred to the National Museum in Manila.
Malay was the principal language of Southeast Asian commerce
during those times. It is not surprising that a number of Malay loan
words to Philippine languages pertain to commerce. These include
talaro (scales), upa (payment), lako (peddle), gusali (hall), tunay
(real) means "hard cash," and biyaya (grace) means "disbursement."
Still other words illustrate the impact of commerce on culture like
atsara (pickles), patis (brine), puto (native cake), kcilan (stove), pinggan
(plate), aral (learning), and pagsamba (adoration).
At the height of the Sri Vijaya power (which originated in
Palembang, Sumatra in the 7
th
century) around 1000 A.D., the Sri
Vijayan merchants conducted extensive trade with China and India.
In the 12
th
century, the Sumatra-based kingdom of Sri Vijaya had
also expanded its influence in the Philippine archipelago.
According to Sulu tradition, between 900 and 1200 A.D.,
immigrants from Champa, an Indianized kingdom in Indochina,
established a trading colony with the Buranuns of Sulu. The men of
Champa were called Orang Dampuans, who were then vassals of the
Sri Vijaya Empire. The Orang Dampuans settled in Taguima (now
Basilan). They became the ancestors of the Yakans.
Years later, immigrants from Bandjarmasin, Borneo (another Sri
Vijaya dependency) settled in Sulu. They were the Orang Bandjar
(Men of Bandjarmasin). They engaged actively in the rich pearl
trade. To establish goodwill with the Buranuns, they brought with
them a beautiful princess and offered her as bride to the native ruler.
This state marriage resulted to deeper relations between Sulu and
Borneo. Like the Dampuans, the Orang Bandjar introduced Indian
culture in Sulu.
Centuries of direct contact-with these Indianized traders left
vivid traces on Filipino history and culture. The Indian influences
were clearly noticeable in the religious beliefs, language, literature,
and customs of the ancient Filipinos. Bathala, the name of the chief
god of the pre-Christian Tagalogs, came from a Sanskrit term
Bhattara, meaning "Great Lord."
Also of Hindu origin was the belief of the early natives that the
universe is filled with good and bad spirits. They offered religious
sacrifices and prayers to these spirits for help and protection.
Many Filipino fables werelinked to Indian literature. Included
here are the story of the monkey and the turtle, the tale of the race
between the deer and the snail, and the Visayan anecdote of the
hawk and the hen. Filipino folk literature was also to some extent,
influenced by Indian literature. Popular epics, including Darangan of
Lanao, Lam-ang of llokandia, Ibalon of Bicolandia, and the Alim and
the Hudhud of the Mountain Province, were inspired by the
Mahabharata (Sanskrit, "Great Story") and Ramayana (Sanskrit,
"Story of Rama"), which likely begun in the 3
rd
century B.C. These
epics were ritually recited.
The early Filipinos had already developed a system of syllabic
writing, with each symbol representing a syllable. The Tagalog script
was called baybayin, sometimes erroneously called alibata. It
consisted of three vowels and 14 consonants, with a total of 17
letters. The writing system was horizontal, from left to right. The
writing instrument used was a sharp pointed iron locally known as
sipol. With this iron instrument, the natives engraved words on
bamboo shafts, wooden boards, leaves of plants, pottery, .ind metal.
Remaining pieces of evidence of pre-colonial writing are so rare.
Only three had been previously found: the 14^-15
th
century Butuan
silver strip, the 10
th
century Butuan ivory seal, and the 15
th
century
Calatagan jar.
The first artifact of pre-Hispanic origin that had writing on
copper material dates back to 900 A.D. The script inscribed on it was
written in Kavi (Old Javanese writing system), which does not look
similar to the ancient baybayin. The text was in a language similar to
four languages, namely: Sanskrit, Old Tagalog, Old Javanese, and
Old Malay. The copper object is now called Laguna Copperplate
Inscription (LCI). It was found near the mouth of the Lumbang River
of Laguna province in 1990. The thin copper plate measures 20 by 30
centimeters in size.
Antoon Postma, a Dutch national who has lived with the
Mangyans for a long time and the director of the Mangyan
Assistance and Research Center in Mansalay, Oriental Mindoro, was
able to unlock the message on the copper material.
The LCI is an official record imprinted in the Saka year 822 in
the months of March-April on the 4
th
day of the dark half of the
moon on a Monday. This document was issued to Lady Angkatan
together with her relative Bukah (child of His Honor Namwran)
clearing Namwran, his family, and all their descendants of a debt

equivalent to one kati and eight suwarnas of gold from the Chief of
Dewata (Diwata, a town near Butuan). The pardon was issued by the
chief of Tundun (Tundo), represented by the leader of Pailah
Jayadewa.
Others who witnessed the document include the leader of
Puliran (Pulilan); Ganasakti, representing the leader of Paila
(Norzagaray); Bisruta, representing the leader of Binwangan
(Obando); and the Chief of Medang.
The settlements during the LCI era flourished for some
centuries but things like natural catastrophes, epidemics, and
emigration made them disappear. The Dutch expert who looked into
the LCI's authenticity concluded that the specific script style used in
the copper material was consistent with its indicated date and that
the correctness of the languages and words used would have been
very hard for forgers to produce.
Both oral and written literature had already flourished in the
country prior to the coming of the Spaniards. This consists of bugtong
(riddles), awit (songs), salawikain (proverbs), legends, myths, and
poems. Some of the folk epics of the early times include: in Ilocano,
the Lam-ang; in Ifugao, the Alim and Hudhud; in Kalinga, the Ulalim;
in Bicol, the Handiong; in Maranao, the Bantugan; and in
Maguindanao, the Indarapatra and Sulayman. The customs
and traditions of the early Filipinos bear Hindu influence. Among
them were as follows: the placing of a fresh flower garland around
the neck of a visitor; the giving of bigaykaya (dowry) and rendering of
personal services in the house of the bride's parents by the groom
before the wedding; the throwing of rice grains to the newlyweds
after the matrimonial ceremony by the guests; and the offering of
buyo (mixture of betel nut, ikmo leaf, and lime) to a guest as an
expression of hospitality.
There were early superstitions in the country that came from
Indianized migrants. Until today, many believed that a girl, who
sings in front of the stove while cooking will marry a widower and
that a cat cleaning its face indicates the coming of a visitor. Likewise,
eating twin bananas would cause a mother to give birth to twins.
The mode of dressing in pre-Spanish Philippines shows Indian
influences. The putong (turban) of the early Filipino men and the
sarong (lower garment) of the early Filipino women resemble the
Indian putees and sari.
The archaeological relics excavated in the Philippines further
indicate Indian influences. Some of these are the following: the gold
image ofAgusan, which was excavated on the left bank of Wawa River
near the town of Esperanza, Agusan Province in 1917 (now
preserved at the Gem Room of the Chicago Museum of Natural
History); the copper image of Ganesha, elephant god of the Hindus,
which was also found in Mactan in 1843; and the god Garuda pendant
of Palawan found at Brooke's Point in 1961. The garuda is a mythical
bird that Hindu god Vishnu used as vehicle.
Certain industries in the country are of Indian origin, notably
boat building, weaving of cotton clothes, and metalwork. Decorative
arts were also influenced as shown in the design of gold necklaces
and bolo handles. The manufacturing of some musical instruments
like the kudyapi (guitar) and the planting of some species of flowers
like sampaguita and champaka; fruits including mango and nangka;
and vegetables such as ampalaya, patola, and malunggay came from
Indianized sojourners.
According to paleographical experts, the ancient Filipino
writing has originated from India. According to Dr. T. H. Pardo de
Tavera, there are more than 340 Sanskrit words found in the Tagalog
language. Dr. Jose Villa Panganiban, former Director of the Institute
of National Language, gives a longer list of 375 Sanskrit loan words
in the Filipino national language, which is basically Tagalog. These

include the Filipino words: ama (father), nanay (mother), asawa
(spouse), halaga (price), kalapati (dove), kuta (fort), sutla (silk), saksi
(witness), tala (star), raha (king), sandata (weapon), and maharlika
(noble) to name a few.
Historically speaking, Sino-Philippine relations began in the 10
th
century A.D. The earliest known authentic date of these relations
was 982 A.D., when sever.il traders from Ma-yi (believed to inc lude
Mindoro, liatangas, Manila, and I'ampanga) arrived in Canton board
on an Arab ship and sold their valuable merchandise. Ma-Tuan-lin, a
Chinese chronicler, included this detail in his Wen Shiann Tung Kao
(General Investigation on
the Chinese Cultural Sources).
\
China during those times, having refined many of its
developments in the fields of historical writing, painting,
calligraphy, and hard-glazed porcelain, was beginning to expand its
maritime activities in Nanyang (Southeast Asian world) especially
during the Southern Sung (1127-1280), Yuan (1280-1368), and Ming
(1368-1614) dynasties. Chinese merchants on board their junks left
Chuanchow, Canton and other ports in China and traded with the
people of Lingayen, Manila, Mindoro, and Sulu.
In 1225, Chau Ju-kua, a Chinese Superintendent of Foreign
Trade, described China's trade with Ma-i in his book, Chu-fan-chi
(Reports on the South Sea Barbarians). This narrative pointed out the
honesty of the early Filipinos in their business transactions with the
Chinese traders. This was confirmed by another Chinese writer,
Wang Ta-yuan.
Wang Ta-yuan's description of medieval Filipino life appears in
his Tao-i-chih-lio (Summary Notices of the Barbarians of the Isles),
which was written in 1349. Both Chu-fan-chi and the Tao-i-chih-lio
have sections about a barbarous place called P'i-she-ya, which is
presumably Visayas. Wang Ta-yuan describes the natives of P'i-she-
ya as being tattooed up to the neck.
During the reign of Zhu Di (Chu 1i), the Yung-lo Emperor in
1403-1423 when China was expanding the boundaries of its domain,
he induced the countries visited by his missions to pay tributes to
the Ming court. The native rulers of the Philippines, Borneo, Java,
Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, Indochina, and other Southeast Asian
countries sent regular tribute embassies to the imperial court of the
Ming emperor. According to the Ming Shih (Annals of the Ming
Dynasty), Record of Luzon, Record of Camilig, and the Record of
Sulu, the Philippines sent eight tribute embassies to Beijing between
1372-1424.
China's greatest maritime explorer, Admiral Zheng He, also
known as Cheng Ho, (1371-1435), led seven expeditions from 1405-
1433 in the south seas and reached the Philippines, Borneo, Malay
Peninsula, Singapore, Indochina, India, and Ceylon (Sri Lanka). It is
said that Cheng Ho's first expedition, which consisted of 62 ships,
landed in the Philippines in December 1405.
While in Jolo, one of his men, Pei-Pon-Tao (also known as Pun
Tao King) died and was buried in Jatti Tunggal, Jolo. Annually, on
December 26, the Chinese of Jolo until these days visit the tomb of
Pei-Pon-Tao to pay homage to the forerunners of Sino-Philippine
relations.
t enturies of trade and personal relations with the Chinese
inevitably led to the enrichment of Filipino life and culture.
Decorated enameled ceramics painted in traditional patterns were
exported in the Philippines. The blue-and-white pieces of Chinese
porcelain had their origins in the Ming period.
The manufacture of gunpowder, the art of metallurgy, the use
of porcelain, gongs, lead, silver, tin, and certain occupations like
blacksmithing and goldsmithing in the country were learned from
the Chinese. The Filipinos practiced a form of duck culture around
Pateros and Taguig in Rizal that resembled the Chinese, which
includes the method of artificial incubation of eggs. They also taught
the Filipinos of kite-flying and other games including various forms
of gambling like jueteng, kuwaho, and pangginggi.
The Chinese improved the culinary art of the early Filipinos.
From them, the natives learned the roasting of pigs, the brewing of
tea for drinking and the cooking of dishes like pancit, lumpia,
chopsuey, and okoy. The Chinese also taught the Filipinos the use of
seasonings like toyo (soy sauce) and tahuri, and vegetables like bataw,
petsay, and upo.
During the early times, the Filipino manner of dressing bore
Chinese traces. The sleeved jackets (kangan) of the Filipino males, the
loose trousers of the Muslim women of Mindanao, and the use of
slippers, wooden shoes (bakya), fans, and umbrellas were of Chinese
origin.
The social customs of the early Filipinos showed Chinese
influence. Among them were the arrangement of marriage by the
parents of the boy and the girl, the hiring of a go-between in marital

negotiations, the honoring of departed ancestors, and the
employment of professional mourners during the funeral.
Certain existing social customs bear indications of Chinese
origin like the blasting of firecrackers on New Year's Eve, the beating
of gongs to celebrate a feast, and the collection of tong (percentage
fee) by the owner of a gambling joint. Haggling between the
merchant and the customer to arrive at a price for a commodity is
another practice that the natives have learned from them.
The linguistic influence of China on the Filipino language is
quite exceptional. About 1,500 Chinese loan words are included in
the present vocabulary of the Filipinos. These words usually pertain
to kinship and family relations, clothes, ornaments, food and drinks,
agriculture and commerce, tools and occupations, and abstract ideas.
Among these are as follows: ate (older sister), sanse (third older
sister), kuya (older brother), diko (second older brother), sangko (third
older brother), suki (friend), gunting (scissors), hiya (shame), pakyaw
(wholesale), and susi (key).
In the 13
th
century, Japan was said to have traded with the
Philippines based from the early historical records in Ryukyu.
Japanese wakos (pirate- traders) sailed the Orient waters, and many
of them were able to reach the Philippine archipelago. The Japanese
made some early contributions to Filipino culture and economy.
They taught our people some industries such as the manufacturing
of arms and tools and the tanning of deerskins. In the 1400s, they
established a trading post at Aparri, Northern Luzon.
In the middle of the 14
th
century, the Muslim traders from
Malaysia brought Islam (in Arabic means "submission to the will of
God") to the Philippines. It spread through the southern parts of the
islands. Historians say Tuan Masha'ika brought the Islamic faith in
Sulu. He was mentioned to have established the first Muslim (means
"one who surrenders to God") community in the archipelago.
Karim ul Makhdum is the next mentioned in the Tarsilas
(records). He was a noted judge and scholar from Mecca. After
converting the sultan and the people of Malacca, he went to Sulu
(1380 A.D.) and began missionary work. He built a house for
religious worship (a mosque) at Tubig-Indagan on the Island of
Simunul and won many converts, particularly at Buansa (ancient
capital of Sulu).
About 1390, Rajah Baginda, a Muslim prince from
Menangkabau, Sumatra, landed at Buansa. He overpowered native
resistance because his warriors fought with firearms, the first to be
used in combat on the Philippine soil.
The stage of the makhdumin, an era of receptivity to Islam,
resulted to conversions to the Islamic faith with the arrival of
missionaries in Sulu, an event contemporaneous with the work of
other missionaries in Java, Indonesia. The Muslims established
settlements that dominated the region for years. In some instances,
the conversion process became easier as soon as the male
proselytizers marry the daughters of families belonging to the ruling
class.
In 1450 A.D., Sharif ul-Hashim (popularly known as Sayid Abu
Bakr), an Arab authority on Islamic religion and law arrived in
Buansa, Sulu from Johore, Malacca. He married Princess Paramisuli,
the beautiful daughter of Raha Baginda (from Sumatra).
Abu Bakr founded the Sulu sultanate in the same year, after his
father-in-law's death. He organized the government patterned after
that of the Arabian caliphate and promulgated the first Sulu code of
law. He later transformed the Muslim Tausugs into a powerful
army.
Abu Bakr was said to have unified the coastal and the hill
dwellers (Buranun) of Sulu. He adapted the local traditions to the
Qur'an (bible). He received the title of Sultan Sarif. After reigning for
30 years, he died in 1480. All sultans of Sulu until the present day
trace their ancestry from him.
In the lirst quarter of the 16
th
century, more Muslims migrated
into the archipelago. The Islamic conquest of Mindanao was
attributed to the legendary Sharif Muhammad Kabungsuwan, a
johore Muslim. In 1475, he arrived in the Malabang area in Cotabato
(Maguindanao) with an invading force of Islamized Samals. The
pagan natives ferociously opposed him but his Samal warriors
subdued them.
After conquering the Cotabato Valley (Maguindanao),
Kabungsuwan married a native princess in the place. He converted
the overpowered inhabitants to Islam. Those who refused to accept
the new faith fled to the mountains. They became the present-day
Bilaans, Manobos, Subanuns, and other pagan Filipinos.
Kabungsuwan founded the sultanate of Maguindanao sometime in
1515. Years after, several sultanates were also established in the
region.

Other Muslim missionaries entered the Philippines
subsequently. Shortly before Magellan's arrival in 1521, Muslim
traders from Borneo actively disseminated the teachings of Islam in
Mindoro, Batangas, Manila, and Pampanga. One of them was Siat
Saen, who introduced Islam in the town of Balayan, Batangas.
Through their efforts, the spread of Islam was accelerated.
The last recorded Muslim missionary to bring the Islamic faith
into the country was Alawe Balpake, an Arab Sharif from Sarawak,
Borneo. During the early years of the 17
,h
century, he introduced
Islam in Northern Mindanao and the Lanao Lake region, after which,
he moved to the island of Basilan and became its first Muslim sultan.
In 1956, his grave was discovered in Taguima, Basilan.
The spread of Islam occurred in two waves: the first was the
expansion of Islam out of Arabia to the Middle East, North Africa,
Spain, Central Asia, and the latter parts of Eastern Europe, while the
second wave brought Islam towards Sub-Saharan Africa and
Southeast Asia. The introduction of Islam in the Philippines is part of
the second wave. The southern part of Luzon and its islands became
under the control of Muslim sultanates.
Islam, which professes monotheism, or in the belief of a single
God, teaches that Muhammad was the last and the most important
in a series of prophets. Furthermore, it advocates that all Muslims
belong to one community, the umma, regardless of ethnic
background. Islam believes that man has to treat all God's creation
with kindness and compassion.
The five pillars of Islam are as follows: first, the profession of faith
(shahada): "There is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is the
Messenger of God," which is a prerequisite for membership in the
Muslim community; second, the ritual prayer (salat) wherein the adult
Muslim has to implore the Almighty five times a day facing Mecca,
i.e., before daybreak, at noontime, in mid-afternoon, at sunset, and
any time after sunset, before sleeping preceded by ritual cleansing;
third, the almsgiving (zakat), which is the obligatory giving of one
fortieth of one's income to the needy or religious
cause to purify one's wealth .nd attain salvation; fourth, the
pilgrimage to Mecca (hajj), which is a mandatory once-in-a-
lifetime trip to the House of God (the Kaaba) where the title of
hadji shall be given to a Muslim who has performed this
pilgrimage; and fifth, fasting (sawm), which is done during the
lunar month of Ramadan (the ninth month of the Arabic calendar).
Ramadan commemorates the Holy Qur'an's revelation
(Chapter II, Verse 185) to Prophet Muhammad Sallalahu Alaihi
Wassalam. During the period of fasting, all Muslims must refrain
from eating, drinking, and sexual intercourse from daybreak to
sunset. The sick, travelers, and menstruating women are exempted
from fasting but they have to make up the days they skipped at a
later date. Islam celebrates Eid ul-Fitr or the Festival of Breaking
the Fast, after the sighting of the crescent moon at the end of
Ramadan. (Republic Act 9177 declared Eid ul-Fitr a national
holiday in the Philippines to be observed not only by Muslims but
also by Christians). This is a day on which the Muslims are called
upon to visit one another and exchange i greetings among
themselves.
Considered the sixth pillar of Islam by some Muslims is the jihad,
which in Arabic means "to struggle" or "to exhaust one's effort" in
order to please God. Within the belief of Islam, jihad refers to living
a virtuous life, helping other Muslims, and preaching Islam. It has
lately evolved to holy war, which focused on the militant
interpretation of the jihad.
Islam had left her lasting impression on the life and culture of
the Muslim Filipinos, which include the Maranaos of Lanao,
Maguindanaons of Cotabato, Samals of Zamboanga, Yakans of
Basilan, and Tausugs of Sulu. The Muslim Filipinos should abide
the rules and laws to be followed by all Muslims like the overt
expression of belief in Allah and fasting between dawn and sunset
during the Ramadan. Friday is a holy day for Muslims.
The mosque is their special place of worship and point of
convergence for social activity. In most Muslim communities, there
is at least one mosque. The muezzin calls the faithful to public
prayer. Those who responded should remove their footwear before
entering the mosque and aligned themselves in rows and offered
prayers in the direction of Mecca. An imam (prayer leader) leads
the recitation in Arabic verses from the Qur'an.
The Muslim settlers also brought their political system by
establishing a series of sultanates in Mindanao. Abu Bakr
established his dynasty's legitimacy by claiming to be a descendant
of the Prophet Muhammad. In the sultanate form of government,
title of political dignitaries, such as sultan (supreme ruler), raja
muda (heir apparent), dayang (princess), and kali (judge) became
known.

The Islamization of a number of Filipinos led to the
introduction of Arabic alphabet, Islamic holidays, and the Arabic
arts. Singkil (a Maranao word for "getting a leg or foot entangled in
an object") originated from Lanao del Sur. The dancers, with
solemn faces and dignified poses,
dressed in elegant Muslim costumes begin dancing in a slow pace,
which soon progresses to a taster tempo to the rhythmic clapping of
crisscrossed bamboos. The ladies gracefully wave big fans while the
men glide with brightly colored handkerchiefs.
When performed by ladies of the royalty of Lanao, the dance is
usually ushered by a waiting lady, who holds an exquisitely
embellished umbrella over the Princess' head wherever she goes.
Legend has it that singkil originated from the time the dizvatas
(nymphs or fairies) played a joke on Princess Gandingan as she was
on a stroll. The diwatas caused the trees to tremble and the rocks to
roll; however, the princess skipped nimbly from place to place
unharmed.
In their artworks, the Maranaos used the okir or okkil design, a
curvilinear floral design. The different types of okkil design appear as
border decoration on the cover and in the pages of the Qur'an. They
are also replicated in furniture, boats, farm implements, silverware,
brassware, jewelry, and ceramics. Similar okir designs were also
made on ancestral houses called torogan.
The indigenous bird motif, the sarimanok, is also said to have
been developed by the Maranaos. It is decorative in nature, having
the appearance of a bird or a rooster holding a fish in its claws or
beak.
Another artistic expression by the Muslims is the kris used
extensively by the Tausug, Samal, and Yakan warriors. This is a
sword with a straight or wavy blade. These swords were not only
used as weapons but also considered as great works of arts, at times
inlaid with silver and gold or pearls. The Muslims usually carry their
kris at the right side of their bodies. Another fearsome weapon is the
lantaka (swivel gun) placed on flexible beams that allowed the
gunner to pursue a moving target.
The people in a society collectively create and preserve culture.
The Filipino people culturally evolved because they were able to
exchange their thoughts with others through communication. The
transmission of ideas and skills was made possible through
interaction since the early Filipinos no longer lived in complete
isolation.
The ancient Filipinos prior to the coming of Spaniards have
already possessed a distinctive culture as proven by the material
remains of past societies. They were not uncivilized but intrinsically
endowed with abilities to stand as equal to the people elsewhere in
the world.

2. Traditional Filipino Communities
Early Filipino settlements varied in population sizes. Some were
inhabited by thousands of people while others were small,
composed only of a few scattered family members. The unit of social
organization with broader political, economic, and religious features
than the family was the barangay, headed by the native chieftain
called datu or rajah.
Usually several barangays were situated near each other to
mutually assist in case of war or any emergency. Consolidation of
barangays was formed through marriages and blood compact,
locally known as sandugu. This traditional ceremony signifies that
the partakers of such rite become blood brothers, presumably
because the same blood now flowed in their veins. They drew blood
from their arms and mixed it with wine, which they shared and
drank at the same time, as viewed by witnesses.
Chroniclers noted and characterized the social stratification
system of pre-colonial Filipino community organization based on
wealth, political influence, and social privileges enjoyed. The ranks
were as follows: (1) the datu class or the ruling class; (2) the maharlika
or the aristocracy; (3) the timagua (pronounced timawa) or the
common class; and the (4) alipin (also known as uripon among the
Visayans) or the dependent class.
The datu or rajah ruled the barangay. Since the term barangay
came from the word balangay, which means boat, Fr. Juan de
Plasencia, a Spanish chronicler in the 16
th
century, speculated that
the role of the datu arose from the captain of a boat migrating to the
Philippines with his family, relatives, and servants. Miguel de
Loarca, in his Relacion de las Islas Filipinas (1582) said that the datus
who live in the same town obey the wealthiest among them.
Furthermore, Antonio de Morga in his Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas
mentioned that only the best warriors were obeyed.

The Boxer Codex, an anonymous late 16
th
century manuscript
mentioned that only men were qualified for the title. The datu's
power depends upon the faithfulness of his followers.
- The datu exercised administrative powers. In arriving at
important decisions, the datu also exercised legislative powers,
calling his people all together and securing their consent. The datu
usually had a council of elders to advise him, especially in the
enactment of a law. He had the duty to protect his community.
A datu also was given judicial powers since he could render
judgment in any dispute. He should hear the testimony of the
claimants before handling down the verdict. His decision could be
appealed to an arbiter of the claimants' choice from another
community.
Control over the disposition of the barangay's real property was
vested in their native chief. The chieftain received the agricultural
produce, personal services as well as respect from his people. He
took his share of the harvest as tribute except from the aristocracy or
the maharlika.
Other historians include the family, relatives, and elders of the
datu as members of the aristocracy. The maharlikas were believed to
be the descendants of mixed marriages between a ruling dynasty
and the one out of power.
The timawa class enjoyed their rights to a portion of the
barangay land. Their normal obligation was agricultural labor but
they were also called to catch fish, to accompany expeditions, or
paddle boats. They were also called out for irregular services like
supporting feasts and building houses.
An alipin was a man indebted to another. His creditor could
have been a datu, maharlika, timaiva, or another alipin. His
subordination was obligatory. A person may be born alipin, for that
reason he was called gintubo. He inherits the debt of his parents. The
degree of alipin indebtedness may vary. For example, if alipin and
timawa marry, their offspring would be half-alipin where he would
only work half of his father's obligation.
There were two kinds of alipin, the aliping namamahay and the
aliping sagigilid. The alipin with land rights was called namamahay
(householder). He owned a house. He came at his master's call to
work on the fields and do other services. A man enters the
namamahay status either by inheritance from namamahay parents,
dropping down from the timawa status or rising from the sagigilid
status.
The aliping sagigilid (gilid is the part of the house where the
stove is) were members of the master's household who ate from their
master's pot. They may be transferred to another creditor at any
moment and may be rewarded at their master's pleasure. Slaves
purchased from outside the community and captives in battles or
raids were included in the sagigilid status.
The dependent population whom the Spanish chroniclers called
slaves were released from dependence by paying back debts, by
marriage, by purchase or by the voluntary act of the master.
The barangay had both oral and written laws. The oral laws
were their customs (ugali), which had been handed down from
generation to generation. The written laws were promulgated by
datus with the help of the council of elders. However, these laws may
be changed by consensus among ruling datus or by any among them
powerful enough to do so. Such written laws were announced to the
people by a barangay crier known as umalohokan.
The unwritten codes of conduct were strictly obeyed.
Righteousness was cabanalan and an upright person was described
banal. Any wrongdoing would mean reprehension from the
community leaders and more importantly, from the supernatural
beings. When a witness was called to testify against anybody, it was
customary to say, "May lightning strike me if I am telling a lie. May
the heavens or the sun fall upon me if I will tell a lie."
They believed that after death, the soul would travel to another
world to receive due reward or punishment. The good soul would
go to kalwalhatian (state of bliss) according to the Tagalogs and
ologan, to the
Visayans. The bad soul would go to a place of doom called kasamaan
by the
Tagalogs and solad by the Visayans.
Aside from their strong belief for life after death, archaeological
sites show that there was a local form of ancestor worship. Religion
was animistic or based on the worship of spirits of dead relatives
and other spirits, such <is nature deities. Early Filipino contacts with
other Asians brought in the belief system like the anito concept to
honor ancestors. The Visayans called their ancestor spirits umalagad
(from the word alagad or follower). The notion of diwatas (spirits) that
dwell in nature was also pervasive in the Visayas and Mindanao.

The abstract idea of religion was concretely shown in
sculptured objects known as licha (pronounced likha) or larawan,
reverently worshipped by the natives. The Cordillera people carved
anito figures called bul-ul, signifying as ancestral spirits and granary
gods.
There are over 1,500 gods in the Ifugao pantheon by which
sacrificial offerings were made. The matung-ngulan takes care of the
welfare of animals. The pil-le looks over the property. The minnahu
regulates welfare while the bul-ul controls rice. The bul-ul figures,
usually made in pair is carved by a senior priest-carver or by older
members of the village. The figures are carved either by standing or
sitting and most often the wood is taken from the narra tree. The
figures are then placed in a granary house or house attic where they
are believed to guard the harvest from pests and thieves. Every
harvest time, the bul-ul is brought out to share the bounty of the
harvest and to consume the non-material essence of the sacrificial
rice, chickens, pigs, and rice wine, while the people eat the material
part.
Aside from sculptured objects, the relationship between ancient
spirits and men were expressed in elaborate paintings executed on
the bodies of human beings. Tattooing, as believed by some people,
was done as a thanksgiving offering to the gods, while others in
many instances, had it done to acquire protective powers from
spirits or were applied after a man had shown remarkable courage in
battle. TattoOs were also part of the body ornaments of pre-Hispanic
Filipino men and women. These were also regarded as war medals.
Other minor gods and idols include lakambini, the god of the
throat; bibit, who was offered food by the people for good health;
lakambacod, guard of the crops; and, lakapati, who was the god of the
fields and had a half-woman and half-man figure.
There were also major gods considered by ancient Filipinos. The
supreme god of the Tagalogs was Bathala or Abba. He was said to
inhabit a faraway realm of eternal space known as kalwalhatian. For
the Bontoks and Kankanays of the Central Cordillera, Lumawig was
the creator and preserver of life. Among the Ifugaos, the highest of
all their deities is Kabunian, who dwells in the fifth region of the
universe.
Mediums were called upon to communicate with spirits who
often resorted to divination to ascertain the will of the gods. Such
divination usually took place during the rituals practiced by the
natives. Festivities and ceremonies to appease the different divinities
were celebrated customarily by the people, ranging from simple to
complex performance of rites appropriate for the occasion.
Temporary shelters or roofs were built for religious feasts and rites.
The Patipat, more popularly known as tagitag was an Ifugao
ritual performed by the menfolk of the community to drive away
bad spirits, which they believe bring poor harvest or ailments to
people. The worship service called the baki, which starts at the crack
of dawn, was headed by a mumbaki (native priest). Animal sacrifices
were offered to the gods for good omen.
The participants, with their bodies adorned with leaves of the
red Ti plant or the dongla, beat their wooden planks called bangibang
(painted with chicken blood) from the terraces to the river and to
their homes. This was to frighten hidden rodents and prowling
wicked spirits. At the end of the ritual, the dongla leaves were
removed from the participants and strung together.
One of the most popular religious ceremonies during the
ancient times was the paniwata, frequently celebrated for
thanksgiving and for curing illness. The religious rituals were
performed by mediums and healers, which the Tagalogs called
catalonan while the Visayans termed as babaylan or baylan. They
belonged to the highest rank of the early Filipino priestly caste. They
were highly respected by the community members. The priestly
caste also included the mankokolam, which was of a lower ranlc.
People feared him because he was believed to have the power to
inflict diseases.
One feast, the pandot, was observed at night under a balete tree
or in the open field wherein those who came to participate brought
food and an offering, such as a mat, which they tied to a tree. The
celebration was more of drinking than eating.
Another feast, the maganito, was a month-long celebration.
Usually, they put lights to several poles, which surrounded a central
light. Leaves served as decorations. At times when the occasion
demanded a sacrifice, the prettiest girl was first asked to stab the
offering (usually a live pig). The people in the feast followed her, and
the meat of the dead hog was then given to the guests.
Meat was primarily provided during rituals and feasts. The
everyday meal of the early Filipinos included rootcrops, fruits, and
fish. The staple food of the early Filipinos was rice. They cooked
food in earthen pots or in bamboo tubes. They ate with their bare

hands, using banana plant leaves as plates and coconut shells as
drinking cups. They made fire by rubbing two pieces of dry wood.
They stored their drinking water in large earthen jars or in huge
bamboo tubes.
In many provint wineinaking is an age-old enterprise. Their
most popular wine was the tuba, made from the sap of coconut or
nipa palms. I he other wines manufactured in the islands were basi,
an llocano wine Irom sugarcane juice; pangasi, a Visayan wine made
from rice; lambanog, a lagalog wine produced by distillation of
tuba; and the tapuy, an Igorot wine made from rice.
The early Filipinos taught their children how to endure life's
challenges. The fathers trained their sons in hunting, fishing, timber
cutting, boat making, mining, and agriculture. The mothers, on the
other hand, t rained their daughters to do household tasks like
cooking, gardening, and sewing.
It is said that in ancient Panay, there was a barangay school
called bothoan, under the charge of an old man, acting as the teacher.
The subjects taught were reading, writing, arithmetic, the handling
of weapons, and the acquiring of amulets or kinaadman.
From the Negritos and similar aboriginal people in the
mountains of Luzon, Panay, and other islands came indigenous
dances and music made by primitive jaw harps of bamboo, flutes of
mountain cane and bamboo violin with abaca string. Jaw harps
became popular all over the archipelago. Though mostly made of
bamboo, some of them were made of metal. The bamboo jaw harps
of the Kalingas were called olibaw. The Tagalogs called it barimbaw.
In Mindanao, kubing was the common term for these bamboo jaw
harps.
Other musical instruments being played by the natives were the
kudyapi (Tagalog guitar), kalaleng (Tinggian nose flute), babandil
(Maguindanaoan gong), kulintang (Muslim xylophone), tultogan
(Visayan bamboo drum), silbay (llocano reed flute), the suracan
(Subanun cymbal) and tambuli (trumpet made from carabao horn).
Bungkaka is a bamboo buzzer played by striking the split ends
against one's palm.
Ancient songs exhibited varied emotions, with themes about
thanksgiving, birth, death, love, war, labor, religion, and victory.
Among these were as follows: tagumpay, Tagalog song of victory;
ayeg-klu, Igorot serenade song; bactal, Tagbanua death song; and
tudob, Agusan harvest song.
Ethnic dances, which had been part of every tribe and culture,
reflected the sentiments and artistry of the populace. Their dances,
customarily light- hearted and mimetic, were in connection with
their beliefs in spirits, in thanksgiving and healing, in courtship.
Tribes of Malay stock had preserved many dances accompanied by
nose flutes, bamboo guitars, gongs of various sizes and shapes,
drums, and wooden sticks. Some of the native dances included the
mahinhin, a Tagalog courtship dance; the dandansoy, a Visayan tuba
dance; the sua-sua dance, a Sulu courtship dance; and the paunjalay, a
Muslim wedding dance.
Dances of the highlanders were more energetic, in contrast to
lowlanders that were generally slow and tender. People residing
near the sea sang and danced about fishing and rowing of their
bancas. In areas where coconuts abound, shells of the nut were used
in some dances. Dances of rice-growing regions depicted rice-
planting, harvesting, pounding, and winnowing. The fast-moving
dances of Visayan, Tagalog, and Bicol regions depict abundance. In
llocos, where life was harder, dances were slower and emotional.
Theater originated within the early communities through ritual
practitioners in their dance-dramas to appease supernatural powers
that were believed to control natural forces, to ensure good harvest
and success in hunting and battles.
Kali, later called amis during the Spanish era, was popular all
over the islands. It was a method of self-defense with instruments
made of rattan canes or betel nut tree trunks. As an art of battle, the
kali requires basic skills for parrying, offense, and defense.
In commerce, the early Filipinos had their own weights and
measures. They used the talaro, a kind of balance with scales, for
weighing things. Measurement for capacity were the kaban (25
gantas), the salop (one ganta), the kaguitna (one-half ganta), and the
gatang (one chupa). For length, measures used were the dipa, the
length of the outstretched arms; the tumuro, the length between the
tip of the thumb and that of the forefinger when extended; the
sandamak, the width of the hand with the five fingers pressed
together; and the sandali; the width of one finger.
They also knew the art of coinage and had gold used as
medium of exchange. Modern numismatists call these ancient gold
coins piloncitos (little cones) because of their conical shape.
Shells and bronze gongs were also used as money in exchange
of other goods. However, the usual method of trading during those

times was barter in which they offered their own products in
exchange of other goods. Aside from rattan, pearls, precious shells,
and other marine and forest products, the early Filipinos traded their
native merchandise such as baskets and mats. Non-textile weaving
industry in the archipelago was a result of the proliferation of
organic materials such as bamboo, rattan, vines, and rotio reeds.
To the mountain people of Cordillera, a basket was a functional
household or agricultural container. This light bushel was essential
in carrying clothes and vegetables especially in a rugged terrain. The
multipurpose backpack was the best known Cordillera basket. The
Ilocanos had produced baskets for storing valuables and their
clothes, the tampipi. The Hanunuo of Mindoro had embellished
baskets to hold betel nut chewing ingredients, beads or money.
Mat-making was also popular in the islands. Various palms
were the sources for this flourishing Industry. The natives made
distinctively large mats for sleeping. Mats were also fashioned as
home furnishings to sit on and receive distinguished guests. Sulu
mats were the most intricately woven. They colorfully dyed
pandanus mats and occasionally incorporated sy inbols and
geometric designs.
The early natives also knew mathematics. They could count up
to 100,000,000 (bahala) and could add, subtract, multiply, and divide.
The terms for numericals were as follows: isa (one), puo (ten), daan
(hundred), libo (thousand), yuta (one hundred thousand), angao (one
million), kati (ten million), and bahala (one hundred million).
They also learned how to calculate time and identify seasons by
reading the signs of nature. The early or late flowering of certain
plants could indicate a long dry season or early rains.
The Ifugaos, on the other hand, devised a calendar, which
contains 13 months in a year, each month having 28 days. Some
members of this ethnic group still utilize this calendar method. They
had a tribal calendar recorder called tumunoh, who kept 13 strings
representing the 13 months of the year. At the end of each day, the
tumunoh tied a knot per string to show that a day had passed. A
string with 28 knots represents one month. The Ifugao calendar has
a total of 364 days a year.
The early inhabitants also had some knowledge of medicine.
Folk healers applied certain roots and leaves, flowers and fruits,
branches and pistils of plants containing substances with curative
powers.
Long before the coming of the Spaniards, the natives of the
islands were already wearing clothes. Men wore collarless, short-
sleeved coat called kangan and a strip of cloth called bahag, wrapped
around the waist and between the legs. Usually, they wore putong, a
piece of cloth worn around the head. Though they had no footwear,
they wore jewels such as gold necklaces, gold armlets called
kalombigas, and gold anklets filled with agates, carnelians, and other
colored glass.
The women's upper garment was a wide-sleeved blouse called
baro. Their skirt was called patadycmg or saya with a strip of cloth
over it called tapis. Their personal trimmings consisted of necklaces,
bracelets, earrings, and rings made of gold at times filled with pearls,
carnelian beads, and other precious gems. Numerous types of glass
and stone beads have been unearthed in Philippine archaeological
sites, providing substantial proof of early trade relations of the
archipelago with foreign lands.
One personal garb in the islands was the salakot (native hat),
worn as protection from heat or sudden rain. Generally made of
anahaw (a forest palm), the salakot was widely used in Central Luzon
and the Visayas. The llonggots used leather (from animals they hunt)
in making shallow hats, while neighboring Bontoks used coiled
rattan. The Ifugaos, on the other hand, wore perfectly fitted carved
bowl-like hats, while the Maranaos and
the Bagobos (Davao) made wooden hats as shields for combat.
When the first Spaniards arrived in the 16
th
century, they were
surprised to see the early Filipinos living in these well-organized and
independent villages, the barangays. The native dwellers lived in
houses made of wood and bamboo, roofed by nipa palm leaves
called bahay kubo (nipa hut). Other materials used include yantok
(rattan), cogon grass, stone, and clay.
These houses were elevated three to four meters from the
ground and usually supported by four or more posts made of wood
or bamboo. The space beneath the house called silong, served as
workspace, storage space, a granary or pen for livestock. A hagdan
(ladder), which could be drawn up at night or when the owners of
the house went out, was used to enter the nipa hut.
The roof of the bahay kubo may be constructed on the ground,
then completed over the house frame. The wall was built from nipa
shingles or bamboo. The tinilad na kawayan (bamboo slats), which
served as the floor of the house, were set slightly apart to induce

ventilation. The doors, as well as the stairs, were made of bamboo.
The windows of the house differ in size, with a tukod (mast) to prop
the swinging cover open during the day.
The principal space inside the bahay kubo, called the bulwagan,
about 10 square meters in area or larger, could be used for receiving
guests, dining, and sleeping. Furniture in the bahay kubo is minimal,
commonly with a low table for meals called dulang and a built-in seat
called papag. A small silid (room) served as a dressing room and
closet for clothes, pillows, and mats.
There were houses with an open porch called batalan, an
unroofed platform, where water jars are placed. Sometimes the
cooking was done in an open hearth or on a clay kalan (stove) or
tungkong kalan (three stones) in a space in front of the ladder of the
batalan.
The structure and design of the native houses resulted from
various factors that may be dictated by the natural setting, available
resources, customs, beliefs, and needs of the occupants. The
seafaring Samal built their houses over the water, along the seashore.
Their domiciles were on stilts, high enough to let their boats dock
under them even at high tide. Footbridges made of planks were
connected to these clustered dwellings. The Badjao lived in
houseboats. The Bagobos of Davao del Sur and the Kalinga of the
Mountain Province built houses on trees for protection from enemies
and wild animals on the ground.
Cats were kept in most houses to get rid of rats. There were also
dogs and pet monkeys to warn the household members of
approaching strangers.


Study Guides

Terms/Concepts to Understand Mainland Origin Hypothesis Island
Origin Hypothesis Nusantao Umma Shahada Eid ul-Fitr Burnay
Questions to Answer
1. How did the peopling of the Philippine archipelago come
about?
2. What were the cultural influences brought about by the Asian
traders to the ancient Filipinos?
3. How did the teachings of Islam influence the Filipino society?
4. How was a chieftain selected in a barangay? Should he be
considered a tyrant? Why?
5. Discuss how the early Filipino communities live and interact
with other islanders.
6. Which among the ancient Filipino traditions still exist at
present?



Chapter IV
The Spanish Era

1. In Search of New Lands

The fifteenth and sixteenth centuries brought an era of
worldwide exploration and expansion that resulted from the
desire to gain new lands, power, and wealth for the explorers and
their countries. In the last two centuries of the Middle Ages (1300-
1500), the Europeans, while regaining the Holy Land from the
Muslims, were able to establish commerce with the Orient
through trade routes. Spices like pepper, ginger, nutmeg, onions,
and garlic were the most important items of trade from the East,
owing to the desire of the Europeans to enhance the taste of food
and to preserve meat during winter time.
The fall of Constantinople (1453) and the emergence of the
Ottoman Turks closed the former trade routes to the East, causing
the monarch s and navigators of Europe to find new routes across
the seas. The Portuguese were a few years ahead of the Spaniards
in the discovery of new trade routes. Inspired by Prince Henry,
the Navigator (1394-1460), Portuguese navigators sailed down the
African coast to reach the East. In 1487, led by Bartolome Dias, the
Portuguese rounded the Cape of Good Hope. A few years later, in
1498, Vasco de Gama reached Calicut, India, by sailing eastward
from the cape.
The end of the reconquistas (wars against the Moors) in 1492,
paved the way for great voyages including the discovery of the
New World (America) for Spain. Christopher Columbus, who had
failed to convince the King of Portugal that he could reach the

East by sailing westward, was able to get the support of the
Spanish Crown.
After these remarkable voyages, Portugal and Spain became
keen rivals in colonizing new lands because of gold, spices, and
other merchandise found in the Orient, as well as their religious
zeal to proselytize the natives. European adventurers made daring
voyages and sought new lands and riches. Great explorers were
able to discover various routes for their expeditions, which
marked the Age of Exploration (1492-1682).
On May 3,1493, Pope Alexander VI, attempting to settle the
rivalry, issued a papal bull known as the Inter caetera. The Pope
decreed that the Spanish zone of exploration should be west of the
imaginary line drawn north to south, 100 leagues west of the
Azores and Cape Verde Islands. All lands east of the demarcation
line should belong to Portugal. The demarcation line was drawn
to identify Spanish and Portuguese spheres of exploration and
conquest. The following year, the two kingdoms agreed
in the Treaty ofTordesilU* to move the demarcation line 170 leagues
(about 1,100 miles) west of Cape Verde islands and still be guided by
the provisions of the papal bull. The revised treaty allowed Portugal
to claim what is now Brazil while Spain was given the rest of the
Americas (Perry et al., 1988: 353).
In 1505, Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521), a member of the
nobility of Portugal sailed with a fleet carrying the first Portuguese
viccroy to the I last Indies in 1506 and from there, was sent to
Malacca (Melaka) in the Malay Peninsula and the spice markets of
Ambon and Banda in Western Indonesia. He was promoted to the
rank of captain in 1510. He returned to Portugal in 1512. During
those days, all explorations were done by latitude sailing by means
of an astrolabe. Through observing wind directions and ocean tides,
Magellan later conceived the idea of a passage to the west or around
South America to reach the Moluccas or Spice Islands (islands of
present-day Indonesia). While finding the chance to present his plan
to King Manuel of Portugal, he fought against the Moors in Morocco
in 1513. There he received his wounds that left him lame for life.
After his return to Portugal, Magellan proposed to the king his plan
to travel a westward route to the Moluccas. The king refused and
even canceled his promotion probably because of charges of
financial irregularities while he was in Morocco.
Disgusted by the king's response, he renounced his Portuguese
citizenship. He went to Spain in 1517. In his new found home,
Magellan met influential persons who helped him get support for his
plan to find a new route to the Spice Islands from King Charles I
(later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V). One of them was Bishop
Juan de Fonseca, the head of the Royal Council of the Indies
(division in charge of overseas expeditions).
Spurred by the competition to win against Portugal in obtaining
high- priced spices, Spain commissioned Magellan to find a route to
Moluccas by sailing west. Such passage would be beneficial to Spain
for Portugal controlled the eastward route to the East Indies around
Africa's Cape of Good Hope. The contract for the expedition was
signed on March 28,1518. Magellan was named captain general of
the expedition.

2. Magellan's New Route to the East
Magellan left the port of San Lucar de Barrameda, Spain, on
September 20,1519 with five ships namely: Trinidad, Conception,
Santiago, San Antonio, and Victoria together with about 250 men. The
expedition intended to circumnavigate the earth in the service of
Spain. Accompanying him were Fr. Pedro de Valderrama (fleet
chaplain), Antonio Pigafetta (chronicler of the expedition), Duarte
Barbosa (Magellan's brother-in-law), and his Malay slave Enrique of
Malacca (acting as interpreter).
The fleet sailed through familiar waters along the westcoast of
Africa. They reached the Canaries on September 26. Crossing the
Atlantic, they landed on the South American coast, now
Pernambuco, Brazil, on November
29. Magellan continued the voyage, reaching Rio de Janeiro on
December 13. He named it Santa Lucia, because he landed there on
the saint's feast day. There they traded with the native Americans for
provisions.
The voyage continued at Rio de Plata. By the time they were at
the tip of the South American continent, it was already winter. The
snowstorms were in a headstrong. The men became apprehensive
and asked Magellan that they all return to Spain. Magellan declined.
Instead, he asked them to take courage. The ships took shelter from
storms in Port San Julian (now in Argentina) in March 1520.
Unknown to Magellan, some officers took into command the
maneuvering of three ships, the San Antonio, the Conception, and the

Victoria. The next day, Gaspar de Quesada, captain of the Conception,
wrote to Magellan that he and others would not recognize his
authority unless they return immediately to Spain. Still, Magellan
refused to heed their petition.
Juan de Cartagena, Antonio de Coca, Juan Sebastian del Cano
(called Elcano), and Gaspar de Quesada were found guilty of treason
but pardoned. But Cartagena continued to plot again, this time with
one of the priests, Pero Sanchez de Reina. They were probably
jealous because the captain-general of this Spanish expedition was a
Portuguese. Magellan had the two left off the coast of an unnamed
island.
With the first signs of spring, the exploratory voyage continued
in search of a route to the Southern Sea (now Pacific Ocean). A
strong typhoon had driven ashore and destroyed the smallest ship,
Santiago. In August, the four ships went farther south and
eventually, they came upon a strait, which Magellan called "Strait of
All Saints" (now Strait of Magellan).
Magellan sent the San Antonio to explore the southeast opening
of the strait. Trinidad entered the southwest. Secretly, San Antonio,
piloted by Esteban Gomez (a Portuguese), deserted on the night of
November 20 and sailed back for Spain.
The fleet reached the Southern Sea, which Magellan named
Ocean Pacific because it was calm. Unfortunately, Magellan had
underestimated the ocean's size. In the next five months, the ship
was running out of supplies. Instead of biscuits, the men ate
sawdust. They also started to eat leather rope guards and even rats.
Many got sick with scurvy (a gum disease). A number of his men
died.
But Magellan and his men bravely sailed on and by March 6,
1521 they had reached an island in the Western Pacific. He called it
Islas Ladrones (or Islands of Thieves, later to be named Marianas, in
honor of Maria Ana of Austria, Queen Regent of Spain) because
some of the native Chamorros had stolen a boat from the flagship.
To stop them, Magellan ordered his men to fire their guns.

1. Voyage to the Philippines
From Ladrones Islands, Magellan's fleet went on their journey
westward. At the dawn of Saturday, on March 16, 1521, they saw the
towering heights of Samar and named the island Islas de San Lazaro,
for it was the feast day of St. Lazarus. They stayed overnight off
Suluan Island. I he following day, they landed on the small
uninhabited islet of Humunu (Homonhon) found at the mouth of
Leyte Gulf and built two tents for the sick.
On the third day after their arrival on March 18, they met nine
natives from the neighboring island of Suluan who arrived in a boat.
Seeing them .1 friendly people, Magellan gave them red caps,
mirrors, combs, small I ells, ivory, fine linen cloth, and other trifles.
In return, the islanders gave them their cargo of bananas, fish,
coconuts, and palm wine (tuba).
On Holy Thursday, March 28, the fleet landed in another island
called Mazaua, which could be Limasawa in Leyte or Masao in
Butuan. Rajah kolambu was rowed to where the Europeans were. At
first, he refused to board Magellan's big ship. Finally, the rajah
welcomed Magellan and visited him aboard his ship. He gave
Magellan three porcelain jars of rice, while Magellan gave a red cap
and a red-and-yellow robe.
Subsequently, Magellan's men held a mock fight. The soldier in
a suit of armor remained unhurt even after he was struck. Rajah
Kolambu was fascinated and noted that one man in such attire was
worth 100 fighters. These newcomers could help them win their
battles. Thus, the rajah decided to seal their new friendship.
Afterwards, he performed the kasi kasi or blood compact ceremony
with Magellan on March 29, Good Friday.
Pursuant to Republic Act No. 2733 dated June 19, 1960 Barangay
Magallanes, Limasawa, Southern Leyte is the site of the first
Christian mass in the Philippines. In 1980 the National Historical
Institute (NHI) sponsored a workshop for historians to determine
the site of the first mass in the Philippines. They concluded it was
Limasawa. They based their findings from the evidence presented in
1800 by Carlo Amoretti, a conservator in Ambrosiana Library in
Milan. Amoretti said that Mazaua where Magellan landed in 1521
and the island of Limasawa in the book written by Father Francisco
Combes are one and the same. This idea was supported by known
writers in history, which include Father Pablo Pastells, S.J., Dr. T. H.
Pardo de Tavera, Jaime de Veyra, and James Robertson.
Noted historian Dr. Sonia M. Zaide presented the evidence for
Masao rather than Limasawa as the site of the first recorded mass in
the Philippines. First, in all primary sources including the diary of
Antonio Pigafetta, the chronicler of Magellan's voyage, the name of
the place was Mazaua. Limasawa has four syllables and begins with

another letter. Second, according to primary records, the expedition
traveled 20 to 25 leagues from
I lomonhon, iht* first landing point. If they had been to Limasawa
Island, the distance is only 14.6 leagues or one-half of that length.
Third, the distance to Cebu from Mazaua according to Pigafetta was
35 leagues (140 miles). The distance from Limasawa to Cebu is only
80 miles. Fourth, it was mentioned that the king came to their ship in
a balanghai. Butuan is now the site of at least nine excavated balanghai
relics; by contrast, Limasawa has no significant archaeological relics
or balanghai tradition. Fifth, the Western explorers got excited at the
abundance of gold in Mazaua, for that was the main currency at that
time. Both archaeological relics and the gold mines today attested to
the abundance of gold in the Agusan Valley.
The site of the first mass in the Philippines was first mentioned
by Maximilian Transylvanus in his De Moluccis... in 1523. He
interviewed the survivors of the Magellan expedition and noted that
they landed in Messana (at times written as Massana), where the
mass was first officiated. Due to numerous copies of De Moluccis in
Europe, the Italian manuscript of Antonio Pigafetta (the chronicler of
the expedition) was deferred in printing.
In 1536, Gian Battista Ramusio also wrote a chronicle about the
voyage of Magellan based on the Pigafetta manuscript. He pointed
out that it was in Butuan where the first mass in the Philippines took
place. When Father Francisco Colin, S.J. wrote a book about the
spread of Christianity in the Philippines, he could not exactly
determine the site of the first mass in the archipelago. From the
Ramusio version it was in Butuan, while from the writings of
Antonio de Herrera (based from accounts of Andres de San Martin)
it was in Mazaua.-Finally, Father Colin wrote that it was in
Limasawa where the first mass in the Philippines was officiated.
In 1667, Father Francisco Combes mentioned in his Historia de
Mindanao... description of the voyage of Magellan and his Armada
de Molucca. He mentioned the word Limasaua, which never existed
in any primary source about the Magellan expedition.
It was William Henry Scott who was able to identify that it was
the Ramusio version that first mentioned Mazaua in Butuan. From
the findings of Scott and Vicente C. de Jesus, they had come into
conclusion that the inclusion of Limasawa in the voyage of Magellan
may be attributed to Colin (with his Dimasaua) and Combes (with
his Limasawa). For Scott, de Jesus and the NHI, the eyewitness
account of Gines de Mafra, the Spanish mariner should be
considered in determining the location of Mazaua. Mafra was the
only navigator who reached Mazaua twice, first in 1521 in the
Magellan's expedition and in 1543 in the Villalobos expedition.
Andres de San Martin gave Mafra some important documents
before he was killed by the warriors of Rajah Humabon in Cebu after
the Battle of Mactan. Martin was an astrologer and one of the finest
mariners during the Renaissance. He died in the Cebu massacre that
took place on May 1, 1521. Mafra held the documents given to him
by Martin for five years.
I hrse documents were confix ii'd by the Portuguese and were
kept in the Lisbon archives. Finally, the documents were transferred
to Madrid at the lime when Portugal became part of Spain (1580-
1640).
Based on the Mafra accounts, from Homonhon, Magellan and
his men iiaveled westward, southwest to the tip of Seilani (Panaon)
to avoid the Northeast monsoon. (From Panaon, Limasawa is in the
northwest direction). According to Mafra, Mazaua has a
circumference of 3-4 leagues, equivalent t:o 9-12 n.m., while
Limasawa has a circumference of 2.0313 n.m.
Mafra mentioned that Magellan and his men were able to reach
Mindanao. Mazaua is 45 n.m. south of Surigao. The western part of
the i .land is a perfect harbor during the Northeast monsoon.
Mazaua has two hilly areas, Pinamangculan at Dalindingan, as
drawn in the map of Pigafetta. Planted near the foot of the hills were
rice, coconut, and fruits. There was gold in the area. Houses were
described as stilted.
On Easter Sunday, March 31, 1521, a mass was held on
Mazaua's shore with Reverend Father Pedro de Valderrama
officiating. At sundown, Magellan, in the presence of Spaniards and
Filipinos, planted a large wooden cross on the summit of a hill
overlooking the sea. He named the country the Islas de San Lazaro.
On April 7, 1521, Magellan together with King Kolambu and
the Spanish and native fleets landed on Sugbu (now Cebu). On the
same day, Humabon made a blood compact with Magellan after the
latter had won his trust and friendship.
Asked who would succeed him, Rajah Humabon told Magellan
that he had no sons, only daughters. His nephew who had married
his daughter was therefore the crown prince. Rajah Humabon added
that parents were no longer honored in their old age and instead

their children commanded them. Magellan explained to the Cebuano
chieftain the Christian teaching about honoring one's parents. This
confounded Rajah Humabon. Soon, he sought to be baptized as a
Christian.
On Sunday, April 14,1521, a mass on the shore of Cebu was
held with Rajah Humabon and his people attending the ceremony.
After the mass, Magellan planted a huge wooden cross and gave
Queen juana, wife of Rajah Humabon, an image of the Child Jesus as
a gift. There were about 800 Filipinos who participated in the mass
and underwent ritual baptism. As for Humabon (renamed Carlos),
Magellan made him the king's representative in Cebu and promised
to unite the local chieftains under his authority. Magellan likewise
tried to impose Christianity and Spanish sovereignty on local
chieftains.
Rajah Humabon and Datu Zula of Mactan welcomed the
Spaniards, but not Lapulapu, another chieftain of Mactan.
Lapulapu's real name was Cali Pulacu as written by Carlos Calao, a
Chinese-Spanish poet in the 17
th
c< ntwry 111 his poem, Que Dios Le
Perdone (That God May Forgive Him). I his was a result of the
research of Prof. Guillermo Gomez-Rivera, a 1975 Zobel Prize
awardee.
Lapulapu refused to accept the new political system and pay
tribute. He decided to break away from Rajah Humabon. To teach
him a lesson, Magellan invaded Mactan on April 27, 1521. He led an
army of 60 steel- clad Spaniards in three vessels and 1,000 Cebuano
warriors in 30 boats. He told Rajah Humabon and his men to stay on
their boats, watch how the Europeans fight.
Magellan had misjudged the fighting skill of Lapulapu and his
men. The Mactan warriors repulsed the Spanish force with their
spears and bamboo stakes. They aimed their spears at the
unshielded legs of the Europeans. The Spaniards were forced to go
back to their boats.
Magellan was wounded in the battle. A poisoned arrow hit his
right leg and then a bamboo spear struck his face. Lapulapu and his
fighters pounced and killed him. The remaining Europeans retreated
and left the body of their captain behind.
The Battle of Mactan was a scandalous defeat for the Spaniards
for they were not able to prove themselves better in combats. On
May 1; the natives of Cebu carried out the plan to massacre them.
While the Europeans were attending a banquet prepared for them by
Rajah Humabon, the warriors attacked them. Duarte Barbosa, Juan
Serrano, and 27 other Spaniards were killed.
The remaining members of the expedition were forced to flee
the islands before the Cebuanos could kill them all. They burned the
ship Conception for lack of men to operate the vessel. With two ships
left - Trinidad and Victoria, they continued their voyage to Moluccas.
On November 8, 1521, they finally landed in Tidore, an island
in Moluccas. They were able to secure a rich cargo of spices. The
survivors decided that the Trinidad, led by Gomez de Espinosa,
would sail back to Spain by crossing the Pacific to Panama, while the
Victoria, under Juan Sebastian del Cano's command would sail via
Cape of Good Hope, but on lower latitudes to avoid the Portuguese.
The Victoria crossed the Indian Ocean, rounded the Cape of
Good Hope and finally reached San Lucar, Spain on September
6,1522, with only 18 survivors. The voyage around the world lasted 2
years, 11 months, and 16 days. As for the crew of the San Antonio
(the ship that had deserted the expedition), they had been
imprisoned until Elcano's return. They were tried and convicted.
Pigafetta's story of the expedition spread. Shortly thereafter, the
geographers adopted new dimensions of the earth and the wider
scope of the Southern Sea (Pacific Ocean). The voyage enhanced
their knowledge about the existence of othet inlands in the Pacific
and the Philippines. It also confirmed that the earth is round and
that it is really possible to sail around the world since the world's
oceans are connected. The cargo of cloves sold for such a high price
that it was more than sufficient to pay for the expenses of Magellan's
expedition. As a reward, the Spanish Crown granted Elcano a proud
motto for his shield, Primus (. ircumdedisti Me (you circumnavigated
me first).
In unwritten history, it was really an Asian who first
circumnavigated the world ahead of the Europeans. He is no other
than Enrique of Malacca who acted as interpreter for Magellan. From
Malacca, he was able to join the voyage of the Portuguese after he
was taken by Magellan to be his aide, cruising across the Indian
Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean and reached Portugal. When he
became part of the Magellan's expedition, he was able to sail from
Spain via Atlantic Ocean, reached the tip of South America iind
across the Pacific Ocean then finally returned to Asia, particularly
the Philippines.

Magellan's expedition paved the way for Spain's expansion to
the Orient. Driven by the thrill of adventure and the reward of gold
and spiritual dispensation, the conquistadores took the risks of the
journey.
The first post-Magellan expedition (1525), led by Captain Garcia
Jofre de Loaysa sailed with seven ships and 450 men. After crossing
the Strait of Magellan, the vessels were dispersed by a storm.
Unfortunately, Loaysa got ill. They served him broiled rat, the
traditional treatment for constipation. He did not recover. Eventually
he died. His men failed to reach the Philippines.
Sebastian Cabot, son of Venetian explorer John Cabot, headed
the second expedition in 1526 with four ships and 250 men. They
failed to find the Strait of Magellan.
In 1527, A1 varo Saavedra Ceron, cousin of Hernando Cortes of
Mexico, together with 110 men constituted the first expedition to the
Philippines from the Viceroyalty in Mexico (New Spain). Three ships
were set out to investigate what had happened to the two earlier
expeditions and rescue any survivors. Only one ship, the Florida,
reached Surigao in Northeastern Mindanao but failed to colonize.
They were able to rescue several survivors from the first two
expeditions in Tidore, Moluccas. Loaded with spices, the Florida
attempted to return to Spain but strong winds drove her back.
Saavedra Ceron tried the second and third time to sail against strong
winds. He fell ill and died. His successor also failed to make a return
trip. Finally, they decided to surrender to the Portuguese.
In 1542, King Charles I sent another expedition. This was to
reassert the claims of Spain to the islands, which is part of the
Eastern Hemisphere. Based on the Treaty of Tordesillas of 1494, the
Eastern Hemisphere was reserved to Portuguese colonization.
However, with the Treaty of Zaragoza in 1529, <i new demarcation
line was fixed .it 297 1/2 leagues east of Moluccas. Portugal gained
the rights of ownership over all the lands on the west of the line,
while Spain gained the right of ownership over all the lands found
on the east of the line. Spain sold the Moluccas to Portugal for
350,000 gold ducats ($630,000), which lay within the Portuguese
sphere ot influence and claimed ownership over the Philippines then
known as Islas del Poniente (the Sunset Islands). He instructed Ruy
Lopez de Villalobos to command a fleet of six ships and around 400
men. He exhorted Villalobos to avoid any of the Spice Islands in
their voyage to Islas del Poniente.
Villalobos reached Baganga Bay in Eastern Mindanao on
February 2,1543 after three months of sailing. He named Mindanao
Caesarea Caroli, or the imperial island of Charles. Searching for food,
they reached the southern island of Sarangani, which Villalobos
renamed Antonia in honor of Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza of
Mexico. Some of his men went as far as Leyte, which they renamed
Felipina, in honor of the future king Philip II of Spain. Later, the
name Felipinas was given to all the islands. Villalobos also failed to
colonize Mindanao. He died in the Moluccas, consoled by St. Francis
Xavier, acclaimed as the Apostle of the Indies.
King Charles T of Spain abdicated his royal crown after getting
weary of far ranging duties brought about by his scattered
dominion. His son Philip II succeeded as ruler of the Netherlands in
1555 and in Spain in 1556.
During the reign of King Philip II, Spain was at the height of its
power. He wrote to Mexican Viceroy Velasco ordering him to
prepare an expedition for the conquest of the Philippines. The
command of this expedition was given to Miguel Lopez de Legazpi
(1505-1572), a soldier, lawyer, and administrator. Since the Mexican
government was then in the brink of bankruptcy, Legazpi spent his
own resources to finance the expedition.
Legazpi and his fleet, consisting of four ships with 380 men, left
Natividad, Mexico, on November 19, 1564 (some say November 20, a
Monday). Besides royal officials and crew, five Augustinian friars
joined the expedition. Legazpi was accompanied by Father Andres
de Urdaneta (survivor of the Loaysa expedition), and Captain Felipe
de Salcedo (Legazpi's grandson), Guido de Lavezaris (survivor of the
Villalobos expedition), and Melchor de Legazpi (Legazpi's son). The
fleet stopped in Guam, and there they obtained fresh water and
supplies.
On February 13,1565, Legazpi and his men anchored near the
island of Cebu. Due to Cebuano opposition, they sailed to the
neighboring islands and landed in Samar. Legazpi made a blood
compact with Urrao, a friendly chief, on February 22. They
proceeded to Limasawa and were received by a young chieftain
named Bankaw.
Later, Legazpi landed in Bohol and befriended two native
kings, Sikatuna and Sigala. On March 16, 1565, Legazpi and Sikatuna
made a blood compact. A few days later, Legazpi and Gala did a
similar pact.

On April 27, 156.5, I egnzpi .n rived in Cebu and hit the shore.
Rajah lupas and his Cebuano warriors challenged the enemy forces
but were overpowered by the Spaniards. Soon, the natives burned
their houses and if treated to the uplands.
The next day, April 28, one of Legazpi's men, a Greek sailor
named Mermeo (others say Juan de Camuz) discovered the image of
the Sto. Nino in one of the houses. Viewing it as a sign of God's
approval, Legazpi named I he f irst settlement Ciudad del Santissimo
Nombre de Jesus (City of the Most I loly Name of Jesus), in honor of
the sacred image. The statue can be found m the present
Augustinian Church of the Holy Child.
The earliest Spanish settlement was in the form of a triangle.
The i wo sides face the sea and the third fronts the land. The
settlement was urrounded by fences. Wells were dug for stable
water supply. A church lor the Augustinian Fathers was erected. In
this church, the historic image of the Child Jesus was kept.
One day, a soldier, Pedro de Arana, went out alone from the
camp. He was speared to death. Ln retaliation, a unit was sent to
grab captives, one of them a niece of Rajah Tupas of Cebu. Upon
learning this, Legazpi sent her nursemaid to inform Rajah Tupas that
the hostages were free to go home, on the condition that he had to
come for a talk.
Tupas did not heed the invitation of Legazpi, but Tamuyan the
girl's father came with six men. Tamuyan offered himself as a slave
in place of his daughter but Legazpi assured him the freedom of his
daughter without making him subservient to the Spaniards.
The father was stunned to see his daughter dressed as befitted
her rank. He knew that captives taken in war were not given noble
treatment. Moved by their kindheartedness, Tamuyan accepted
Legazpi's friendship. He promised to convince his brother Tupas to
accept Spanish good will. After a few more days, convinced that
Legazpi was sincere with his words, Rajah Tupas accepted Legazpi's
friendship.

4. The Spanish Conquest of the Islands
Legazpi tried to win Rajah Tupas and the people of Cebu
through the policy of attraction, inviting them to return, rebuild their
homes, and live in peace with them. With the help of Cid Hamal
(Sidamit), a Muslim Malay, Legazpi succeeded. The Cebuanos paid
yearly tribute to the king of Spain and recognized him as their
sovereign. Legazpi promised Spanish protection.
When Legazpi began on his conversion efforts, most Filipinos
were still practicing a form of polytheism, although some had
converted to Islam. The Augustinian missionaries were assiduously
spreading the Christian faith. The first Cebuano convert was
Jandulaman, a widowed niece of Tupas, later on named Isabel in
honor of Isabel Garces, Legazpi's deceased wife. After her baptism,
she married Master Andres, a Greek member of Legazpi's
expedition. Fray Diego Herrera officiated the wedding, the first
Christian marriage on Philippine soil.
Rajah Tupas also accepted baptism. Legazpi stood as the
godfather. He was named Felipe, in honor of Philip II. His son,
Pinsuncan was likewise baptized and was named Carlos. The natives
followed the same.
In 1569, Legazpi transferred to Panay due to meager food
provisions in Cebu. Meanwhile, he sent his grandson back to Mexico
with his first reports to the Spanish King. On the bank of the Panay
River, the second Spanish settlement was founded. Due to the
continuing apostolic work of Fr. Juan de Alba and other Augustinian
missionaries, the people became friendly to Legazpi. Two chiefs of
Panay, Datus Macabaog and Madidong became Christians.
In 1570, Legazpi sent his grandson, Juan de Salcedo who
arrived in Cebu from Mexico in 1567, to Mindoro to punish the Moro
pirates who plundered upon Panay's villages. With 30 Spaniards and
several hundreds of Visayans, Salcedo destroyed the Moro forts in
Ilin and Lubang (islets near Mindoro).
On May 8,1570, Marshal Martin de Goiti and his men left
Panay. With a force of 120 Spaniards and 600 Visayans, they
explored the Pansipit River in Batangas. Native volunteers who had
already made friends with the Spaniards joined Goiti's men to
avenge the harm done to them by hostile neighboring villages.
From the bay, Goiti saw on the south bank of the Pasig River a
wall protecting a port. He sent his interpreter ashore to invite the
local chief to a conference, which Rajah Matanda and his nephew
Rajah Sulayman (or Soliman) accepted.
Rajah Sulayman led Goiti to a house and they sealed their new
alliance with the traditional kasi kasi. The Maynilad chief was willing
to befriend the Spaniards but would not submit to Spanish

sovereignty and pay tribute to the Spanish king. This lack of trust led
to an armed clash between them.
Goiti landed his 80 fighters against Sulayman's fort, (where Fort
Santiago stands today) and ordered his men to destroy the artillery.
Sulayman defended his kingdom from the Spaniards who took the
offensive. A bloody hand-to-hand battle ensued until the Manilans
turned their backs as flames began to engulf their houses. Sulayman
and his warriors retreated across the river. Goiti and his men
captured Maynilad on the 24
th
of May and seized some cannons that
Panday Pira had made for Sulayman.
After the battle, Goiti returned to Panay. He told Legazpi about
the rich kingdom of Maynilad, a trading center where Chinese,
Borneans, Siamese, and other foreign merchants engaged in. From
thereon, Legazpi decided to colonize Maynilad. He left Panay and
reached Manila Bay in the middle of April 1571, with a stronger
expedition consisting ot 27 vessels, 280 Spaniards, and 600 Visayan
allies.
Lakandula, king of Tondo and Sulayman's uncle, realized that it
was useless to resist the Spanish forces. He welcomed Legazpi and
persuaded his nephew Sulayman to make peace with Legazpi. On
May 19,1571, Legazpi took possession of Maynilad in the name of
King Philip II of Spain.
Bambalito, a Pampango warlord from Macabebe; wanted to
resist the Spanish forces in Maynilad. He conferred with Lakandula
and Sulayman to support his cause. The two former native rulers did
not want to join him since they had already made peace with
Legazpi. However, a son and two nephews of Lakandula and some
of Sulayman's warriors joined his war camp in Navotas.
On June 3, 1571, Bambalito's more than 2,000 fighters in 40
caracoas (boats) from Hagonoy, Macabebe, and other Pampanga
villages sailed into Bankusay's creek, off the north shore of Manila
Bay. They fought Marshal Goiti's forces in this furious naval battle.
Bambalito perished at the height of this bloody fight. His men were
routed. The rest paddled frantically away. Ten native boats were
captured.
On June 24, 1571, the Feast Day of St. John the Baptist, Legazpi
proclaimed Manila as the capital of the Philippines (celebrated as the
Manila's FoundationDay). He called the city Nueva Castilla, because
he had been told that there had been an old fort or castle on the site.
On the same day, the city government was established with a cabildo
or city council and a court.
Years later, King Philip II, by his Royal Decree of June 1,1574,
named Manila, Insigne y Siempre Leal Ciudad (Distinguished and Ever
Loyal City) and by his Royal Decree of March 20, 1596, conferred a
beautiful coat-of- arms on this city.
On August 20,1572, Legazpi, the first Spanish governor and
adelantado (title given to those who personally funded their
expeditions) of the Philippines, died of heart attack. Guido de La
vezaris succeeded and stayed in post until 1575.
Captain Juan de Salcedo, grandson of Legazpi, subdued the
region along Laguna de Bay; discovered the gold mines of Paracale
across the mountains; and pacified Ilocandia and Cagayan in 1572.
He founded Villa Fernandina de Vigan in honor of Prince Ferdinand,
son of King Philip II who died at the age of four. Ln recognition of
Salcedo's military services, the Spanish Crown gave him encomienda
in llocos.
From Vigan, Salcedo explored the tip of Luzon. In 1573, he
conquered Camarines, Albay, and Catanduanes. The Bicolanos
refused to yield to them. The natives used their arrows against the
Spanish forces, however they hurriedly withdrew for their safety
after Salcedo fired his guns.
I'he Philippines was a crown colony considering she was
under Spanish domination. From the beginning of Spanish rule in
1565 to 1821, the Philippines was a dependency of Mexico. The
Mexican viceroy, in the name of the Spanish King, administered the
country. After the independence of Mexico from Spain in 1821, the
Philippines came to be directly governed from Madrid. In 1863, the
Overseas Ministry (Ministerio de Ultramar) took over the functions of
the Council of the Indies (Consejo de Indias).
The colonial code titled Recopilacion de leyes de los reynos de las
Indias (Compilation of Laws on Royal Lands in the Indies) popularly
known as Leyes de Indias (Laws of the Indies) issued in 1680, was
used by Spain to rule its extensive possessions.
It was on November 16,1568 when King Philip II issued
instructions to Legazpi to establish cities and towns and create
encomiendas to be distributed to deserving soldiers, in the first three
decades of Spanish rule, the Philippines was divided into
encomiendas. With a cross in one hand and a sword in the other, the
Spanish conquistadores imposed upon the Filipinos this feudal

system of administration. The word encomienda comes from the verb
encomendar meaning "to commend or to commit to one's care."
Originally, an encomienda was a feudal institution used, in Spain
to reward deserving generals and conquerors during Spanish wars
of recover}' of territory from the Moors. The earliest encomendergs in
the West Indies were delegated with the power to collect tribute and
to use the personal services of the inhabitants of their encomiendas.
This feudal grant was introduced by the Spanish Crown for the
combined purposes of rewarding deserving Spaniards and attracting
others to settle in the colonies. Permanent settlement of the Spanish
soldiers assured the defense of the colonies. This also facilitated the
conversion of the natives to the Catholic faith.
Encomienda in the Philippines was not a land grant. It was more
of an administrative unit for the purpose of exacting tribute from the
natives and to use the personal services of the King's vassals in the
encomienda. The encomendero undertook ways to look after the well-
being of his people and to educate them with Spanish norms of
conduct. In the domain of relations, the encomienda had been
considered as a kind of benevolent paternalism. In reality, the
encomienda was looked upon by its beneficiaries as a pretense for
slavery.
Tributes were collected in cash or in kind. From the total
collection, not exceeding one-fourth of this went to the encomendero
and the rest to the friars as well as the government. The cabeza de
barangay (former datu) collected the tribute and gave it to the
encomendero.
The Laws of the Indies provided that the encomendero must
not own a house in the native settlements, within their encomiendas
to avoid the commission of abuses. C >ovenwr Gomez Perez
Dasmariftas, as commanded by King Philip 11, urged the
encomenderos to reside near their wards to promote the latter's
welfare. However, this arrangement became an opportunity for the
encomenderos to enrich themselves. The unlawful inaction of
numerous services coupled with greed and cruelty made the lives
of the natives miserable. The early Spanish friars took the side of
the exploited people because they saw that the colonizers had
failed to instruct their people in the Catholic religion.
The national economy, founded upon the medieval concept of
master cind slave, paved for the introduction of a class of landed
aristocracy, while the broad masses lived in distress.
Haciendas and encomiendas are not the same though both were
forms of colonial appropriation. The demands or exactions of an
encomendero were incidental to his position as representative of the
King, thus, he exacted tribute and drafted labor. The hacendero on
the other hand, under the fiction of partnership (with the tenant as
companion or kasama), had the right of inheritance and free
disposition of the land.
Because of the abuses perpetrated by the encomenderos, the
encomiendas were replaced by a system of provincial government.
There were two types of provincial administrations: the alcaldia-
mayor or the province, where peace had been established by the
Spanish government placed under a civil official called alcalde-mayor;
and the corregimientos or territories that had not been completely
pacified under the charge of corregidores or politico- military
governors. Tomas de Comyn, a Spanish social scientist, nevertheless
described the office of the alcalde-mayor as a model of graft,
corruption, and inefficiency brought about by inexperienced men
being assigned to govern the provinces. Some of them had little or
no background at all to execute their varied responsibilities.
The province was divided into towns or pueblo, which were
administered by gobernadorcillos. The office of the gobernadorcillo
was open to Filipinos. This local position was at first occupied by
pre-colonial chieftains and their descendants and later elected by an
electoral board composed of the outgoing gobernadorcillo and twelve
members of the principalia. The principalia (social and political
aristocracy) referred to the prominent land-owning and propertied
citizens who could read, write, and speak Spanish.
Each town had several villages or barangays placed directly
under the cabezas de barangay. This position remained an appointive
office.
The king appointed the governor general and other colonial
officials administering the country. The governor general was the
chief executive as well as the commander-in-chief of the military
forces in the colony. Aside from this, he was also the vice-royal
patron wherein he has the power to recommend priests in parishes,
and the authority to intervene in controversies between religious
authorities. The governor general could also reject or suspend the
implementation of any royal decree or law from Spain with his
cumplase power, if in his opinion, the conditions in the colony did not
justify its implementation.

The office of the governor general was oftentimes bought or
granted as a favor. Since it generally involved a short tenure of
office, averaging two years and ten months, and in the 19
th
century
even shorter, the governor general oftentimes became eager in
accumulating wealth before his term of office expired.
However, checks to gubernatorial powers were made possible
through the following: first, the Audiencia Real or Royal Audiencia
established in 1583 to act as the Supreme Court of the colony also
served as advisory body to the governor and audited the
expenditures of the government; second, the residencia, which was a
judicial institution headed by the incoming governor general to
conduct a trial of an outgoing governor general and other Spanish
officials for the purpose of punishing those guilty of corruption, but
the case may be appealed to the King for clemency; third, the
visitador-general, who was the investigator sent by the King or an
official dispatched by the Council of Indies in Spain to check the
behavior of the high officials in the colony; fourth, the Archbishop
and clergy who were appointed by the Pope upon the
recommendation of the King; and fifth, subordinate public officials
and influential private citizens.
The counterbalance efforts of the aforementioned nevertheless
proved ineffectual in reprimanding corrupt administrators, for it was
quite easy for them to bribe the officials conducting the
investigation. They could even seek for the revocation of the
decisions given by the investigating officials through political
influence in the country or in Spain.
The local officials as well as the Spanish high officials became
the main instruments of "pacification." The subjugation of the natives
became complete after they have agreed to pay the tribute. One
tribute corresponds to one family, consisting of husband, wife, and
minor children. Half of the tribute has to be paid by an unmarried
man or woman. One tribute is equivalent to eight (8) reales or one
peso. It may be paid in money or in kind like rice, honey, corn, and
the like. In 1851, it was increased to 12 reales or one peso and a half,
in 1884, the cedula tax replaced the tribute.
Exempted from paying the tribute were as follows: incumbent
gobernadorcillos, cabezas and their families, government employees,
soldiers with distinguished service, descendants of Lakandula, a few
other native chieftains, choir members, sacristans, porters of the
churches, and government witnesses.
Encomenderos often had to send soldiers to collect the tribute
by force. Nonpayment of tribute meant torture or imprisonment.
Sometimes houses were burned or looted by them? soldiers as
punishment for the natives' defiance. Other natives |ust fled to the
mountains to escape punishment. The Filipinos hated the tribute for
it was a symbol of subjugation to Spain. Likewise, it resulted to
Spanish abuses especially by tribute collectors.
Opposition to colonial authority became quite difficult.
Although the Spaniards constituted a small number in the country,
they had conscripted natives from different regions to put down
revolts in other regions to remain in power.
Polo or forced labor instituted in 1580 was another form of
pacifying the natives. Male Filipinos between 16 to 60 years of age
rendered manual service for the country for the purpose of building
ships, churches, roads, and other forms of infrastructure.
The polista or worker has to work 40 days a year in the labor
pool. In 1884, forced labor was reduced to 15 days a year. To be
excluded from the polo, one has to payfalla (exemption fee), which
only a few Filipinos could actually pay. The chieftains and their
eldest sons were also excused from forced labor.
Polo led to the abandonment of the fields, separation from
families or homes, as well as illness and death for some. The alcaldes
often drafted hundreds of men, more than what was necessary for
woodcutting and then pocketed the money, which must be paid for
the polistas.
Bandala, which was instituted in the first half of the 17
th
century
by Governor General Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera was another
way to overpower the Filipinos. This refers to the assignment of
annual quotas to each province for the compulsory sale of products
to the government. Due to lack of funds, the government issued
promissory notes in exchange for the goods. Nonpayment on the
part of the government meant seizure of products. The system meant
virtual confiscation of products for the government that was usually
out of money; promissory notes were first given in exchange for the
goods.
The political condition in the Philippines was worsened with
the union of Church and State. The friars, like the government
officials, exercised political, economic, and other non-spiritual
powers. They controlled the educational system as well as the
collection of taxes and the conscription of natives into the army.

They even controlled municipal elections and censored plays and
reading materials. So extensive was the so-called friar interference in
the country that in the 19
th
century, Filipino propagandists
demanded their expulsion.

5. Towards the Hispanization of the Natives
The Spaniards integrated into the Filipino society their religion,
language, customs, arts, and sciences. The Church and State
inseparably carried out Spanish policy in the country. When the
Spaniards came into the country, they destroyed the carved idols out
of wood and stone because these artworks were regarded as
abominable to the faith.
To a great extent, the Spanish Catholic missionaries were able to
remodel Filipino culture and society. The Spanish authorities
clustered the Filipino population into village settlements where they
could more easily be instructed. Since most secular colonial officials
had no intention of living far from home, the friars took on the roles
as the King's representatives and interpreters of government policies
in the countryside. Spanish urbanization was centered in the city of
Manila, within a walled city called Intramuros.
Infrastructure showing Spanish domination in the country, such
as massive colonial churches, convents, schools, roads, bridges, and
the bahay na bato at kahoy (Antillian stone and wood houses) were
constructed. Initially, buildings during the Spanish era were of
thatch and bamboo. After accidental fires that hit some of them,
stones, wood, bricks, and tiles were used for construction.
Structurally, the bahay na bato at kahoy also known as bahay na
mestiza (or mixed, because wood and stone were blended together),
perpetuated the features of the pre-Hispanic bahay na kubo. The
ground floor was used for storage and for parking vehicles.
Habitation took place upstairs with specific rooms for guests (azotea
and sala), dining (comedor), cooking (cocina), and sleeping (cuarto).
The Spaniards imposed the feudal system and created towns
and estates by converging the people through reduction, referring to
the resettlement of inhabitants in Spanish-style poblaciones - or at
least - bajo de las campanas (within hearing distance of the church
bells).
The Spanish model for a poblacion (town center) was organized
around a rectangular plaza, with the church (the most important
structure of the plaza complex) and convent on one side, bounded by
the tribunal or municipio, and by the houses of Spanish officials and
principales (elite). The presence of principalia residences in the plaza
complex reflected the existence of socioeconomic ascendancy.
Spanish society had always stressed "purity" of blood in
indicating societal rank. At the top of the social pyramid were the
espanoles, with both Spanish parents, which included the espanoles
peninsulares (born in the Spanish peninsula) and the espanoles
insulares or Filipinos (born in the colony).
Below the espanoles were the mestizos and mestizas - the children
of an espanol and an indio or india. The term mestizo referred to the
mestizos de sangley or Chinese mestizos, while Spanish mestizos were
called mestizos de espanol.
Constituting the majority of the population were the indios or
indios naturales, pertaining to the natives of the Philippines without
Spanish or
I hinese ancestry. Generally, the Spanish colonizers believed that
the indios k could not comprehend more than the basic knowledge.
The ceremonial splendour of the Roman Catholic Church
aroused the admiration of the natives. More representatives of
various religious orders such as the Augustinians, Dominicans,
Franciscans, and Jesuits came to the Philippines after Legazpi's
expedition. The first bishop of Manila was Fray Domingo de
Salazar, a member of the Order of Preachers (OP). He was
succeeded by Fray Ignacio de Santibanez, a Franciscan priest who
became the first Archbishop of Manila.
The territory of the old Archdiocese of Manila covered the
civil provinces of Nueva Ecija, the Southern half of Tarlac,
Zambales, Pampanga, Bulacan, Rizal, Cavite, Batangas, Laguna,
and the islands of Mindoro and Marinduque. Pope Clement VIII
on August 26,1595, established the Diocese of Nueva Segovia in
Lal-lo, Cagayan. In the same year, the Diocese of Nueva
:
Caceres
in Camarines Sur and the Diocese of Cebu (cradle of Christianity '
in the Philippines) were also established. Consequently, the
missionaries learned local dialects and introduced the Roman
alphabet.
By the 16
lh
century, there were Filipinos like Tomas Pinpin
(the first Filipino printer), who became conversant with the
Spanish language. He wrote the first published Tagalog book titled
Librong Pag-aaralan nang manga Tagalog nang uicang Castila (Book

that the Tagalogs Should Study to Learn Spanish) for the benefit of
unlettered Filipinos in the Spanish language.
Basic education was rendered by parochial schools,
established primarily for religious instruction. The first one was
established in Cebu. In 1582, Archbishop Domingo de Salazar
ordered that every town was to have one school for boys and one
for girls. Attendance was made compulsory. Parents paid the
teachers' salaries. The subjects taught were catechism, reading and
writing in the dialect, music, the rudiments of arithmetic, and
trades and industries.
Education was still in the early stage of development during
the Spanish period. Even by the late 19
th
century, the Spanish
language was still unknown to a great majority. They were literate
in their own native dialects. The Spanish aristocracy tried to
distinguish themselves from the indios with the use of language
and level of education.
Higher education was established exclusively for the
Spaniards and Filipinos, referring to those born in the colony to
Spanish parents. Colleges and universities were closed to indios.
(The natives were only allowed in these institutions after 200 years
of colonial rule).
The Jesuits in Manila founded the first college for boys in
1589. It was originally called College of Manila (for the
scholastics), and later changed to College of San Ignacio. In 1621, it
was elevated to the rank of a university by Pope Gregory XV and
was named University of San Ignacio. However, this
school was closed in I7h8 when the Jesuits were expelled from the
country. In 1601, the Colegio de San Jose also under the Jesuits, was
established.
In 1611, Fray Miguel de Benavides, the third archbishop of
Manila established the Colegio de Nuestra Senora del Santissimo
Rosario, later renamed Universidad de Santo Tomas (in 1645 by
Pope Innocent X).
The Dominican order that administered Colegio de Santo
Tomas also established the Colegio de San Juan de Letran to take
care of orphaned Spanish boys.
The girls were also given special education. Schools were of two
kinds: the colegio, which is a regular school for girls; and the beaterio,
a combined school and nunnery. The first college for girls in the
Philippines was the College of Santa Potenciana (1594). After the
school ceased its operations, the students transferred to College of
Santa Isabel, now the oldest existing college for girls in the country.
The institution was originally built to care for orphaned Spanish
girls. Eventually, it became an exclusive school for the daughters of
affluent Spaniards.
In 1621, the Franciscan nuns established the Real Monasterio de
Santa Clara (now St. Claire Convent of Manila), the first nunnery in
the Philippines. In 1694 the Beaterio de la Compania de Jesus, which
was directed under the Jesuits was founded by Mother Tgnacia del
Espiritu Santo, a Filipina nun. This was a school established to
accommodate Filipino girls, the indias. Mother Ignacia's spirit of
poverty, humility, penance, confidence in God and charity became
the distinguishing mark of the beatas (resident pupils). The beatas had
extended their apostolate to education. The beaterio has developed
into the Congregation of the Religious of the Virgin Mary (R.V.M.) of
the 20
th
century.
- Primary education consisted of courses in reading, writing,
arithmetic, religion; geography, the history of Spain, the Spanish
language, vocal music; and agriculture for boys and needlework for
girls. The girls were taught basic education, as well as religion,
needlework, painting, and music.
Academic reforms were later on implemented, after the Spanish
government conceded to its growing demand. The Educational
Decree, dated December 20, 1863 introduced a system of public
education that opened opportunities to Filipinos for higher learning.
It ordered the establishment of an educational system consisting of
elementary, secondary, and collegiate levels. It also provided for the
establishment of normal schools to train teachers. The Board of
Public Instruction was likewise created to supervise the schools. The
decree also provided for the use of Spanish as the language of
instruction, starting at the elementary level.
The Escuela Normal (Normal School) for the training of male
teachers for elementary instruction, was delegated to the Jesuits. It
was inaugurated in 1865. In 1893, it became the Normal Superior,
which trained teachers of secondary courses.
Schools for the arts were also built aside from these regular
schools. Archbishop Juan A. Rodriguez founded the Escuela de
Tiples in 1743. The institution was to provide elementary education
and offer courses in vocal and instrumental performance. In the late

19
th
century, the school was able to pattern its plan of study after the
Conservatory of Music in Madrid.
Damian Domingo founded the Academy of Fine Arts, the first
school in painting in Manila in 1820. With this, he was called the
"Father of Filipino Painting."
The Academia de Dibujo y Pintura (Academy of Drawing and
Painting) was founded in 1824. Some of its students were sent by the
government to pursue higher studies in Madrid, Rome, and Paris.
In the 19
th
century, various technical schools were established
like the School of Mercantile Accounting and Modern Languages,
patterned after the Commercial School in Barcelona. Commerce was
introduced as a three-year vocational course, with the degree of
perito to be earned by the student after studying.
Mechanics and other vocational courses were offered in
secondary instruction leading to the bachillerato en artes. After
finishing the course, the students could take examinations for the
title of perito mecanico (mechanical expert). Surveying was also
introduced as a vocational course, which conferred the degree of
perito agrimensor to its graduates.
It was in 1860, that a nautical school was opened upon orders of
the queen. It was placed under the commander of the fleet. After four
years, the student was to board a ship. The degree of piloto de marina
mercante was to be given after the training.
The seeds of vocational education were sown by the early
Spanish missionaries who taught the natives better methods of
farming, the cultivation of foreign plants like indigo, corn, cotton and
wheat, and various crafts like printing, carpentry, masonry, and
dyeing.
The early missionaries were also the first to establish a printing
press in the Philippines. Books were being printed by xylographic
method, using engraved wood blocks. The earliest book printed was
the Doctrina Christiana en lengua espaiiola y tagala (1593), written by
Fray Juan de Oliver. This catechetical book sought to explain the
importance of Christ, chastity, and devotion to God in the
vernacular.
At the beginning of the 19
th
century, the pasion was the
prevalent form in print. Written in verse and chanted during Lent, it
depicted the life and passion of Jesus Christ. The first Tagalog pasion
was written by Caspar Aquino de Belen. It was published in 1704.
The second written pasion titled Casaysayan ng Pasiong Mahal ni
Jesucristong Panginoon Natin na Sucat Ipag-alab ng Sinomang Babasa
(The Story of the Holy Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ that Should
Inflame the Heart of the Reader, circa 1814) was preferred over the lirst
one. It was also known as Pasyong Genesis. This version was edited
by Father Mariano Pilapil (circa 1758-circa 1818) and published by
the Imprenta de Santo Tomas. It was later translated into several
native dialects.
During the first half of the 19
,h
century Jose de la Cruz was the
most prominent poet in the oral tradition. He was said to have
written many literary pieces in elegant Tagalog language. Among
them were: Doce Pares de Francia; Bernardo Carpio; and, Adela at
Florante. He was popularly known as Husefig Sisiw because
whenever zealous writers approached him for guidance in their
verses, he required them to bring sisiw (chick) as payment.
Pedro Bukaneg, the blind poet who wrote the popular Ilocano
epic, Lam-Ang, was hailed as the "Father of llocos Literature." Among
the Tagalogs, Francisco Balagtas (later dubbed as the Prince of
Tagalog Poets) became popular with his poetical pieces particularly,
Florante at Laura.
Momentous feasts and events like the arrival of a new Spanish
official also meant stage presentations. The first recorded drama was
staged in Cebu in 1598, a comedia written by Vicente Puche. It was
performed in honor of Msgr. Pedro de Agurto, Cebu's first bishop.
Christian victory over the Muslims was depicted with a linambay
(moro-moro in Tagalog) in 1637.
At the end of the 17
th
century, the first theater was established
in Intramuros, Manila, known as Teatro Comico. At the turn of the
19
th
century, the zarzuela, a Spanish one-act opera with satirical
theme became popular in the country. These stage plays were
performed at fiestas where townfolks eagerly watch so as not to miss
the gala presentation.
In the field of music, the Sampaguita composed by Dolores
Patemo became popular. The first music teacher to win distinction in
Philippine history was Geroriimo de Aguilar, a Franciscan
missionary.
In 1811, the first newspaper in the country appeared in Manila,
which was the Del Superior Govierno (Of the Supreme Government)
with Governor General Manuel Gonzalez de Aguilar as editor.
In the field of science, the first scientists in the Philippines were
the Spanish friars. Fr. Manuel Blanco, the "Prince of Botanists/"

wrote Flora de Filipinas, which was published in 1837. This book
identified 1,200 kinds of plants in the country. The first sundials in
the country were built in 1871 at Tagudin, llocos Sur by Fr. Juan
Sorolla, a Spanish Augustinian.
Father Marcial Funcia Ramos introduced the first iron printing
press in the Philippines in 1847. He also initiated the use of better
paper such as papel de kilo (linen paper), instead of rice paper and
Chinese paper. George Oppel, a German, introduced lithography in
the country in 1858.
Transported through galleons (huge Spanish trading ships)
were plants like corn, cassava, sweet potato, cotton, maguey, indigo,
achuete, tobacco, cacao, peanut, tashew nut, pineapple, avocado,
pepper, squash, tomato, lima bean, turnip, and eggplant. The
Spaniards also brought to the Philippines some animals like horses,
cow, sheep, and goats.
The galleon ships were used to ferry the cargoes via Pacific
Ocean to Acapulco, Mexico were brought into the Philippines by
Asian traders from China, Japan, India, Siam (now Thailand),
Moluccas, and other nearby places. Manila became an important
port for the galleons. The galleon would be carrying minted coins or
silver bullion and products of Mexico on its return.
The galleon trade was a government monopoly, however, the
Chinese merchants outnumbered the Spanish and Filipino traders in
selling their goods mainly silk textiles and porcelain to Mexico. The
Chinese formed an economically important community in Manila by
the 1590s but years later were given restrictions. When the galleon
trade ended in 1815, Philippine trade was opened to the world, but
links to Latin America weakened.
The financing of the galleon trade was made possible primarily
through the Obras Pias, the earliest banking institution in the
country. The funds were donated by rich people for charitable
purposes. Later, the friars had the funds given as loans to
businessmen at various rates of interest. The friars were also able to
borrow from die government. Unfortunately, they were not able to
pay back the government resulting in the bankruptcy of the national
treasury.
In 1717, Governor General Fernando Manuel de Bustamante
compelled the friars to return the money they borrowed from the
government. This however, only resulted to his death in 1719 in the
hands of an angry mob, agitated by his stringent rules against the
members of the church.
The Spanish government also attempted to introduce economic
reforms in the country, through the efforts of some enlightened
officials like Governor General Jose Basco y Vargas. Governor Basco
implemented series of reforms not only to promote economic
development but also to make the country independent of subsidy
from Mexico. He envisioned large-scale production of silk, cotton,
tobacco, spices, and sugarcane; the application of scientific
knowledge to Philippine agriculture and industry and the growth of
foreign trade on the basis of Philippine natural resources.
Governor General Basco (1778-87) founded the Sociedad
Economica de los Amigos del Pais (Economic Society of the Friends of
the Country) in Manila on April 26, 1781. The society helped much in
the agricultural development of the country. In 1824, importation of
martines (birds) from China was made to fight the locusts that were
destroying Philippine crops. The society also offered prizes for best
agricultural projects and techniques developed. In 1853, Candido
Lopez Diaz, a Filipino, was awarded for his invention of a machine
cleaning hemp fibers.
In 1861, the society established the tirst .igi n ultural school in
Manila. It introduced the cultivation of tea, cotton, poppy, and
mulberry trees. Large tracts of land in Camarines were planted of
mulberry trees to feed
silkworms.
Upon Governor Basco's recommendation, King Charles III
issued a royaT decree in 1780 establishing a government monopoly
in the Philippines that took effect in 1782. Thus, the government
established monopolies on
tobacco, wine, gunpowder, playing cards, and among others.
The tobacco monopoly raised much money for the colonial
government but resulted to the abuses of some crooked Spanish
officials. They often cheated the farmers in the payment of their
produce. The farmers on the other hand cultivated more than what
was required and hid their excess tobacco to be sold in the black
market. In 1882, Governor General Fernando Primo de Rivera
abolished the monopoly. Private firms took control of the tobacco
business.
Governor General Felix Berenguer de Marquina succeeded
Governor Basco. His first official act was the demolition of nipa

houses in the city of Manila, which to him was an ugly sight and can
even cause fire. He also ordered the abolition of indulto de comercio
(license to trade), which gave the alcalde mayor (provincial governor)
the privilege to control the prices of goods in his province.
Monopolies on playing cards, gunpowder, and wine were also
abolished. He established the minting of money in the country to
prevent the outflow of gold.
In 1842, Don Sinibaldo de Mas, an economist, w
T
as sent by
Spain to the Philippines to make an economic survey of the country.
In his report, he made the following recommendations: first, the
opening of more Philippine ports to world trade; second, the
encouragement of Chinese immigration in the country to stimulate
agricultural development; and third, the abolition of the tobacco
monopoly.
The opening of the Philippines to world trade resulted to a
great demand for its products in the world market. This brought
about the need of machinery for massive production. The first steam
machine for hulling rice was introduced in 1836 by Eulogio de
Otaduy. Then a few years later, Nicholas Loney, a British merchant,
introduced the first steam machine for hulling sugar in Negros.
The end of the galleon trade together with Spain's involvement
in the Napoleonic Wars (1799-1858), reduced the large-scale
importation of fabrics. This became beneficial to the local weaving
industry.
The most important materials used in weaving were cotton,
abaca, silk, and pina. Sinamay or pinukpok is made from beaten abaca
fibers, which were extensively woven in Camarines, Albay, Panay,
Bohol, and Samar. Finest of the fabrics were usually woven in
combination. Nipis (sheer) is from pure
Nllk in combination with cotton and abaca (trom the trunk of wild
banana). A particular type of riipis produced in lloilo came to be
called jusi (from the taw silk fibers brought in by i hinese traders).
Since weaving of the riipis requires a great amount of skill, patience
and time, the cloth was priced highly. Also popular during the
Spanish era was the pina fabric (from the Ir.ives of the wild
pineapple). Batangas was known for its kulambo (gauze mosquito
net). The Northern Luzon provinces produced a type of cloth l.nown
as abel lloco.
As early as in the 1700s the Spaniards brought in their dressy
shirt (tucked out) with standing collar. Woven embroidery of the
fabric is for display and for some, due to health reasons. With the
sinamay or pinukpok material, skin irritation at times developed
because of the material's fibers >md the country's warm
temperature. The trousers used with shirt were loose and required
the use of slippers or shoes.
In the early 19
th
century, the Augustinian missionaries
introduced spinning wheels and more sophisticated looms in Panay
Island, which greatly developed the local weaving industry of the
place.
In time, needlework developed in Ermita, Malate, and Sta. Ana,
Manila. Finished articles were expensive, primarily because of
embroidery. Elaborate works of embroidery were sewn on hemlines,
sleeves, scarves, handkerchiefs, and on children's clothes. With
skilled labor, this cottage industry gained popularity.
The Christianization of the Filipinos was the most lasting legacy
of the Spanish missionaries. The Spaniards converted much of the
Philippines to Christianity except Mindanao and Sulu. The use of
Philippine dialects by the early missionaries facilitated the teaching
of the Gospel. The striking resemblances between the pre-colonial
religion and Catholicism have made the latter acceptable to the local
inhabitants.
During the Spanish period, no building structure was allowed
to rise higher than the church's bell tower. The highest part inside
the church was the retablo. At the center and above the altar table
was the tabernacle for storing the sacred hosts.
Many holy images arid their corresponding devotions have
originated from New Spain (now Mexico). Some of the popular
images are the following: statue of Our Lady of Peace and Good
Voyage (also known as Our Lady of Antipolo); the Black Nazarene
venerated at the Quiapo Church, and Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Jesus Christ has been represented in various forms. As a child
he is depicted as the Santo Nifio, either placed on a manger or
standing as the Sovereign King with a globe and a scepter. On His
way to Calvary, he is presented as the Nazareno. While placed inside
a sepulcher, the image is called Santo Entierro. The image of the
resurrected Christ is known as Cristo
Hi in ituiio. Christ on the cross known as the Santo Cristo is regarded
as the most important symbol of the Church. It is to be placed at the
center of every altar. During the Spanish era, it occupied the central
pinnacle of the

church's retablo (decorated medieval altar).
Family life during the Spanish period focused on the Christian
way of life. The father although acknowledged as the head of the
family, considered the sentiments of his wife on family matters. The
mother was regarded as the custodian of the family. She usually
acted as the first teacher of the children.
Families became more considerately close since parents and
children did pray together, particularly during the Angelus, in
saying the rosary and before each meal. They went to church
together to hear the Sunday mass as well as other masses, marking
important religious events like Christmas, Holy Week, and the feast
day of the patron saint of the town.
Owing to the influence of Christianity, social welfare was also
promoted in the country. The sick and the needy were given care
through medical services, juan Clemente founded the first hospital in
Manila in 1578. Out of this hospital originated the present San Juan
de Dios Hospital and the San Lazaro Hospital.
In 1594, the Santa Hermandad y Cofradia de la Misericordia (Holy
Brotherhood and Confraternity of Mercy) was organized for
charitable works and services for the needy. The first regular
orphanage, Real Hospicio de San Jose, was established in 1810.
The religious calendar stemmed from celebrations in reverence
of Jesus Christ and Mother Mary and in the feasts of saints. Every
December 8, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, which
solemnizes the dogma of Mary being conceived without original sin
is celebrated through eucharistic rites and a grand procession.
The whole Christendom celebrates the birth of Jesus Christ on
December 25. The joyous celebration begins on December 16 with
the start of Misa de Aguinaldo (Mass of the gift), popularly known as
simbang gabi, a novena dawn mass to prepare for the midnight mass
on Christmas Eve called Misa de Callo (Mass of the Rooster). A
religious play called panunuluyan, which reenacts the search by
Joseph and Mary for an inn has also been observed in some parishes
prior to the midnight mass. After the mass, families gather for the
traditional noche buena, a feast usually of ham, cheese, and other
native delicacies.
The passion and death of Our Lord is solemnly remembered
during Lenten season, particularly during Holy Week from Palm
Sunday to Easter Sunday. People chant the pasion or attend the
cenaculo (religious play depicting the life, sufferings, and crucifixion
of Jesus Christ). In Easter Sunday, the traditional salubong
commemorates Christ's first meeting with His mother.
In Marinduque, the Moriones Festival is held during the Holy
Week. This glittering pageantry rei .ills the story of Longinus, the
Roman centurion who was converted to Christianity. In this colorful
parade, the participants wear masks and costumes portraying the
Roman era. A typical Moriones mask bears a bearded Caucasian face
with large arrogant eyes and an open mouth.
The tradition of self-flagellation during the Lenten season was
introduced in the Philippines from Mexico. During those times,
public penance was practiced in Spain and the rest of Europe. But in
Mexico and i n the Philippines self-flagellation was primarily done to
carry out a promise (panata in Tagalog) to the Lord.
Every town established during the Spanish period has a patron
saint, whose fiesta is celebrated annually with masses, procession,
fireworks, feasting, music, and often, theatrical presentations. Towns
or barrios named after San Jose (St. Joseph) hold their fiesta on
March 19. Those named Sta. Monica celebrate every May 4. Those
named after Sta. Rita de Casia commemorate her feast day on May
22. Those named San Juan (St. John the Baptist) observe his feast on
June 24.
Every May 15, the Pahiyas Festival in Lucban, Quezon is held in
honor of San lsidro Labrador, the patron saint of farmers. The word
"pahiyas" comes from the root word hiyas, which gives a notion of a
joyous shower of blessings or treasures. Elaborate decorations like
rice wafer, fruits, and vegetables are placed on houses, as an
outpouring of creativity and thanksgiving for good harvest.
In Pulilan, Bulacan, the Carabao Festival is also held in honor of
San lsidro ever)' May 15. Work animals mostly colorfully groomed
and shaved carabaos are led on parade on the streets of Pulilan to
genuflect or kneel in front of the church.
Also in Bulacan, the Obando Festival is in honor of the town's
patron saints - Nuestra Senora de Salambao, San Pascual Baylon, and
Santa Clara, which begins on the 17
,h
of May. It is a three-day
celebration. Pilgrims attending the festival usually wear straw hats
adorned with quills, flowers, ribbons or paper and join the dance to
appeal for heavenly intercession for a future spouse in the case of
singles or a child in the case of childless couples. Farmers also attend
to thank the Virgin of Salambao for bounteous harvests.

Bicol's grandest celebration is the annual Penafrancia Festival
where a fluvial procession is made in honor of Our Lady of
Penafrancia every 17
th
of September in Naga, Camarines Sur.
Culminating the final novena prayers is a Gregorian Mass, in
thanksgiving to God and in honor of Our Lady.
During the entire month of May, parishes annually hold the
Flores de Mayo (Flowers of May), where devotees offer flowers every
day at the church altar to honor the Blessed Mother. Before the
month ends, the Santa Cruz de Mayo or the Santacruzan procession is
held to commemorate the finding of the I loly Cross by Empress
Helena and Emperor Constantine. The participants called sagalas
play various characters found in Christian history, which include the
Reyna Elena. This festive celebration ends inside the church.
Solemn rites and celebrations were followed by dining and
merrymaking among families and friends. During these occasions,
Spanish culinary specialties like paella (a mixture of rice, chicken and
shellfish), arroz valenciana (rice and chicken cooked in coconut milk),
and lengua (sauteed ox-tongue) were usually served in feast tables.

6. Chinese in the Philippines
During the Spanish times, the Chinese were called Sangleys,
derived from the terms xiang and ley meaning "traveling merchant."
Since Legazpi and those who succeeded him favored Sino-Philippine
trade, more trading junks from China came to the Philippines
annually, bringing their merchandise like silk, textiles, and porcelain
wares.
Prior to the coming of the Spaniards, the Chinese had already
established their settlements in the country. The Chinese, who were
able to learn the styles and techniques from native craftsmen,
predominantly occupied the manufacturing of carriages, stone
masonry, printing, shoemaking, and tailoring.
In Manila, they were forced to live outside tine city walls. The
place was called Parian, erected in 1581 by Governor General
Gonzalo Ronquillo de Penalosa. Outside Manila, many Chinese
engaged in retail trade, while others invested in land. Many Chinese
settled in the Philippines after the Taiping Rebellion (1851-1864) in
China. A number of them were converted to Catholicism and
married Filipina women. Their descendants, called Chinese mestizos,
were formed.
During the Spanish period, the Chinese mestizos were able to
acquire land from peasants through the pacto de retroventa. This was
also known as pacto de retro, which was a contract under which the
borrower who conveyed his land to the lender could repurchase it
for the same amount of money that he had received. Generally, the
borrower could no longer pay the sum of money; thus, the transfer
of land ownership to the lender has been completed.
The Chinese in the Philippines had given valuable services to
the community but still they were not given fair treatment by the
Spanish authorities, owing to their constructive role in the economic
development of the country. To discourage Chinese immigration to
the country, the Spanish authorities taxed them heavily. They were
also taxed twice the amount required of Filipinos because they
earned more. The Spanish government encouraged the immigrants
to become agricultural laborers. Soon, the Chinese gained position in
the cash-crop economy in the provincial level.
The Chinese mestizo could legally change his classification
through the dhpcrtsaie ley, which involved the transfer of his
family to the tax register of Indios. The Chinese compound name
was combined into a single surname, g., Tan Hwang Co to
Tanjuangco. 1 le wore the camisa de chitio and the top li.it, a status
symbol of the native priticipalia.
I he first Chinese threat to Spanish rule in the Philippines was
the m\ .ision of Lim-Ah-Hong. He appeared in Manila Bay on
November 29, l'v I with 62 war junks and shiploads of farming and
household goods. M was in search of a kingdom.
In Paranaque beach, Lim-Ah-Hong landed a force of 600 men
under Sioco, his Japanese lieutenant. On November 30, 1574, Sioco
attacked H.n.umbayan, killed Marshal Martin de Goiti, and
assaulted the city of Manila. But the Spanish forces aided by
Filipinos, drove the invaders back to their ships.
Lim-Ah-Hong himself led the second attack in Manila. This
time, Juan Salcedo has already arrived from Vigan upon knowing
the previous attack in Manila. He succeeded Goiti as marshal.
Sioco died in action while Lim-Ah-Hong retreated with his
ships and men northward, to Pangasinan. He established a colony at
the mouth of Agno River. However, Lim-Ah-Hong's colony in the
Philippines did not last long. Marshal Salcedo with a fleet of 1,500
Filipinos and 250 Spaniards sailed from Manila to Pangasinan and
destroyed Lim-Ah-Hong's stronghold in Lingayen Gulf.

Lim-Ah-Hong evaded capture. He managed to escape through
a man-made canal and fled to the hills and mingled with the Igorots
and Tingguians. Then, he returned to China and reorganized his
forces but he was defeated by the Chinese viceroy in Fookien in a
naval battle of Palahoan. He fled to Thailand but was not permitted
to stay there. He went to other kingdoms, but for fear of China, these
kingdoms did not welcome him. He wandered from one place to
another, till his whereabouts could no longer be traced.
The first Chinese revolt was brought about by the deep-seated
suspicion of the Spaniards. On May 23, 1603, three Chinese
mandarins arrived in Manila. They wanted to see Chin-San
(Mountain of Gold), which was believed to be in Cavite. The
Spaniards looked at it as a plausible scheme. After the mandarins
had left, the Spaniards strengthened the city defenses, which
alarmed the Chinese residents.
In Parian, a secret plot to overthrow the Spaniards was planned
under the leadership of Eng-Kang, a rich Chinese merchant. They
attacked Tondo and Quiapo on October 3,1603 by setting the
buildings on fire and by killing the inhabitants. Don Luis
Dasmarinas (former governor general) and Captain Tomas Bravo de
Acuna (nephew of Governor General Acuiia) led the retaliatory
attacks but they were ambushed.
I lowever, the Chinese failed to capture the city walls because
of the Spanish, F ilipino and Japanese joint forces, including the
friars as well as the residents of the area. The Chinese rebels
retreated to the hills of San Pablo, Laguna, but they were defeated by
the forces led by Cristobal de Axqueta Monchaca.
In 1639, the Chinese revolted for the second time. This was
caused by Governor General Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera's order
forcing the Chinese to work in Calamba, Laguna. The Chinese
denounced the abuses committed by Spanish tribute collectors. On
November 19,1639, hostilities began in Calamba and it spread to
other towns killing several Spanish friars, including the alcalde
mayor of Laguna, Marcos Zapata.
In the early part of 1662, Koxinga (real name was Cheng
Chengkung) was able to take Taiwan from the Dutch. He sent Fr.
Victorio Ricci to Manila, to extend his directive for tribute from the
Spanish authorities. This infuriated Governor General Manrique de
Lara and thus, he prepared to drive out all Chinese residents in the
country.
The Chinese retaliated by burning the district of Santa Cruz.
Many Filipinos and Spaniards were killed. An army of 4,000
Pampanguenos under Francisco Laksamana came to the rescue and
defeated the rebels who had fled to the mountains of Taytay and
Antipolo.
The fourth Chinese revolt (1686) was planned by Tingco, a
Chinese ex-convict. He was desperate to raise money to return to
China. He tried to burn the city of Manila and to loot the churches.
His group of rebels attacked in August, starting at the Parian, in the
house of Don Diego Vivien, the alcalde mayor. The government
forces arrived and routed them. Tingco was caught and executed.
To put an end to possible Chinese insurrection in the country,
the governor in 1729 ordered that all unbaptized Chinese in Manila
were to reside in the Parian. The baptized ones had to reside in
Binondo and Sta. Cruz.
However, when the British came and occupied Manila in 1762
the Chinese collaborated with them to fight the Spaniards. The
Chinese in Manila as well as the Chinese in Guagua, Pampanga
secretly plotted to massacre the Spaniards on Christmas Eve of
December 24,1762. One of the plotters happened to reveal the plot to
his Filipina sweetheart. The latter relayed the news to Fr. Jose Salas,
the parish priest of Mexico, Pampanga.
Governor General Simon de Anda who was informed of this
plot, led his forces to Guagua on December 20 and crushed the
Chinese rebels. This bloody confrontation was considered in
Philippine history as the "Red Christmas."

7. More Europeans In the Islands
Towards the end of the I6
,h
century, some European nations
began the attempts to establish settlements in the Philippines. In
1579, English mariners including Sir Francis Drake started to harass
Spanish shipping. I he Dutch also began to raid some islands in the
Philippines. They likewise assaulted Chinese, Portuguese, and
Japanese trading vessels.
In 1602, the Dutch trading companies sent fleets capable of
seizing control of the spice trade from the Portuguese. As Portugal's
ally, Spain committed its forces in the Philippines to help avert
Dutch assaults. Thus, the Dutch were drawn to the Philippines to
weaken the Spanish fleet stationed in the colony. Their base of
operations was Formosa (Taiwan). Dutch naval squadron attacked

various places in the Philippines from 1600-1747, which discouraged
Chinese and Japanese traders from entering the colony.
In February of 1646, a Dutch fleet arrived in the Philippine Sea.
As the Spanish officers and crew prepared for battle, the Dominican
friars advised the people to do penance and pray for the intercession
of Nuestra Sefiora del Santissimo Rosario (Our Lady of the Most Holy
Rosary).
After five naval skirmishes between March 15 and October
4,1646, the Filipinos and Spaniards won the eight-month naval battle
of Manila against the Dutch. This naval victory, until now is being
celebrated as Festival La Naval de Manila in honor of Our Lady, the
patroness of the Spanish fleet. This is truly a manifestation of divine
intervention for people to reflect on the social and moral pressures
that threaten the Filipino society.
The first successful foreign invasion of the Philippines, after the
Spanish conquest was the one staged by the British. It happened
when Spain became involved in the Seven Years War (1756-1763) on
the side of France and Austria against Britain and Prussia for the
control of Germany and for supremacy in North America and India.
In counterstrike, Britain laid claim to most of the Spanish colonies in
the Americas and the Orient, including the Philippines.
On the evening of September 22, 1762 (Manila time), the British
fleet consisting of 13 ships (with around 2,000 men) entered Manila
Bay. The commander of the fleet was Rear Admiral Samuel Cornish,
while Brigadier General William Draper was in command of the
troops. The following morning, September 23, two British officers
sent ashore under a white flag, a truce carrying an ultimatum to the
Spanish officials, demanding the surrender of Manila. Upon the
advice of the council of war, Archbishop Manuel Antonio Rojo, the
interim governor general rejected the ultimatum.
Thousands of Filipino warriors from Pampanga, Bulacan, and
Laguna reinforced the military army in Manila, then with only 556
regular troops.
I heir leader was Manalastas, .1 Pampanguefto. Still, they were
outnumbered and out armed. Knives and spears were no match
against British rifles. Draper's cannons tore down the southwest
corner of the city walls. Finally, they were forced to retreat. Although
unsuccessful, this battle was significant for the Filipinos, for it
proved their loyalty to Spain and to Catholicism.
Manila fell into British hands on October 5, 1762 after a white
flag was hoisted at Fort Santiago. This was to stop the horrible
slaughter of city defenders and residents. Terms of surrender were
discussed.
Simon de Anda, the youngest oidor of the Audencia Real had
escaped in a boat on the eve of the fall of Manila. He was dispatched
by Archbishop Rojo to Bulacan to ensure the loyalty of the rest of the
provinces to Spain. He established his headquarters in Bacolor,
Pampanga. He continued the government with himself as the
governor general.
Archbishop Rojo had also sent messengers to Palapag, Samar
where the galleon Filipino docked. The ship had brought back from
Mexico the situado (subsidy) of over a million silver pesos. The
government wanted to keep this fund from the British. Under Rojo's
instructions, the ship was burned after the silver coins were taken
out safely. Learning about it, Cornish sent his frigates to Samar but
the money had already been placed under Anda's care.
During the brief occupation of the British in Manila, the country
had three governors: Archbishop Rojo, Oidor Simon de Anda, and
Honorable Dawsonne Drake, who established a civil government in
Manila. He was appointed by the East [ndia Company to govern the
Philippines.
The brief occupation of Manila by the British resulted to
different reactions. When the British took Pasig, Alimud Din sought
refuge and was later restored to his sultanate in the south. In return,
he signed a treaty permitting the British to establish a trading center
in Jolo.
The people of Paranaque stood loyal to the Spaniards.
Pampanga and Bulacan rallied behind Anda. However, in North and
Central Luzon, some people roused in action against the Spanish
government. In Pangasinan, a revolt was instigated by Juan de la
Cruz Palaris. In the Ilocos region, Diego Silang accepted the British
bid of support for his cause in fighting against the Spaniards.
The Seven Years War in Europe came to an end with the Treaty
of Paris signed on February 10, 1763. Among the terms settled was
the acquisition of almost entire French Empire in North America by
Britain. The British also acquired Florida from Spain. England has to
restore the Philippines to Spain. The news reached Manila in a much
later date. On May 31,1764, Anda and his troops went back to Manila

amidst the jubilation of the populace in conformity with the treaty,
which formally ended the war.

Study Guides
"Terms/Concepts to Understand
Inter caetera bull Vassalage
Reduccion Plaza complex
Retablo Pacto de retroventa
Questions to Answer
1. What prompted the Europeans to search new lands in the 14
th
.
century to the 16
th
century?
2. Explain the efforts of the westerners to conquer the Philippines.
3. What made some historians believed that it was in Masao,
Butuan and not in Limasawa, Leyte where the first recorded
Christian mass took place?
4. Did the Spaniards succeed in promoting Hispanic culture
among the early Filipinos?
5. Describe the general condition of the Filipino-Chinese during
the Spanish period. What caused them to revolt against the
colonial government?
6. When the British forces occupied Manila in 1762, what
happened as a result to the Philippine political scenario?



Chapter V
Struggle for Rights and Freedom

1. Revolt of Lakandula and Sulayman
(1574)
Cause: Lavezaris's Reversal of Legazpi's Policy
After the death of Legazpi on August 20, 1572, Governor Guido
de Lavezaris no longer exempted the native rulers and their
descendants from paying tribute. He ordered the confiscation of
their patrimonial land properties.
Because of the new policy, Lakandula and Sulayman decided to
rise in arms. Taking advantage of Lim-Ah-Hong's attack in Manila in
1574, the two chieftains proclaimed their revolt and gathered their
warriors in Navotas.
Juan de Salcedo and Fr. Geronimo Marin were sent by
Lavezaris to persuade them not to carry out their plan. They were
given an assurance that all their grievances would be remedied and
those who took arms would be pardoned. Governor Lavezaris did
this gesture to ask help from Filipino natives in driving away Lim-
Ah-Hong from the country.

2. First Pampanga Revolt (1585)
Cause: Abuses of Encomenderos
Disgruntled by the way the encomenderos administered, some
brave Pampangueno leaders connived with the people of Manila and
the Borneans to rise in revolt.
According to their plan, they would secretly enter the city of
Manila one dark night and massacre the Spaniards. A native woman
who was married to a Spanish soldier happened to learn of it and
warned the Spanish authorities about it. The leaders were arrested
and executed without any fair trial.

3. The Tondo Conspiracy (1587-88)
Cause: Regain Lost Freedom
Attempting to restore freedom and local leadership being
enjoyed during the pre-colonial years, Agustin de Legazpi (nephew
of Lakandula), together with other leaders like Martin Pangan
(gobernadorcillo of Tondo), Magat Salamat (son of Lakandula), Juan
Banal (another Tondo chief), Esteban Taes (chief of Bulacan), Pedro
Balinguit (chief of Pandacan), Pitonggatan (chief of Tondo), Felipe
Salonga (chief of Polo), and Geronimo Basi (brother of Agustin de
Legazpi) planned to overthrow the Spanish rulers in the country.
***

Through a Japanese I luisli.m, Dionisio Fernandez, Agustin de
Legazpi, and his fellow conspirator contacted a Japanese sea captain,
Juan Gayo, to get amis and Japanese warriors to fight the Spaniards.
In exchange, he and his Japanese warriors would be given one-half
of the tribute collected in the Philippines. Aside from this, help

would also be secured from Borneo, l.aguna, and Batangas. The
conspirators with their warriors would then assault the city of
Manila and start killing the Spaniards.
Magat Salamat innocently revealed the plan to Antonio
Surabao, i Cuyo native who was pretending to be a supporter.
Surabao later recounted this to his master, Pedro Sarmiento (the
Spanish encomendero of Calamianes). Immediately, Captain
Sarmiento rushed to Manila and informed Governor General
Santiago de Vera on October 26, 1588, the existence of a conspiracy
against the Spanish government.
Eventually, the governor ordered the arrest of all persons
implicated in the revolutionary plot, including Dionisio Fernandez, a
Japanese interpreter. All these suspects were investigated and tried
in court. They were given harsh penalties. Agustin de Legazpi and
Martin Pangan were brutally hanged. Their heads were cut off and
placed in iron cages. The government seized their properties. The
sites of their homes were plowed and sown with salt to remain
barren.
Dionisio Fernandez was hanged and his property, confiscated.
Also executed were Magat Salamat, Geronimo Basi, and Esteban
Taes. The rest were given lighter punishments - heavy fines and
some years of exile from their town. Five of the leading members of
the conspiracy were exiled to Mexico - Pedro Balinguit, Pitonggatan,
Felipe Salonga, Calao, and Agustin Manuguit.

4. Magalat's Revolt, Cagayan (1596)
Cause: Tribute
During the rule of Governor Francisco Tello, two brothers
instigated the people of Cagayan to rise in arms against the colonial
government because of the latter's arbitrary levy collection. One of
the brothers was called Magalat. The uprising was suppressed by the
authorities. He and his men were kept in Manila as exiles.
The Dominican missionaries of Cagayan persuaded Governor
Tello to pardon them, after knowing the plight of the two brothers.
The favor was subsequently granted. After Magalat was released, he
went back to Cagayan and incited the people to continue the fight.
Many Spaniards and loyal natives were killed by the rebels.
Governor Tello sent Captain Pedro de Chavez to quell the revolt.
Magalat, however, remained undefeated in open battle. Later, the
Spaniards decided to hire native assassins. Magalat was murdered in
his own house.

5. Revolt of the Igorots (1601)
Cause: Refusal to Accept New Religion
The Spaniards were determined to convert the Igorots to
Christianity. They launched a crusade to proselytize the highland
natives of Luzon and to place them under Spanish authorities. A
strong expedition was sent to the Igorot land to stop the natives from
resisting colonial subjugation. However, the Spaniards were only
able to gain nominal political and military control over them.

6. Revolt of the Irrayas, Northern Isabela
in the Cagayan Valley (1621)
Cause: Oppression of Spanish Officials
Fray Pedro de Santo Tomas, a Dominican missionary, tried to
convince the rebels to avoid an uprising against the abusive Spanish
officials. The rebels led by Gabriel Dayag and Felix Cutabay refused
to heed the priest's words of peace. However, they treated Fr. Santo
Tomas and his missionary companions with respect. They allowed
the friars to leave unmolested, with all their ornaments and jewels of
the churches.
After the missionaries had left, the Irrayas began their fight by
killing the oppressive encomenderos and burning their houses. After
this bloody incident, the rebels went up to the Basili River and built
their fortification on a rocky hill.
Fr. Santo Tomas returned and exhorted the leaders to lay down
their arms and promised them that the government would pardon
them and remedy their grievances. The revolt ended without a fight.

7. The Revolt of Tamblot, Bohol (1621-
22)
Cause: Return to Native Religion
In 1621, Tamblot, a babaylan (native priest), reported the
appearance of a diwata who promised the people a life of abundance,
without the burden of paying tribute to the government or dues to
the church. He persuaded the natives to abandon the Catholic

religion and rise against the Spaniards. Around 2,000 Boholanos
responded to Tamblot's call.
They began the uprising at the time when most of the Jesuit
fathers, the spiritual administrators of the island, were in Cebu
celebrating the feast of the beatification of St. Francis Xavier. They
burned the villages being supervised by the Jesuits, as well as their
churches. They threw away all rosaries and crosses they could find.
News of the revolt reached Cebu. Don Juan de Alcarazo, the
alcalde mayor, sent immediately an expedition to Bohol, consisting
of 50 Spaniards and more than 1,000 natives from Cebu and
Pampanga. In the midst of a heavy downpour, Tamblot and his
followers were crushed.

8. Hankow's Revolt Leyte (1622)
Cause: Return to Native Religion
The leader of this rebellion was the aged chieftain of
Limasawa, Bankaw, who was one of the first local leaders who
received Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in 1565. He had been previously
converted to Christianity and became loyal to Spain. But in his old
age, Bankaw together with his sons and a native priest named
Pagali, led the people of Carigara, Leyte to rise i n arms in defense of
their old religion. Soon they had the whole island into armed
resistance.
Fr. Melchor de Vera, a Jesuit, went to Cebu and warned the
Spanish authorities of the uprising. Alcalde Mayor Alcarazo sent a
fleet of 40 vessels, manned by hundreds of Cebuanos and some
Spanish arquebusiers to Leyte. The rebels were offered peace but
they turned it down.
The Spanish-Filipino forces pursued them in the hills and
defeated them. Bankaw, together with his son and Pagali perished in
the battle. Soon his second son was beheaded as a traitor. His
daughter was taken as captive. Bankaw's head was placed on a stake
as a public warning, to generate fear among the natives.

9. The Revolt of Ladia (1643)
Cause: Spanish Oppression
Pedro Ladia, a native of Borneo, who claimed to be a
descendant of Rajah Matanda, instigated the people of Malolos,
Bulacan to rise in arms against the Spanish government. He was able
to recruit a number of followers but before he could carry out his
plan, Fr. Cristobal Enriquez had already entreated the people to
remain loyal to Spain. Ladia was later on arrested and sent to Manila
to be executed.
10. The Revolt of Dabao (1650s)
Cause: Controversial Decree to Send Carpenters to the Cavite
Shipyard
To move freely among fellow Christians, Dabao, a Manobo
chieftain in Northern Mindanao allowed himself to be baptized to
the Catholic faith. He convinced some new converts to join him in
his plan to kill the religious and all the Spanish soldiers in the fort.
Dabao's opportunity to carry out his plot came as natives who
stole a quantity of maize and rice were being hunted down. He
offered himself to catch them. He took his men to act as prisoners.
Just when the men were going to be set in the stocks for their
punishment, Dabao attacked the captain and the supposed prisoners
joined him by taking out their concealed weapons. All Spaniards in
the garrison were killed. Governor Diego Fajardo offered amnesty to
the rebels to end the Northern Mindanao unrest. However, the rebels
who surrendered were either hanged or enslaved or taken to Manila,
where they were sold to Spanish household.

11. Sumuroy's Revolt, Samar (1649-50)
Cause: Forced Labor
Under Juan Sumuroy's leadership, the people of Palapag, Samar
rose in arms against the government. They resented Governor Diego
Fajardo's order, which involved the sending of men to Cavite
shipyards. Hostilities began on June 1,1649, with the killing of the
curate of the town.
The revolt spread to Albay and Camarines, Cebu, Masbate,
Camiguin, and as far as Northern Mindanao. Sumuroy won several
victories over the Spanish-Filipino forces. At one time, the Spanish
commander offered a large sum of money in exchange of Sumuroy's
head. The rebels sent him the head of a pig instead.
In July 1650, under cover of darkness and rainfall, the
government forces staged an assault on the natives' fort. The rebels
were caught by surprise. Sumuroy's mother perished in the battle.
The revolt ended with individual surrenders. The rebels themselves
killed Sumuroy and brought his head to the Spanish commander.


12. Maniago's Revolt, Pampanga (1660)
Causes: Frequent Recruitment of Men to Cut Timber in the
Mountains and Bandala
Pampanga's rice production suffered exceedingly from the
disruptive effects of polo. One thousand Pampanguenos had been
working for eight months as timber cutters. To show their
sentiments against the government, the workers mutinied and set
their campsite on fire. They chose Don Francisco Maniago, a chief
from the village of Mexico to be their leader.
The armed rebels gathered in Lubao under Maniago and
another group made preparations in Bacolor. They closed the
mouths of rivers with stakes. Letters to other chiefs in Pangasinan,
Ilocos, and Cagayan were sent, asking them to join the uprising
against the Spaniards and later elect a king of their own.
By the time the province of Pampanga revolted, the government
owed the local inhabitants more than 200,000 pesos due to unpaid
rice purchases from the bandala system.
The Spaniards tried to end the rebellion immediately because
they knew that the Pampanguenos had been trained in military art.
Governor Manrique de Lara began his maneuver with a show of
force, by bringing with him 300 men in Macabebe. Seeing the well-
armed Spaniards, the Pampanguenos showed cordiality. This caused
other rebels to waver and distrust one another.
Governor Lara called for Juan Macapagal, chief of Arayat, to a
discussion. De Lara treated him well and assured him rewards if he
would
Mcle with the government. Mai apagal consequently accepted Ihr
offer. He went back to Arayat and organized a force to repress the
rebels. His defection discouraged other chiefs. Parish priests as well
as mercenary soldiers were also employed to demoralize the rebels.
The governor general moreover, I imposed a partial payment of
14,000 pesos on the total amount of 200,000 pesos that the
government owed to the Pampanguenos.
The Spaniards concluded an agreement with Maniago, which
brought about peace in Pampanga. For fear that the Pangasinenses
would strike back, the Pampanguenos themselves demanded two
Spanish garrisons in the province, one in Lubao and another in
Arayat. From then on, they never revolted against the colonial
government.

13. Andres Malong's Revolt, Pangasinan
(1660-61)
Causes: Spanish Oppression and the Desire to Replace the
Spaniards as Personal Rulers of the People
Spurred by the Pampangueno rebellion, the natives of
Pangasinan also rose in arms against the Spanish government in
Lingayen on December 15, 1660. Several Spaniards were killed,
including an alcalde mayor. Inspired by the growing number of their
followers and their early successes, Malong proclaimed himself a
king and directed his military leaders to place the province under
rebel control with his defenses at the capital town of Binalatongan.
He appointed Pedro Gumapos as count, Francisco Pacadua as judge,
and Jacinto Macasiag, and Melchor de Vera as army generals.
Letters were sent to the people of Tlocos, Zambales, Pampanga
and Cagayan, inviting them to rise against the Spaniards. The
Pampanguenos under Maniago did not join because they had
already made their peace with the Spaniards.
To extend his sovereignty, Malong sent 6,000 men to Pampanga
and 3,000 men to llocos and Cagayan, leaving 2,000 men with him in
Pangasinan. But this depleted his forces. The government troops led
by Don Felipe de Ugalde and Don Francisco Esteban outmaneu
vered his army in Pangasinan. He was pursued into the mountains
and was caught alive. He was executed together with Vera, Pacadua,
and Macasiag in 1661 in Binalatongan.

14. The Revolt of Gumapos (1661)
Cause: Continue Andres Malong's Revolt
Pedro Gumapos and his army of Zambals killed many
Spaniards in llocos. The Ilocanos did not join them; for their loyalty
was to their property. During the Zambal invasion, they hid their
valuables in the Bishop's house and buried other properties.
The bishop assembled the Zambals and threatened them with
excommunication the moment they get anything from the churches
or from his house. But the bishop's words fell on deaf ears.
Gumapos's campaign ended after an encounter with the
Spanish forces. Four hundred rebels were slain and Gumapos
himself was taken prisoner and was later hanged in Vigan.


15. The Revolt of filmazan (1660s)
Cause: Personal Ambitions
The flames of rebellion soon spread in Ilocos with Pedro
Almazan as the defiant leader. Almazan, a rich chief of San Nicolas,
crowned himself King of Ilocos during the wedding ceremony of his
son to the daughter of another chief. He wore the crown of the
Queen of Angels taken from the church, which the rebels sacked.
The rebels were gaining some headway at the start but the Spaniards
eventually suppressed them.

16. Tapar's Revolt, Panay (1663)
Cause: Found a New Religion Under Native Supervision
The prevalent misdemeanor of Spanish friars alienated
countless natives from the Catholic faith. Tapar, a native of Panay,
wanted to establish a religious cult in Oton. He attracted many
followers with his stories about his frequent conversations with a
demon.
Tapar and his men were killed in a bloody fight against the
Spaniards, along with native volunteer soldiers. Their corpses were
impaled on stakes.

17. Dagohoy's Revolt, Bohol (1744-1829)
Cause: Refusal to Give His Brother a Christian Burial
Father Gaspar Morales denied Francisco Dagohoy's brother a
Christian burial because the latter died in a duel. Dagohoy argued
that his brother's burial was the responsibility of the Jesuit priest
because he had died carrying out the missionary's order, to arrest an
apostate. The priest refused to bury Dagohoy's brother unless the
proper limosnas, or church offerings were given. The body was left
decomposing for three days.
Humiliated by this tragic incident, Dagohoy got mad and
incited the natives of Bohol to revolt. He took around 3,000 men and
women to the uplands of Talibon and lnabangan. He set up a self-
sustaining community far from the Spanish authorities. Dagohoy's
community grew in number as more people fled to the hills to avoid
being recruited by the government to join its expeditions in Northern
Mindanao as well as to avoid the harsh impositions of the
government.
Dagohoy and his men raided the Jesuit estate of San Javier.
Then they killed the Italian Jesuit curate in Jagna, Father Guiseppe
Lamberti in 1744. Because of the killing, the Spanish authorities
tortured and killed Dagohoy's future father-in-law and the porter of
the church of the slain priest.
II* death of the innocent ^nuter drove more people to join
Dagohoy's ^roup. Shortly afterwards, l ather Morales was killed in
cold blood. Bishop Miguel Lino de Kspeleta of Cebu tried to pacify
the rebels through negotiations. The plan to send secular priests to
Bohol was not carried out. A 20-year deadlock set in. The community
continued to subsist without outward sign of rebellion.
Twenty Spanish governors from Caspar de la Torre (1739-45) to
Juan Antonio Martinez (1822-25) tried to stop the rebellion but failed.
In the 1740s and the 1750s, the Spanish government was preoccupied
with the Muslim raids.
In 1829, the rebellion finally ended when Governor Mariano
Ricafort pardoned 19,420 survivors and permitted them to live in the
new villages. Nothing has been heard on how Dagohoy died. His
autonomous community lasted for 85 years.

18. Silong's Revolt (1762-63)
I . Causes: His Imprisonment, Abusive Government Officials,
Heavy Taxation
The Ilocanos had already been complaining about the
anomalous collection of tribute and the abuses of the alcaldes max/ores
in the exercise of indulto de comercio. Diego Silang appealed to Don
Antonio Zabala, the provincial governor of llocos to consider the
demands of the natives. Regarding him an agitator, Zabala had
Silang incarcerated.
Silang's followers and friends successfully worked for his
release. Taking advantage of the Spanish preoccupation with the
British in Manila, Silang led the revolt of the Ilocanos and made
Vigan the capital of his independent government. His defiance of the
Spaniards lost him support of many principals. He ordered that those
principals who were opposing him be arrested and brought to him.
Should they resist, they were to be slain. He also imposed a fine of
100 pesos on each priest but lowered it to 80 pesos on their petition.
Property of the church was also taken.
Bishop Bernardo Ustariz of Vigan issued an interdict against
Silang and his followers. He exhorted the Ilocanos to withdraw

support for the rebels' cause. In retaliation, Silang imprisoned all of
the latter's followers.
Finally, Spanish Governor Simon de Anda sent Silang an
ultimatum. Fearing that Anda was planning to march to llocos,
Silang decided to seek the protection of the British. Shortly
thereafter, he accepted the Bri tish offer of friendship to fight against
the Spaniards.
However, Silang's leadership ended with an assassin's bullet.
Miguel Vicos, a Spanish mestizo who wished to take revenge on
Silang and Pedro Becbec, a trusted aide of Silang conspired to kill the
rebel leader in exchange of a large monetary reward. Vicos shot
Silang in the latter's house.
Gabriela Silang, Diego's wife, continued the fight. Nicolas
Carino, Silang's uncle, temporarily took command of the forces. He
and Gabriela attacked the town of Santa in Ilocos Sur and won over
the government forces. After the battle, Gabriela went to the forests
of Abra and recruited the Tingguians (Itnegs).
Another battle was fought at Cabugao, but this time the rebels
were beaten. Carino perished in action. Gabriela and her warriors
fled to Abra and organized a new army of Ilocanos and Tingguians.
With her newly reorganized battalion, Gabriela marched
towards Vigan. She rode on a fast horse and led her troops into the
combat. The loyal archers of the Spanish government repulsed her
attack. Once more, she went back to the mountains of Abra with her
followers. Don Manuel de Arza, lieutenant governor of Northern
Luzon and his Cagayan warriors followed her trail. With the aid of
Apayaos and Kalingas, they captured her and her surviving
followers. On September 20,1763, Gabriela and her companions were
executed in Vigan, Ilocos Sur.

19. Polaris'* Revolt (1762-65)
Causes: Tribute, Spain's Loss of Prestige Due to the British
Occupation of Manila
Simultaneous with the Silang revolt was an uprising in
Pangasinan. The local inhabitants wanted the abolition of the tribute
and the removal of loaquin Gamboa, alcalde mayor of the province for
irregularities in tax collection.
The rebellion began on November 3,1762 at the town of
Binalatongan under the leadership of Juan de la Cruz Palaris. From
Binalatongan, the spirit of insurrection spread to other towns of the
province. Palaris urged the people to fight since the Spaniards were
very weak because of their defeat at the hands of the British in
Manila. For over a year, he succeeded in driving the Spaniards and
friars out of the rebel towns. The Dominican friars tried to pacify the
rebels, but failed.
In March 1764, Don Mariano de Arza together with 3,000 loyal
Ilocano soldiers suppressed the Revolt of Palaris in Pangasinan.
Palaris was publicly hanged.

20. Basi Revolt (1807)
Cause: Wine Monopoly of 1786
Due to the wine monopoly of the government, the Ilocanos
were prohibited to drink homemade basi (wine fermented from
sugarcane). They were compelled to buy wine from government
stores.
On September 16, 1807, the Ilocanos of Piddig, Ilocos Norte,
rose in arms in defense of their favorite wine, basi. The rebellion
spread to the neighboring towns, Badoc and Santo Domingo.
The Spanish alcaldc muyot, who was residing in Vigan, sent a
force ot 36 soldiers and two column* of civilian guards with a
cannon to attack Badoc. However, on September 28, 1807, the alcalde
mayor together with a strong force of regular troops attacked them
at San lldefonso and quelled the revolt.

21. Revolt in Defense of the Spanish
Constitution (1815)
Cause: Abolition of the Liberal Spanish Constitution
The Spanish Constitution of 1812 was very much influenced by
the ideals of the French Revolution - Liberty, Equality, and
Fraternity. This democratic constitution granted human rights to
both Spaniards and Filipinos. It was promulgated by the Spanish
Cortes (Parliament) and approved and signed by 184 delegates of
Spain and her colonies (including the Philippines). One of its
signatories was Ventura de los Reyes, a Filipino.
Upon knowing that this constitution was abolished on May 4,
1814 by the despotic ruler King Ferdinand VII, an explosion of
violence in the country against the principales took place. The masses
suspected that the principales were behind this, since they had been
presumed aiding the Spanish authorities to perpetuate in power.

On March 3, 1815, more than 1,500 Ilocanos of Sarrat, Ilocos
Norte, under the leadership of Simon Tomas rose in arms in defense
of the Spanish Constitution of 1812. The Ilocanos plundered the
houses of rich Spaniards and pro-Spanish natives. They also looted
the churches and killed some friars and officials. The Spanish
government rushed infantry and cavalry forces to the rebellious
towns in the Ilocandia. The revolt ended on March 6, with the
surviving leaders of the rebellion severely punished.

22. Revolt of the Bayot Brothers (1822)
Cause: Feeling of Distrust between the Peninsulares and the
Creoles
The insulares in the Philippines, as well as the Creoles in other
colonies of Spain resented the extra privileges given to the
peninsulares. The feeling of distrust and antagonism between the
peninsulares and the Creoles became intense in the early decades of
the 19
th
century.
Inspired by the achievements of the Creole liberators in Latin
America from 1808 to 1826 and influenced by the ideals of the French
Revolution (1789-1799), the three Bayot brothers - Manuel, Jose, and
Joaquin - sons of Colonel Francisco Bayot, a prominent creole of
Manila, conspired with other Creole officers of the Battalion Real
Principe, to overthrow the government, which was dominated by the
peninsulares. The plot was to be carried out on April 17,1822 at dawn.
A few days before April 17, the plan of the Bayot conspiracy
was discovered. Governor Mariano de Folgueras alerted the Queen's
Regiment and surrounded the barracks of suspected rebels with
loyal troops and 15 cannons. The Bayot brothers were imprisoned
after a trial.

11 ktfllglout Revolt of Mermano Pule
(1840-41)
***
.uittiN K'li);ius Freedom
In 18 W, Apolinario de la Cruz went to Manila to pursue
priestly vocation under the Dominican order. He was not accepted
on the ground that he was an itidio (native). At that time, all religious
orders were closed to indios.
In June 1840, Apolinario, better known as Hermano Pule
returned to Lucban, Tayabas Province (now Quezon Province), and
founded the Cofradia de San Jose (Confraternity of St. Joseph), a
nationalist fellowship, which fostered the practice of Christian
virtues.
Hermano Pule sought the recognition of his religious
brotherhood. However, Governor General Marcelino Oraa and
Archbishop Jose Segui, upon the recommendation of the Spanish
friars, banned his confraternity. Undaunted by the intolerance of the
government authorities, he carried on his religious movement at
Barrio Isabang of Mount Banahaw, then later moved his camp at
Alitao, at the foot of Mount Cristobal. His brotherhood attracted
thousands of followers in Tayabas, Laguna, and Batangas.
On November 1,1841, Lt. Col. Joaquin Huet, a veteran Spanish
combat commander, launched a massive assault in Alitao, killing
hundreds of defenseless old men, women, and children. Hermano
Pule was captured the following evening at Barrio Ibanga and was
executed on November 4, 1841. The Spanish soldiers paraded his
chopped body from Tayabas to nearby Lucban, his birthplace.
Enraged by the merciless killing in Alitao, the non-
commissioned officers and soldiers of the Tayabas Regiment secretly
planned to rise in arms under the leadership of Sergeant Irineo
Samaniego. After a few hours of fighting at Fort Santiago,
Samaniego and his men were routed, captured and shot to death at
Bagumbayan at sundown of January 21,1843.

24. Muslim Wars (1578-1898)
The Spaniards made attempts to subdue the inhabitants of
Mindanao by deploying its military forces in the South. The Muslims
on the other hand, valiantly resisted and repulsed the colonizers.
They retaliated by raiding territories under Spanish rule with
varying degrees of intensity. The war between the Muslim Filipinos
and the Spaniards (aided by Christian Filipinos) lasted for more than
300 years.
The Muslim wars were brought about by the following reasons:
the Spanish invasion of Mindanao and Sulu, preservation of Islam,
and the love of adventure arising from the spoils of wars.
In 1597, the Spanish colonizers tried to seize Jolo and force the
sultanate into submission. After his victorious battle in Borneo for

the Spanish Crown, Governor Francisco de Sande sent forces to Jolo,
under the command of
Captain Esteban Rodriguez Ue I igueroa. He ordered the pacification
of the place and the payment ot tribute by the inhabitants to the
colonial government. Sultan Pangiran Budiman (Muhammad ul-
Halim) resisted the ittack. However, Sulu fell into Spanish hands.
Pearls were given as tribute to the Spaniards.
The Muslims, haughtily referred to by the Spaniards as Mows,
avenged by plundering coastal towns under Spanish dominion.
Sirungan and Salikala prepared a stronger force of 70 vessels and
4,000 warriors, a year .liter their first successful raid in the Visayas in
1599. This time, they were repulsed with heavy losses at Arevalo,
lloilo province by 1,000 Visayan warriors and 70 Spanish
arquebusiers under the command of Don Juan Garcia de Sierra, a
Spanish alcalde mayor who died in the fight.
To embark its operations over Muslim Mindanao, the Spaniards
built fortified stations in particular areas. On June 23, 1635, Father
Melchor de Vera along with 1,000 Visayans began the building of the
stone fort in the province. This fort was named Fort Pilar (in honor of
Nuestra Senora del Pilar, the patroness of Zamboanga), which
helped the government forces in their campaign against the
belligerent natives.
The Spaniards tried to conquer Maguindanao but were
thwarted by native resistance. From 1600-1650, the sultan of
Maguindanao, Sultan Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat (Corralat in
Spanish records) held power in regions from the Gulf of Davao all
the way to Dapitan.
On March 13, 1637, Governor Corcuera with his Spanish-
Filipino troops landed at the mouth of Rio de Grande de Mindanao.
The next day, Lamitan, Sultan Kudarat's capital in Cotabato fell into
the hands of the Spaniards. Kudarat retreated to a hill called Ilihan.
Corcuera's troops assaulted the place and finally captured it after a
bloody encounter. Defeated by the Spaniards, Kudarat was able to
escape together with his brave wife, carrying a baby.
On May 24, Governor Corcuera returned to Manila and was
given a conqueror's welcome - with music, religious festivals, and a
moro-moro performance (a stage play about the contending Christians
and Muslims with the former emerging as victors).
The fighting Moros intensified their efforts to continue the
battle against the Spaniards. After nursing his bullet wound in one
arm, Sultan Kudarat later mounted raids on Spanish settlements in
Luzon and the Visayas and inspired fellow Muslims never to submit
to the Spanish colonizers. The Muslims also assaulted the Spanish
outposts in Mindanao and Sulu. In 1645, the Tausugs finally
liberated Jolo from the Spanish forces.
In 1749, Sultan Alimud Din I was deposed by his brother
Bantilan because of his friendship with the Spaniards. On January
2,1750, he and his family, together with some faithful followers
arrived in Manila. The sultan was royally received by Bishop Juan de
Arrechedera, the acting governor general. On April 28 of the same
year, he was baptized by the Dominican fathers at Paniqui, Tarlac.
He was named Don Fernando Alimud Din I, the first Christian
sultan of Jolo. His son, Israel, and his daughter Fatima were likewise
converted to Christianity and given education in Manila.
In 1751, Governor General Jose Francisco de Obando wanted
Alimud Din I to regain his throne in Jolo. The sultan left Manila for
Jolo and stopped at Zamboanga. The Spanish commander in
Zamboanga claimed to have intercepted a letter from Alimud Din I
to a sultan in Mindanao, which was allegedly treasonable. Alimud
Din I was shipped back to Manila and later imprisoned at Fort
Santiago.
Governor General Pedro Manuel de Arandia, Obando's
successor, released Alimud Din I and granted him royal privileges.
In 1762, the British troops rescued Alimud Din I at Pasig and later
restored to him his throne in Jolo.
The Spanish forces, plunged in its conflict with the British and
the local rebels, were unable to control the Mow (plunderer) raids on
Christian pueblos in the Visayas and Luzon. The height of Moro wars
occurred in the second half of the 18
th
century. In 1769, the Moros
landed at Malate and plundered the place.
According to Spanish records, an average of 500 Christians
were captured and sold annually as slaves in Betavia, Sandakan, and
in other slave markets in the East Indies. The Spanish government
spent huge sum of money for military operations against the
marauding troops of the South.
In the closing decades of the 19
th
century, the Moro power
declined. In 1848, Governor General Narciso Claveria, using new
steamships, attacked the Samals at Balanguingui. They brought 350
Samal prisoners to Manila.

On December 11,1850, Governor General Antonio de
Urbiztondo left Manila for Zamboanga in command of a force
consisting of 100 troops of artillery and 500 infantry to subjugate the
Muslims of Sulu. Upon his arrival in the last week of the month, he
desisted from fighting, realizing that his force was not enough to
capture Jolo. He sailed again to Jolo in January 1851. Sulu warriors
fired upon his ships. The Spanish force retaliated and burned down
1,000 houses and around 100 bancas (boats) in Tungkil before sailing
back to Zamboanga. The following month, after a reinforcement of
his troops, Urbiztondo attacked Jolo. The natives of Sulu lost over
100 men, and were forced into the interior.
In 1861, after more expeditions by the Spaniards in
Maguindanao, the sultan finally recognized Spanish sovereignty.
However, resistance continued under Datu Ugto in upper Pulangi.
Superior Spanish arms allowed the colonizers to remain in
Maguindanao until 1899.
In 1874, Admiral Joni? M.iU.impo became the Spanish
governor general in the Philippines. I le prepared a mighty armada
for the invasion of Jolo. This would put an end to the devastating
raids of the Tausugs on the Christian pueblos. The attack lasted for
24 hours. On March 1, 1876, Sultan Jamalul A'lam worked for peace
with the Spaniards.
Sultan Jamalul A'lam of Jolo transferred his capital to
Maimbung. The Sultanate of Sulu, being a sovereign government
was able to lease Sabah (North Borneo) to a British company. On
January 22,1878, Sultan Jamalul A' lam leased Sabah to Mr. Alfred
Dent, an Englishman and Baron Gustavus Von Overbeck, an
Austrian of British North Borneo Company for an annual rental of
5,000 Malayan dollars. The contract in 1878 used the Tausug word
"padjack," which means lease. (The rental was increased to 5,300
Malayan dollars in 1903 to 1963).
The sultan of Jolo, a direct descendant of Sultan Kudarat,
acquired sovereignty over North Borneo (Sabah) the second half of
the 17
th
century. When the sultan of Brunei sought help to the sultan
of Jolo to suppress a rebellion in 1704, the Sabah territory was ceded
to the latter in 1715 out of gratitude.
In 1886, Governor General Emilio Terrero led the invasion to
Cotabato to subdue the Moro Maguindanaoans. Terrero's forces
destroyed some kutas (forts) of Datu Utto but failed to crush Utto's
fighters. After suffering heavy losses, Governor Terrero decided to
return to Manila.
In 1891, Governor General Valeriano Weyler, known as the
"Butcher" for his ruthless suppression of early revolts in Cuba,
invaded Lanao. On August 21, 1891, he won the First Battle of
Marawi in Lanao Lake. Datu Amai Pakpak, the defender of Marawi,
was able to escape. He recruited more warriors to fight against the
Spanish invaders. Failing to conquer Lanao, Weyler assaulted
Cotabato. However, he was overpowered by Datu Ali Jimbangan
and his fierce krismen (warriors).
In 1895, Governor General Ramon Blanco invaded the Lanao
Lake region. Blanco's troops attacked Marawi on March 10,1895. In
this second battle of Marawi, the heroic Datu Amai Pakpak died in
action. Blanco won his battle, but he failed to conquer Lanao like
Terrero and Weyler. To avenge the fall of Marawi and the death of
Datu Amai Pakpak, the Muslim warriors declared a jihad (holy war),
forcing Blanco to halt the campaign and return to Manila.
The bitter warfare between the Spaniards and the Muslims
ended in 1898, after the signing of the Peace Treaty of Paris on
December 10, 1898, which ended the Spanish domination in the
Philippines.

25. The Rise of Filipino Nationalism
Nationalism was said to have rooted from a strong feeling
among populace that they belong to the same race. Such sentiment
has not yet existed in the Philippines prior to the 19
th
century.
Although the cultural traits of the early Filipinos had striking
similarities, their linguistic differences as well as the local autonomy
of each political unit in the archipelago barely yielded to the
development of this national sentiment. The absence of adequate
means of transportation and communication made the situation even
more dismal.
The transition of the country's traditional societal structure to
colonial bureaucracy brought about the awareness of the local
inhabitants as to their common source of anxiety and suffering.
Unknowingly, the Spanish government planted the seeds of
nationalism by perpetuating poverty and injustice among the lower
classes of society. The following have been regarded in history as
factors that gave rise to Filipino nationalism:


1. Spread of liberalism. When Spain gradually exposed the
Philippines to international commerce in the late 18
th
and
early 19
th
centuries, liberal ideas from Europe filtered in.
The thoughts of Montesquieu, Rousseau, Voltaire, Locke,
Jefferson, and other political philosophers were made
known through books and periodicals brought into the
country by men from foreign ports.
The transformation of the Philippine economy into a
raw material market for Europe unconsciously increased
their contact with the intellectual tradition of the West. The
improvement in transportation and communication
facilities required by increased foreign trade also brought
the Filipinos closer, and made them realize their common
predicament.
When Spain opened the Philippine ports in 1834 to
free trade, commercialization of Philippine agriculture and
economic expansion greatly benefited the principalia in the
country. They were able to send their children to schools
and even to educational institutions in Spain, thereupon
giving them exposure to libertarian ideals.
The dissipation of European and American liberalism
in the country was even facilitated with the opening of the
Suez Canal in 1869. In like manner, the ideas of masonry
(i.e., freethinking, anticlerical, and humanitarian) also
made the new middle class aware of the repressive policy
of the Spanish authorities in the colony thus, making
themselves more outspoken on the excesses of the friars
and government officials.
2. Sentiment against the principales. There was a mounting
dissatisfaction against the principales (or the political and
social aristocracy, which includes the prominent land-
owning and propertied citizens), accommodated as
intermediaries of the Spanish government from the
inception of its colonial rule.
The manse* Iwul Nfen skeptical about the local aristocracy
due to their proportion of influence in the society. The Ilocano
insurrection in 1815 was a manifestation of the people's cry to
mass movement.
3. Racial prejudice. The Spaniards commonly regarded the
Filipino natives as belonging to the "inferior race" and haughtily
called them as indios. The preconceived notion of the Spanish
colonizers that the natives could not rise beyond their "limited
intelligence" instigated the enlightened Filipinos to struggle for
equality. Jose Rizal's annotation of Antonio de Morga's Sucesos
de las Islas Filipinas denounced the allegations of the Spaniards
that the Filipinos were savages and had no culture prior to the
coming of the Western colonizers.
4. Cultural changes. The educational reforms of 1863 dramatically
improved the standards of education in the primary level. With
the implementation of a new educational system, qualified
Filipinos were able to pursue higher education. Young men
from prosperous Chinese mestizo and native families were able
to take up law, medicine, and pharmacy. They were able to see
the repressive colonial policies of Spain after being enlightened
with liberal ideas; thus, giving birth to a new breed of Filipinos -
the ilustrados (enlightened ones).
The ilustrados got the chance to manifest their political will
when Carlos Maria de la Torre became governor general in
1869. This benevolent governor was able to show his liberal
disposition in administering the government after he invoked
reforms in the government like the revocation of press
censorship and the abolition of flogging as a form of
punishment. He even lived simply within his means. Governor
de la Torre as a result, inspired the Filipino middle class to
sustain their campaign for reforms in the country.
5. Secularization controversy. The mandatory provision of the
Council of Trent (1545-1563) affirmed that secular priests be
appointed to administer the parishes in the colony. Due to lack
of secular priests, Pope Pius V issued in 1567, upon the request
of King Philip II, the Exponi Nobis, which allowed the regular
clergy (those belonging to monastic orders) to serve as parish
priests without diocesan authorization and be exempted from
bishop's authority.
However, the appointment of regular clergy to Philippine
parishes brought about dissension among members of the
Church. The regular orders at the outset resisted diocesan
visitation on the ground that this would place them under two
superiors, the head of their religious order and the bishop as
well.


This caused the expulsion of priests who refused the visitation of
parishes by representatives of the bishop. The members of the
Society of Jesus, SJ (Jesuits) were expelled from the country for this
reason.
The parishes vacated by the Jesuits (expelled in the country in
1768) were given to the native seculars. In the 18
th
century,
Archbishop Basilio Santa Justa accepted the resignation of regular
priests and appointed native secular priests to the parishes.
The royal decree, which was promulgated on November 9, 1774
ordering the secularization of the parishes (or the turnover of
parishes supervised by regular clergy to the seculars), became the
basis for the appointment of native secular clergy. However, this
royal decree was suspended in 1776 owing to friar opposition, as
well as the unpreparedness of the native priests.
The return of the Jesuits in 1859 as well as the policy of
desecularization directly affected the native seculars. In the 1870s,
overt opposition against the abuses of Spanish officials and agitation
for reforms became evident among Filipino clergy.
The secularization controversy transformed into a Filipinization
issue since the secular priests were mostly Filipinos. The effort to
secularize the parishes in a way heightened the nationalist feeling of
the people.
Some of the strong proponents of the secularization movement
of parishes were Archbishop Gregorio Meliton Martinez and Father
Jose Burgos (both from the Archdiocese of Manila).
In December 1870, Archbishop Martinez wrote to the Spanish
Regent advocating secularization and mentioned that discrimination
against Filipino priests would encourage anti- Spanish sentiments.
Cavite Mutiny of 1872. In 1868, a revolution led by the liberals in
Spain deposed Queen Isabella II and gave rise to the Provisional
Republic of Spain. With the victory of the Spanish revolution, many
colonial officials with democratic ideals were sent to Manila, which
included Governor General Carlos Maria de la Torre in 1869.
The republican government was overruled with the restoration
of monarchy. Amadeo, son of King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy
accepted the invitation to assume the Spanish Crown in December
1870. With the alteration of the system of government in Spain, the
political atmosphere in the Philippines likewise changed. When
Rafael de l/quierdo replaced Governor de la Torre in he promptly d
i.scarded the liberal measures. The privileges of the arsenal workers
and engineer corps regarding exemption from tribute and forced
labor were also abolished.
As an expression of protest, on the night of January 20, about
200 Filipino soldiers and dock workers in the province of Cavite
mutinied and killed their Spanish officers under the leadership of
Sergeant Lamadrid (others write La Madrid). The rebellion was
quickly suppressed. Two days after the mutiny, Lamadrid was
executed together with 41 mutineers in Bagumbayan.

The mutiny became an opportunity for the Spanish officials to
implicate the liberal critics of the government. The governor general
asserted that a secret faction existed in Manila to overthrow Spanish
rule. Accused of alleged conspiracy in the rebellion were Fathers
Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora. They were
sentenced to death by garrote on February 17,1872.

Some were thrown into jail while the rest were exiled to the
Marianas Islands on March 14,1872. Among those who left on board
in the Flores de Maria were Father Jose Maria Guevarra, Father Pedro
Dandan, Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, Antonio Maria Regidor, Maximo
Patemo, Jose Maria Basa, Balbino Mauricio, and Pio Maria Basa.

The Spaniards succeeded in uniting the Filipinos in a common
spirit to oppose colonial authority. Between 1872 and 1892, national
consciousness was growing among Filipinos who had settled in
Europe. The execution of GOM-BUR-ZA eventually hastened the
growth of Filipino nationalism.

The concept of nationhood coincided with the development of
the concept of Filipinos. Before, Filipinos would only refer to the
espafioles insulares. Later, they had included the mestizos de sangley
and the native elite who had Hispanized themselves. The
propagandists tried to infuse the term Filipino with national
meaning, which later included the entire people in the archipelago.

26. Propaganda Movement
Many Filipinos took refuge in Europe and initiated in Spain a
crusade for reforms in the Philippines. The emergence of more

Filipino ilustrados gave birth to a unified nationalist movement. This
campaign was known in our history as the Propaganda Movement.
The aim of the Propaganda Movement was peaceful
assimilation, referring to the transition of the Philippines from
being a colony to a province of Spain. The propagandists believed
that it would be better if the Filipinos would become Spanish
citizens, since they would be enjoying the same rights and privileges
of the latter. Its adherents did not seek independence from Spain but
reforms.
These reforms were as follows: equality of Filipinos and
Spaniards before the laws; restoration of the Philippine
representation in the Spanish Cortes; secularization of Philippine
parishes and the expulsion of the friars; and human rights for
Filipinos, such as freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and
freedom to meet and petition for redress of grievances.
Those who joined this peaceful campaign were the Filipino
exiles of 1872, the patriots who left the islands to escape persecution,
and those who had been to Spain for their studies. Although not all
of the propagandists were sons of wealthy Filipinos, they were
scions of good families. One of the greatest was Marcelo H. del Pilar,
a lawyer and journalist from the town of Bulacan. His eldest brother
Toribio, a priest, was implicated in the Cavite Mutiny and exiled.
From then on, he joined in dupluhan and dalitan or literary jousts
during fiestas. During a pintakasi (cockfighting day), he spoke out to
the crowd by satirizing corrupt officials and friars.
Del Pilar also sought to reach out to people through his pen. He
wrote his anti-friar pamphlets in simple yet forceful Tagalog. In
1882, he helped establish the first bilingual (in Spanish and Tagalog)
newspaper, the Diariong Tagalog. He became the editor of the
Tagalog section.
Between 1887-1888, when anonymous manifestos against the
friars were distributed to the public, he released Dasalan at Tocsohan
(Prayers and Mockeries), a manual of anticlerical commentary in the
format of novena. He parodied the Lord's Prayer, Hail Mary, the
Apostles' Creed, the Ten Commandments, the Act of Contrition, and the
catechism. With these anticlerical protests, Del Pilar's stay in the
country became dangerous. His house was burned mysteriously. He
left the Philippines in October 1888 to escape the prosecution of the
friars.
Like Del Pilar, Graciano Lopez Jaena parodied religious
literature in his satires. In lloilo, he saw the misery of rural
communities and the abuses perpetrated by civil and religious
authorities. He wrote Fray Botod or "Friar Potbelly" (circa 1874)
where he ridiculed a cleric named Fray Botod, who arrived looking
like a hungry mosquito and soon became stout because of the stocks
taken from the people. Because of his anticlerical literature, he
moved to Madrid where he joined other Filipino expatriates into
journalism.
Among those who had gone to Spain to study was Jose Rizal,
born to a well-to-do family in Calamba, Laguna. In 1882, he went to
Spain and studied medicine at the Universidad Central de Madrid.
His prestige was greatly enhanced by the publication of his socio-
historical novel Noll Mi' lungere (Touch Me Not) in 1887.
The Noli reflected the defects of the Spanish rule in the
Philippines, particularly the abuses of the friars. The impact of the
story on the Spaniards in the Philippines was so intense, that later
the reading of it was forbidden in the country.
Rizal may have been the first Filipino political cartoonist. In his
Ketchbook, he drew lampoons of Chinese merchants and the cover
design lor the Noli included the hairy calf and the slippered foot of a
Spanish friar.
Other great Filipino propagandists were Pedro A. Paterno,
lawyer; Antonio Luna, pharmacist and essayist; Pedro Serrano
Laktaw, teacher- tutor of Prince Alfonso de Bourbon (later King
Alfonso XIII of Spain); and I abelo de los Reyes, folklorist and
newspaperman. Juan Luna, known lor his monumental painting
Spoliarium, and Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo, acclaimed for his
masterpiece, Virgenes Cristianas Expuestas al Populacho (Christian
Virgins Exposed to the Rabble), also joined the movement for
reforms.
The Filipino propagandists were also supported by a number of
Spanish friends. In 1882, Juan Atayde, a Spaniard born in Manila
founded the Circulo Hispano-Filipino. Unfortunately, the society did
not stay long due to shortage of funds and also because of the lack of
confidence of the members in Atayde.
Professor Miguel Morayta, Rizal's professor at Central
University of Madrid, tried to form the Asociacion Hispano-Filipino in
1889. This association was concerned with instituting reforms in the
Philippines. The association lobbied successfully for the passage of

some laws, which included the law pertaining to the compulsory
teaching of Spanish and the laws providing reforms in the judiciary.
However, these laws were not fully implemented considering the
return to power of the reactionary group in Spain.
Since the membership of the association was composed mostly
of Spaniards, it failed to secure the support of many Filipinos,
including Dr. Jose Rizal and Antonio Luna. The young Filipinos felt
that the Spaniards and the Creoles were too moderate in dealing
with their clamor for reforms.
Finally, the La Solidaridad (Solidarity), a purely Filipino
organization was established in Barcelona on December 31, 1888.
This took place at a traditional New Year's Eve banquet with
Galicano Apacible as president and Graciano Lopez Jaena as vice-
president. Rizal, who was in London during that time, was named as
the honorary president.
To make known the objectives of the Propaganda, Graciano
Lopez Jaena founded a fortnightly newspaper, La Solidaridad in
Barcelona on February 15,1889. Marcelo H. del Pilar recently arrived
from the Philippines. He joined the group and helped prepare the
issues.
hi Solidaridad was printed in Barcelona from February 15 to
October 31, 1889, then in Madrid, where it was printed from
November 15, 1889 until its last issue on November 15,1895. From
December 15,1889 until its last issue, M. H. del Pilar became the
editor, replacing Lopez Jaena.
The contributors of La Solidaridad were mostly Filipinos like M.
H. del Pilar (Plaridel), Dr. Jose Rizal (Dimas Alang, Laong Loan),
Mariano Ponce (Naning, Kalipulako, or Tigbalang), and Antonio Luna
(Taga-Ilog). Some foreigners also contributed their articles, like
Professor Ferdinand Blumentritt and Dr. Morayta.
Many Filipino propagandists turned masons, including Dr.
Rizal and M. H. del Pilar because they needed the help of the masons
in Spain and in other countries in their fight for reforms. This
organization called Freemasonry, consisted of fraternal lodges,
which later evolved into social societies subsequently opened to non-
masons.
In the Philippines, the first masonic lodge was established in
Manila in 1856. As a rule, masonic lodges, were not opened to
Filipinos. It was in Spain where Filipino expatriates, students, and
intellectuals found themselves attracted to the ideals of equality,
religious tolerance, fraternity, and liberty espoused by the free and
accepted masons.
The first Filipino Masonic Lodge called Revolution was founded
by Lopez Jaena in Barcelona. This lodge was recognized by the
Grande Oriental Espanol headed by Morayta in April 1889. The
Revolution did not last long. It ended after Lopez Jaena resigned as
Worshipful Master on November 29,1889.
The following month, M. H. del Pilar, with the help of Julio
Llorente, organized Lodge Solidaridad in Madrid, with the latter as the
first Worshipful Master. Grande Oriente Espanol recognized it in
May 1890. Lodge Solidaridad eventually prospered that other Filipinos
joined it, including Dr. Rizal, Pedro Serrano Laktaw, Baldomero
Roxas, Galicano Apacible, and others.
Towards the end of 1891, M. H. del Pilar sent Pedro Serrano
Laktaw to the Philippines to establish the first masonic lodge in
Manila. Thus, the Lodge Nilad was founded on January 6,1892. In one
of their meetings, the masons set forth their platform. They wanted a
dignified, free and prosperous country with a democratic regime
and a genuine and effective autonomy, and a good government.
They were asking for reforms. They wanted representation in the
Cortes as well as the declaration of the country as a Spanish
province, with all the rights and obligations.
As of May 1893, the masonic lodges in the country numbered
thirty- five, nine of which were in the city of Manila. They also
accepted women members. The first woman to be admitted was
Rosario Villaruel, who was initiated as a member of the Lodge Walana
on July 18, 1893. Other female members were Trinidad Rizal,
Romualda Lanuza, Josefa Rizal, Marina Dizon, Sixta Fajardo,
Valeriana Legazpi, and Purificacion Leyva.
Almost simultaneously with the introduction of masonry in
the Philippines, Rizal wrote the constitution of La Liga Filipina
(The Philippine League) while living in Hong Kong with the help
of Jose Ma. Basa.
In Hong Kong, Rizal drafted a proposal to Governor General
Eulogio Despujol to establish a Filipino colony in Sabah, Borneo,
but the latter refused. Rizal's scheme was meant to help resolve
the plight of ejected tenants from Calamba, Laguna.
After arriving in Manila on June 26, 1892, Rizal conferred
with Governor General Eulogio Despujol to obtain pardon for his
family. He met with some Filipinos around the city, then took the

train to Malolos, Bulacan; San Fernando and Bacolor, Pampanga;
and Tarlac.
On the night of July 3, 1892, Rizal founded La Liga Filipina at
the residence of Doroteo Ongjunco in llaya St., Tondo, Manila
with Ambrosio Salvador as president; Deodato Arellano,
secretary; Bonifacio Arevalo, treasurer; and Agustin dela Rosa,
fiscal. Among those present in the meeting were Pedro Serrano
Laktaw (Panday Pira), Domingo Franco (Felipe Leal), Jose A. Ramos
(Socorro), Moises Salvador (Araw), Faustino Villaruel (Haw),
Numeriano Adriano (Ipil), Apolinario Mabini (Katabay), and
Andres Bonifacio {May Pag-asa).
La Liga was to be a sort of mutual aid and self-help society,
dispensing scholarship funds and legal aid, loaning capital and
setting up cooperatives. The league's motto Unus Instar Omnium
(one like all) served as an avowal of their ideals. Based in its
constitution, the objectives of the Liga were: the unification of the
whole archipelago into one compact, vigorous, and homogeneous
body; protection in cases of want and necessity; defense against
violence and injustice; encouragement of instruction, agriculture,
and commerce; and the study and implementation of reforms.
The goals of La Liga were to be carried out by the Supreme
Council, the Provincial Council, and the Popular Council. Each
member of the league had to pay 10 centavos as monthly dues.
The members ought to choose a symbolic name.
The members became quite active. Bonifacio for one, exerted
great efforts to organize chapters in various districts in Manila.
Rizal himself caused the circulation of a handbill, Ang Karapatan
ng Tao, printed in both Tagalog and Spanish. This was his
translation of the French, Declaration of the Rights of Man of 1789.
This situation alarmed the Spanish authorities. On July 6,
1892, Rizal was secretly arrested by order of Governor General
Despujol and subsequently imprisoned at Fort Santiago. The
following day, the governor general ordered the deportation of
Rizal to Dapitan, Zamboanga del Norte as punishment for his
allegedly subversive materials.

27. The Katipunan
Some of the members of the La Liga Filipina found out that
peaceful agitation for reforms was not enough. This time, they opted
for thr country's freedom more than anything else. Andres Bonifacio
was one of them. He did not join the Los Compromisarios or Cuerpo de
Compromisarios led by Domingo Franco. This faction pledged to
continue supporting the Propaganda Movement in Spain.
The radical ones led by Bonifacio believed that the welfare of
the people could' not be achieved by requests for reforms but by an
armed revolution. Their goal was transformed from assimilation to
separation and then independence.
On the night of July 7, 1892, Bonifacio and his friends met
secretly at Deodato Arellano's house at No. 72 Azcarraga Street (now
Claro M. Recto) near Elcano Street in Tondo, Manila. They decided
to form a secret revolutionary society, modeled in part on Masonic
Order called Kataastaasan Kagalang-galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak
ng Bayan (Highest and Respected Society of the Sons of the People),
otherwise known as K.K.K. or Katipunan, dedicated to national
independence through armed revolution.
The men, gathered around a flickering table lamp, signed their
membership papers with their own blood. It was agreed that the
members be recruited by means of the triangle method in which an
original member would recruit two members who did not know
each other but only knew the original member who took them in.
They also decided during the meeting, the payment of an entrance
fee of one real fuerte (twenty-five centavos) and a monthly due of
medio real (about twelve centavos).
The triangle method was abolished in December 1892 after it
was found out to be too cumbersome. New converts were initiated
into the secret society using rites borrowed from the masonry. The
neophyte was made to swear to guard the secrets of the society.
More than a secret society, the Katipunan was a government
itself with a constitution promulgated in 1892, and another
constitution replacing the first one in 1894. The central government
of the Katipunan was vested in a Kataastaasang Sanggunian (Supreme
Council) with the officials aforementioned.
In each province, there was a Sangguniang Bayan (Provincial
Council), and in each town, a Sangguniang Balangay (Popular
Council). The judicial power resided in a secret chamber called
Sangguniang Hukuman (Judicial Council).
There were three grades of membership in the Katipunan. The
first grade called a katipun (associate), wore a black mask at the
Katipunan meetings. His password was Anak ng Bayan (Sons of the
People). The second grade called kawal (soldier), wore a green mask.

His password was i.OM'BUR-ZA. The third gi.ulr tailed bui/um
(patriot), wore a red mask. I Us password was Rizal, the honorary
president of the Katipunan.
During the first election, the following officers of the Supreme
Council were chosen:
Deodato Arellano - President
Andres Bonifacio - Comptroller
Ladislao Diwa - Fiscal
Teodoro Plata - Secretary
Valentin Diaz - Treasurer
There were also women members of the Katipunan, but they
were not required to sign with their own blood. To be admitted in
the women's section, one had to be a wife, daughter, or sister of a
Katipunero (male member) to ensure the secrecy of the movement.
Among the women members were Gregoria de Jesus, Bonifacio's
wife, who was called the Likambini of the Katipunan; Benita
Rodriguez, the wife of Katipunero Restituto Javier; and Josefa and
Trinidad Rizal, sisters of Dr. Jose Rizal.
The women guarded the secret papers and documents of the
society. When the Katipunan held a meeting in a certain house, they
made it appear that a real social party was going on. Likewise, they
were also helping the society by recruiting more members. The
women's chapter of the Katipunan was born during the presidency
of Roman Basa (second president) in July 1893. Josefa Rizal was
elected President of the women's chapter called La Semilla.
Bonifacio deposed Arellano as president in a meeting in
February 1893 because of the latter's inaction. However, early in
1895, Bonifacio realized that Roman Basa was as ineffective as
Deodato Arellano, that he called a meeting of the society and readily
deposed Basa. Bonifacio himself was elected Supremo (President).
With the Katipunan's organizational setup, Bonifacio turned his
attention to the symbol of its authority. Upon his request, Benita
Rodriguez, with the help of Gregoria de Jesus, made a flag, which
consisted of a red rectangular piece of cloth with three white K's
arranged horizontally at the center. This was the first official flag of
the society; however, some members had their flag with three K's
arranged in the form of a triangle. Others had one K at the center of
the red flag. Some generals of the revolution, likewise, adopted their
own designs.
Knowing the importance of a primer to teach the members of
the society its ideals, Emilio Jacinto prepared one, which he called
Kartilla, a word adopted from the Spanish cartilla, which at that time
meant a primer for grade school students. (Former UP President
Rafael Palma, a revolutionary patriot, noted that Apolinario Mabini
wrote the original statutes of the Katipunan's Kartilht .hkI Emilio
Jacinto translated it into Tagalog for the benefit of the unschooled
members of the Katipunan).
The Kartilla consisted of 13 teachings, which the members of the
society were expected to observe. The primer constituted the
following:
I. Life which is not consecrated to a lofty and sacred cause is
like a tree without a shadow, if not a poisonous weed.
II. A good deed that springs from a desire for personal profit
and not from a desire to do good is not kindness.
III. True greatness consists in being charitable, in loving one's
fellowmen and in adjusting every movement, deed and
word to true Reason.
IV. All men arc equal, be the color of their skin black or white.
One may be superior to another in knowledge, wealth, and
beauty, but cannot be superior in being.
V. He who is noble prefers honor to personal gains; he who is
mean prefers personal profit to honor.
VI. To a man with a sense of shame, his word is inviolate.
VII. Don't fritter away time; lost riches may be recovered, but
time lost will never come again.
VIII. Defend the oppressed and fight the oppressor.
IX. An intelligent man is he who is cautious in speech and
knows how to keep the secrets that must be guarded.
X. In the thorny path of life, man is the guide of his wife and
children; if he who guides moves toward evil, they who are
guided likewise move toward evil.
XI. Think not of woman as a thing merely to while away with
time, but as a helper and partner in the hardships of life.
Respect her in her weakness, and remember the mother
who brought you into this world and who cared for you in
your childhood.
XII. What you do not want done in your wife, daughter and
sister, do not do to the wife, daughter and sister of another.

XIII. The nobility of a man does not consist in being a king, nor
in the highness of the nose and the whiteness of the skin,
nor in being a priest representing God, nor in the exalted
position on this earth, but pure and truly noble is he who,
though born in the woods, is possessed of an upright
character; who is true to his word; who has dignity and
honor; who does not oppress and does not help those who
oppress; who knows how to look after and love the land of
his birth. When these doctrines spread and the Sun of
beloved liberty shines with brilliant effulgence on these
unhappy isles anil hinds its null rays upon the united
people and brothers in everlasting happiness, the lives,
labors, and sufferings of those who are gone shall be more
than recompensed. (Teodoro Agoncillo, History of the
Filipino People, Quezon City: Malaya Books, 1970, p. 181).
Bonifacio wrote a decalogue or 10 commandments titled
Katungkulang (iagawin tig mga Anak tig Bayan (Duties to be Observed
by the Sons of the Country) to lay down the guidelines for good
citizenship. This document in manuscript form still exists. The rules
include love of God; love of country and one's fellowmen; diligence
in work; sharing of one's means with the poor; punishment of
scoundrels and traitors; and the guarding of the mandates and aims
of the K.K.K.
Another step taken by the Katipunan to propagate its teachings
was the establishment of a printing press. In 1894, the Katipunan
bought an old hand press with the money donated by two patriotic
Filipinos from Visayas - Francisco del Castillo and Candido Iban.
These two Katipuneros, who came back from Australia in 1895, had
one thousand pesos between them for having won in the lottery. The
types used in printing were purchased from Isabelo de los Reyes,
and many were stolen from the press of the Diario de Manila (Manila
Daily) by Filipino employees who were members of the Katipunan.
Under Emilio Jacinto's supervision, two patriotic printers,
Faustino Duque and Ulpiano Fernandez, printed the Kalayaan, the
organ of the Katipunan, to disseminate the ideals of the society.
Kalayaan had its first and only issue in January 1896, which carried a
false masthead stating that it was being printed in Yokohama with
Marcelo H. del Pilar as editor. This was to deceive the Spanish
authorities and evade arrest.
Published in the Kalayaan was an essay titled "Ang Dapat
Mabatid ng mga Tagalog" (What the Filipinos Should Know)
attributed to Bonifacio. This composition dealt with the three
questions asked of Katipunan applicants: "What were the conditions
in the Philippines before Spanish conquest? What is the condition of
the country today? What will the Philippines be tomorrow?"
Copies of the Kalayaan reached members and possible recruits
through the efforts of Macario Sakay and Pio del Pilar as
distributors. The Katipuneros were tirelessly recruiting members in
Nueva Ecija, Bulacan, and Cavite. The society grew and began to
spread into the non-Tagalog provinces. By August 1896, there were
thousands of Katipunan members in the arrabales of Manila and
some 18,000 in other towns.
During the Holy Week of 1895, Bonifacio and some Katipuneros
went to the mountains of Montalban in search of a good hideout
where they could hold their secret meetings. On April 10, 1895,
Bonifacio and his companions including Emilio Jacinto, Restituto
Javier, and Guillermo Masangkay entered the Pamitinan Cave (Cave
of Bernardo Carpio) on Mount Tapusi in the mountain ranges of San
Mateo and Montalban. There they held a secret session leading to the
initiation rites of new recruits. After the session, Aurelio Tolentino
picked up a piece of charcoal and wrote on the cave wall in Spanish,
"Viva La Independencia Filipina!"
In the early part of 1895, Bonifacio became the Supremo (head of
the Supreme Council). He also occupied this position in the fourth
and fifth elections of the Supreme Council, in December 1895 and
August 1896, respectively.
On June 15, 1896, Dr. Pio Valenzuela, acting as Bonifacio's
emissary, sailed for Dapitan to get Rizal's support for the armed
revolution. To cover his real mission from Spanish authorities, he
brought with him a blind man named Raymundo Mata, who was in
need of Dr. Rizal's medical services. Rizal did not agree to the
Katipunan's plans of an armed uprising since the people were not
ready for it.

28. The Revolution of 1896
By the middle of 1896, as the Katipunan was busy preparing for
a revolution, hints about its existence reached the Spanish
authorities. On July 5,1896, Manuel Sityar, the Spanish lieutenant of

the Civil Guards stationed at Pasig, reported the questionable
activities of some Filipinos.
On August 13, 1896, Father Agustin Fernandez, Augustinian
curate of San Pedro, Makati, wrote to Don Manuel Luengo, the civil
governor of Manila, about the evening gatherings in his parish,
apparently by men plotting against the Spaniards.
The Katipunan was finally discovered on August 19. Teodoro
Patino, a member of the Katipunan betrayed the secrecy of it to
Father Mariano Gil, an Augustinian parish curate. On the basis of
Patino's information, the Spanish authorities acted immediately.
The Spanish cazadores (civil guards) began making hundreds of
arrests. Many of them died of suffocation while detained at the
overcrowded Fort Santiago. Two Katipuneros acting as spies for the
governor of Manila told Bonifacio about the discovery.
On August 21-22, Bonifacio called for a meeting at the house of
Vidal Acab, then to the residence of Apolonio Samson in Kangkong,
Caloocan to issue the call to arms. Emilio Jacinto summoned the
heads of Katipunan Councils to Kangkong to discuss their measures
against the Spanish forces.
The next day, August 23, Bonifacio, Jacinto, and other
Katipuneros met at Bahay Toro, Pugadlawin, Balintawak, north of
Manila and gathered at the residence of Melchora Aquino, known as
Tandang Sora.
In the mass meeting held in the yard of a son of Melchora
Aquino, fhe Katipuneros tore their ccdulus personates (certificates),
the symbol of the Filipino vassalage to Spain .it the same time
shouting, "Long live the Philippines! Long live the Katipunan!" This
event is recorded in history .is the Cry of Pugadlawin or Cry of
Balintawak, which proclaimed their defiance to the Spanish
government.
At Hagdang Bato, Mandaluyong, Bonifacio gave his last
manifesto Katipunang Mararahas ng mga Anak ng Bayan (Society of
Enraged Sons of the Country) regarding the revolution that would
take place in Manila.
Bonifacio led his army to attack the polverin (powder depot) in
San Juan .it the dawn of Sunday, August 30,1896. This is now known
as the Battle of Pinaglabanan. The Spaniards outnumbered the
revolutionaries who were not fully armed. Due to heavy casualties,
Bonifacio and his surviving men were forced to retreat to Balara.
A day earlier, August 29, Melchora Aquino, was arrested by the
Guardia Civil at Pasong Putik, Novaliches, and jailed at Bilibid
(prison) for giving aid to the Katipuneros.
In the afternoon of August 30, Governor General Ramon Blanco,
in trying to quell the Philippine Revolution, issued a decree declaring
a state of war in Manila and seven Luzon provinces - Cavite, Laguna,
Batangas, Bulacan, Pampanga, Nueva Ecija, and Tarlac and placed
them under martial law. The decree also provided that those who
would surrender within 48 hours after the publication of the decree
would be pardoned except the leaders of the Katipunan.
s - Taking advantage of the amnesty provision, some Katipuneros
surrendered like Valenzuela. However, the Spanish authorities only
subjected them to torture to make them squeal matters about the
revolution.
After the San Juan del Monte Battle, Bonifacio, Jacinto, and
other leaders like Macario Sakay, Apolonio Samson, Faustino
Guillermo and General Lucino (alias Payat) set up camp in the hills
near Mariquina (now Marikina), San Mateo, and Montalban. More
Filipinos joined them.
Series of executions by the government began after the
proclamation of a state of war. Blanco inaugurated a reign of terror
in the belief that this would stop the rebellion. On September 4, four
members of the Katipunan were executed at Bagumbayan. On
September 12, thirteen were put to death at Plaza de Armas, near the
Fort of San Felipe in Cavite and are now remembered as "Los Trece
Martires" (The Thirteen Martyrs of Cavite). They were Maximo
Inocencio, Luis Aguado, Victoriano Luciano, Hugo Perez, Jose
Lallana, Antonio San Agustin, Agapito Conchu, Feliciano Cabuco,
Maximo Gregorio, Eugenio Cabezas, Severino Lapidario, Alfonso de
Ocampo, and Francisco Osorio.
On September 16, 22 prominent residents of Manila were
imprisoned
at Fort Santiago for alleged involvement in the insurrection. Among
them wereTelesforoChuidian, Ambrosio Salvador, Ambrosio
Rianzares Bautr i t Juan Luna, Antonio Luna, and Mariano Limjap.
The following month, around 150 Filipino citizens were loaded
on S.S. Manila bound for Cartagena, Spain. From there, they were
taken Fernando Po in Africa to serve as exiles for their alleged
involvement in the rebellion.

Meanwhile, Rizal was arrested while on his way to Cuba to
serve an a doctor for the Spanish army. On November 20, Dr. Jose
Rizal appear* I before Colonel Francisco Garcia Olive to answer the
charges filed again t him. By December 26, the litigation of Rizal took
place before a military court. Two days after, Governor Camilo
Polavieja approved the verdii I Convicted of sedition, rebellion, and
illicit associations, Rizal was executed by a firing squad at
Bagumbayan Field (now Luneta) on December 30,1896, at 7:03 a.m.
Eight Filipino soldiers, with eight Spanish soldiers behind them
carried out the execution.
Such incidents involving detention, deportation, and execution
only made the Filipinos more unrelenting to the Spanish
government. The more they became determined to continue the
struggle.
The Katipuneros in Cavite rose in arms on August 31, 1896.
They assaulted the tribunal (municipal building) of San Francisco de
Malabon. At Cavite el Viejo (now Kawit), the Magdalo troops led by
Candido Tria Tirona attacked the enemy garrison. The Magdiwang
forces on the other hand, pounded the Spaniards in Noveleta.
In the morning of September 5, Emilio Aguinaldo and his men
assailed the Spanish troops stationed at Imus under the command of
General Eusebio Aguirre. In this battle, the Spaniards lost hundreds
of men and 60 guns with ammunition. From that time on, the
Cavitenos recognized Aguinaldo as a man of distinguished valor
and called him Heneral Miong, no longer Capitan Miong.
The Spanish regular army were tremendously defeated at the
twin battles of Binakayan and Dalahican in Cavite, fought on
November 9-11. Both Magdiwang and Magdalo forces in their
respective trenches built by General Edilberto Evangelista (an
engineer trained in Belgium) fought furiously against the Spanish
army under the personal command of Governor General Blanco.
Unfortunately, Candido Tria Tirona, the secretary of war in the
Magdalo Council died in the Battle of Binakayan.
The citizens of Taal, Lemery, Calaca, and Bayungyungan in
Batangas also joined the revolution at the end of October 1896.
However, they were dispersed after the Spanish garrison in Taal
came to the aid of the besieged towns.
At the outbreak of the revolution, the number ot Katipuneros
grew, i in December 4, 18%, tin* katipunan members ot Balangay
Dimasalang met it Bigaa (now Pandi and IJalagtas) in the province
of Bulacan. They inted to reinforce their operation against the
Spaniards and to conduct an election of officials under their newly
founded Kakarong Republic. Led lv Cieneral Eusebio Roque (also
known asMaestrong Sebio and Dimabungo), i .uiuto Villanueva, and
Casimiro Galvez, around 6,000 men and women r-nlisted themselves
as members.
I he Spanish government had already known the existence of
the Katipunan at Kakarong Real (a.k.a. Kakarong de Sili) because of
the armed resistance it had begun against them since August of 1896.
On January 1, 1897, the government troops under General
Olaguer- Miu rushed to the fortifications of Kakarong and launched
a massive assault against the people, including civilians. The
revolutionaries, caught by surprise, resisted with ferocious courage
but they were overwhelmed by the superior armaments of the
enemy. Around 1,100 rebels were killed. I he government forces
captured six fortified positions, seven cannons, a ta rt ridge factory,
and a large number of firearms.
Maestrong Sebio managed to escape his persecutors at first. Ten
days later, he was captured and arrested at Bunga Mayor, Bustos. On
January
16, at 5:00 in the afternoon, Maestrong Sebio was executed.
With the objective of ending the revolution, Governor Polavieja
launched an all-out offensive on February 15,1897 in Cavite. On
February
17, a Spanish sniper killed General Evangelista in the Battle of
Zapote. Two days later, General Lachambre of the Spanish forces
captured the town of Silang. General Aguinaldo aided by Generals
Vito Belarmino and Artemio Ricarte, mounted a counteroffensive,
but failed to get Silang back.
On February 25, 1897, the town of Dasmarinas, Cavite, was
taken by the Spanish troops led by General Antonio Zabala who also
attacked Salitran (barrio of Dasmarinas), which was defended by
General Flaviano Yengko. Yengko was mortally wounded in action
and died on March 3, 1897 at Imus Military Hospital. Yengko was
the youngest general of the Philippine revolution, being younger
than General Gregorio del Pilar by one year, two months and seven
days. In the bloody battle of Salitran, General Zabala was killed by
Yengko's troops.

On May 17 of the same year, the Katipuneros led by Francisco
del Castillo attacked a Spanish garrison in Aklan. Unfortunately, the
leader died in action. His men decided to retreat into the mountains.
The amnesty offer of government lured 20 Katipuneros to
accept it. Not true to its promise, the government killed 19 of them.
The martyrs of Aklan were Ramon Aguirre, Benito Iban, Maximo
Mationg, Tomas Briones, Candido Iban, Simplicio Reyes, Domingo
dela Cruz, Simeon Inocencio, Canuto Segovia, Valeriano Dalida,
Isidro Jimenez, Gabino Sucgang, Claro Delgado, Catalino Mangat,
Angelo Fernandez, Gabino Yorisal, Francisco Villorente, Lamberto
Mangat, and Valeriano Masinda.

29. Rivalry in the Katipunan
In Cavite, there were two Katipunan councils - the Magdalo
Council, headed by Baldomero Aguinaldo (Emilio Aguinaldo's
cousin), and the Magdiwang Council with Mariano Alvarez (uncle of
Gregoria de Jesus, Bonifacio's wife) as president.
The capital of Magdiwang Council was Noveleta, then later
transferred to San Francisco de Malabon (now General Trias). The
other towns under its jurisdiction were Rosario, Tanza, Naic,
Ternate, Maragondon, Magallanes, Bailen, Alfonso, Indang, and San
Roque. The Magdalo Council had its capital in lmus. The other
towns under its jurisdiction were Kawit, Dasmarinas, Silang,
Amadeo, Mendez, Nunez, Bacoor, and Carmen.
Emilio Aguinaldo first gained popularity after he had beaten a
sergeant of the Guardia Civil in a single combat. He even became
more renowned after his successful uprising in Kawit (his
hometown), then in the Battle of lmus and in the early part of
November 1896, he liberated the town of Talisay, Batangas, from the
Spanish soldiers.
Upon invitation of the Magdiwang Provincial in Cavite,
Bonifacio left his hideout in Morong. On December 1,1896, he and
his wife, together with his two brothers (Ciriaco and Procopio),
General Lucino, and 20 soldiers arrived in Cavite.
The Magdalo Council hosted a general assembly of both
factions in lmus on December 31, a day after Rizal's execution.
Bonifacio conducted the meeting. Among the issues discussed were
the establishment of a revolutionary government under the new
elected officials and uniting the Magdiwang and Magdalo forces
under a single command. The Magdalo faction believed that with the
outbreak of revolution, the Katipunan had ceased to be a secret
society and therefore should be replaced by a new one.
The Magdiwangs insisted that there was no need to create a
revolutionary government because the Katipunan was actually a
government with a constitution and bylaws recognized by everyone.
General Edilberto Evangelista tried to reconcile the two groups by
drafting a constitution establishing the Philippine Republic. This
constitution was reportedly discussed in the assembly. Due to
heated debates arising from the issues, the assembly accomplished
nothing definite. Its proceedings ended with the arrival of Josephine
Bracken (Dr. Jose Rizal's widow), accompanied by Paciano Rizal.
They later agreed to reschedule the joint assembly at a different
place.
The Second Convention of these two Katipunan factions was
held on March 22, 1897 at Tejeros, San Francisco de Malabon, Cavite.
The two factions met at an estate-house of the friars, which the rebels
had captured earlier. Majority of those who attended were the
Magdiwangs. General Aguinaldo and other Magdalo officials were
absent because they were defending the Magdalo towns at that time.
The session, which started at about two o'clock in the afternoon
was presided by Jacinto Lumbreras, a Magdiwang. Severino de las
Alas, a Magdiwang, suggested that the convention assembled should
resolve whether there should be a new government to replace the
Katipunan. Lumbreras called for a recess after this issue led to
another heated discussion.
As it turned out, the convention upheld the views of the
Magdalo Council. The majority wanted a new revolutionary
government. This resulted to the election of new officials. Bonifacio
presided over the election. Before the casting of votes had taken
place, Bonifacio reminded that whoever should get elected in any
position should be respected. Elected were as follows:
President - Emilio Aguinaldo
Vice-President - Mariano Trias
Captain General - Artemio Ricarte
Director of War - Emiliano Riego de Dios
Director of the Interior - Andres Bonifacio
Daniel Tirona, a Magdalo, protested Bonifacio's election saying
that his position should be occupied by a lawyer. He suggested a
Caviteno lawyer, Jose del Rosario, for the post. Bonifacio felt
insulted. He demanded Tirona to retract what he had said. But

Tirona, instead of offering an apology, tried to leave the scene. This
infuriated Bonifacio and made him drew his revolver to shoot
Tirona, but Ricarte and others intervened. The people began to leave
the hall. Bonifacio angrily declared the election null and void and left
the assembly room with his bodyguards.
From Pasong Santol, a barrio of Dasmarinas, Aguinaldo went to
Tejeros as informed by a special committee headed by Col. Vicente
Riego de Dios. Being the new president, he had to take his oath. He
was sworn into office inside the Catholic Church of Santa Cruz de
Malabon (Tanza) together with other newly elected officials.
A day after the Tejeros Assembly, March 23, Bonifacio gathered
his followers and drafted a document called Acta de Tejeros, signed
by Bonifacio and 44 other plotters.
This document rejected the revolutionary government of
Aguinaldo on the following grounds: first, the Tejeros Assembly
lacks legality; second, there was a Magdalo conspiracy to oust
Bonifacio from leadership; third, the election of officials was
fraudulent; and fourth, that actual pressure has been brought upon
the presidency.
Another secret meeting was held on April 19, 1897 at the friar
estate house in Naic. Bonifacio and his coconspirators drew up
another document called the Naic Military Pact, signed by 41 men,
including Bonifacio, Ricarte, Pio del Pilar, and Severino de las Alas.
An army corps under the command of General Pio del Pilar was
created.
While Bonifacio and his companions wen." busy conferring,
Major Lazaro Makapagal who was held prisoner downstairs
managed to escape and informed President Aguinaldo, who was in
bed suffering malaria, about the recent developments. Aguinaldo
rose from his sickbed and went to the friar-estate house to confront
his conspirators.
Seeing that Aguinaldo's soldiers had already surrounded the
estate house, Bonifacio and his Magdiwang followers left hurriedly
except General Pio del Pilar and General Mariano Noriel who
subsequently joined Aguinaldo's troops.
President Aguinaldo convoked a revolutionary assembly in
Naic. The following matters were taken up: adoption of a new red
flag with a white sun of eight rays at the center, a standard uniform
for the soldiers - the rayadillo and a set of new rules fixing military
ranks and their insignias; and, the reorganization of the
revolutionary army.
Bonifacio, with his wife Gregoria, his two brothers (Ciriaco and
Procopio) and loyal followers fled to Limbon (barrio of Indang).
Upon learning of Bonifacio's presence at Limbon and the alleged
crimes committed by his soldiers in Indang, Aguinaldo summoned
Colonels Agapito Bonzon, Felipe Topacio, and Jose lgnacio Paua to
go to Limbon with some troops and arrest Bonifacio and his men.
Bonifacio furiously resisted.
Ciriaco Bonifacio and two soldiers were killed, while Bonifacio
himself was wounded in the left arm and neck. Bonifacio (in a
hammock), Gregoria, and the surviving Bonifacio soldiers were
taken prisoners and brought to Naic.
The case of the Bonifacio brothers evolved quite rapidly after a
Council of War headed by General Mariano Noriel was created. The
trial begun on May 5, with Placido Martinez as defense attorney for
Bonifacio and Teodoro Gonzalez for Procopio. Tragically, the
Bonifacio brothers were given the penalty of death the next day The
charges were treason, conspiracy to assassinate President Aguinaldo,
and bribery.
Pio del Pilar testified in the trial of Bonifacio saying that the
latter had been forcing officers to join him. As for Severino de las
Alas, it was he who made the false charges that the friars bribed
Bonifacio to establish the Katipunan and made the Filipinos into
fighting a war for which they were poorly armed. He also said that
Bonifacio ordered the burning of the convent and church of Indang
and that his soldiers had taken by force from the people, carabaos
and other animals. He also accused Bonifacio and his men that they
were planning to surrender to the Spaniards.
Lieutenant Colonel Pedro Giron, turning as state witness, told
the Council that Bonifacio gave him an initial payment of 10 pesos to
assassinate Aguinaldo but he refused to follow the order.
On May 10, 1897, General Noriel ordered Major Lazaro
Makapagal to release the Bonifacio brothers from prison. He gave
Makapagal a sealed letter with orders to read its details after
reaching their destination.
Makapagal took four men with him and opened the letter upon
the request of Bonifacio. The letter ordered the execution of Andres
and his brother Procopio. Included in the letter was a warning that
failure to comply with the order would result to severe punishment.

Makapagal followed the order and executed them at Mount
Nagpatong, Maragondon (according to the National Historical
Institute). Makapagal placed a few twigs on the shallow grave of the
two brothers.
On the same day, the Spanish army attacked Maragondon.
Upon Makapagal's return, he found the Filipinos retreating. On May
12, after two days of defending the town, Aguinaldo and his men
were compelled to leave. They crossed the mountains to Batangas
and aided General Miguel Malvar in a fight against the Spaniards in
Talisay. On June 10, they crossed the Pasig River and bivouacked at
Mount Puray, Montalban. Two days later, the Morong freedom
fighters under General Licerio Geronimo arrived and joined them.
Tired of successive combats, General Camilo de Polavieja asked
for his relief as governor general. His request was given on April
15,1897, with Fernando Primo de Rivera succeeding his post on April
23.
Governor General Rivera issued a decree granting pardon to
rebels who would give up their arms and surrender until May 17.
Most Filipinos simply ignored this decree. Thereafter, the governor
general launched a campaign against the rebels, forcing Aguinaldo
and his forces to seek refuge in Batangas.
On June 14, the Spanish troops led by Colonel Dujiols attacked
the rebel camp at Mount Puray. Aguinaldo and his men resisted.
After six hours of bloody fighting, they won over the Spaniards.
After the Battle of Mount Puray, President Aguinaldo
organized the Department of Central Luzon under the jurisdiction of
the revolutionary government. The Department Government was
headed by Father Pedro Dandan, canonist of the Manila Cathedral as
President with Dr. Anastacio Francisco, Vice-President; Paciano
Rizal, Secretary of the Treasury; Cipriano Pacheco, Secretary of War;
Teodoro Gonzales, Secretary of the Interior; and Feliciano Jocson as
Secretary of Welfare.

30. The Biak-na-Bato Republic
President Emilio Aguinaldo and his men headed for Bulacan.
Finally on June 24, 1897, they arrived at Biak-na-Bato, San Miguel de
Mayumo. From this area, Aguinaldo and his men joined the troops
of General Mariano Llanera of Nueva Ecija in assaulting Spaniards
stationed in the Central Luzon provinces. With the coming of the
rainy season, Primo de Rivera's offensive attacks temporarily ceased.
On November 1, the revolutionary leaders met and adopted a
constitution titled the Provisional Constitution of the Philippine
Republic. It was intended to be effective for two years. It declared
that the aim of the revolution was the separation of the Philippines
from Spanish monarchy and the formation of an independent state.
Isabelo Artacho and Felix Ferrer wrote the provisional constitution,
which was based on the Cuban Constitution known as Jimaguayu
Constitution.
On the same day, the Biak-na-Bato Republic was also
inaugurated and the officials were: Emilio Aguinaldo, President;
Mariano Trias, Vice- President; Isabelo Artacho, Secretary of the
Interior; Antonio Montenegro, Secretary of Foreign Affairs;
Baldomero Aguinaldo, Secretary of the Treasury; and Emiliano
Riego de Dios, Secretary of War.
The struggle between the Spanish government and the Biak-na-
Bato Republic had reached a deadlock. Governor General Primo de
Rivera sent Pedro Paterno to Biak-na-Bato for peaceful negotiations
with the revolutionaries, which began in August and was concluded
in December.
This agreement known as the Pact of Biak-na-Bato, resulted to
the voluntary exile of Aguinaldo and his men to Hong Kong. This
pact consisted of three documents. The first two were signed on
December 14, and the third on December 15,1897.
The first document, called Program, provided that Governor
Primo de Rivera would pay 800,000 pesos to those who rose in arms
and would let Aguinaldo and his men to retire in voluntary exile to
Hong Kong. The second document called Act of Agreement, reiterated
the granting of amnesty to those who would lay down their arms
and the privilege to move freely in the Philippines and abroad.
The third document discussed the question.of indemnity,
wherein Spain would pay a total of 1,700,000 pesos, of which 800,000
pesos was to be paid to those who would lay down their arms as
mentioned in the first document. The remaining 900,000 pesos was
to be distributed among the civilian population as indemnity for the
damages created by the war.
On December 25, 1897, Aguinaldo with Pedro Paterno and
others went to Lingayen, Pangasinan, from where a Spanish
merchant steamer was to take them to Hong Kong. Two days after,
Aguinaldo and 25 other leaders sailed for Hong Kong on board the
steamer Uranus, in compliance with the pact. General Artemio

Ricarte stayed behind at Biak-na-Bato to supervise the surrender of
arms by the revolutionaries.
The Spanish government announced the end of hostilities on
January 23, 1898. It proclaimed amnesty two days later; and it gave
part of the promised money to the rebels in Hong Kong. However,
after the peace pact, neither side fully complied with the terms of the
agreement. The government never instituted the expected reforms.
Likewise, the Filipinos continued their plan to overthrow the
government.
There were sporadic uprisings in different parts of the country.
On iMarch 7, 1898, the revolutionaries in /ambales besieged the
cable station at Bolinao and seized the telegraph line connected to
Manila. On March 25, Federico Isabelo Abaya and his men were able
to get Candon, llocos Sur, from the Spaniards.
Pantaleon Villegas, popularly known as Leon Kilat incited a
revolt in Cebu known as Tres de Abril in retaliation of the March 25
incident when the Spaniards massacred many Visayan sailors at
Camba Street, Manila.
In Central Luzon, General Francisco Makabulos of Tarlac
established a provincial revolutionary government with a
constitution written by him. The Makabulos Constitution adopted on
April 17, 1898, set up this provisional government in Central Luzon
to continue in force until a general government for the Republic was
established.
In Malolos, General Isidoro Torres established his camp to
continue the revolutionary spirit. Revolts were also experienced in
Bohol, Cebu, Panay, and other islands in the country. Feliciano
Jocson, a pharmacist, incited the patriots in Manila to continue the
fight against the Spaniards.
Aguinaldo and his officers went into exile but did not end the
fight to win independence from Spain. On a letter written in Hong
Kong dated February 19,1898, Mariano Ponce stated that General
Aguinaldo had signed the Pact of Biak-na-Bato because under its
terms, the Filipino revolutionists could rest and regain their lost
strength and then return to combat with renewed vigor.

31. The Spanish-fimerican War (1898)
The Spanish-American war, which broke out on April 25,1898,
ended on August 12 of the same year. There were factors that
contributed to the United States' decision to open hostilities against
Spain. These included the Cuban struggle for independence, efforts
of the Americans to extend influence overseas, and the sinking of the
U.S. warship Maine.
Like the Filipinos, the Cubans were fighting against Spain to
obtain their independence. Under the leadership of Jose Marti, the
Cubans revolted in 1895. The Cuban rebels rejected Spain's offer of
autonomy, instead of complete independence. The brutalities
committed by the Spanish government in Cuba such as the rounding
up of peasant population and placing them in concentration camps
were made to suppress local rebellion. Thousands died due to
illnesses and limited food provisions. Such cruelties infuriated the
American public.
The New York Journal and the New York World were among the
American newspapers, which published the stories about the alleged
atrocities committed by the Spanish government in Cuba. They
called for the U.S. government to intervene on the side of the
Cubans. This idea won widespread support among American
citizens and politicians. This gave rise to the belief of Manifest
Destiny, where the United States has the divinely ordained duty to
help troubled countries.
America's open support for the Cuban revolution and her vast
investments in Cuba's sugar industry led her involvement in this
Spanish colony. Spain could not oppose the United States, a rising
powerful nation, in the face of the Cuban Revolution.
A letter of Spain's Ambassador to the United States (Dupuy de
Lome) to a friend in Havana, Cuba, was stolen and published in a
New York periodical. It stated that US President William McKinley
was a weakling and a low politician. This created a national feeling
among the Americans to support the war against Spain.
The replacement of the Spanish ambassador could not,
however, relieve the aggrieved American populace. The provocation
was heated up after the mysterious blowing up of the U.S. battleship
Maine in Havana, Cuba, which was sent by the U.S. consul general in
the city to protect American citizens and property. This incident
happened on the night of February 18, 1898. It reportedly resulted in
the death of 266 officers and men. (In 1976, based on U.S. Navy
Study, the findings suggested that the explosion could have been
caused by spontaneous combustion in the ship's coal bunkers).

The American authorities viewed the assault in Havana as an
act of treachery. US newspapers blamed Spain for the tragedy and
evoked American sympathy with this cry, "Remember the Maine."
On April 19, the U.S. Congress passed several resolutions
demanding the pull out of Spanish forces in Cuba. To save her
honor, Spain declared war against the United States on April 24. The
next day, the U.S. Congress declared war on Spain and thus, the
Spanish-American war began.
Past noon of April 25, Commodore George Dewey, commander
of the Asiatic Squadron received a cable from the Secretary of Navy
stating that war has commenced between the United States and
Spain. Dewey was instructed to proceed against the Spanish fleet
anchored in Manila Bay.
An often-debated question in the U.S. during those times was
why a U.S. naval squadron should be sent to the Philippines in order
to end Spanish rule in Cuba. This has been ascribed to the growing
spirit of American imperialism induced by supporters of Manifest
Destiny, which in like manner encountered considerable opposition
in the United States.
The conclusion of the Spanish-American war, which resulted to
the victory of the Americans, paved the way to the end of the
Spanish colonial rule and the rise of the United States as a global
power.

32. Filipino-American Collaboration
At the time of the Spanish-American war, General Emilio
Aguinaldo was in Singapore where he had negotiations with the
American consul general, Mr. E. Spencer Pratt, regarding the
Americans' offer to support the Philippines in fighting the Spaniards.
The United States would then recognize Philippine independence
after the defeat of Spain. Pratt advised Aguinaldo to meet with
Commodore Dewey who was then based in Hong Kong, if he were
to join the latter should he sail for the Philippines.
General Aguinaldo rushed to Hong Kong but missed
Commodore Dewey who had already sailed to Manila to destroy the
Spanish fleet. Dewey proceeded at once to Manila with his fleet
consisting of four armored cruises - Olympia, Baltimore, Boston, and
Raleigh and two gunboats - Concord and Petrel
The Battle of Manila Bay began on May 1,1898 at 5:40 a.m. and
ended at noon. Admiral Patricio Montojo of the Spanish forces
incurred heavy casualties with 160 of his men killed and 210
wounded. The Spanish forces consisting of 12 ships, including the
flagship Reina Castilla were subdued. The U.S. naval squadron had
no fatal casualties. None of the ships was heavily damaged.
This battle made Dewey an instant hero. The Congress
promoted him to rear admiral and later admiral. However, the U.S.
naval squadron could not attempt to occupy Manila in the absence of
ground troops, which did not arrive until about three months later.
On news of Dewey's victory, ships from Britain, France, Japan,
and Germany began to arrive in the Manila Bay area. They had
recently obtained concessions from China for naval bases and
designated commercial spheres of interest. At that time, Germany
had sent her warships to protect the interests of her nationals in the
Philippines.
The German fleet of eight warships led by Admiral Von
Diedrichs was especially aggressive. The fleet acted provocatively by
cutting in front of American ships. They supplied the city with flour
and other products, ignoring the American economic blockade on
the Spaniards in the city. This angered Dewey. He sent an ultimatum
to Von Diedrichs to stop it or else fight. Captain Edward Chichester
of the English fleet came to support Dewey. Von Diedrichs, fearing
to risk battle with the combined Anglo- American fleets, ended his
hostile activities.
Upon the advice of the Hong Kong junta, General Aguinaldo
left on board the McCulloch (others say McCullough), Dewey's
dispatch vessel, and arrived in Cavite on May 19, 1898. He
reassumed command of rebel forces. His first act upon his return
was his proclamation on May 21, urging the people to rise in arms
and join the Americans in a common struggle against the Spaniards.
On May 24, 1898, General Aguinaldo established a dictatorial
government, with him as the dictator, upon the advice of Ambrosio
Rianzares Bautista. Aguinaldo established a new government to
revoke the authority of the Biak-na-Bato Republic and unite the
revolutionary forces. At that time, a dictatorship was necessary to
carry out the war successfully. This government was temporary and
was to last only until a republic could have been established.
On May 28, the Consultative Assembly instituted by Governor
General Basilio Augustin met for the first time. But the Filipinos did
not like to settle for the projected reforms. They clamored for total
independence. On the same day, Aguinaldo's new army repulsed the

Spanish marines at Alapan, a barrio in Imus, Cavite. The Philippine
Flag (The Sun and Stars Flag) was first unfurled in the Battle of
Alapan.
This initial success inspired other people to relive the
revolutionary spirit. During the subsequent days, the Spanish forces
were routed in Bataan, Cavite, Bulacan, Pampanga, Laguna,
Batangas, Tayabas (now Quezon), and other provinces.
The capture of Manila was the principal objective of General
Aguinaldo. He and his troops commanded by General Gregorio del
Pilar, Pio del Pilar, Artemio Ricarte, and Mariano Noriel, among
others, surrounded the city.
Dewey's squadron dominated the bay and thus, the Spaniards
were trapped within the city walls. Aguinaldo's men had cut off the
supply of foodstuffs and potable water in the city. The populace
suffered terribly during the siege. Aguinaldo offered Governor
General Augustin terms for an honorable surrender but the latter
rejected him. Dewey demanded the surrender of Manila on August
7. Consequently, the Spanish governor general honorably conceded.

Study Guides
A. Terms/Concepts to Understand
Nationalism Liberal ideas
Racial prejudice Secularization
Manifest destiny
B. Questions to Answer
1. What were the common grievances of the Filipinos against
the Spanish colonial administration?
2. Why did the early Filipino revolts fail to liberate the
country from the Spaniards?
3. What were the efforts of the Filipino propagandists to
achieve peaceful reforms?
4. When is a revolution justifiable?
5. Describe the organizational structure of the Katipunan.
6. Who could be a better revolutionary leader, Andres
Bonifacio or Emilio Aguinaldo?
7. What caused the Filipino-American collaboration against
the Spaniards?
Chapter VI
The Birth of a Nation

I. Proclamation of the Philippine
Independence
The struggle for independence against Spain continued in many
provinces, particularly after the news of General Emilio Aguinaldo's
return to the Philippines. In anticipation of the ultimate triumph of
rebel armies, on June 12,1898, between four and five in the afternoon,
General Aguinaldo before a huge crowd proclaimed the
independence of the Philippines in Kawit, Cavite. Finally, after 333
years of Spanish domination, the Philippines obtained her
independence. General Aguinaldo guided the Philippine revolution
to its end.
The Sun and Stars flag was officially unfurled at the
Aguinaldo's mansion as the Philippine National March was played
in public. Dona Marcela Marino Agoncillo, assisted by her daughter
Lorenza and Mrs. Delfina Herbosa de Nati vidad (niece of Dr. Rizal)
had sewn the flag in Hong Kong. General Aguinaldo made its
design. The flag was made of silk with a white triangle at the left
containing a sunburst of eight rays at the center, a five-pointed star
at each angle of the triangle, an upper stripe of dark blue and lower
stripe of red.
The national anthem titled, Marcha National Filipina (formerly
Marcha Filipina Magdalo, named after Aguinaldo's nom de guerre and
his Katipunan faction) composed by Julian Felipe, was played by the
town band of San Francisco de Malabon (now General Trias) whose
members had learned the music just a day before the occasion (at
present, Republic Act 8491 provides the rules and guidelines on the
proper display and use of the Philippine flag, as well as the singing
of the National Anthem and the prohibited acts on its use).
In 1896, Andres Bonifacio favored Julio Nakpil's Marangal na
Dalit ng Katagalugan to be the himno national (national hymn) of the
revolution. Since Bonifacio lost his leadership to Aguinaldo, another
hymn was preferred. It was on June 5,1898 when Julian Felipe went
to Aguinaldo, handling a letter of introduction from Gen. Mariano
Trias. Felipe was then asked to compose a march to be played for the
1898 Declaration of Independence. On June

II, Felipe presented his draft to Aguinaldo and played the march
on the piano, in the presence of General Mariano Trias, Baldomero
Aguinaldo, and other revolutionary leaders. After some discussion
with his generals who were then attending a conference with him,
Aguinaldo agreed to accept it as the Marcha National Filipina. The
anthem remained without words until toward the end of 1899, the
poem in Spanish verses entitled, Filipinas by Jose Palma was adopted
as lyrics.
The Act of the / declaration of Philippine Independence was solemnly
read by Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista, which he himself wrote.
Included in this document was the explanation for the design and
color of the flag. The declaration was signed by 98 people with one
of them an American - L. M. Johnson, Colonel of Artillery.
After the proclamation of Philippine independence, Apolinario
Mabini became the adviser of General Aguinaldo. Upon Mabini's
advice, Gen. Aguinaldo changed the form of government from
dictatorial to revolutionary. Thus, Aguinaldo became the President
of the Revolutionary Government. By a decree of June 18,1898,
President Aguinaldo organized the municipal and provincial
governments. He directed the town chiefs in all provinces to elect
members to a Congress from among the residents in these provinces
who are noted for their education as well as social position.
On August 1, 1898, the first convention of municipal presidents
was held in Bacoor, Cavite, capital of the Revolutionary Government.
The Declaration of Philippine Independence on June 12 was ratified
in this convention. While President Aguinaldo was laying down the
foundations of an independent government, troops were coming
from the United States to reinforce Dewey's forces. By the end of July
1898, nearly 12,000 American troops under the overall command of
Major General Wesley Meritt had arrived from San Francisco.

2. The Incredulous Battle of Manila
General Fermin Jaudenes succeeded General Basilio Augustin
as governor general of the Philippines. The new governor negotiated
the surrender of Manila with an arranged show of resistance to save
the prestige of the Spanish government. Governor General Jaudenes,
through a Belgian consul, Edouard Andre, secretly told Dewey and
Meritt in early August 1898 concerning the capture of Manila. With
the end of hostilities, American forces would be occupying the
beleaguered city and its harbor.
It was a rainy morning on August 13, 1898 when the sham
Battle of Manila began after Dewey's naval gun bombarded Fort San
Antonio Abad near the Luneta. At about 11:20 a.m., the Spaniards
had already raised the flag of surrender. General Greene only
noticed the flag at around noontime. The American troops entered
the city gates after which they closed it. At around five in the
afternoon the terms of capitulation were resolved. The Spanish
authorities decided to surrender the Spanish troops and the Filipino
volunteers within the Walled City. The Americans agreed to secure
the city, including its inhabitants and churches.
Although some 12,000 Filipinos had taken part in the siege of
Manila, the Americans did not allow them to enter the city and its
suburbs, even if unarmed. The Filipino troops deeply resented this
American gesture. Many frankly voiced the apprehension that the
Americans wished to exercise colonial power in the country. On the
other hand, the Spaniards insisted on the exclusion of the Filipinos in
the capitulation area.
The Americans established a military government in the
Philippines, after the surrender of Manila. The Philippines was ruled
by the President of the United States in his capacity as commander-
in-chief of the United States Armed Forces. On March 2,1901, the
military government in the Philippines ended when the United
States Congress enacted the Army Appropriations Act. This law
carried the Spooner Amendment, which removed from the United
States President the final authority to govern the Philippines, instead
this power was to be exercised by the United States Congress
through the President.
After the fall of Manila, General Diego de los Rios became the
governor general. He became the last Spanish governor general of
the Philippines. On August 28, 1898, he transferred his headquarters
to Iloilo and took command of the Spanish forces. But the Visayans
led by General Martin Delgado forced Governor de los Rios to leave
Iloilo on December 24 for Zamboanga. The next day after the
Spanish forces evacuated Iloilo City, Visayan patriots under General
Martin Delgado occupied it. On May 19, 1899, the American troops
occupied jolo, displacing the Spanish garrison of Governor General
de los Rios in Zamboanga.
Meanwhile, in Baler (then part of Nueva Ecija, now Aurora), the
Spanish soldiers led by Lt. Martin Cerezo, continued to fight for their
country, unaware that Spain had lost its fight in the Philippines.

Suffering from scarcity of provisions and continuous assaults, the
soldiers held fort in the Church of Baler and refused to surrender.
Finally on June 2, 1899, 33 Spanish soldiers marched out of tKe
church, ending their 337 days of encirclement and siege by superior
Filipino forces. The siege of Baler, that highlighted the gallantry of
both Filipino and Spanish soldiers, ended on June 30,1899 (now
Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day pursuant to Republic Act No.
9187).
In November 1899, all Spanish forces were shipped to Spain.
The pull out of Spanish military in the Philippines was provided in
the Treaty of Paris, signed on December 10,1898. The treaty
negotiations were initiated by Spanish and American
representatives.
The treaty provided for the Spanish withdrawal from Cuba,
leaving the island temporarily to America. The Teller Amendment,
passed when the U.S. declared war against Spain, prevented the
United States from taking Cuba. Spain had to cede the Philippines,
Guam, and Puerto Rico to the United States, which in turn paid
Spain the sum of $20 million. The civil and political status of the
inhabitants in the ceded territories was to be determined by the U.S.
Congress. With their impending defeat from the United States, Spain
signed the treaty. US Secretary of State John Hay, in behalf of the US
government handed to Spanish commission member Jules Cambon
the $20 million sum as payment to Spain for the Philippines.
Before the signing ol the Treaty of Paris, President McKinley
said he did not know what to do with the Philippines and added that
one night he prayed to God to give him guidance. At that time, he
was surrounded by men, which constituted pressure groups in the
field of business, the military and naval group, and the religious.
General Aguinaldo tried to persuade foreign countries to
recognize Philippine independence. He sent Felipe Agoncillo, a
Filipino patriot- lawyer, together with Sixto Lopez to Paris to ask for
the recognition of the revolutionary government. However,
Agoncillo was not even permitted to attend the conference in Paris.
From there, he went to Washington, where he worked against the
ratification of the treaty by the United States Senate.
The treaty and the U.S. occupation of the Philippines prompted
opposition from among American citizens, including Mark Twain, a
writer and satirist; Andrew Carnegie, a business tycoon; and some
members of the U.S. Senate.
After a heated debate in the U.S. Senate, the treaty was finally
ratified on February 6,1899 by a margin of one vote. It was argued
that the Philippines would simply fall into the hands of Germany or
other countries if U.S. forces left the region since the Filipinos were
unprepared to govern themselves.

3. The Malolos Republic
Uncertain about the outcome of the forthcoming peace
conference in Paris, General Aguinaldo ordered on August 22, 1898
the transfer of the government's seat of power from Bacoor, Cavite,
to Malolos, Bulacan and used the convent of the Malolos Cathedral
(now Basilica Minore de la Immaculada Conception) as the Palacio
Presidential (presidential palace). Aguinaldo refused to acknowledge
American control in the country. He had already been preparing the
foundation of a republican state. He wanted a government without
foreign supervision. A number of Filipinos had shown support for
autonomy.
On September 15,1898, the Revolutionary Congress was
inaugurated at the Barasoain Church in Malolos amidst colorful
festivities. Outside the church Banda Pasig played the national
anthem. Spectators lined the streets as President Aguinaldo, his
advisers and members of the Congress walked to the church where
the ceremonies were to be held.
The altar of the church was draped for the assembly. General
Aguinaldo convoked the constituent assembly in the opening
session. He urged the delegates to promulgate a constitution that
would be the most glorious expression of the noble aspirations of the
Filipino people, a proof that the Filipinos already had the capacity to
govern.
President Aguinaldo sat with his cabinet facing delegates on
both sides of the aisle. The Congress adopted the parliamentary rules
of the Spanish Cortes.
In the afternoon, the Congress elected the following
officers: Pedro Paterno - President Benito Legarda -
Vice-President Gregorio Araneta - Secretary
Pablo Tecson - Secretary (who replaced Araneta)
Pablo Ocampo - Secretary
A total of 93 representatives took part in the Congress, 35 of
them were directly elected. Many of them were holders of academic
degrees from universities in Europe. The president of the Congress

himself, Dr. Pedro A. Paterno, was a holder of a bachelor's degree in
law from the University of Salamanca and a doctorate degree from
the Universidad Central de Madrid.
As the delegates converged at Malolos, they made it evident
that they wished to enact a constitution and establish a permanent
government for the country. The seat of the Revolutionary Congress
was fixed at the Barasoain Church.
Mabini argued that under the decree of its creation, the
Congress was a mere consultative body. It possessed no legislative
powers. It was essential for all powers to be vested in one person or
entity to ensure swift action. Felipe C. Calderon contended that it
was necessary to show that the Philippines was duly constituted as a
State in order to strengthen its claim to recognition of its sovereign
status.
President Aguinaldo upheld Calderon's views, evidently
considering Congress to be the authoritative spokesman for the
Filipino people and the true reflection of their dreams and
aspirations.
The committee to draft the constitution was composed of 19
members with Felipe Calderon as the chairman. It studied the three
constitutional drafts submitted - the Mabini Plan, the Paterno Plan,
and the Calderon Plan.
The Mabini Plan was the Constitutional Program of the
Philippine Republic. The Paterno Plan was based on the Spanish
Constitution of 1868. The Calderon Plan was a constitution based on
the constitutions of France, Belgium, Mexico, Costa Rica, Guatemala,
Nicaragua, and Brazil. After a thorough examination and
deliberation, the Committee chose the Calderon Plan and submitted
it to the Malolos Congress for approval.
According to Felipe Calderon, the Committee rejected the
Mabini draft because it was based on the Statutes of Universal
Masonry, abhorred by the majority of the delegates who were
Catholics. However, significantly written in Mabini's draft were the
provisions advocating women's rights like the exercise of public
office, education in any branch of science or of the arts in public
institutions, exercise of a profession or industry, right to vote, and
exemption from military service and from personal tax. Calderon
mentioned that the Paterno draft was also discarded because it was
patterned from the Spanish Constitution of 1868.
Other matters were also taken up in the Congress. On
September 29, 1898, the Declaration of Philippine Independence
made on June 12, 1898 in Kawit was confirmed in special
ceremonies. The declaration was not recognized by the United States
and Spain since the Spanish government ceded the Philippines to the
American government in the 1898 Treaty of Paris in consideration
for an indemnity for Spanish expenses and assets lost. In the
following month, the Congress authorized the Executive to float a
domestic loan of 20 million pesos redeemable in 40 years, to support
the new government.
Discussions on the draft constitution lasted until November
29,1898. Article 5, Title III of the draft became the most debatable.
This refers to religion and the separation of Church and State. Tomas
del Rosario, one of those who figured prominently in the conference,
spoke in favor of the principle of separation of Church and State;
while Felipe Calderon, on the contrary position wanted to make
Catholicism the state religion. After the members of the Congress
voted for it, the result was a tie.
The second voting resulted to the separation of Church and
State, winning by only one vote given by Pablo Tecson. On whether
or not Church and State should be united showed the democratic
orientation of the delegates. Though the Malolos Congress formally
separated church and state - by the narrowest vote possible - the
revolutionary experience did not establish a tradition barring
Filipino clergy from politics (Wurfel, 1988:8).
A few other amendments was placed in the draft constitution
before it was submitted to Aguinaldo for approval. The draft
constitution provided for an executive, legislative, and judicial
branch of government and the creation of a Permanent Commission
acting as a legislative body when the Assembly was not in session.
Finally, on January 21, 1899, President Aguinaldo proclaimed
the Malolos Constitution as the fundamental law of the land. Then
on January 23, the First Philippine Republic was inaugurated amidst
festive ceremonies at the Barasoain Church. It was popularly known
as the Malolos Republic.
Amidst the inaugural rites, President Aguinaldo issued a decree
granting pardon to all Spanish prisoners of war, except to members
of the Spanish regular army. He also gave the Spaniards as well as
other foreigners the right to engage in business within the limits of
the Republic.

To disseminate the ideals and aspirations of the Republic,
publications were made. The Casa Real (Royal House) in Malolos
(declared a National Shrine in 1965 by President Diosdado
Macapagal by virtue of Executive Act No. 173) became the National
Treasury and National Printing Press where the revolutionary
organsLa Independencia, El Heraldo de la Revolucion, Kalayaan at
Kaibigan ng Bayanwere printed.
The official organ of the Republic was El Heraldo de la Revolucion
(Herald of the Revolution), with its first issue on September 29,1898,
about four months before the emergence of the Republic. In a special
issue of the newspaper was the poem 'A1 Heroes Nacional' (To the
National Hero), composed by poet laureate Don Cecilio Apostol and
the December 20,1898 decree of President Aguinaldo declaring
December 30 as Memorial Day to honor Jose Rizal and many other
Filipinos who suffered martyrdom. The name of the newspaper was
afterwards changed to Heraldo Filipino, then to lndice Oficial, and
finally to Gaceta de Filipinas, with its last issue on October 14, 1899.
Some Filipinos who wrote articles using their nom de plume for
the newspaper were Rafael Palma (Dapit Hapon), Cecilio Apostol
(Catullo), Fernando Ma. Guerrero (Fulvio Gil), Epifanio de los Santos
(G. Solon), and Salvador V. del Rosario (Juan Tagalo).
In the provinces there were many revolutionary newspapers
published by patriotic individuals like El Nuevo Dia (The New Day),
founded and edited by Sergio Osmena. Its first issue appeared in
Cebu on April 16,1900.
In 1899 Jose Palma, the 23-year old brother of Rafael Palma and
member of La lndependencia, wrote the poem "Filipinas," which was
later adapted as the Spanish lyrics of the national anthem of the
Philippines, still at war against the Americans. (The English
translation of the lyrics were done by Camilo Osias and M. A. Lane,
while in 1951 the Tagalog translation was used).
For Mabini, true independence would not simply mean
liberation from Spain but also educating- the people for autonomy
and refraining from colonial mentality. Thus, the Malolos Congress
had set up educational institutions.
A system of free and compulsory elementary education was
provided for by the Malolos Constitution. A college for boys called
Burgos Institute was established in Malolos under Enrique
Mendiola, with a regular academic course leading to the degree of
Bachelor of Arts and special vocational courses in agriculture,
commerce, and surveying. The girls learned their lessons at home
under private tutors. They were conferred the degree of Bachelor of
Arts after passing the government examination.
The Universidad Literaria de Filipinas (at the convent of Barasoain
Church) was also established with Joaquin Gonzales as the first
president. Gonzales was subsequently, replaced in September 1899
by Dr. Leon Ma. Guerrero.
The university offered courses in law, medicine, pharmacy, and
notary public. However, its existence was short-lived due to Filipino-
American conflict, which resulted to the dispersion of its faculty and
students.
Military training for officers in the Army of the Republic was
offered in the Military Academy of Malolos whose director was
Major Manuel Sityar, a former Spanish lieutenant of the Spanish
Guardia Civil. Some of its instructors were graduates of the Military
Academy of Toledo, Spain like Major Jose Reyes and Major Candido
Reyes. President Aguinaldo made efforts to reconcile the new
government with the former enemies.
The Filipino army in Luzon included a battalion of Igorot
lancers and a company of Negrito archers. There were more soldiers
than rifles in the armed forces of the Republic. Those without rifles
were armed with bolos, bamboo spears, anting-an tings (amulets),
and bows and arrows.
The Republic has a relatively small navy. It consisted of eight
steam launchers captured from the Spaniards and several interisland
steamers donated by rich families in Batangas. Filipinas, an inter-
island steamer owned by Compania General de Tobaccos became the
army flagship.
In Mindanao, Spanish colonial rule particularly ended in
Butuan, Agusan del Norte with the hoisting of the Philippine flag.
Butuan was then the military capital of the province of Surigao.
Emissaries of the Revolutionary Government led by Wenceslao
Gonzales proclaimed a Philippine Republic in Butuan on January
17,1899.
Four flags were hoisted on that day: the tricolor flag of the
Philippine Revolution, the white flag of surrender, the national flag
of Spain, and the Pontifical flag. These flags were symbols of the
forces operating in the Philippines at that time.
The Malolos Republic is the first Republic in Asia. The new
government has empowered the people to choose their

representatives to create laws beneficial for the nation. The decisions
of the members of the Congress became the cornerstone of
democracy. It has manifested the capability of the Filipinos to govern
in the midst of turbulent times. At a time when most of Asia was still
under colonial power, the Philippines stood out as a beam of hope.


Study Guides
Terms/Concepts to Understand
Marangal na Dalit ng Katagalugan Constituent Assembly
Dictatorial government Separation of Church and State
El Heraldo de la Revolucion Pontifical flag
Questions to Answer
1. What is the significance of the proclamation of Philippine
Independence in 1898?
2. How was the transition of governance from the Spaniards to the
Americans made possible in the Philippines?
3. What has transpired in the Malolos Congress, which brought
about the establishment of the First Philippine Republic?
4. Explain, why is the Malolos Republic considered in history as
the First Philippine Republic and not the Kakarong Republic
nor the Biak-na-Bato Republic?


Chapter VII
The American Rule

1. War of Philippine Independence from
the United States
At first, President Aguinaldo regarded the United States an ally
in the Philippines' road towards independence. Filipino-American
relations deteriorated as the American military authorities took over
Manila in August 1898. The mandatory evacuation of the Filipino
troops in the captured districts of the city dismayed Aguinaldo and
his men who joined the battle, thinking that the Americans were on
their side. The signing of the Treaty of Paris without consulting the
Filipinos heightened the tension. Neither Spain nor the US gave
Felipe Agoncillo, Aguinaldo's special envoy, a chance to join the
Paris peace talks.
Previously in Hong Kong, the Americans offered assistance to
Aguinaldo in fighting the common adversary, the Spaniards.
However, the negotiations turned out to be tentative in nature. The
plan of the new colonizers was becoming more evident as the
Americans eventually controlled more areas in the country.
There was a popular belief among the supporters of Manifest
Destiny that the United States had the God-given right to help
oppressed countries and build democratic nations. When US
President William McKinley issued his so-called Benevolent
Assimilation Proclamation on December 21,1898, he expressly
indicated American policy regarding the Philippines, that the US
shall exercise sovereignty over the entire archipelago. He argued that
the Americans must educate and uplift the conditions of the
Filipinos. This ideology was used by the Americans to rationalize
their actions in the country.
On January 5, 1899, Aguinaldo issued a counter-proclamation
and specified that his forces were prepared to fight any American
attempt to take over the country. The Filipinos waged a guerrilla
warfare. They were supported in their struggle by the local folks.
Even if the American flag was publicly displayed and the local elite
officials openly acknowledged support to the United States
government, the guerrillas continued to receive food supplies, and
shelter from the people. Local resistance showed that the Filipinos
did not want to be under American rule. Suspicion and bitter
feelings were growing between the American soldiers and the
Filipino dissidents.
Still, the Americans occupied the Philippines. On January 20,
1899, President McKinley appointed the First Philippine
Corrtmission to make recommendations in the administration of the
country. This commission headed by Dr. Jacob Schurman, issued a
proclamation on April 4, 1899, declaring the establishment of
American sovereignty in the Philippines in the midst of the Philip
pine-American war, which broke out months ago.
Hostilities began on the night of February 4, 1899 at about 9
p.m. An American soldier named Private Robert Willie Grayson of
the First Nebraska volunteers with two other members of the U.S.
sentry shot and killed a man who happens to be a Filipino soldier.

The man together with three other Filipino soldiers were already
entering into American lines on their way home. The American
soldiers tried to stop them and shouted, "Halt!" twice. Unfamiliar
with the word halt the Filipino shouted "Halto!"
Thinking that the Filipino soldier was making fun of them, the
American soldiers fired on the Filipino soldiers who were caught
unprepared. The site of the first shot of the Philippine-American
war, called Philippine Insurrection by the Americans is in Silencio
corner Sociego St. in Sta. Mesa, Manila. (This is pursuant to National
Historical Institute Board Resolution 07 s.2003, 'Authorizing the
Transfer of the Historical Marker for the Site of the First Shot of the
Philippine-American War from San Juan Bridge to Silencio Corner
Sociego St., Sta. Mesa, Manila' after a thorough deliberation on the
position of Dr. Benito Legarda). News reached the United States that
the Filipinos were the ones who started hostilities. The Americans
viewed the fighting as an insurrection.
The next day, Sunday, General Arthur MacArthur issued his
order to advance against the Filipino troops without investigating
the shooting incident. Aguinaldo tried to avoid war. He sent an
emissary to inform Governor General Elwell Otis that the firing on
their side had been against his order.
Governor General Otis answered that since the fighting had
begun, it must go on to the grim end. On the same day, Aguinaldo
issued a declaration informing the Filipino people that they were
now at war. This turned out to be the seven-year Philippine-
American War (1899-1906). Because of their advanced preparations
and firearms, the American troops captured Rizal Province, La
Loma, and Kalookan (now Caloocan City).
The Muslims, uncertain of both Christian Filipinos and
Americans opted to remain neutral. They signified their non-
involvement in the Filipino-American war. The Americans knew that
the Filipino Muslims in Mindanao had not been completely
subjugated by the Spaniards. General John C. Bates tried to win the
friendship of the Muslims by negotiating with them on the basis of
equality. On August 20, 1899, John Bates and Sultan Jamalul Kiram II
of Sulu with three datus signed the Bates Treaty. This treaty
provided that the rights and dignities of the sultan and his datus
shall be respected. Likewise, the Muslims shall not be interfered with
on account of their religion.
Nevertheless, the Muslim province remained under American
military rule until 1914. Schools that taught non-Muslim curriculum
were established. The United States, seen as a challenge to Islam,
intensified armed resistance in the region. Panglima Hasan led a
rebellion against the American authorities. His fight for freedom
ended on March 4,1904.
In the suburbs of Manila, the American fleet started
bombarding the Filipino tort north of San Juan del Monte on
February 5, 1899. In the afternoon of that day, a fierce battle in La
Loma, near the Chinese cemetery ensued. Major Jose Torres
Bugallon, one of General Antonio Luna's gallant officers, fell
mortally wounded. After capturing La Loma, General Mac Arthur
headed for Caloocan.
In Caloocan, a fierce battle followed, with the Americans once
again victorious. Undismayed by his defeat, General Antonio Luna
(younger brother of Juan Luna) prepared for a plan for the recapture
of Manila by burning American occupied houses in Tondo and
Binondo. This took place on February 22, Washington's birthday (an
American national holiday). American fire brigades rushed to the
area and fought the flames. They repulsed Luna's men with heavy
losses. Luna then retreated to Polo where he established his
headquarters.
In late February, reinforcement arrived from the United States.
The American troops under General Mac Arthur began their
offensive north of the city. They wanted to capture Malolos, capital
of the Philippine Republic. Luna resumed his command by building
his position at the junction of Rio Grande and Bagbag Rivers, just
outside Calumpit.
The Filipinos fought with fierce valor near Malinta. Colonel
Harry O. Egbert of the 22
nd
U.S. Infantry died in action. Fighting as
they retreated, the Filipinos burned Polo and Meycauayan in order
to delay the enemy advance.
On March 30, the American army was already in Malolos. By
this time, the Aguinaldo government had evacuated Malolos and
established its headquarters in San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. General
MacArthur wanted to pursue Aguinaldo but Governor General
Elwell Otis ordered him to rest in Malolos. On March 31, General
MacArthur captured Malolos.
The Filipino troops, although insufficiently armed and
inadequately fed continued fighting. In Quingua (now Plaridel), on

April 23, the American cavalry under Major Bell suffered heavy
losses under General Gregorio del Pilar. In this battle, Colonel John
Stotsenberg was killed.
General MacArthur continued his drive northward. The fierce
battle of Bagbag River in Calumpit ensued for three days. On April
25, Calumpit fell into American hands. General Gregorio del Pilar
and his troops were left to defend the Filipino lines since General
Luna and his men, had already left for Pampanga at the height of the
battle to see what had happened to the reinforcement troops being
asked from General Tomas Mascanit Whi n I una returned to
C'alumpit, the Americans had already succeeds in penetrating the
Filipino defensive lines.
It was on March 6, 1899 that Apolinario Mabini, in his capacity
ni head of the Cabinet and minister of foreign affairs met with the
Schurman Commission and requested for a temporary cease-fire but
was refused. I le issued a manifesto dated April 15,1899 in San
Isidro, Nueva Ecija urging his countrymen to continue the struggle
for independence. Unlike him, flu- members of the Filipino
Assembly (formerly Congress) like Pedro Paterno, Ambrosio
Rianzares Bautista, and Felipe Buencamino wanted the American
offer of autonomy rather than independence. Mabini made another
attempt on April 28 by seeking armistice but was again turned
down.
Since the Assembly knew that Mabini opposed to their views,
they persuaded Aguinaldo to remove him from office. A resolution
was passed by the Assembly asking Aguinaldo to reject Mabini's
stand and to removo him as President of the Cabinet. When Mabini
resigned from his post on May 7,1899, President Aguinaldo named
Pedro Paterno the head of the new Cabinet. Mabini spent his last
years writing articles against the Americans.
The Paterno Cabinet, known as the "P.eace Cabinet" created a
Committee headed by Felipe Buencamino to negotiate peace with
the Americans. When General Antonio Luna heard this, he blocked
the trip of the Committee to Manila and arrested the members. He
opposed any attempt to make peace with the colonizers and strongly
advocated a fight for independence. His dreadful temper won him
enemies. His plan to recapture Manila was supposed to be carried
out together with the Kawit Company, Aguinaldo's bodyguards.
Due to the latter's lack of cooperation, Luna recommended to
Aguinaldo that the Kawit Company be disarmed for military
insubordination.
General Luna met his tragic end in the hands of his fellow
patriots. Early in June 1899, he received a telegram from Aguinaldo
asking him to go to Cabanatuan. He left his command in
Bayambang, Pangasinan. On June 5 he went to a convent in
Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija, which served as Aguinaldo's
headquarters. He got mad when he did not find Aguinaldo who had
already left for San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. After he had heard a rifle
shot, General Luna rushed downstairs and cursed the soldiers and
then slapped one of them. Pedrong Kastila, a captain from Cavite
drew his bolo and hacked him. Seeing him wounded, the other
soldiers stabbed him while others shot him. He received more than
forty wounds. His aide-de-camp Colonel Francisco Roman was also
killed. The next day, he was buried with full military honors on
Aguinaldo's orders. Severino de las Alas, the Secretary of the Interior
in his circular informed the provincial chiefs of Luna's death and
said that it was caused by Luna's insulting and assaulting of the
President's bodyguards and the
Hta of Luna to take over the presidency from Aguinaldo. After
Luna's ^Bith, some demoralization set in. Many officers began to
surrender to the Americans. Aguinaldo's army gradually broke up
with one defeat after Bpiotiicr on the battlefields. By November 12,
1899, the regular army was dissolved by Aguinaldo. He formed
guerrilla units instead, to carry on the War.
The capture of Aguinaldo was one of the priorities of the
Americans. They mounted a full-scale offensive on October 12,1899.
From Cabanatuan, Aguinaldo moved his government to Tarlac,
then to Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya and then to Bayambang,
Pangasinan. With his wife, son, mother, Sister, and some members
of the Cabinet, he boarded the train on the night off November 13
bound for Calasiao, with the Americans still finding ways to trap
him.
In order to elude the American forces, Aguinaldo and his
forces proceeded to the Cordillera mountain range. In Candon,
Ilocos Sur, Aguinaldo and his troops went east and crossed the
Ilocos range. This passageway to the Cordillera was Tirad Pass. Del
Pilar saw the advantageous terrain of the Tirad Pass. This could
shield the Filipino troops. From atop Mt. Tirad, which could
provide view of pursuing Americans, Del Pilar and with 60 riflemen

were given the mission of defending the pass. They stood as guards
to intercept the American soldiers and to give Aguinaldo sufficient
time to escape.
In the morning of December 2, 1899, Major Peyton G. March
and about 300 American troopers stormed the Pass, but were
repulsed by Del Pilar's men. The Americans had not so far located
the exact position of the Filipinos. Tirad was 4,500 feet high.
Through Januario Galut, an Igorot guide of the Americans, the
secret trail to the top from the rear was known. In the midst of the
combat, General del Pilar, was hit with a bullet that passed through
his neck. Only eight men escaped alive to relate the tragic news to
Aguinaldo.
After the Battle of Tirad Pass, which took six hours, the
American authorities lost track of Aguinaldo until Cecilio
Segismundo, Aguinaldo's messenger fell into the hands of General
Frederick Funston, stationed in Nueva Ecija. He was carrying
important letters to Baldomero Aguinaldo, General Urbano Lacuna,
and other guerrilla leaders. The dispatch to Baldomero Aguinaldo
directed the sending of reinforcement to Palanan, Isabela. This gave
Funston a clue to the whereabouts of Aguinaldo.
The Americans perceived conquest of Filipinos as dependent
on the fall of the Aguinaldo government. With the approval of
General MacArthur, who had succeeded Otis as military governor,
Funston employed 80 Macabebe scouts, two former officers of
Aguinaldo (Lazaro Segovia and Hilario Tal Placido), three Tagalog
natives, and four other American officers for the capture of
Aguinaldo.
Pretending to be the reinforcement with five American prisoners,
tin Macabebe scouts were able to enter Aguinaldo's camp. Aguinaldo
and I us men met them and even gave them food. At a given signal,
the Macabebi"* 1 suddenly opened fire. Tal Placido, a fat, powerful
man grabbed Aguinaldo ] from behind. General Funston and four
other American officers entered the ; room and arrested him in the
name of the United States.
Aguinaldo was taken aboard the Vicksburg and brought to
Manila General Mac Arthur graciously received him at the
Malacariang Palace \ On April 19,1901, he took the oath of allegiance
to the United States and j appealed to all Filipinos to accept the
sovereignty of the United States.
At the time when some patriotic Filipinos were still fighting for
independence, some officials of the revolutionary government had
already decided to make peace with the colonizers. The Pacificados
(Pacifists) led by Pedro Paterno and Felipe Buencamino founded
Asociacioti de Paz. Among the organizers were Cayetano Arellano,
Tomas del Rosario, Trinidad Pardo de Tavera, Leon Ma. Guerrero,
Rafael Palma, Justo Lukban, and Pascual Poblete.
While Aguinaldo and some of his men were in the highlands of
Northern Luzon, the Pacificados (Pacifists) in a meeting on December
23, 1900 renamed the league for peace the Partido Federal (Feder.al
Party), with Trinidad Pardo de Tavera as elected president. The
Federal Party wanted to make the Philippines a part of the United
States and be given rights and privileges extended by the U.S. to
other territories becoming eventually a state of the union. The
Federalistas were haughtily called Americanistas or pro-Americans by
the nationalists.
The Filipino civilians, caught between the Americans and the
Filipino revolutionaries suffered badly. More than 200,000 Filipinos
died during the war, most often by famine and disease. Some
Filipinos accepted the offer of amnesty. Notable exceptions were
Apolinario Mabini and Macario Sakay. On July 4,1902, President
Theodore Roosevelt declared that the Philippine- American War was
over. However, local resistance continued.

2. A Government Under America
Although the Philippine-American war was still in progress, on
March 16,1900 President McKinley appointed the Second Philippine
Commission (Taft Commission). He gave the commission the
legislative and executive authority to put up a civilian government.
On July 4, 1901, the American civil government was proclaimed
with Judge William Howard Taft as the first civil governor.
Governor Taft exercised both executive and legislative functions
because he was the head of the Second Philippine Commission that
served as the lawmaking body. His policy, the Philippines for the
Filipinos, laid the foundation of a democratic government during his
administration. Subsequently, the Second Philippine Commission
passed a law establishing a high school system in the country.
One of the achievements of the Taft administration was the
sale of huge i1 acts of friar lands (410,000 acres) to Filipinos on easy
installment terms. In I'>04, the US government paid the Vatican US

$7.2 million for these lands held by the religious orders. However,
this scheme did not really alleviate He plight of Filipino tenants
because estate owners bought most of these lands.
The first congressional law about the government of the
Philippines Kjfev.is the Cooper Act also known as the Philippine
Organic Act of 1902. It i n >vided for the extension of the United
States Bill of Rights to the Filipinos, i .i lso guaranteed the
establishment of an elective Philippine Assembly, after ilir
proclamation of complete peace and two years after the publication
of census.
Governor Taft proclaimed March 2,1903 as Census Day. It was
the first official census of the Philippines during the American
period. It reported n total Philippine population of 7,635,426.
Filipino nationalists organized political parties to counteract
the pro- American activities of the Partido Federal. Among these
parties were Partido Nacionalista (Nationalist Party), founded by
Pascual Poblete in August 1901; Partido Independista (Independence
Party), founded by Dr. Pedro A. Paterno; and the Partido Democrata
(Democratic Party) founded by Alberto Baretto, Leon Ma. Guerrero,
Justo Lukban, and Jose de la Vina in 1902. Partido Democrata like
Partido Nacionalista advocated the independence of the country
through peaceful means.
The Partido Conservador, composed of prominent members of
the Spanish community like Macario Adriatico, Francisco Ortigas,
and Gregorio Singian, was organized in February 1901. This group
recognized American sovereignty in the Philippines under the
Treaty of Paris. It advocated for autonomous representative
government after peace and order had been restored.
Though thousands of Filipinos surrendered as a result of the
American peace propaganda, some military commanders refused to
lay down their arms. In Samar, General Vicente Lukban resorted to
ambushing American soldiers. The brutality of the war was best
exemplified by the Balangiga Massacre. This happened in 1901, a
few weeks after a company of American soldiers arrived in
Balangiga, Samar, took over the affairs of the town and occupied
some local huts to protect the inhabitants from the Muslim rebels.
On September 28,1901, the American soldiers were attacked by the
townsfolk. At 6:30 a.m., the bells of Balangiga were rung, signaling
the attack of around 400 men.
Enraged at this tactic, General Jacob Smith ordered the
massacre of all men and children above ten years of age. He wanted
the province of Samar to be turned into a "howling wilderness."
Balangiga massacre took place in 1901 -1902. After the end of the
bloody campaign, Smith was court-martialed for the cruelties
inflicted by his troops and found guilty. They retired him from
service. The American forces took the two Balangiga church bells
ant I a rare 1557 cannon as war booty and transported them to
Wyoming (now being placed in a brick display museum in their
home base Fort Russell Wyoming).
The fearless General Miguel Malvar continued the fight for
Philippine independence. In a manifesto to the Filipino people dated
July 31,1901, he urged the continuation of resistance to the American
occupation. Gener.il Franklin Bell believed that the entire population
of his area of operations in Batangas and Laguna were actively
aiding the guerrilla forces of General Malvar. Accordingly, he
decided to employ tactics to cause so much general apprehension.
The principal measure he used was reconcentration. On April
16,1902 General Malvar surrendered in Lipa, Batangas, two months
after the capture of General Lukban in Catubig, Samar.
Bell directed his commanders to set up the outer limits of an
area around each town chosen as a zone of reconcentration. Before
December 25,1901, the people must have moved into this zone with
all food supplies they could bring. All property found outside the
zone after said date would be confiscated or destroyed by the
Americans. Furthermore, after January 1,1902, any man found
outside the reconcentration area would be arrested and imprisoned
if he could not present a pass. He could either be shot if he
attempted to run away.
Several other Filipinos refused to conform to the American rule.
However, the American authorities were determined to assert
sovereignty in the Philippines, as manifested by the anti-nationalist
laws imposed on the local inhabitants. These included the Sedition
Law, Brigandage Act, Reconcentration Act, and the Flag Law.
Subsequently, these anti-nationalist laws were scrapped following
the policy of Filipinization in 1916 except the Flag Law, which was
repealed in 1919. Flag Law (1907) prohibited the display of the
Philippine flag and other symbols used by the resistance against the
United States.

It was on November 4,1901 when the Second Philippine
Commission or Taft Commission passed the Sedition Law, which
imposed death penalty or a long prison term on anyone who
advocated separation from the United States even by peaceful
means. Sedition was defined as action pro- independence, meant to
inculcate a spirit of hatred and enmity against the American people
and the Government of the United States in the Philippines and to
incite the people to open an armed resistance to the constituted
authorities. Within this precept, the display of the Philippine flag,
the singing of the national anthem, and plays advocating
independence were prohibited.
Juan Abad's Tanikalang Guinto (Gold Chains) was closed
after its jfatl.mgas performance on May 10, 1903. The author was
found guilty of wil it km i He was sentenced to two years
imprisonment and a fine of US
mooo.
Iiindi Aco Patay (I Am Not Dead) by Juan Matapang Cruz was closed
liin May 8, 1903 at the Teatro Nueva Luna in Malabon. The red sun
on a jl; fcatipunan flag that rose behind the stage caused the riot
inside the theater. A > i ninken American soldier climbed the stage
and tore the scenery apart. ^Hk month later Cruz was arrested and
later imprisoned, which he served in full.
Kahapon, Ngayon at Bukas (Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow), a play JSP written by Aurelio Tolentino was also
regarded as seditious. It had its last . .how on May 14,1903 at the
Teatro Libertad. There were different versions i)! the last scene. In
the uncensored version, Inangbayan's (mother country, iIn
Philippines) children rise in arms against Malaynatin (Who
knows? i eterring to the U.S. Insular government) and Bagong
Sibol (newcomer - the United States). In the censored version,
Bagong Sibol grants the children i heir freedom. The uncensored
version resulted to Tolentino's arrest. He was given life
imprisonment in 1905. In 1912, he was pardoned.
On November 12, 1902, Governor William H. Taft pushed
through the passage of the Brigandage Act or Ley de Bandolerismo,
which punished with death or with a prison term of not less than
20 years for members of an armed band. Persons aiding brigands
were to be given prison terms of not less than 10 years.
On June 1,1903, the Philippine Commission passed the
Reconcentration Act, which gave the governor general the power
to authorize any provincial governor to reconcentrate in the
towns all residents of outlying barrios if ladrones or outlaws
operated in these areas. This law was passed to facilitate the
arrest of guerrillas who were being protected by the people. The
Philippine Constabulary, Philippine Scouts, and members of the
United States Army combined to apprehend guerrillas.
In September of 1902, the resistance groups that had been
operating in Rizal and Bulacan merged into a consolidated
movement with General Luciano San Miguel as supreme military
commander. Starting with a force of around 150 men armed with
a few guns captured from municipal police detachments, San
Miguel's group soon attracted new recruits. They raided towns to
obtain more weapons. They also captured some Filipino Scouts
serving the U.S. Army.
The end for San Miguel came on March 28,1903, after some
Philippine Scouts discovered his headquarters between Caloocan
and Marikina. San Miguel and his force of two hundred men
defended themselves. Hit three times, San Miguel nevertheless
fought until his last breath.
With the death of San Miguel, Faustino Guillermo assumed the
leadership of the New Katipunan movement in Rizal and in Bulacan.
Soon after, Guillermo was captured. Two men pretended to have
defected from the Constabulary force under Captain Keithley. While
inside Guillermo's camp, they took Guillermo as prisoner and turned
him over to Keithley.
At the height of the rebellion in Samar in 1902, Macario Sakay,
Julian Montalan, and Cornelio Felizardo organized their resistance
forces in the Rizal-Cavite-Laguna-Batangas area by formally
establishing the Philippine Republic, or what Sakay referred to as the
Tagalog Republic. Sakay claimed that his republic was a
continuation of Bonifacio's Katipunan. He was chosen as president
with Montalan in charge of military operations. Francisco Carreon, a
former councilor of the Katipunan, as the vice-president.
Sakay exerted efforts to provide some amenities for the
movement. In April 1904, Sakay released a manifesto addressed to
all foreign consulates declaring that he and his men were real
revolutionaries and not mere brigands as the U.S. government
claimed because they had a flag, a government, and a constitution.
To obtain security of his followers, Sakay imposed sanctions to
uncooperative Filipinos. In one instance, they abducted the family of

Mariano Trias, a former general of Aguinaldo. This was a retaliatory
move for his collaborationist acts. Trias ordered the arrest of four
town presidents suspected of supporting the guerrillas when he
became the first civil governor of Cavite. Thereafter the Philippine
Constabulary rescued Mrs. Trias and her children. The same way,
the government forces nevertheless were not able to suppress the
Sakay rebellion.
In mid-1905, Governor General Henry C. Ide authorized Dr.
Dominador Gomez, a well-known labor leader, to conduct
negotiations for the surrender of Sakay and his men. Dr. Gomez
went to Tanay and told the rebel leader that his surrender would
help restore peace and order in the country, a condition provided by
the Cooper Act of 1902 for the establishment of a Philippine
Assembly. This assembly would serve as a training ground for self-
government, the first step toward independence.
Sakay agreed to end his resistance on condition that a general
amnesty be given to them, that they be permitted to carry firearms,
and that he and his men be allowed to leave the country assured of
personal safety. Gomez assured Sakay that his conditions were
acceptable to the American government. In July 1906, Sakay left his
headquarters in Tanay and went down to Manila. He viewed his
surrender as a genuine step towards independence. The people
honored him through receptions and banquets.
Colonel Harry H. Bandholtz, who had been handling the
negotiations with Dr. Gomez, invited Sakay, his principal lieutenants
and Dr. Gomez to a party in Cavite. While at the house of Cavite
Governor Van Schaik where the party was being held, the
Americans and the Philippine Constabulary arrested and disarmed
Sakay and his men. Sakay and his principal officers were charged
with ladronism or banditry and other crimes such as robbery, rape,
kidnapping, and murder.
In accordance with the provisions of the Brigandage Act, the
court sentenced General Macario L. Sakay and Colonel Lucio de
Vega to die by public hanging. The other officers were sentenced to
long prison terms. Julian Montalan and Leon Villafuerte were
eventually given executive clemency.
On September 13, 1907, Sakay and de Vega were taken out of
their Bilibid Prison cells. Standing on the death platform in the
prison plaza, General Sakay shouted saying that he was not a
brigand but a sincere patriot working for Philippine independence.
By calling Sakay a bandit, the Americans regarded him a mere
criminal. Sakay's resistance became the final chapter in the
Philippine-American War.
The last revolutionary general to surrender to the Americans
was General Simeon Ola, who surrendered to Colonel Bandholtz in
Guinobatan, Albay on September 25,1903. Like Malvar, Ola took the
oath of allegiance to the United States. They surrendered to the
Americans in order to save the people from brutality and hunger.
Artemio Ricarte refused to take oath of allegiance to the United
States and was exiled in Hong Kong and later in Japan.
As the 1907 elections for the First Philippine Assembly
approached, the nationalists saw the need for fusion in order to win
against the well- organized Partido Nacional Progresista (National
Progressive Party), which was formerly the Partido Federal The
Partido Nacionalista and Partido Nacional Progresista clashed in the
elections of July 30,1907 for 80 seats in the First Philippine Assembly.
The Partido Nacionalista advocated immediate and absolute
independence. It won a landslide majority.
The Philippine Assembly was inaugurated at the Grand Opera
House, Manila on October 16, 1907. Sergio Osmena was chosen
Speaker of the Assembly while Manuel L. Quezon became the
majority floor leader. The first bill passed by the Philippine
Assembly was the Gabaldon Law (sponsored by Assemblyman Isauro
Gabaldon), which appropriated one million pesos for barrio schools.
Pursuant to the Philippine Organic Act of 1902 (also known as
Cooper Act), two Filipino resident commissioners represented their
countrymen in the U.S. Congress. They were Benito Legarda (1907-
12) and Pablo Ocampo (1907-09). The resident commissioners took
part in the debates in Congress in defense of Filipino interest in
America but were not given the privilege to vote.
On August 19,1916, the U.S. Congress passed the Jones Law,
which w.v* signed by President Woodrow Wilson. The Jones Law
provided a bicamer.il Philippine legislature with an Upper House
called the Senate (with JA members) and a Lower House called the
House of Representatives (with 93 members). The law contained a
preamble declaring that independence would be granted to the
Filipino people as soon as a stable government could be established
in the Philippines.
The new legislature under the Jones Law was inaugurated on
October 26,1916, with Quezon as President of the Senate and

Osmena as Speaker ot the House (until 1922, since he became the
Senate Pro-tempore after 1922). The Nacionalistas dominated both
Houses. The Progresistas had only one seat in the Senate and seven in
the House of Representatives.
On October 5,1921, Leonard Wood replaced their popular
Governor General Francis Burton-Harrison. In his first year of
administration, he vetoed 16 bills passed by the legislature, whereas
Harrison, in his whole term (1913-21), vetoed only five bills.
The heightening tension between Governor Wood and the
Filipino leaders came to its climax on July 23,1923, when Senate
President Quezon, Senate President Pro-tempore Osmena, and the
Filipino Department Secretaries resigned from the Council of State.
The incident, known as the "Cabinet Crisis of 1923" happened when
Governor Wood governed the country without the cooperation of
the legislature.
Upon Quezon's advice, Filipino cabinet members resigned from
their posts in protest of Governor Wood's handling of the Ray
Conley case. Detective Conley of the Manila police was charged with
immorality and misconduct in office. Wood created an
administrative committee, which later exonerated Conley and
recommended his reinstatement. Secretary of Interior, Jose P. Laurel
and Mayor of Manila, Ramon Fernandez had earlier resigned
because of Wood's interference in the prosecution of Conley. Laurel's
resignation incurred political repercussions. Quezon, acting as
spokesman of the Filipino members of the Cabinet, accused the
governor general of controlling the affairs of the government in utter
disregard of the authority the department heads and other officials.
In 1926, Governor Wood abolished the Board of Control, which
was created by law during Governor Harrison's term to oversee and
manage the ownership of stocks of government-owned and
controlled corporations. Those institutions included the Manila
Railroad Company, the Manila Hotel, and the Philippine National
Bank.
Governor Wood found himself opposed by Filipino advocates
of political autonomy. The dilemma awakened the nationalistic spirit
of the people. The Nacionalista and the Democrata Parties joined
forces in a common cause against this governor general and to work
for the recognition of the country's independence. A coalition called
National Supreme Council
was formed. Tension ended with the governor general's death while
Undergoing surgery in the United States. Governor Wood died on
August
W, 1927.
From 1919 to 1933, there had been 12 Independence Missions
sent to the ' United States to campaign for the recognition of
Philippine Independence. In December, 1931, the ninth mission
popularly called the Os-Rox Mission, Bfter its leader, Senate
President pro tempore Sergio Osmena and House Speaker Manuel
A. Roxas, brought home the Hare-Hawes-Cutting Act. The III K Act
divided the Philippine Congress into two opposing camps - the /\
litis and the Pros. The Antis, led by Senate President Quezon,
opposed the Act because of its objectionable features while the Pros
headed by Senator Osmena and Speaker Roxas upheld it on the
ground that it was the best independence measure.
The HHC Act provided the granting of Philippine
independence after 12 years, but reserving military and naval bases
for the United States. Also included in this controversial measure
was the control of the currency system and the conduct of foreign
affairs by the US President. American goods were allowed free entry
into the Philippines. The bill also directed the U.S. to retain land for
military and other reservations.
In December 1932, Quezon sent a one-man mission (Benigno
Aquino) to Washington to discuss his objections. Aquino, however,
was won over by Osmena and Roxas to their side.
In November 1933, Quezon led the twelfth mission to
Washington to secure a better independence act. A new
independence measure called Tydings-McDuffie Law was passed
and signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on March 24, 1934. It
closely resembled the HHC Act. The law was accepted by the
Philippine Legislature.
The Tydings-McDuffie Law provided for a 10-year transition
period under the Commonwealth of the Philippines, preparatory to
the granting of absolute and complete independence on July 4,1946.
Also included in the provisions were an annual quota of 50 Filipino
immigrants to America; control of the currency, coinage, foreign
trade, and foreign relations by America and representation of one
Filipino resident commissioner in America and an American High
Commissioner in the Philippines.
The Tydings-McDuffie Law authorized the Philippine
Legislature to call a constitutional convention to draft the

Constitution of the Philippines. It is also required that the
Constitution be approved by the American president and ratified by
the people in a plebiscite.
On July 30, 1934, the Convention met in an inaugural session at
the hall of the House of Representatives, Legislative Building in
Manila. The elected officers were Claro M. Recto, President; Ruberto
Montinola and Teodoro Sandiko, First and Second Vice-President,
respectively; Narciso Pimentel, Secretary; and Narciso Diokno,
Sergeant-At-Arms.
The drafting of the (Constitution lasted six months - from July 30,
1934 to February 8,1935. The Constitution was approved by the
Convention by M( vote of 177 to 1. Twenty-two members were absent.
One member had died^ in August 1934.
Tomas Cabili of Lanao cast the dissenting vote. He opposed tint
constitution because it did not provide the system of popular election
foi* the members of the National Assembly from Lanao. Gregorio
Perfecto, fll delegate from Manila, signed the constitution in his own
blood, like tin- Katipunan blood compact or pacto de sangre.
President Roosevelt approved the Constitution. Then on May I I
1935, the plebiscite for the ratification or rejection of the Constitution
wjr< held. For the first time, Filipino women exercised the right of
suffrage. The Constitution was overwhelmingly ratified by the people
with a total ol 1,213,046 in favor and those against were only 44,963.
The first national election under the 1935 Constitution was held
on September 17, 1935. The candidates for President and Vice-
President were Manuel L. Quezon, Sergio Osmena (Coalition Party);
General Emilio Aguinaldo and Raymundo Melliza (National Socialist
Party); and Bishop Gregorio Aglipay and Norberto Nabong
(Republican Party). Quezon and Osmena were overwhelmingly
elected as President and Vice-President respectively by majority vote.

3. The American Legacy
After the victory of the Americans against the Spanish fleet in the
Battle of Manila on May 1, 1898, the US military reinforcement grew in
number. The United States in fact, sent its top generals to the
Philippines, including General John "Blackjack" Pershing who urged
the Colt gun factory to manufacture the famous Colt .45 caliber
automatic revolver. This kind of weapon was used against the Muslim
warriors in battle.
Veterans of the Indian wars were also sent to the country. Among
them were General Elwell Otis and General Henry W. Lawton, (for
whom a street and a plaza were named respectively). Some of the
American soldiers helped in building roads. The rest of them staffed
the American public schools. They came to be known as Thomasites,
from the name of the U.S. army ship that they boarded on their way to
the Philippines. These American teachers, numbering about 540 who
arrived in the country on August 21, 1901, established the modern
school system.
Public elementary education, which provided educational
opportunity for all citizens, was financed by government funds.
Education was sought to acquire not only theoretical knowledge but
also practical skills to meet the essential demands of life. The English
language was used to transmit these new ideas in the country.
The Americans propagated the use of the English language for
better "^^Btanding with the Filipinos. English became the
language of instruction
v
all schools and became the official
language of the government.
The first American newspaper to appear in the Philippines was
the rUnding Billow, published at irregular intervals on board
Dewey's flagship )lympia. The first American daily newspaper to
be published in Manila Sis the American Soldier, with its first issue
dated September 10, 1898.
The first Filipino weekly paper in English was the Philippine
Herald, founded by Senate President Manuel L. Quezon in 1902.
Nationalistic periodicals like El Renacimiento and Muling Pagsilang
also circulated. Despite the Sedition Law of 1901, local writers
continued criticizing individual Americans committing offenses
against Filipinos by using talinghaga or embolism as a literary device
to elude detection of censors.
In 1908, El Renacimiento attacked the then Secretary of the
Interior, Dean Worcester in the article Aves de Rapina (Birds of Prey).
Worcester immediately sued the owner and editors of the
newspaper for libel. The litigants were .lefeated in court. The
newspaper, together with its machinery was sold at auction.
Teodoro M. Kalaw, the editor of the newspaper, was imprisoned but
later pardoned by Governor General Harrison.
Anew generation of Filipino writers in English attracted
appreciation from die people. Carlos P. Romulo won the Pulitzer
Prize for international reporting in 1942. Jose Garcia Villa was listed

among the top short story writers in America in 1932 by Edward
O'Brien, a known American anthologist.
The period from 1905 to 1930 was the golden age of the zarzuela
in the country. Severino Reyes' Walang Sugat (Not Wounded) was
one of the most famous Tagalog zarzuela. With the introduction of
the Hollywood talkies (talking pictures), the zarzuela gradually
vanished as a popular theatrical art.
Two Swiss entrepreneurs introduced film shows in Manila in
1897. The film clips showed recent happenings and natural
calamities in Europe. Then in 1912, two American entrepreneurs
made a film about Jose Rizal's execution. This became a big hit and
greatly inspired the making of the first Filipino film in 1919. The
credit of being the first Filipino to make a film goes to Jose
Nepomuceno, dubbed as the Father of Philippine Movies.
Nepomuceno's first movie was based on a highly acclaimed musical
play, Dalagang Bukid (Country Maiden) by Hermogenes Ilagan and
Leon Ignacio.
Cartooning began to blossom at the turn of the century after the
American colonial government allowed free press to flourish.
Artists like George Pineda (1879-1972), who invented the immortal
representation of the Filipino - the salakot-wearing slippered Juan de
la Cruz, did political cartooning like Jose Perreira (1901-1954), chief
cartoonist of the Philippine Free Press magazine from the 1920s to the
1930s.
In music, the young generation enthusiastically welcomed
American jazz and swing music. However, talented Filipino
musicians tried to preserve the country's musical heritage. Nicanor
Abelardo, a Bulakeno, became a prominent Filipino composer of
kundimans, waltzes, marches, and sonatas for piano and violin.
Among his famous compositions are Mutya ng Pasig (Muse of Pasig),
Nasaan Ka hog (Where Are You My Love?), and Bituing Marikit
(Beautiful Star). Other luminaries in this field were Francisco
Santiago, Jovita Fuentes, and Naty Arellano. Santiago became known
for his Anak Dalita (Child of Woe) and Madaling Arazv (Dawn).
Protestant Christianity was introduced in the country by the
Americans. This new religion, which stresses personal salvation
through faith, was able to attract a number of new Filipino converts.
In 1899, Mr. C. B. Randall, a lay worker, distributed the first bibles in
Manila.
Bishop James M. Thoburn of the Methodist Episcopal Church of
India delivered the first Protestant sermon in the country.
Methodism, which began in 1729 at the University of Oxford in
England, was brought to the United States before the American
Revolution (1775-1783) by migrants from Ireland and England.
Other Christian denominations were also allowed to practice
their faith. Iglesia ni Cristo (Church of Christ) was founded in 1914 by
Felix Manalo. The members reject the doctrine of Trinity and argue
the duality of Christ's nature. The Seventh-Day Adventists (SDA)
bears the Christian Old Testament doctrine of worshipping on the
Sabbath (Saturday); Felix Manalo, before founding the Iglesia ni
C'risto, was said to have belonged to the SDA. The Jehovah's
Witnesses is another fundamentalist group. Like the INC, the
Jehovah's Witnesses rejects the concept of the Trinity.
During the American occupation in the country, the people
were permitted to honor and celebrate the anniversaries of the
Filipino national heroes. The country came to commemorate the
Bonifacio Day (November 30) and Rizal Day (December 30). America
also added some holidays such as Valentine's Day (February 14),
Washington Day (February 22), Glorious Fourth (July 4), and
Thanksgiving Day (4
th
Thursday of November).
The Filipino people adopted the American mode of dressing.
Men started wearing pants with belts or with suspenders. For casual
wear, polo shirts became popular. Coat-and-tie became the typical
formal attire. The women began to wear skirts, high-heeled shoes,
nylon stockings, artificial eyelashes, make-up, and even perfumes.
Mr., Miss, or Madam as salutations became conventional.
Women were granted more rights in education, in places of work,
and even in politics. Coeducational schools were also instituted.
In 1903, Charles M. Swift established the MERALCO (Manila
Electric Company). Its original name was Manila Electric Railroad
and Lighting C ompany, the first company given the franchise to
operate electric cars called tranvia and supply electricity to Manila.
Communication likewise improved with the creation of the
Philippine Long Distance Telephone by virtue of Act No. 3436 in
1928.
On February 17, 1905, the Philippine Constabulary School was
established. Later it became the Philippine Military Academy, the
first military officers' school in the country. From Intramuros, it was
moved to Baguio.

In 1910, the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) located at Taft
Avenue, Manila was established by the government to attend to
indigent patients.
The Americans also trained the Filipinos in various physical
activities. Outdoor games such as baseball, Softball, calisthenics,
football and volleyball, and indoor games like bowling, billiard, table
tennis, poker, black jack, and other card games became
tremendously popular. The Americans emphasized the importance
of sport activities to improve physical fitness and ease tension
arising from work. They also inculcated in the minds of the players
the notion of sportsmanship.
The American era also marked the improvement of
infrastructure, transport, and communication facilities as well as
community services. Manila and other population centers had
modern buildings constructed along American architectural lines
resembling Greek or Roman temples with porticoes.
The architectural plan for the City of Manila and the Quezon
Memorial Circle (with eight main roads encircling from the rotunda)
were done by the Americans. It was Daniel Burnham, noted Chicago
architect and town planner who designed Baguio City.
Filipino sculptors were given remarkable recognition in the
middle of the 19
th
century. One of the most prominent in die field
was Guillermo Tolentino (1890-1976), best known for his
masterpiece, the Bonifacio Monument, which is a group sculpture
composed of several figures gathered around a central obelisk. The
principal figure is Andres Bonifacio, the leader of the Philippine
revolution in 1896. Behind him stands Emilio Jacinto. The monument
was completed in 1933.
The Americans used their stay in the Philippines to teach us
their way of life and the principles of democracy. Individual
freedom, respect for rights and liberties of the people, free and open
elections, and multiple political parties are among the principles
found in a democracy. The Americans came and enhanced the
knowledge of the Filipinos on democratic ways and institutions.
They organized the civil courts, including the Supreme Court with
Cayetano Arellano as the first Filipino Chief Justice.
Local governments were established in towns and provinces
under the control of American troops. The first election under the
American flag was conducted on May 7,1899 in Baliuag, Bulacan.
It is a fact that the Filipinos had already some idea of a
democratic government as proven by the establishment of a
republican government in Malolos, Bulacan. However, the First
Philippine Republic did not last long having been overthrown in
1899.

4. Philippine Independent Church
The Philippine revolution in the late nineteenth century both
affected the Church and State. In the second phase of the revolution,
which began with Aguinaldo's return from Hong Kong, Governor
General Basilio Augustin and Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda
commissioned Father Gregorio Aglipay to confer with the
revolutionary leaders to bring them back to the Spanish side with a
promise of autonomy for the Philippines. On the other hand, Emilio
Aguinaldo sent Colonel Luciano San Miguel as his emissary to
Aglipay for the purpose of persuading the latter to go to the North to
work for the revolutionary cause.
Aglipay went North to investigate the condition of the bishopric
of Nueva Segovia (Cagayan). Upon his return to Manila to report to
Nozaleda, he found Manila besieged by the Americans. He decided
to go to Cavite and join Aguinaldo's movement, particularly the
Malolos Congress.
On October 20,1898, Aguinaldo issued a decree appointing
Aglipay as Military Vicar General, making him the religious leader
of the revolutionary movement. A day after his appointment,
Aglipay issued a letter to the Filipino clergy to form an ecclesiastical
council, which would ask the Pope to appoint Filipinos in all Church
positions from archbishop to the lowest parish priest.
Archbishop Nozaleda, deeply alarmed by Aglipay's decisions
charged the latter with usurpation of power. Nozaleda issued his
decree excommunicating Aglipay, which took effect on May 5,1899.
Returning to the Philippines early in 1901, Isabelo de los Reyes,
a newspaperman imprisoned for conspiracy against Spain,
campaigned for the establishment of a Filipino Church, the Iglesia
Filipina Independiente. The church was a breakaway from the
Catholic Church. It was launched in August 1902.
In July of the same year, he founded the Union Obrera
Democratica (Democratic Labor Union). On August 3,1902, de los
Reyes called a meeting of his Democratic Labor Union at the Centro
de Bellas Artes and proposed the establishment of a Filipino Church

independent of Rome with Fr. Aglipay as the Supreme Bishop. The
proposal was accepted and thus, the Iglesia Filipina Independiente
(Philippine Independent Church) was founded.
In a conference with the Jesuits, Fr. Aglipay made his last
attempt to prevent a schism in the Church. He did not yet accept the
position of a Supreme Bishop in the Philippine Independent Church
when he was being interviewed at the Jesuit house in Sta. Ana,
Manila. For four days,
Fr. Francisco Foradada, a Spaniard, exerted all efforts to win back
Aglipay to the Catholic fold although the latter had not yet given up
his Catholic faith.
On the fifth day, Foradada handed Aglipay a document for his
signature, affirming his return to Catholicism. Aglipay wanted an
assurance that by signing the document, the problem of the Filipino
Catholic priests will be solved, that is, their appointment to the posts
formerly held by the Spanish regulars. Foradada in return replied
why did he mind so much the Filipino priests considering they are
vicious and inefficient. Aglipay felt very offended and he demanded
Foradada to withdraw his odious remark. He left the Jesuit house
and severed relations with Roman Catholicism.
Years later, the Jesuits tried their best to make up with Aglipay.
Father Joaquin Vilallonga was chosen to deal with Aglipay but the
latter had already made his decision to support the Philippine
Independent Church. In September 1902, bishops were consecrated.
On January 18,1903 Aglipay was consecrated Supreme Bishop by the
bishops of Manila, Cavite, Nueva Ecija, Isabela, Cagayan,
Pangasinan, and Abra.
Subsequently, more Filipino priests joined the Philippine
Independent Church, which became popularly known as Aglipay an
Church. According to the Philippine census of 1918, out of a total
population of 10 million, close to one and a half million Filipinos
were members of the Aglipayan Church.

5. The Colorums
Indigenous religious groups mostly thrive in isolated islands
and mountainous localities. Some are induced by the power of
natural forces, others a mixture of Catholicism, and superstition. The
remnants of Hermano Pule's Cofradia de San Jose retreated to the
mountains between Tayabas and Laguna. They settled at the
mountain of San Cristobal and considered this place their Jerusalem.
This group came to be known as colorum, a corruption of the Latin
phrase, et saecula saeculorum (world without end) used at Mass to end
certain prayers.
During the American occupation, the term colorum was used
by the authorities to refer to rebel organizations with mystical
characteristics.These colorum groups were characterized by religious
fanaticism, which was a combination of Catholic devotion, hero-
worship and folk-superstition. Members were recruited from the
oppressed masses that sought the messiahs for their redemption.
Colorum organizations were active in the 1920s. In Leyte and
Samar, the Sociedad de la Confianza was formed. The Caballeros de la
Sagrada Familia had one thousand followers in Pampanga,
Pangasinan, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija. Other colorum groups were
established in Tarlac, Rizal, La Union, Batangas, and Surigao.
In Tarlac, the colorums worshipped Jose Rizal and Apo Ipe
Salvador. They believed that the two leaders would resurrect and
save them. Felipe Salvador, otherwise known as Apo Ipe was born in
Baliuag, Bulacan on May 26, 1870. When the Katipuneros from
Balintawak arrived in Baliuag, Ipe joined them. He was appointed as
colonel by Aguinaldo in 1899. When Aguinaldo surrendered to the
Americans, he went to the mountains and began his guerrilla
operations. Soon, he organized his group and called it Santa Iglesia
or Holy Church.
Apo Ipe warned his followers that a second deluge would occur
and destroy all non-followers and that after the flood, there would be
rain of gold and jewels for his followers. The colorums of Tarlac
believed that anting-antings made all members invulnerable to the
bullets fired by the enemy.
In Surigao, the colorum groups were devoted to the Sacred
Heart of Jesus, Immaculate Heart of Mary, and Jose Rizal. They
believed that one day Rizal would return and rule the Philippines.
The group grew in number and spread from Surigao to Agusan,
Cotabato, Samar, and Leyte.
The colorums of Surigao began their uprising by the end of
1923. They killed five Constabulary soldiers and later attacked a
Constabulary detachment, which resulted in the death of the
provincial commander and 12 soldiers. The government had to
suppress the colorum rebellion, which lasted from January to
October, 1924.

Governor General Leonard Wood, recognizing the patriotic zeal
that animated the colorum rebellion, prohibited the display of
pictures of Filipino heroes in all public schools in Mindanao.
In Nueva Ecija, Pedro Kabola founded a secret society in 1923
called Kapisanan Makabola Makarinag. They intended to assault the
municipal building of San Jose and execute all town officials so that
independence could be achieved. Subsequently, land would be
equally apportioned among the masses and the caciques as well as the
Americans would be expelled from the country. But before the
appointed date of the attack, the Constabulary troopers were able to
discover the plan. Kabola was killed. Hundreds of Kapisanan
members were arrested and jailed for conspiracy and sedition.
In Pangasinan, an Ilocano named Pedro Calosa began
organizing a colorum group in 1929. Members were given ranks
ranging from corporal to general and wore colorful red and white
uniforms with anting-antings embroidered on them.
In January 1931, the colorums decided to attack the town of
Tayug, supposed to be the spark of that would ignite the Central
Luzon area in a peasant revolution. Armed with knives, bolos, and a
few guns, Calosa and his followers marched on Tayug at the night
and managed to rout the soldiers. When a Constabulary detachment
arrived, the colorum group retreated into the convent. Pedro Calosa
escaped but was captured a few days later.
In an interview years later, Calosa himself said that many of the
colorum members were tenants who had been ejected by hacenderos,
or were small farmers deprived of their lands by land grabbers who
used their power to advance their personal interests.

6. Land Tenure System
During the American colonial rule, the Spanish feudal system
was not dismantled. Through the system of land registration that
favored the Filipino elite, tenancy became more widespread. The
hacienda (estate) system kept the peasants in bondage. The landlord-
tenant relations ensued even after the institution of a democratic
government.
Tenants were either inquilinos (cash tenants) or kasamas (share
tenants). The inquilino paid yearly rent for using a piece of land.
Aside from this, he was often required to give various services to the
hacendero for free. Refusal to work or to contribute to the expenses
could mean outright dismissal from the hacienda. It became
customary for the children of the tenants to serve the landlord as
domestic servants to help their parents pay the interest on debts
incurred due to cash advances.
The kasama or sharecropper provided the labor on the hacienda
where he shared the harvest on a 50-50 basis with his landlord or
hacendero, after deducting the expenses incurred in planting and in
harvesting. Like the inquilino, he was expected to render personal
services to the landowner, at the latter's discretion.
Low productivity, due to traditional farming methods, along
with cacique (landlord) exploitation insured the tenants a low
standard of living. Free trade likewise reinforced the feudal agrarian
system of the Spanish regime and twisted the normal development
of local industries. The leading families of the Filipino elite joined the
free trade system. This system paved the way to multinational
corporations. Rich landowners and investment capitalists took
control of the economy, laying the groundwork for limited per capita
income, inflation, and structural poverty.
Dependence upon duty-free, American goods increased the
suffering of local producers. In the 1920s to the 1930s, a number of
peasant uprisings and labor protests evolved from cases of
exploitation and poor living conditions.
The Philippines, though a country rich in resources, was unable
to sustain the basic needs of the masses. The Filipino leaders,
absorbed with much attention on how to gain political autonomy
had not fully given efforts to bring about economic independence.
Pressing issues like social reform, land ownership, tenancy rights,
and the distribution of wealth had been the causes of public
discontentment.

7. The First Labor Groups
In January 1902, Isabelo de los Reyes organized the first labor
union in the Philippines, the Union de Litografos e Impresores de
Filipinas. Soon after its founding, the members decided to reorganize
themselves into the Union Obrera Democratica (U.O.D.), a federation
of smaller unions of printers, lithographers, cigar makers, tailors, and
shoemakers, which demanded higher wages and worker's benefits.
With its official organ, La Redencion del Obrero, the Union voiced
the social demands and nationalistic feelings of the workers. As a
result of one of the strikes, Isabelo de los Reyes was imprisoned. A
few weeks later, he was pardoned.

Dr. Dominador Gomez, who succeeded De los Reyes, led a
group of laborers on May 1,1903 in a demonstration before
Malacanang. However, Gomez was replaced by Lope K. Santos for
the union members distrusted the former's involvement in the
surrender of Sakay, which led to his capture.
Lope K. Santos, a printer and newspaperman, was the last
president of the U.O.D. Under him, the union became known as the
Union del Trabajo de Filipinas. Political rivalries had led to its
dissolution in 1907.
On May 1,1913, Labor Day was first officially celebrated in the
country. The labor leaders organized the Congreso Obrero de Filipinas
(C.O.F.). This Congress approved resolutions demanding eight-hour
labor day, child and women labor laws, and an employer's liability
law.
Barely four years later, Vicente Sotto established his Asamblea
Obrera, which he used to support his candidacy for the House of
Representatives. In 1917, Joaquin Balmori founded the Federacion del
Trabajo to support the candidates of the Democratic Party. The
Congreso Obrero de Filipinas for its part, backed the Nacionalista
Party's candidates.
In Bulacan, the Union ng Magsasaka was formed in 1917 to fight
the evils of tenancy and usury. In 1919, Jacinto Manahan, formed his
own group in view of the decline of the original peasant
organization.
Also in 1919, the Legionarios del Trabajo was formally organized
as a result of a strike against the Manila Electric Company. The
group pressed a number of nationalistic demands such as protection
of Philippine products from foreign competition. Crisanto
Evangelista, one of its organizers, later left the association due to the
adoption of Masonic initiation rites.
In 1924, Evangelista, Domingo Ponce, and Cirilo Bognot formed
the Partido Obrero de Filipinas. Its platform showed a strong Marxist
influence.
Attendance at world conferences and their affiliation with
international organizations of the Left, radicalized some labor
leaders. In 1927, the C.O.F. affiliated itself with the Red International
of Labor Unions. During its convention, subjects such as
communism, class struggle, and proletarian internationalism were
discussed. The following year, the C.O.F. leaders Evangelista and
Bognot attended the Red International of Labor Unions Conference
in Moscow.

8. The Communist Party of the
Philippines
During the 1929 Congress of the Congreso Obrero de Filipinas
(C.O.F.), the conservative members clashed with Crisanto
Evangelista and his group over the proposals submitted by the latter.
Some of the recommendations included the organization of factory
committees as a first step toward the formation of industrial unions,
the establishment of a workers' political party, the advocacy of class
struggle and the condemnation of the Nacionalista and Democrata
parties.
With the radicals in the minority, Evangelista and his followers
walked out and immediately launched the Katipumn ng mga Anak-
pawis ng Pilipinas or K. A.P. Evangelista became the elected executive
secretary while Manahan, the vice-president, in charge of the
peasant movement.
Other officers were Jose Hilario, Antonio Ora, Patricio Dionisio,
Cirilo Bognot, and H. C. Hao. The K.A.P. wanted unity among
workers, peasants, and the exploited masses. It advocated struggle
against American imperialism in the Philippines, betterment of
living and working conditions, immediate and complete
independence of the country, unity among revolutionary
movements all over the world, and an establishment of a Soviet
system in the Philippines.
On November 7, 1930, the Communist Party of the Philippines
was formally established with all the officers of the K.A.P. except
Hao and Hilario, as members of the first Central Committee of the
Philippines.
Communist parties have been instituted in some countries in
Europe and Asia to establish and maintain the Soviet system. The
working class has been designed to dominate the administration of
the government.
Communism is a concept of society in which the major
resources and means of production are communally owned.
Theoretically, there would be equal sharing of the benefits of
production. This ideology involves the abolition of individual
ownership of property. It advocates the revolution of the working

masses to overthrow the capitalist society so that a classless society
may be achieved.
The promises of Communism confounded a number of people.
The CPP became more unrelenting after some of its officials were
apprehended by the military. Soon after, Antonio Ora, a CPP Central
Committee member was arrested in Manila.
While Ora was being taken to prison, he died reportedly due to
an automobile accident near Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija. The CPP
members became skeptical about it. They were thinking that the
incident was not purely by chance. As a result, the Communists
staged a demonstration on January 25,1931. More than 10 thousand
workers joined the funeral march carrying red flags and placards
with anti-imperialist slogans.
Evangelista, Manahan, Dominador Ambrosio, Guillermo
Capadocia, and Alfonso Pangilinan were arrested the following
month. Charged with sedition on the basis of the platform actions
and demands of the Communist Party, they were found guilty by
the Court of First Instance and sentenced to jail. It was on October
26, 1932 when the Supreme Court declared the CPP an illegal
organization.

9. Sakdalism
Benigno Ramos, leader of a popular movement Sakdal, used to
be a Senate clerk. In 1930, he purposely left his job to work against
the administration. The immediate cause of his resignation was his
involvement in a student picket staged in a Manila high school,
which had been provoked by negative remarks made by an
American teacher against the Filipino students. A number of Filipino
professionals gave their support for the students. Ramos had already
been warned by Quezon not to join the protest action but still he
declined.
Ramos consequently founded Sakdal, a weekly tabloid, which
became the vehicle for bitter denunciations of the ruling oligarchy.
This tabloid exposed the discontentment of the masses. It also
adopted the position that independence is not given but must be
taken through the united action of the people. Through its
newspaper, the Sakdal movement campaigned against
maldistribution of property, excessive taxes, and the concentration of
land ownership to a few. Subsequently, Ramos transformed the
movement into a political party.
In the 1934 election of delegates to the Constitutional
Convention, the Sakdalistas desired to have a number of candidates.
In campaign meetings and through their paper, the Sakdalistas
opposed colonial education in the country, in particular Camilo
Osias' grade school "Readers," for their glorification of American
culture. They also expressed opinion against American economic
control and the military bases. In this election, the Sakdalistas with
three candidates for representatives won.
With the coalition of the Antis and Pros of the Nacionalista
Party for the 1935 National Elections, the Sakdalistas predicted the
greater expansion of American economic power. They continued
their barrio campaigns to boycott the plebiscite for the
Commonwealth Constitution. However, Governor Frank Murphy
issued a ruling that any campaign against the plebiscite shall be
branded as seditious. As a consequence, many Sakdalistas were
arrested.
In various parts of the country, perpetuation of feudal and
usurious practices, which originated from the Spanish regime,
intensified the agony of the peasant masses. On May 2,1935, one
hundred fifty peasants armed with bolos and paltiks marched to the
municipal hall of San Ildefonso, Bulacan and hauled down the
American and Philippine flags, and raised the red Sakdal flag. Other
Sakdalistas did the same in Cavite, Rizal, and Laguna. The peasants
occupied the town halls and burned American flags in such places as
Tanza, and Caridad in Cavite, and Cabuyao and Sta. Rosa in Laguna.
Altogether, almost sixty thousand Sakdalistas were involved.
On the second day, constabulary troopers suppressed the
uprisings in the beleaguered towns. Disorganized and poorly armed,
the peasants were in no way equal to the Constabulary detachments
dispatched in the centers of the rebellion. Fifty-seven peasants were
killed, hundreds were wounded, and around five hundred were
imprisoned.
Benigno Ramos was in Japan when the revolt broke out. He was
then arranging for Japanese support for the Sakdal party. He denied
his involvement on the May 2 incident. Disowned by their leader,
many peasants withdrew support for Ramos. As a result, Sakdalista
influence greatly diminished in the countryside.



Study Guides
A. Terms/Concepts to Understand
Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation Bates Treaty
Philippine Commission Brigandage Act
Autonomy
Sedition Law
B. Questions to Answer
1. What were the incidents that precipitated the Filipino-
American War in 1899?
2. Why did Apolinario Mabini resign as cabinet member of
the Aguinaldo government? Would you agree with his
decision?
3. What were the cultural changes brought about by the
Americans to the Filipinos?
4. How did the militant groups in the country operate during
the American regime?
5. What were the significant American policies that led ,to
the recognition of Philippine sovereignty?



Chapter VIII
Commonwealth Period

1. The Transition
The Filipino people opted to continue asserting their right to
political independence. A transition government was a precondition
given by the United States pursuant to the Tydings-McDuffie Law.
Amidst colorful ceremonies, the Commonwealth of the Philippines
was inaugurated on November 15, 1935 at the Legislative Building.
The country now had a self-ruling government except in matters of
treasury and foreign affairs. Recognition of Philippine independence
by the United States was to come in 1945.
Some U.S. officials and dignitaries who attended the ceremonies
were Vice-President Nance Garner, Speaker Joseph Byrnes of the
U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Secretary of War George Dern,
and General Douglas MacArthur. Chief Justice Ramon Avancena of
the Supreme Court sworn into office the new state officials, which
include President Manuel L. Quezon, Vice-President Sergio Osmena,
and the members of the National Assembly. In this occasion, U.S.
Secretary Dern proclaimed the existence of the Commonwealth of
the Philippines and the termination of the Philippine government
established under the Jones Law.
Upon assuming office, President Quezon secured the enactment
of laws that would improve the conditions of the marginalized
society. He readily adopted the policy of social justice, referring to
justice to the common tao by improving his condition.
The policy measures included the following: the establishment
of a Court of Industrial Relations to resolve labor disputes and the
promotion of social justice as shown by the Eight-Hour Labor Act
and the Minimum Wage Law. Written contracts between
landowners and tenants as requisite, as well as the establishment of
credit facilities for farmers were also included. Authority given to
the President to acquire private lands for resale to farmers was also
part of the social justice policy.
Considering the problem of national security, the National
Assembly enacted Commonwealth Act No. 1, the National Defense
Act, which provided for citizens' army. In formulating the Philippine
defense system, President Quezon requested and obtained the
services of General Douglas MacArthur who became the Field
Marshal of the Philippine Army.
Filipino-American relations continued in the transition period
provided by the Tydings-McDuffie Law. In 1937, Quezon and
President
Roosevelt agreed to create a joint Philippine-American committee to
probe into the economic problems of the Philippines and to
recommend a program for economic development. The Joint
Preparatory Committee on Philippine Affairs (JPCPA) was
established on April 14, 1937. For over a year, conferences were held
in Washington, San Francisco and in Manila. In 1938, the JPCPA
recommended the grant of political independence to the Philippines
on July 4,1946 and the extension of Philippine-American preferential
trade to December 31,1960.
Growth of agriculture, commerce, and industries also took
place in the economy although this may be attributed to a

considerable number of foreign capitalists who had investments in
the country. The Chinese for one, heavily invested in industries,
which included rice production, tobacco, hemp, copra, logging and
timber, manufacturing, banking, and real estate. They also controlled
a big percent of the retail trade. Together with the Americans, they
controlled the country's foreign trade.
Aside from the Chinese, the Japanese also invested largely in
the country. Prior to Japanese invasion in the country, the Japanese
had already penetrated the Philippines for economic reasons. In
1903, when Baguio was chosen as a summer capital, the Americans
hired one thousand five hundred Japanese workers to build the
zigzag road to that city.
After the road was completed, one hundred of them stayed and
migrated to Davao to work on American hemp and coconut
plantations. By 1907, their leader, Kyosaburo S. Ohta had formed the
Ohta Development Company. Soon other Japanese corporations
were established. By 1930, the Japanese had practically controlled the
deep-sea fishing industry. By 1935, a big percentage of the abaca
production in Davao came from the Japanese corporations. They
likewise invested in mining, logging, manufacturing, and extractive
industries. Thus, prior to the outbreak of World War II, Davao had a
big population of Japanese migrants.
In these Japanese enterprises, Filipinos were often used as
fronts or dummies. Alarmed by this situation, the National
Assembly passed the Anti-Dummy Law in May 1939, which
punished Filipinos who would allow themselves to be used as fronts
by alien businessmen and investors. The government in this manner
attempted to secure the utilization of resources by Filipinos.
There was also a growing apprehension over the political and
social consequences of unchecked immigration of a big number of
foreigners, especially the Chinese and the Japanese. Thereupon in
May 1940, the Philippine Immigration Law was enacted. The law
limited to 500, the number of immigrants permitted annually to
enter the country.
Civic-minded citizens, supportive of the government's program
in enabling Filipinos to engage in retail merchandising, established
the
National Economic Protectionism Association (NEPA) and the
Consumers' Cooperative League of the Philippines. Consequently,
Filipino participation in retail trade substantially improved.
In accordance to Commonwealth Act No. 184, s. 1936 enacted
by the National Assembly, the Institute of National Language was
established to make a study of the different Philippine languages for
the purpose of evolving and adopting a national language. After a
comprehensive study of the country's language condition, the
institute recommended to President Quezon the adoption of Tagalog
as the basis of the national language.
On December 30, 1937, President Quezon proclaimed through
Executive Order No. 134 the National Language of the Philippines
based on the Tagalog vernacular. The teaching of the National
Language in all schools in the country began on June 19,1940. By
virtue of Commonwealth Act No. 570, the National Language was
declared one of the official languages of the Philippines effective July
4, 1946. The said act also ordered that all textbooks written in the
National Language be prepared under the supervision of the Bureau
of Education, subject to the approval of the Institute of National
Language. (Secretary of Education and Culture Jose E. Romero
issued Department Order No. 7 on August 13,1959 mandating
Pilipino in referring to the National Language, The Tagalog-based
Pilipino remains an official and common national language until the
ratification of the 1987 Constitution, which prescribes Filipino as the
national language of the Philippines and an official language).
Other accomplishments of the Commonwealth Government
included the creation of the following new offices: National
Economic Council, Census Commission, and the Commission of
Mindanao and Sulu. Filipinization of the judiciary from the Supreme
Court to the municipal courts was completed. Woman suffrage was
finally allowed as shown in the May 14, 1935 plebiscite to ratify the
1935 Constitution. Pursuant to the Public Defenders Act,
appointment of public defenders (government lawyers) was made to
extend legal services to the people. New chartered cities were also
established - Cebu, Iloilo, Bacolod, Davao, Zamboanga, San Pablo,
Quezon City, Cavite, and Tagaytay.
Three amendments to the 1935 Philippine Constitution were
ratified by the national plebiscite on June 18,1940. The amendments
included the tenure of the office of the President and Vice-President
to four years with reelection for another term. Another legislative
revision is the establishment of a bicameral Congress of the
Philippines, with the Senate as Upper House and the House of
Representatives as Lower House. The creation of an independent

Commission on Elections composed of three members to supervise
all elections was also part of the revised provision.

2. Decade of Unrest
It was in the 1930s when Hitler's troops occupied Austria,
Czechoslovakia, and Poland and invaded Norway, Denmark, France,
the Soviet Union, and the rest of Europe. Japan had been at war with
Manchuria in 1931 and later invaded China in 1937. In 1940, Japan
occupied the northern part of French Indo-China and the following
year the whole French colony. America and Britain consequently
imposed economic sanctions in Japan. America froze Japanese assets
in America to prevent Japan from using these to her advantage.
Britain renounced her commercial treaties with Japan.
The imperialistic design of Japan in Southeast Asia could not
simply be ignored. The Commonwealth government feared that the
country would be the next target; thus it tried to lay its groundwork
for any contingency. Compulsory military training of able-bodied
Filipino youths under the supervision of General Douglas
MacArthur was made. In July 1941, the Philippine reserve and
regular forces joined forces with the United States Army. This
combined military forces known as United States Armed Forces in
the Far East (USAFFE) was placed under the command of General
MacArthur.
The Civilian Emergency Administration was likewise
organized. The Philippine National Red Cross conducted practice
evacuation drills in Manila and in other towns. The first simulated
blackout was conducted in Manila on July 10,1941. In October of the
same year, the whole archipelago experienced other simulated
blackout.
Notwithstanding the diversification and growth of agricultural
production, the living conditions of the farmers did not improve.
Exorbitant rental fees, arbitrary ejection, and other agrarian problems
intensified their agony. Though the previous government assumed
control of many religious estates, still many tracts of land were sold
to private American entrepreneur and big Filipino landowners. The
problems of the peasants were compounded when some influential
landowners resorted to a system of landownership characterized by
fraudulent resurvey of their estates.
Conscious of their common grievances, the peasants formed
organizations to realize their objectives. One of these organizations
was die Kapisanan Panahoti Na (The Time Has Come), composed of
tenants in haciendas in Dinalupihan, Bataan; San Rafael, San
Ildefonso, Bigaa, and Polo in Bulacan; San Pedro Tunasan in Laguna;
and Lian in Batangas. The members were concerned with the resale
of the lands to the tillers.
Other peasant organizations were Dumating Na (It Has Come),
composed of tenants of Hacienda Buenavista in San Rafael and Oras
Na (It is Time) in a Jesuit estate at San Pedro, Laguna.
From 1935 to the outbreak of war in 1941, the recognized leader
of the peasantry in Central Luzon was Pedro Abad Santos, known as
Don Perico.
A bar topnotcher and a member of the landed aristocracy, Don
Perico was elected in 1917 to the Philippine Assembly. In 1929, he
founded his Socialist Party. Regarded as a traitor by his hacendero
province-mates, he devoted the remaining years of his life to the
cause of the peasants. Under his guidance, the peasants and rural
workers conducted many protest actions, from strikes to the burning
of rice and cane fields and the carting away of farm produce.

3. Entry of Japanese Imperial Forces
The Philippines was still getting used to the American colonial
lifestyle when World War II (1939-1945) broke out. The country was
drawn into this war as an ally of America. The Japanese assault in
the country was meant to cut America's lines of communication in
the Pacific as Japan sought to expand her empire in the region.
While Admiral K. Nomura was in Washington to present
Japan's peace proposals to the American officials, the Japanese forces
on December 7, 1941 (Washington time) bombed Pearl Harbor in
Hawaii, the main base of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. This resulted to the
death of 2,897 men. The Japanese also launched offensive attacks in
Malaya, Hong Kong, Guam, Wake Island, Midway Island, and the
Philippines. On that tragic day, President Theodore Roosevelt asked
the US Congress to declare war, which the latter did with only one
dissenting vote.
The general offensive plan of the Japanese was to acquire the
Dutch and British possessions in Southeast Asia, which include
Malaya and the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). In order to carry
the scheme, the Japanese navy and air forces had to destroy the U.S.
Pacific Fleet.

At the dawn of December 8, 1941 (Philippine time), 10 hours
after the attack in Pearl Harbor, the Japanese bombers under the
command of General Masaharu Homma, conducted air attacks in
various places of the Philippines. They destroyed the air and naval
defenses in Davao, Tuguegarao, Baguio, Iba, Tarlac, and Clark Field.
Generally, the country had few planes to assault the enemy forces.
American planes on the ground were caught by surprise.
Davao was bombed twice on December 8. The Japanese were
able to land in Batan Island without any opposition. On December 9,
the city of Manila experienced its first wartime air raid. Lacking air
cover, the American Asiatic Fleet in the Philippines withdrew to
Java, Indonesia on December 12, 1941.
Capt. Jesus Villamor of the Philippine Air Corps defiantly led a
flight of pursuit planes against the Japanese who were then raiding
Nichols Field. He was able to destroy an enemy plane in the aerial
combat, which took place on December 10. On the same day, the
Japanese invaders made their first landing in Aparri and Vigan. Two
days later in Legazpi, Albay and on
I ember 20, they landed in Davao. Two days later, December 22, the
main l.ipanese forces, under the command of Lt. Homma landed in
Lingayen, Pangasinan.
At the onset of the attacks, civilian structures were burned and
crumbled in succeeding explosions. Many were shocked. Bodies
littered the ground together with the wounded. Emergency
operations were compounded by the evacuation of the civilian
casualties to nearby hospitals.
On December 14, after the enemy landings in Legazpi, all remaining
14 fortresses were withdrawn to Fort Darwin in Australia for repair
service. Some 11 Navy patrol bombers were flown to the
Netherlands East Indies (Indonesia today) to join the Asiatic fleet.
General MacArthur was left with few fighters and observation
planes.
The landing of General Homma's main force, the 48
th
Division
in 1 ingayen made General MacArthur finally decide to use the War
Plan Orange 3 (WPO-3). This was the master plan later renamed
Rainbow 5, which ordered the withdrawal of all island forces to
Bataan peninsula, which was considered key to the defense of
Manila Bay. This assumed that the Japanese forces would have
Luzon as primary target. Delaying action was to be enforced against
the enemy forces in Bataan until the arrival of the U.S. reinforcement.
It also required the evacuation of all civilians within the area before
the entry of troops. The USAFFE officers and men had in mind the
U.S. aid while on systematic withdrawal.
The enemy bombers were hitting Port Area Manila at the time
President Quezon and his group were about to leave. The President
was advised by General MacArthur to evacuate to Corregidor
Island, strategically located at the entrance of Manila Bay. The
presidential party left Manila on December 24,1941. President
Quezon, his wife Dona Aurora, his two daughters Maria Aurora and
Zenaida, and his son Manuel, Jr. together with Vice-President Sergio
Osmena, Chief Justice Jose Abad Santos, Maj. Gen. Basilio J. Valdes,
Col. Manuel Nieto, the President's aide and Serapio I). Canceran, the
president's private secretary on board S.S. Mayon were able to reach
the island fortress.
On December 26, General MacArthur declared Manila an open
city, wherein the enemy forces may enter the area provided they
stop shooting. This would spare the city from further destruction.
Immediately, all military i nstallations were removed from Manila.
The northern and southern armies of the USAFFE were retreating to
Bataan.
On December 30, 1941, the second inaugural ceremonies of the
C ommonwealth were held outside the Corregidor tunnel. President
Quezon took his oath of office as President of the Commonwealth,
marking the commencement of his second term. Administering the
oath of office to President Quezon and Vice-President Osmena was
Chief Justice Jose Abad S.intos. General MacArthur ordered that all
troops must have crossed Calumpit Bridge (in Bulacan) by six in the
morning of New Year 1942, before their explosives destroy the
structure. This was to prevent the enemy from crossing it. By the
time the people of the province learned about the blasting they
began to prepare for evacuation to the outlying fields.
By January 2, 1942, the Japanese forces had already entered
Manila. The people of nearby areas left hurriedly. Evacuation became
the frequently repeated word as families gathered their portable
belongings, stored and preserved food, and went into safer places
like the mountainsides for refuge.
For many days, the people stayed in evacuation areas. People
dug underground shelters for threatening air raids. The bolder ones
ventured to return to their respective homes to get provisions they

failed to take along with them while fleeing hastily from the
invading forces.
Almost everywhere there was panic and fear. Many people
stayed in air-raid shelters for many days. Others went to the fields,
hills and fishponds, mindful of the radio broadcast by the Voice of
America in Corregidor that the Japanese soldiers were committing
atrocities in areas they have occupied.
As the Japanese occupied the towns, their immediate task was
to reinstate order in the area. To achieve this, the Japanese employed
austere rules to demand obedience from the local inhabitants. Once
this was achieved, they worked for the development and
procurement of war materials and strategic resources. The Japanese
rushed to deliver the immediate needs of their war machinery.
Many Filipinos thought that the stay of the Japanese would
only take a month or three. The American forces made the Filipino
people hope that the invading Japanese forces will be repulsed
immediately.
With the formation of the Bataan Defense Force (BDF), the
North Luzon Forces were deactivated. The BDF established the
advance Command Post at Signal Hill near Mt. Samat. The first Main
Line of Resistance (MLR) ran 20 miles from Morong to Abucay. The
Abucay line stretched across the peninsula to Mauban on the west.
For three months, the Filipino-American troops, which
numbered around 80,000 (65,000 Filipinos and 15,000 Americans)
held out in Bataan against the assault of the enemy forces.
Thousands of soldiers and civilians perished due to malnutrition,
dysentery, and malaria.
In the midst of enemy attacks in the Philippines, President
Roosevelt urged President Quezon to flee to the United States since
the Japanese could inevitably use him as the leader to rally Filipinos
behind Japan. President Quezon and his family left Corregidor for
Australia on February 18 on board submarine Swordfish. From there,
on board another submarine S.S. Pres. Coolidge, President Quezon
sailed for San Francisco, California on April 20,1942.
Likewise, General MacArthur on orders of the US President, left
Corregidor for Australia on the night of March 11,1942 to assume
command of the newly designated Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA).
On this day, the USAFFE was deactivated. Constituted was the
United States Army Forces in the Philippines (USAFIP) under the
command of Major General Jonathan Wain wright. After landing in
Australia on March 17,1942, General MacArthur made his promise to
the Filipinos, "I came through and I shall return."
Major Gen. Wainwright was promoted as Lieutenant General
on March 21. He became the Commander of Filipino-American
troops, the USAFIP (formerly USAFFE). The U.S. Air Force and other
units in the Western sector were able to trim down the Japanese
night raiders at the beaches of Mariveles.
Gen. Momma's 50-day deadline to take the Philippines had
ended. Homma failed to conquer the country in time. He called a
halt to offensive action and waited for reinforcement from Tokyo.
The 48
th
Division was pulled out to invade the Netherlands East
Indies.
For one and a half months, small military action took place in
Bataan. During this period, the Japanese sent propaganda teams
with leaflets.from planes and portable speakers, urging the Filipino
fighters to surrender. They even played sentimental music and
recordings of pleas from loved ones. They asked the Filipino soldiers
to desert their American comrades-in- arms, assuring them of safe
passage outside the peninsula. But the Filipino soldiers ignored this
kind of psychological warfare.
As the battle in Bataan went on, more and more civilians were
arriving in Hagonoy, Bulacan. Most of the evacuees came from
Abucay, Balanga, Pilar, Orion, Limay, Morong, Bagac, and
Mariveles. These towns were totally destroyed by war. The exit point
from the Bataan peninsula was barrio Camachile in Orion and the
nearest point of deliverance was Hagonoy, the closest bayside town
from Bataan to Bulacan.
The POWs who were able to escape the Death March, sought
safety in the hands of some Filipino families. They hid their uniforms
to prevent Japanese patrols or sentries from recognizing them as
soldiers. Old women pretended to be their mothers or older sisters.
The exodus to Hagonoy resulted to an increase of population
from around 25,000 to 90,000. The Religious of the Virgin Mary
(RVM) based in Hagonoy proved to be very helpful in providing for
the needs of the people. This was the only religious congregation
that openly assisted the wounded, the hungry, and the orphaned.
They placed a number of children under their custody. What they
did was not easy, for their selfless service could mean something else
to the Japanese that might cost a number of lives among the
religious.

At the end of March, General Homma finally got the military
support he needed. The Japanese brought in reinforcement from
Singapore. On April 3, Good Friday (after Singapore surrendered to
Japan) the enemy forces launched their final offensive in Bataan.
Bombers attacked anything that moved. The main thrust centered on
Mt. Samat, where hostilities started from 8 A.M. and lasted until 2
P.M. The forest dimmed with smoke and explosion.
The capture of Mt. Samat would give the Japanese a key
observation post, which overlooked the whole Bataan peninsula.
General Homma pressed hard on this area to deny the Filipino-
American forces the chance to regroup and mount a counterattack.
However, General Edward P. King managed to pull together the
American 31
st
Infantry Regiment and the Philippine Scout units.
Resistance began to weaken on April 7. The aggressiveness of
the enemy forces, the long days in the battlefields and the shortage
of food and medicine claimed the lives of many. The next day,
conditions worsened and the Bataan defense forces were
disintegrating. To prolong the fight would mean the loss of more
men. On April 9, around 78,000 men from Bataan under General
Edward King surrendered, while the rest headed by Lt. Gen.
Wainwright had escaped to Corregidor and to surrounding
provinces. General King sent peace feelers to the Japanese.
Surrender negotiations were conducted in front of the public
school in Lamao. Since General King was not the senior officer in the
Philippines, the Japanese refused to recognize the surrender of the
whole Bataan force. They accepted the surrender of each unit as they
laid down their arms. (Today, a Shrine of Valor was erected in Mt.
Samat to commemorate the historic defense of Bataan).
The infamous Death March began in Mariveles and Cabcaben on
April 10, 1942. The Filipino-American troops were forced at
gunpoint to march from Bataan to San Fernando, Pampanga. Some
were kicked and beaten. Those wounded had their legs or head
wounds bandaged with shirt uniforms. Others were carried on army
wool blankets folded in hammocks, tied in bamboo poles, and
carried by other comrades. Other soldiers limped on crutches made
out of tree branches. Those who were too sickly to walk were left to
die. The Japanese army had little provisions for Filipino-American
POWs. Around 10,000 lives were claimed by this infamous trail.
The POWs reached San Fernando and were billeted in
schoolhouses, warehouses, and vacant lots. The next day, the weary
marchers were herded like cattle into the boxcars. Close to 100 POWs
were huddled in every boxcar, which was supposed to accommodate
only 50 people. Many of the weak and exhausted passengers died.
The freight train stopped at Capas, Tarlac. From there, they walked
seven kilometers more to Camp O'Doruiel, the prison camp. Some
56,000 reached the camp alive on April 15,1942.
The camp contained the barracks of the Philippine Army before
the Japanese occupied the area. It was actually a group of unfinished
structures made of bamboo and cogon grass and fenced with barbed
wire. The suffering of the survivors did not end there. Those who
managed to stay alive had to endure the dirty surroundings, hunger
and diseases, which further reduced their number.
In Manila, the people could hear successive bombings directed
against the island of Corregidor. General MacArthur had established
USAFFE headquarters on this island On December 24, 1941, after he
had declared War Plan Orange in effect. After the fall of Bataan, the
Japanese pounded the island daily. The Japanese also raised an
observation balloon daily to spot Corregidor's gun positions.
Even though the enemy constantly assaulted Corregidor, the
forces in the island fortress gave downright protection to it. Inside
the Malinta Tunnel, a radio station had been established, called the
Voice of Freedom. Major Carlos P. Romulo, the prewar editor of the
Philippine Herald, headed this station in broadcasting news to men
in Bataan and in occupied areas like Manila. Well-known writers like
Salvador P. Lopez, Leon Ma. Guerrero, and including Major Romulo
prepared the scripts.
The Japanese were able to seize a beachhead on May 5. The
Americans tried to counterattack but were stopped by Japanese
artillery fire and the appearance of Japanese tanks in the area.
Should the Japanese forces reach Malinta Tunnel, the noncombatants
in the tunnel and the wounded in the hospital would be in great
danger.
General Wainwright decided to surrender Corregidor and the
harbor forts. In the morning of May 6, General Wainwright
addressed a message to General Homma through the Voice of
Freedom offering his surrender with men directly under him. At
noon, the American flag was lowered from the flagpole and replaced
with the flag of surrender.
Wainwright was taken to Cabcaben, Bataan to meet Homma.
Upon learning that Wainwright only offered to surrender the harbor

forts, Homma rejected his surrender. The American general
explained that he had command only of Corregidor and its satellite
islands. He could no longer communicate with General Sharp, who
took command of Visayas and Mindanao, because he had no radio
facilities. Realizing the hopelessness of his position, at midnight of
the same day, Wainwright signed the surrender documents
according to Homma's wishes.
On May 7, Wainwright was brought to Manila to broadcast a
message to General Sharp and the guerrilla leaders in Luzon, saying
that he was taking command and ordering them to surrender.
American commanders in the Visayas and Mindanao debated on
whether the orders were genuine and therefore should be followed
or whether they had been forced on Wainwright by the Japanese,
making it unlawful.
General MacArthur himself radioed General Sharp that
Wainwright's surrender was not valid. General MacArthur ordered
Sharp to initiate guerrilla operations against the enemy forces.
The POWs were brought to Capas. On August 11, 1942, General
Wainwright and ranking officers were shipped to Formosa and later
to Japan. On Corregidor, the Japanese maintained a reinforced
company with about 300 POWs mostly American technicians to
restore necessary installations.
The battered Filipino and American soldiers submitted to the
enemy forces. They received orders to lay down their arms. Life in
the prison camp was a grueling sequel to the agony in Bataan.
Nevertheless, the strength and will of the Filipino people did not
waver even after the surrender of Bataan and Corregidor to the
Japanese. Underground guerrilla movements were put into action by
Filipino and American soldiers, as well as unyielding civilians in the
countryside.

Study Guides

A. Terms /Concepts to Understand

Social justice
Anti-Dummy Law
National language
Official language
Rainbow 5 POWs
Death March
Religious us of the Virgin Mary

B. Questions to Answer
1. How did President Manuel L. Quezon implement the
Social justice Program under his administration?
2. Why is there a need for a national language?
3. What caused the Japanese forces to invade the Philippines
during the Pacific War?
4. Discuss the gruesome picture of the Philippine archipelago
at the onset of World War II.
5. Do you think the surrender of Bataan and Corregidor was
necessary at that time?


Chapter IX
The Japanese Occupation

1. Japanese Martial Law
By early 1942, the Philippines, Burma, Singapore, the Dutch
East Indies, French Indochina, and other territories in southeastern
Asia and the Pacific were placed under the Japanese rule. After
conquering the lands, Japan claimed that it was creating an Asia for
Asians.
On January 3,1942, a day after Manila became an occupied city,
General Masaharu Homma, commander-in-chief of the Japanese
Imperial Forces issued a proclamation announcing the end of the
American occupation and the imposition of martial law in the
country. One of his first orders was the surrender of firearms. Those
who were still caught with weapons were detained at the dungeons
of Fort Santiago and in other detention posts.
Detention camps became places of torture. Water cure, pulling
of fingernails and toenails, pouring and burning of extremities with
gasoline, and severe beatings were some of the abuses committed to
prisoners.
Americans and other foreigners who were allies of America and
Great Britain were rounded up in Manila and in other parts of the

country as early as January 4, 1942. Most of them were held in
custody at the University of Santo Tomas campus in Manila, a 22-
hectare university campus. Other internment camps were
established in Los Banos, Laguna and in Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija.
Priests suspected of engaging in subversion activities were also
imprisoned like Father Rufino Santos who was then a young priest
and later became the first Filipino Cardinal of the Catholic Church
and Archbishop of Manila.
General Homma allowed the laws then enforce the
Commonwealth to stay for the moment. He ordered all public
officials to continue to discharge their duties.
Jorge B. Vargas, who was then the mayor of greater Manila
before the Japanese occupation of the city, had been instructed by
President Quezon and General MacArthur to cooperate with the
enemy hoping that with the cooperation of Filipinos, the occupation
might be less severe. This was to avert further anguish on the
Filipino people.
On the very same day that the city of Manila was occupied,
Vargas met with a representative of Imperial Japanese forces to see
to it that peace and order be maintained and that public utilities such
as water, electricity, and transportation be restored.
Three weeks later, on January 23,1942, Vargas received an order
from General Homma to assume the position of the Executive
Commissioner of the Central Administrative Organization of
Occupied Philippines. He had to coordinate the activities of all
existing central administrative departments in the Philippines and
was to see to it that all commands of the Japanese commander-in-
chief were carried out.
Movement was registered with the imposition of curfew, first
from 8:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m., and finally from midnight to 6:00 a.m.,
from May 18 onwards. After the fall of Bataan, total blackout was
lifted on May 4,1942.
Arbitrary arrests and executions were done by the kempeitai
(military police) any time of the day. The people were not assured of
their safety in their houses nor in the streets. The most dreaded
Japanese word was kura, which meant two things depending upon
the movement of the hand. When the word was mentioned with an
inward wave of the hand it meant, "Come here!" The moment kura
was uttered with an outward wave of the hand it meant, "Scram!" or
"Dismiss!" For the slightest offense, soldiers would slap the face of
the civilians.
Many were also executed on mere suspicion of being with the
resistance movement. Other offenses punishable by death were
arson, murder, robbery, spreading rumors against the Japanese
forces, cutting military lines of communication, counterfeiting and
spying, and printing or distributing anti-Japanese leaflets.
During the initial period of the Japanese occupation, no one
could travel without a pass from its army. This prohibition in travel
was lifted a month and a half after the fall of Corregidor. In Manila,
the streetcar was still operational. Many people rode bicycles and
dokars (wartime carriages pulled by horses). The casco, a large banca,
pulled by motorboats transported goods and foodstuffs from Manila
to Guagua, Pampanga. Most of the passenger coaches and freight
cars of the Manila Railroad Company were destroyed at the onset of
the Japanese invasion.
Taliba, La Vanguardia, Tribune, and Liwayiuay were allowed to
continue publication but under rigid censorship by the government.
Some old Hollywood films were shown in movie houses. Many
theaters switched from movies to stage shows.
Knowing that the Church had played an important role in
shaping 1 ilipino minds for centuries, the Japanese did not wish to
incur open hostility with the Church. As early as January 14,1942,
Colonel Murosawa, head of the Religious Section of the Japanese
Army, issued a Declaration to Christians in the Philippines in which he
expressed the view of the Japanese army to assure freedom of
religion. By 1943, parish priests were being required to use their
pulpits to convince the people that it was useless to resist Japanese
rule.
Conciliatory moves were also done to the Philippine
Independent Church. The Japanese also showed leniency towards
the Muslims. In contrast, the American Protestant ministers were
detained at the Santo Tomas Internment Camp.
Japanese Premier Hideki Tojo said on January 21, 1942 before
the Japanese Diet, Japan's legislature, that the Philippines would be
granted independence provided it recognizes Japan's program of
establishing "The Philippines for the Filipinos" as a member of the
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. He visited Manila on May
6,1942. He noted that the Filipinos desired to cooperate with the
Japanese government.


2. Life Daring the Wartime Years
Neighborhood and district associations were organized based
in an executive order issued by Vargas on August 8, 1942, "for the
purpose of providing means for protection under joint
responsibility." They were supposed to cooperate with the Japanese
Army to keep the residents within the area of jurisdiction from anti-
Japanese activities.
Each neighborhood association was to be composed of at least
10 families, their leader of which was to be appointed by their
respective town or city mayor. Then they, in turn grouped into
district associations. The president of the district association was
appointed by the mayor with the approval of the directors of the
local branch of the military administration.
The head of each family had to report to the Constabulary
officers, the leaders of the neighborhood association, or other
competent authorities any movement of bandits or other suspicious
persons in their place. He was also to report changes within his
family, such as birth or death of any family member.
The Sendenbu, the propaganda section of the Japanese army,
and later the Hodobu, or Department of Information did its best to
convince the people to collaborate with them. They sought to
promote the cultural ideas of the New Order and the policy of the
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
Violation of Japanese orders and laws was considered a hostile
act, which meant death penalty. Also punishable with death was the
injuring of a Japanese soldier. If the assailant could not be seen, some
Filipinos were held hostage by the Japanese military.
The Japanese military authorities instituted outright
confiscation and direct management of banking institutions and
public utilities, including transportation. They also supervised the
production and distribution of agricultural yields for systematic
extraction.
In different parts of the country, the Japanese refloated inter-
island ships, which they themselves sunk for revival of transport
service. Trucks and automobiles were shipped to Japan in huge
volumes. Oil companies were forced to sell their stocks to the army.
This led the Filipinos to use their improvised charcoal-fed
transportation facilities. They assumed direct management of
railroad, electrical, telephone, and other facilities from different
companies.
The schools were again made open to the public. Books used
before the war were again utilized, except the ones with pictures and
stories about the Americans. To get the Filipinos to the Japanese side,
the United States and England were projected as bent on world
power. Japanese language and culture were taught and
disseminated. Various contests with attractive cash prizes were held
to encourage further the study of the language.
Tight restrictions on the movement of commodities by the
Japanese had made the supply of rice, sugar, and other crops scarcer.
Prices of commodities had increased to the point when most people
could no longer afford to buy. As months passed by, very few
families could afford to enjoy three meals in one day.
The worsening food crisis reached a point where the populace
started eating plain lugaw (rice porridge). At times they subsisted on
binatog or boiled grains of dried corn with grated coconut and
pinches of salt. Toasted rice was brewed as coffee but even these
lowly meals could har.dly be available regularly.
In spite of the government's ardent call for national food
production, the people suffered from deprivation and starvation.
Several well-to-do families had to dig up the canned goods they had
placed under the ground at the start of the war.
The Japanese soldiers confiscated palay stocks stored in the
ktimalig (warehouse) of the farmers. They ransacked private
backyard loading their trucks with chicken and hogs. These frequent
food forays virtually stopped land production causing imminent
food scarcity and escalating prices of prime commodities. A cavan of
rice sold clandestinely in Japanese money costs thousands of pesos.
Currency and banks were also closely monitored. The
Department of Finance of the Japanese Military Administration
controlled all existing banks. One of the first acts that the Japanese
did was to circulate military money, also known as military pass
money or war notes. It was in peso and centavo denominations.
These bills had been prepared before the war.
The peso was decreed equal to the Japanese yen in its monetary
value. Since the peso was equivalent to two yens before the war, this
order favorably served the purpose of the Japanese. They found
everything cheap in the Philippines. Bales of Japanese war notes,
without any foreign exchange value, were forced on the people. In

local transactions, the Filipinos used this Japanese money for the
payment of commodities, which before would cost a few in
Philippine pesos.
The new peso bills looked like play money. They lacked serial
numbers. They were not backed by silver or gold reserves. Filipinos
were doubtful to accept them. The Japanese, however, threatened
punishment to anyone who refused the war notes. The threats
convinced the Filipinos to use them but they haughtily called it
Mickey Mouse money. Others called it gurami, a small fish so
plentiful and cheap and apa, the sweet wafer for ice cream cones,
implying flimsiness. Prewar bills and coins immediately disappeared
as people chose to keep them for future use.
The Japanese realized the Filipinos were apathetic about the
military money. In 1942, the Southern Development Bank was
established to finance projects in occupied territories in Southeast
Asia. The bank printed war notes and produced a modified Ho note,
which started circulating in 1943. The new notes in denominations of
1, 5, and 10 pesos had serial numbers this time. The Rizal Monument
was printed at the front side.
Since the highest denomination was 10 pesos, more bills were
required to buy basic necessities as prices soared high. Salaries were
paid in bundles. Bayongs (woven buri bags) of small bills were
carried to market.
Severe inflation set in as supplies ran low. Fuel shortage,
confiscation, and deteriorating peace and order hampered food
production. In March 1942, in order to meet the rice shortage, the
Japanese Military Administration introduced a fast-maturing grain
from Taiwan called horai rice. Experimental farms directly under the
Japanese army control were developed to test the new grain. The
controlled media proclaimed that this would make the Philippines
self-sufficient after a year. However, due to heavy rains in 1942,
many of these experimental crops were destroyed. Pests hit other
crops.
The cotton industry likewise did not fair well. It was readily
affected by unfavorable weather and soil conditions. Moreover, the
abundance of pests as well as the reluctance of the Filipino farmers
to plant a crop that was hard to tend and yet destined for Japanese
war factories contributed to this adverse situation.
The exorbitant price of meat resulted to the slaughtering of
cows and carabaos in large numbers. Farms were running out of
work animals. The administration had to restrict the number of
animals to be killed. Only those certified to be no longer useful in the
fields were to be butchered. To save on matches, some families
lighted dry "cakes" of carabao manure, which burn out slowly and
serve as light at night.
Although factories and stores for prime commodities were soon
reopened, they were not as free to operate. In order to assure steady
supply and affordable prices, a Japanese-controlled economy put
into effect. This involved price control measures, registration and
issuance of permits, and a ration system for basic commodities like
rice, sugar, matches, laundry soap, and cloth.
Hoarding and profiteering were banned. Retailers and
suppliers were ordered to follow price lists issued by the
government. Price tags had to be displayed prominently. Rents were
also fixed.
Life had become harder for most people. The residents having
no land to cultivate had to gather items of value from their cabinets
or drawers. Things like clothes, jewelry, and kitchenware were
disposed in buy and sell in Manila's downtown. They spent the
proceeds to buy food, which they would be consuming for a few
days.
Many families were forced to sell their furniture and other
personal belongings. Pushcarts loaded with furniture traveling along
the highway, was a common sight. Cascos (local boats) were also
used in transporting these items.
The railroad train became a common vehicle of smuggling rice
to the city at the Tutuban station, where the Japanese sentries lay in
wait for the viajeros (passengers). Among these viajeros were children
as young as 12 years old. They fought for every available space on
the train, even on the rooftops.
To evade arrest, those carrying half a cavan or more would
jump off somewhere at Solis, Tondo after their merchandise had
been pushed off the freight or passenger cars by their companions.
They usually did this at night. However, train jumpers began to be
plagued by nocturnal hijackers waiting for viajeros to drop their
goods. They would then run off with the sacks of rice before their
owners had the time to jump off the speeding train.
Aside from the rice business, people became preoccupied with
cigarette making. Steady tobacco supply came from the North.

Sometimes the genuine tobacco leaves were blended with dried
papaya leaves.
Another trade that prospered during the era was the making of
fakes and forgeries. Some doctors made adulterated medicines,
while some lawyers made fake documents. Fake Lucky Strike,
Camel, and Chesterfield cigarettes became part of consumers' goods.
Clever counterfeiters produced fake passes, IDs, ration tickets, and
even Mickey Mouse money.
Due to scarcity of food, medicine and basic services, thousands
died of malaria, malnutrition, tuberculosis, and other diseases.
Sulfathiazole, the wonder drug of the period, was sold at a very high
price. Many died on the sidewalks. Such desolate condition brought
about the increase of crime rate, which included burglary and hold-
up. Others even tried to kill in order to survive in a highly
competitive and hostile environment.
Disheartened by their dismal situation in the country, a number
of Filipinos did anything simply to survive in the wartime years.
Some had lost their social balance and moral strength in these most
trying times. Others collaborated with the enemy. In the midst of
turmoil, still there were Filipinos who kept their faith in God and
waited for the liberation of the country.

3. Reforming the Philippine Government
On December 2,1942, the Japanese Military Administration
announced that political parties had been dissolved "of their own
free will." The Kapisanan sa Paglilingkod sa Bagong Pilipinas
(KALIBAP1), a non-political organization, was established.
KALlBAPl's aim was to bring about the rapid reconstruction of
the Philippines and the rehabilitation of the Filipino people. This
organization was designed to coordinate all activities and services of
associations and individuals concerned with the promotion of the
total well-being of every person and to foster a stable foundation for
the New Philippines by inculcating the Asian virtues of hard work,
faith, self-reliance, loyalty, bravery, discipline and self-sacrifice.
Jorge Vargas became the ex-officio president of the KALIBAPI.
Benigno Aquino was appointed director-general of the said
organization.
At their June 18,1943 convention in Manila, the KALIBAPI
members appointed a committee to nominate the members of the
Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence (PCPI). Four
months after the establishment of the PCPI, the first draft of the new
Philippine Constitution was completed. Written in Tagalog and in
English, the Constitution had a preamble and twelve articles. The
Constitution was quite similar to the Commonwealth Constitution
however, several modifications were made in keeping with the
requirements of the Japanese Occupation. This body of laws was not
submitted to the Filipino people for ratification.
With the approval of the Constitution by the members of the
KALIBAPI and the election of Laurel as President of the Republic,
Laurel, Aquino and Vargas flew to Tokyo on September 29, where
they met with high-ranking Japanese officials to discuss Philippine
independence. They made an official call on the emperor on October
2. Then on October 5, these three Filipino leaders returned to Manila.
Two days later, the government announced the inauguration of the
Republic of the Philippines would be on October 14.
The Japanese worked for the enlistment of the Philippines into
the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, a long-range economic
plan for Japanese-conquered territories. The pool of raw materials
from these territories would be a source for Japan's industries as well
as outlets for its export products.
4. The Second Republic of the
Philippines
On October 14, 1943, Manila was in a holiday mood, despite the
traces of war. Five hundred to eight hundred thousand people
gathered in front of the Legislative Building that morning to witness
the proclamation of Philippine Independence and the inauguration
of the Republic of the Philippines. In the afternoon, a Pact of Alliance
between the Philippines and japan was signed by the Philippine
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Claro M. Recto, and the Japanese
Ambassador, Shozo Murata.
Then on October 18, Laurel announced the appointment of his
cabinet: Claro M. Recto, minister of foreign affairs; Antonio de las
Alas, minister of finance; Teofilo Sison, minister of justice; Quintin
Paredes, minister of agriculture and commerce; Jose Yulo, chief
justice of the Supreme Court, and Jose Villa, acting executive
secretary.
The President of the Republic, elected by the majority of all
members of the National Assembly, was given the highest executive
power by the Constitution. He was to serve a single term for six

years. Being the commander-in-chief of all armed forces of the
country, he could place the Philippines or any part of the nation
under martial law, when public safety required it. He could also
declare war and make peace with the concurrence of two-thirds of
all members of the National Assembly. And with the agreement of
the majority of all members of the Assembly, he could make treaties
with other nations.
The Constitution did not provide for a vice-president, however,
the ranking minister in the order of precedence established by law
could assume presidency in the event of a permanent disability of
the President. The power to make laws was vested in the unicameral
National Assembly, which was composed of provincial governor
generals and city mayors as ex-officio members and of delegates to
be elected every three years, one from each province and chartered
city. The Assembly was to meet in regular session once every year.
Judicial power was vested in a Supreme Court, composed of a
chief justice and six associate justices who were appointed by the
President with the advice of the Cabinet. The President with the
advice of the Supreme Court appointed judges in the lower court.
A governor ran the provincial civil government. The governors
and city mayors, in an ex-officio capacity became members of the
108-man National Assembly. Civil administration was operating
under the supervision of a Japanese garrison commander
headquartered at the provincial capitol.
However, civil administration was ineffectual. The Japanese
continued to maltreat the local inhabitants. The garrison was tolerant
of the abuses committed by the Japanese military stationed in the
provinces. The supply requisitions were never coursed to the local
administration. The extended Japanese occupation caused
widespread anxiety among the people in the islands.
With the inauguration of the Second Philippine Republic,
President Laurel created the National Education Board to study
curriculum changes and to develop a more suitable educational
program for the country. The board advocated enhancement of the
Filipino identity by giving emphasis to the study of the national
language and history. It also recommended the teaching of Asian
history and culture.
The board also adopted the semestral system, with a vacation
long enough for the students to rest, and in time for the rainy season
to lessen disruption of classes. (Before the outbreak of war, in 1940,
school calendar had been changed to four terms with only one week
between terms. This exhausted both students and teachers).
To direct the educational thrust more thoroughly, the
government was given more powers to supervise all schools, both
public and private. President Laurel saw schools as complementary
to the family and church in shaping morals and character.
The government also sent selected young men to japan as
pensionados to study at Japanese schools. Members of the Japanese
constabulary taught them Japanese methods of discipline. These
pensionados had to be cleansed of anything anti-Japanese to operate in
the new environment.
Simultaneous with the restructuring of the educational system,
control over media and culture was also emphasized by the Hodobu.
Movies, stage shows, radio programs, and even letters at the post
office were checked.
Under the Laurel administration, the media was used to spread
more Filipino propaganda line. Posters and leaflets called for the
support of the republic. New periodicals such as Filipino, a monthly
magazine, were also read not only in Manila but also in the
provinces. On the anniversary of the Japanese-sponsored republic, a
new newspaper was born (The Republic). Both periodicals tried to
portray a more Filipino perspective rather than other publications.
New stamps were also printed for the republic, showing the
government's nationalist orientation. One stamp issued to
commemorate the 1943 independence showed a Filipina in
traditional costume, with the Philippine flag and the Rizal
monument in the background.
In publications, the flag was highlighted. The Philippine
national anthem was translated into Tagalog. It replaced the
Japanese national anthem and Awit sa Paglikha ng Bagong Pilipinas.
Even cigarette boxes were used for the propaganda. One box bore
the slogan, "AFree Philippines in United Asia." Another had
"Freedom Implies Responsibility" written on the box. The brand was
called Independencia cigarettes.
President Laurel went his way to Filipinize the Catholic Church.
He wrote the Pope explaining that Filipinos would understand the
Church better if they ran the parishes and religious schools. He met
with religious leaders to explain his views. The government tried to
keep the Church under some degree of control.

The Japanese Military Administration did closely supervise the
affairs of the Church. The Bureau of Religious Affairs was created as
an agency under the Executive Commission to control the activities
of the religious orders like the issuance of permits for special
collections, meetings, and religious parades. The Church was
ordered to report the amount of money it had received as donations.
Its financial status was obliged to be disclosed. All priests, ministers,
and other religious officials had to secure permit from the
government in solemnizing marriages.
The Board of Information, which replaced the Bureau of
Information and Public Security of the Executive Commission, was
created. This prevented the printing of reports that was not in
keeping with the republic's ideals.
Following the government's pro-Filipino line, the Kabataang
Pangarap ni Rizal (The Youth of Rizal's Dreams) and Revtrufilnism
(Revive True Filipinism), were organized according to some
historians. Both civic organizations aimed at developing nationalism
consciousness. This cultural campaign was launched somehow to
make the Filipinos aware of Japanese and Filipino native traditions.
Somehow, prolonged exposure to Asian spirit could win Filipino
cooperation and sympathy.
Pre-war American films, previously censored, were still shown
in some movie theaters. Japanese films glorifying the Japanese war
machine and way of life were also shown in between presentations
of American films as part of the cultural propaganda.
The Japanese discouraged the Filipinos from writing in English.
In a way, these Asian colonizers contributed to the promotion of the
Tagalog language. They bolstered the enthusiasm of local writers to
rediscover the richness of the country's mother tongue. Liwayway, the
only Tagalog weekly magazine, was allowed to continue publication.
A number of writers began to create short stories and verses
similar to the Japanese haiku. Two magazines that became popular
during those days were the Philippine Review and Pillars. However,
freedom of expression was suppressed during the occupation period.
The writers who were limited to their subject matter had the rural
scene as the popular theme. Moreover, the writers were not well
compensated. Their income was good enough to buy them a kilo of
coffee-corn.
In 1943, the Dramatic Philippines, Inc. was formed to stage
popular plays in English, adapted in Tagalog. These plays were
performed at the old Metropolitan Theater. Under the management
of a group of college actors, the organization presented highly
acclaimed plays translated in Tagalog such as Passion Play, Julius
Caesar, Golden Boy, and Applesauce. Sa Pula, Sa Puti, an adaptation of
Julian Cruz Balmaseda's Isang Kuwaltang Abaka, became a crowd
favorite. Musical Philippines, Inc., a sister organization of Dramatic
Philippines, Inc., enabled classical musicians to present their
performances at the theater.
Despite Laurel's attempts to make independence real, many
elements of the Japanese policy were still there. Censorship of the
media continued as before. Nippongo classes were still mandatory.
Listening to foreign short wave stations (except Radio Tokyo)
remained restricted.
At the forefront of Japanese attempt to establish the New Order
was the kempeitai. Being a separate army organization, it reported
directly to the Japanese commander-in-chief in the Philippines, and
from there on to the kempeitai headquarters in Tokyo. It had
established branches throughout the Philippines. Anywhere in the
country, they struck terror and fear.
The Japanese occupation in just about a few years had relatively
changed the Filipino outlook. Because of the grim consequences of
the war, they became more pragmatic, or rather materialistic. The
people had come face to face with violence. They had learned to use
weapons to kill the opponents, obviously the Japanese and those
who work for them, to the detriment of their own safety and
security.
For want of doing something, some men, both young and old
learned to indulge in many forms of vices. Smoking, cockfighting,
dice games, mahjong, jueteng, monte, and other card games became
common pastimes. However, there were also other forms of
recreation like stage shows (mostly of the hometown variety) and fist
bouts.
People kept leaving and returning, depending upon the
situation. Those who could not stand the condition any longer had to
evacuate to other barrios. Some opted to live with relatives in far
provinces. With the enemy occupation, the old social elite, the
wealthy land-owning families, no longer held the monopoly of the
social circle. The rushing in of the new rich led to the rise of a new
bourgeoisie.

Everywhere in the land, people lived in fear. Men did fear the
spies (like the Ganaps and Makapilis) as well as the dreaded
kempeitai and their zona system, whereby the local males were herded
in one place, usually a public one, to pluck out the guerrillas.

5. Resistance and Restoration
What strongly nullified the Japanese policy of attraction was the
series of atrocities ranging from confiscation of personal goods to
wanton killing of people. There was the imposition of severe
penalties for slight violations of the law. Persons caught violating the
curfew were punished with water cure. Afterwards, nothing would
be heard about them. Pedestrians who refused to bow to the
Japanese military were slapped on their faces or hit with closed fists.
The Filipinos looked at this gesture as a grave personal assault.
Health and living conditions deteriorated throughout the
Japanese occupation. Tuberculosis, malaria, and nutrition ailments
became common illnesses. Many people died of starvation.
The war years witnessed the mass contact of Filipinos and
Japanese, characterized by mutual suspicion. The Filipinos could not
simply trust the motives of the Japanese in promoting the national
culture. The Japanese showed unreasonable harassment and
executions of Filipinos deemed dangerous to the new order of the
society.
There were others who thought that the war was about
democracy and against fascism. The unprovoked attack of the
Japanese in the Philippines led many Filipinos to resist in defense of
the country.
Thoughts in having recognition and a challenging experience
did help in encouraging more volunteers for the army. Others joined
the struggle for freedom because it seemed to be the natural thing to
do. Classes had been suspended for quite a time. When the
enlistment of recruits for the army took place, many young men
signed up.
If the surrender of Bataan and Corregidor and the immediate
retreat of General MacArthur to Australia marked the end of
American assistance to the country, these events were only
perceived as temporary. Moved by their sense of nationalism, others
felt that it was glorious to fight for the country's freedom. They had
realized that it was their duty to their fellow Filipinos to defend the
country from foreign aggression. Guerrilla fighters all over the
country kept their faith in democracy. Many waited for the return of
the Americans.
The United States Army Forces in the Philippines (USAFIP),
North Luzon, was one of the earliest guerrilla units to be organized
after the fall of Bataan and Corregidor. The USAFFE soldiers of
Northern Luzon who had been unable to join the American and
Filipino Forces in Bataan banded together under two Filipino
captains, Guillermo Nakar and Manuel P. Enriquez. This was
recognized as the First Guerrilla Regiment by USAFFE headquarters.
Walter Cushing, an American mine operator in the Mountain
Province, led the first ambush against the Japanese. Cushing
organized some 200 Filipino guerrillas shortly after the enemy
invasion. (Unfortunately, on September 19,1942, Cushing and two of
his men were killed instantaneously by Japanese soldiers at Jones,
Isabela while on a mission to contact a large guerrilla outfit).
American soldiers in Northern Luzon who did not surrender
with General Jonathan M. Wainwright placed themselves under the
command of Captain Nakar and Captain George Barnett, an
American engineer.
Other American officers who managed to escape from Bataan
like Major Russell Volckmann (a West Point Graduate) organized
their own guerrilla units. Volckmann set up secret training camps for
his guerrillas. The North Luzon guerrillas were consolidated under
his overall command. Among the prominent guerrilla leaders under
his direction were Governor
Roque Ablan of Ilocos and Bado Dangwa in Baguio. He also
established a communication and intelligence network, which
reported the movements of the enemy. Reports from this network
were transmitted to MacArthur's headquarters in Australia.
Volckmann's Northern Luzon guerrilla army was responsible
for driving General Tomoyuki Yamashita's troops from the
Mountain Province in the last days of the war in the Philippines.
Marcos V. Agustin, a bus driver before the war, formed a
guerrilla unit centered in Antipolo. This eventually became one of
the largest in Luzon owing to its membership from different sectors.
In its ranks were soldiers, teachers, lawyers, writers, laborers,
drivers, young inmates of a reformatory school, and a few reformed
convicts. Some Chinese and Americans joined Agustin's group.
The Hunters ROTC (Reserve Officers' Training Corps) guerrilla
group, headed by two young cadets of the Philippine Military

Academy, Eleuterio Adevoso (better known as Terry Magtanggol,
during the war), and Miguel Ver, was formed at Ver's house in San
Juan, Manila. After the surrender of Bataan, the group moved to
Antipolo.
During the latter stages of the war, the Hunters ROTC guerrillas
cut Japanese communication lines, blew up roads and bridges, and
destroyed convoys passing through their territory. Their newspaper,
Thunderclap, which came out in 1943, oftentimes changed its place of
publication to confuse the enemy forces.
Other guerrilla units were established in Central Luzon. In
Bulacan, Captain Alejo S. Santos, "C" Company, 31
st
Infantry of the
USAFFE, who escaped the Death March from Bataan at Betis,
Pampanga, organized the Philippine Legion at his hometown Bustos.
Captain Santos and his comrades wanted to continue the battle
against the enemy forces. No longer did they want to suffer silently
in pain.
The Philippine Legion was initially envisioned as a force of
small combat units with primary mission of destroying enemy
intelligence groups. It also aimed to gather information on military
installations as well as political and economic activities sponsored by
the Japanese government. The group members were also directed to
eliminate Filipino traitors.
In August 1943, Captain Bernard L. Anderson, a U.S. Airforce
officer, took command of the USAFFE Luzon Guerrilla Army Forces
and appointed Captain Santos as his personal representative in the
area. On October 12, 1943, Captain Anderson issued a directive
confirming Captain Santos' command over the Bulacan Military
Area (BMA).
BMA had four regiments at the start. By the middle of 1944, it
had a force over 18,000. The BMA was regrouped into 10 regiments
as follows: Valenzuela Regiment (Meycauayan, Marilao, Bocaue,
Polo, and Obando);
Republic Regiment (Malolos and Paombong); Del Pilar Regiment
(Hagonoy and Calumpit); Kakarong Regiment (Plaridel, Guiguinto,
and Bigaa); M. Ponce Regiment (Baliuag, Pulilan, and Bustos);
Buenavista Regiment (San Ildefonso and San Rafael); Natividad
Regiment (Northern San Miguel); Biak-na-Bato Regiment (Southern
San Miguel); Mountain Regiment (Angat and Norzagaray); and the
Batute Regiment (San Jose and Sta. Maria). These regiments were
named after famous personages and places in the province of
Bulacan.
Procurement groups were organized to collect arms and
ammunitions. Some Bulacan guerrillas went back to Bataan to look
for weapons buried prior to the surrender of the Filipino-American
troops in April 1942. In the latter part of 1943, the guerrillas raided
some municipal buildings to get the arms and ammunitions.
Daring assaults were mounted by the BMA fighters against the
Japanese garrison in Malolos and in the other towns in Bulacan.
Military intelligence reports continuously needed by General
Headquarters Southwest Pacific Area (GHQ-SWPA) were supplied
by the BMA.
In August 1944, the submarine Nawarhal landed arms and
ammunition, signal equipment, and other supplies at the Kalayaan
Headquarters of Major Anderson in Infanta, Tayabas. Salanga Point,
just off the mouth of Masanga River became the surface point of the
Nawarhal submarine. Some officers and men of the BMA, together
with some loyal Dumagats of the mountains journeyed across the
Sierra Mad re Mountains to bring the military supplies to Bulacan.
Together with the group of Americans was Captain Bartolome
Cabangbang. He manned the Philippine Islands Detachment of the
Allied Intelligence Bureau. A graduate of Philippine Military
Academy, Capt. Cabangbang fought in Bataan and Corregidor. He
was released from Capas Concentration Camp to be trained at the
Philippine Constabulary School. He was able to escape in October
1942 and later joined Capt. Villamor in Negros Occidental. He
boarded submarine Gabriela to Australia and thereon was trained in
communications and jungle warfare.
Airstrips were also constructed by the BMA guerrillas for the
emergency landing of American airmen like the ones found at Akle
in San Ildefonso, at Atlag, Malolos and Bustos. Each of these airstrips
had a runway of about 600 yards right for L-5s, which required 200
yards to get airborne.
These airstrips did facilitate the transport of supplies and men
from the army posts in Lingayen and Dagupan to Bulacan guerrilla
headquarters and vice versa. All units of the BMA were alerted for
any ill-fated plane that would need help. They were set to rescue
these pilots before they could fall into the hands of the Japanese.
Their other concern was retrieving whatever equipment remained
intact in the damaged planes.

On November 16, 1944, three men from Admiral William
Halsey's Third Fleet belonging to the Carrier USS Essex were rescued
by the Republic Regiment. (Halsey's Fleet had undertaken air strikes
in the Visayas prior to General MacArthur's landing in Leyte). They
were later on escorted to BMA headquarters. Among those ferried
from Akle (home base of BMA) to San Jose, Mindoro were Colonel
Gwen G. Atkinson, Lts. Floyd Fulkerson, Yates Hicky, Russel Reed,
and Landry.
On January 4, 1945 at Camp Jerusalem, the first air drops in
Luzon were done by giant B-25s of the US Air Force. Crated TNT
(trinitrotoluene), arms and ammunitions, medicines, rations and
radios for the BMA were dropped. On the evening of January 9,
1945, the Sixth Army, under Gen. Walter Krueger, landed 68,000
combat troops. Some army units rolled eastward to Nueva Ecija and
turned to Pozorrubio-Rosario-Aringay Line. Others penetrated the
Pampanga and Pangasinan areas - all of them, including the 37
th

Division entered through Bulacan towns.
In Southern Luzon, the PQOG (President Quezon's Own
Guerrillas) engaged in guerrilla warfare against the Japanese in
Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, and Quezon Province. In the Bicol region,
former Assemblyman and Governor Wenceslao Vinzons, headed the
guerrilla activities in the area.
The guerrilla movement in Samar and Leyte was led by Colonel
Ruperto Kangleon; while Colonel Macario Peralta of Tarlac headed
in Panay Island with Governor Tomas Confessor as the civilian
leader. In Mindanao, Tomas Cabili, Salipada Pendatun and Wendell
Fertig organized the guerrillas in the region.
Another guerrilla unit that confronted the Japanese forces was
the communist-led Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa Hapon known as the
Hukbalahap. The organization was founded on March 29,1942 in a
forest near the boundaries of Nueva Ecija, Pampanga, and Tarlac.
Luis Taruc was chosen chairman of the committee. Casto
Alejandrino (GY), became second in command.
Other Huk leaders were Bernardo Poblete (Banal) from Minalin,
Eusebio Aquino from Magalang, and Felipa Culala (Dayang-
Dayang) from Candaba. Other Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (PKP)
members who became leaders of the Hukbalahap aside from Taruc
and Alejandrino were Lope de la Rosa and Mariano Franco. "Anti-
Japanese Above All" became the battlecry of this underground
movement, mostly consisting of peasants and workers.
The guiding principles of the Huks were found in this
document, The Fundamental Spirit. The duties and privileges of a Huk
soldier were discussed in another document, The Iron Discipline. The
kind of discipline imposed on its members was quite tough.
Members found deviating from the rules of the organization were
reportedly liquidated in the name of unity. For instance, Dayang-
Dayang was executed by her own men.
Katubusan ng Bayan (Redemption of the People) was the
principal Huk publication, which started in mid-1942. It was issued
weekly with between 3,000 to 5,000 copies mimeographed. Its editors
included peasant leaders, trade unionists from Manila and university
people. They chronicled the Huk victories against the Japanese.
The Huks fought guerrilla battles with the enemy forces. In
mid- January, 1945 they liberated much of Tarlac and Pampanga. By
the time the Americans were already in Cabanatuan, there they
found the Huks had already secured the town for them. Municipal
governments attacked by their squadrons were placed under Huk
auspices. The Huks occupied a number of towns in Central Luzon
and also rose against exploitative landlords.
There were some Filipinos who chose to cooperate with the
Japanese and aided them in apprehending the guerrillas and their
supporters. These fanatical pro-Japanese included the Ganaps, the
Pulahanes, the Palaaks, the United Nippon, the Painpars, and the
MAKAPILJs.
The Gamps were the former pro-Japanese Sakdalistas who
served as spies for the Japanese military authorities while the
Pulahanes (from Samar, "pula" means red) acted as guides for the
Japanese in their efforts to arrest people who supported the guerrilla
cause.
The Palaaks, armed with bamboo spears, worked as guards for
the Japanese army while the United Nippon (U.N.), armed with rifles,
wore army uniforms as part of the Japanese military. The members
were recruited from the Ganap Party.
The Pampars (Pambansang Pag-asa ng mga Anak ni Rizal) were
also armed with rifles. The Japanese military authorities in Pililla,
Rizal Province organized the group in 1943. The group members
wore blue denim uniforms with short pants.
The most dreadful one, the MAKAPILI (Makabayan: Katipunan
ng mga Pilipino) was headed by General Artemio Ricarte, Benigno
Ramos, and Pio Duran. This group was organized after the American

liberation forces had already entered the Philippine territory.
MAKAPILI was formally launched in Manila on December 8,1944,
amidst a gala ceremony attended by General Yamashita, President
Laurel, Ricarte, Ramos, Duran, and other high officials.
Escalated guerrilla operations pressed the Japanese army to
offer amnesty. Such offer was given throughout the land but
eventually no guerrilla fighter accepted such dubious proposal. The
Japanese continued their propaganda to secure the cooperation of the
people in various ways like the sponsorship of the Japanese Youth
Leadership Program. Young Bias Ople had already left the program
and joined the ranks of the BMA. The guerrillas carried out missions
that were of great importance to the Allied forces leading to the
eventual liberation of the Philippines.
In June 1944, the Battle of the Philippine Sea began. The air raid
strikes started in Guam to neutralize Japanese offensive. In
desperation, Japanese suicide pilots known as kamikaze (meaning,
divine wind in Japan) engaged in dog-fight air battles against
American warplanes. By August 9, the American fighter planes
began their devastating raids on Japanese military installations in
Mindanao, Visayas, and Manila. Casualties ran high in the Pacific
because of the Japanese feeling that surrender meant dishonor
(Perry, et. al., 1989:711).
On September 21,1944, President Laurel proclaimed martial law
in the country by virtue of Proclamation No. 29. News about General
MacArthur's Pacific Forces nearing the Philippines through the
newspaper, The Tribune, and short wave radio broadcasts made the
Japanese fiercer and more distrustful. Japanese raiding forces
swooped into barrios and assembled all men in tine barrio chapels to
be warned against subversive acts. More zonas were conducted. The
male residents were detained for days.
On October 20,1944, the Leyte beaches were severely
bombarded by American bombers and fighter planes. The new P-38
fighter planes had proven its prowess in air battles. With faster
velocity to go up at a higher altitude, the planes pounded the
Japanese planes below with bullets from the 30/50 caliber machine
guns. The path to Leyte was cleared on the same day, paving the
way for General MacArthur's return together with his allied forces,
landing at Palo Beach. Warships formed a line of defense to protect
the American forces in the island.
Consequently, the American flag was raised at Hill 120 in
Dulag, Leyte. The Japanese suicide pilots crashed their planes on the
American warships at Leyte Gulf. The Battle of Leyte Gulf, the
greatest naval battle in history was fought from October 24 to 26.
Simultaneous with this naval warfare were the following battles: the
Battle of Surigao Strait, the Battle of Samar, and the Battle of Cape
Engano.
On December 21, 1944, President Laurel and his Cabinet moved
to Baguio. The Japanese forces retreated to the "Yamashita Line," a
battlefront stretching along the jungle of Sierra Madre from Antipolo
to Aparri. While retreating, the Japanese took some provisions from
the Filipino civilians, massacred innocent people, and burned towns
and villages.
Despite kamikaze attacks, landings were made at Lingayen Gulf
on January 9,1945. Other American troops landed in Zambales,
Tagaytay, and Batangas. The U.S. Sixth Army, with its headquarters
in Dagupan City, had issued on February 2, a letter of instruction
calling for coordination of all guerrilla units in Central Luzon in
combat operations against the enemy forces. The units of the Sixth
Army were seen riding in a new type of vehicle, which was later
learned to be jeeps. (The army jeeps left by the Americans after
World War II inspired the making of the Philippine jeepney, resized
and remodelled to accommodate commuting passengers numbering
from 20 to 30, making it a smaller versions of a bus). Others boarded
armored cars and half trucks.
On February 3, an American cavalry division entered Grace
Park in the northern outskirts of Manila. With Filipino guerrillas as
guides, they rescued the suffering prisoners at the Santo Tomas
Internment Camp.
By March 3,1945 the Americans had won the war in Manila.
Baguio was captured from the Japanese on April 26. By July 4, the
Americans had officially completed liberating Luzon.
The Japanese made their last stand in Northern Luzon. The US
6
th
Infantry entered Kiangan, Ifugao province and engaged in series
of close fighting. The so-called "Million Dollar Hill" sheltered the 14
th

Area Army under the overall command of General Tomoyuki
Yamashita known as the "Tiger of Malaya" and his elite officers.
There were three infantry divisions to entrap the enemies the
USAFIP NL, the 6
th
Division, and the 32
nd
Division. The Buenavista
boys, detailed with the 6
th
Division and 32
nd
Division, were the first

ones to come near the mouth of the hill. The major obstacle in
blasting the place was the Japanese woodpecker machine gun.
After four months in its Northern Luzon drive, the Buenavista
Regiment's task finally ended. Japan formally announced through
radio broadcast its final surrender on August 14 after the bombing of
Hiroshima and later Nagasaki on August 6 and August 9,
respectively. Two days later, front line units of the USAFIP NL
received Volckmann's order to cease firing.
Negotiations for the surrender of General Yamashita and his
troops began after a Filipino officer 2
nd
Lt. Macario A. Abarillo,
leading a patrol of the 15
th
Infantry Combat Company had
penetrated into enemy lines northwest of Kiangan.
The Kiangan campaign ended on September 2, 1945. General
Yamashita finally ordered his men to lay down their arms. The
surrender was administered by the 1
st
Battalion of the 14
th
Infantry,
supported by other units of the US 6
th
Division. It was also on that
day that Japan formally accepted defeat upon signing a treaty on
board USS Missouri at Tokyo Bay. Ten days after the formal
surrender, Laurel was arrested by the U.S. Army. He was confined in
Sugamo Prison for almost a year and returned to Manila in July 1946.
From Kiangan, the Japanese officers and their respective staff
were brought down by trucks to Bagabag, Nueva Viscaya and flown
to Luna, La Union and finally brought up in jeeps to the American
High Commissioner's Residence at Camp John Hay, Baguio City for
the formal surrender.
From Baguio, Yamashita and his staff were brought to the
National Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa. Yamashita went on trial in
October 1945 before U.S. War Crimes Commission and was
convicted of war atrocities on December 7.
On the early morning of February 23, 1946, Yamashita was
hanged on a tree on top of a hill overlooking the U.P. College of
Agriculture in Los Banos, Laguna. U.S. Army police unit headed by
Col. Charles Haldermann carried the execution order.
President Osmena, who succeeded the late President Quezon,
tackled the task of rehabilitating the land, which had been cruelly
damaged by war. Quezon died on August 1,1944 while in exile in
Saranac Lake, New York. Three days after the Leyte landing,
Osmena was already given the power to govern all territories
liberated by the U.S. forces. This took place at a public ceremony
headed by General MacArthur.
On March 7, 1945, President Osmena signed an Executive Order
providing for the restoration of the executive departments of the
government as they existed prior to Japanese occupation. The Order,
dated February 27, also created the department of information as
part of the Department of Public Instruction.
On March 8, the President sworn into office the new members
of the Cabinet. He also outlined the principles of his government.
These included the adherence to the principles of freedom and
democracy and the establishment of a social and political system
wherein the government officials and employees are servants of the
people. The government reaffirmed the principle of Filipino-
American collaboration.
The Philippines at that time was practically without funds.
Production at the onset was very slow owing to lack of capital to
finance the rehabilitation of destroyed machinery and other
equipment. In the early months of reoccupation, the United States
attended to the needs of the local populace. The Philippine Civil
Affairs Unit of the United States Army (PCAU) became the principal
agency for relief distribution in Manila and the provinces. It also
proceeded to remove municipal officials elected by the Huks and
replaced them with USAFFE guerrillas (ideologically different from
the Huks).
General MacArthur known to be a man of action, at that time
made important decisions for the President. He advised President
Osmena to immediately convoke the Congress, for it was part of the
policy of the American government to restore constitutional
government in the Philippines as soon as law and order had been
established.
Osmena was reluctant at first, believing that the government
might fall into the hands of collaborators whom the American
government suspected of treason. Nevertheless on June 9,1945, the
First Congress of the Philippines convened for the first time since the
election of its members on November 11,1941 with Senator Manuel
A. Roxas chosen as President of the Senate. By July 4,1945, the
Commonwealth was reestablished in Manila.
President Osmena offered Roxas beforehand to go to
Washington as Philippine Resident Commissioner but the latter
refused. Roxas at that time was having in mind his candidacy for
presidency. Two days later, on May 26,1945 he instructed his men to
launch his bid for the position. The worsening relations between

Osmena and Roxas reached its climax when Roxas left the
Nacionalista Party and organized his own party, the Liberal Party.
He took many Nacionalistas with him.
The election of April 23, 1946 resulted in the victory of the
Liberal Party with Roxas and Quirino as the elected President and
Vice-President, respectively. Their party won nine out of 16
contested senatorial seats.
On May 6, 1946, Roxas was inaugurated as the last President of
the Philippine Commonwealth. The inaugural ceremonies were held
on the grounds of the Legislative Building. In his inaugural address
as the last President of the Commonwealth, he cited the groundwork
of his administration - to rebuild the economy from the ruins of war.
He also advocated the establishment of political and economic ties
with America, to help in the rehabilitation of the islands.


Study Guides

Terms/ Concepts to Understand Declaration to Christians in the
Philippines Neighborhood and district associations Binatog Ration
system Sulfathiazole MAKAPILI Sa Pula, Sa Puti Questions to
Answer
1. How did the Japanese military rule the country before and after
the inauguration of the Second Philippine Republic?
2. Describe the living conditions of the Filipinos under the
Japanese occupation.
3. Why did a number of Filipinos join the guerrilla movement
against the Japanese?
4. How did the war in the Pacific end?
5. KALIBAPI Pensionados Zona system Nawarhal
6. Katubusan ng Bayan
7. Kamikaze
8. Kiangan


Chapter X
The Republic

1. Roxas Administration (1946-48)
From the ashes of the Pacific war, a new Philippine Republic
has risen. Philippine sovereignty was finally recognized with
Manuel Roxas as the President of the Third Republic of the
Philippines. On July 4, 1946, at exactly 9:15 a.m., High Commissioner
Paul V. McNutt read President Harry S. Truman's proclamation
announcing to the world the withdrawal of American sovereignty
and the recognition of the independence of the Philippines.
To the accompaniment of the American National Anthem,
Commissioner McNutt lowered the American flag. Thereafter,
President Roxas hoisted the Filipino flag to the accompaniment of
the Philippine National Anthem. He took his oath of office before
Chief Justice Manuel V. Moran of the Philippine Supreme Court. In
his inaugural address, President Roxas thanked the coming of the
United States in 1898 and urged the people to have faith in the
goodness of America.
Following the President's inaugural address was the public
signing of the US-Philippine Treaty of General Relations. Based on
this treaty, the United States withdrew and surrendered all rights of
supervision, control or sovereignty over the Philippines. Likewise,,
the United States would represent the interests of the Philippines in
countries where there is no Philippine representation, pending the
establishment of Philippine diplomatic service abroad.
In the final part of the inaugural rites, a chorus of 1,000 voices
sang the Philippine Independence Hymn. Closing the ceremonies
was the Invocation Prayer by Most Rev. Gabriel M. Reyes, the
Archbishop of Cebu.
The political system of the Philippines was basically patterned
after the U.S., with a bicameral legislature and a president elected
every four years, limited to one reelection.
When Roxas assumed his post, he solved the collaboration issue
by proclaiming amnesty to all political prisoners. Senator Claro M.
Recto refused to be amnestied. He fought his legal battles with the
People's Court and was acquitted.
The Philippines as seen by the administration could not
rehabilitate its economy without American aid and investment.
Subsequently it adopted two laws legislated by the United States

Congress to grow and industrialize. On April 30, 1946, the U.S.
Congress passed two laws that were intended to help the economic
recovery of the country.
The Philippine Trade Act, also known as the Bell Trade Act,
provided for the continuation of free trade with the Philippines and
the United States from 1946 to 1954. For the next 20 years from 1954
to 1974, Philippine exports to the U.S. will pay a gradually increased
tariff rate. The value of the peso was fixed at half an American dollar.
The Philippine Rehabilitation Act on the other hand, also
known as the Tydings Rehabilitation Act resulted to the creation of the
Philippine War Damage Commission to take charge of war damage
payments.
President Roxas really wanted to rebuild the Philippine
economy even if it meant sacrificing national patrimony. In return
for American support, the government went its way to amend the
1935 Philippine Constitution to give parity rights to the Americans.
This obliged the country to grant U.S. citizens and corporations the
same rights as Filipinos in the utilization and exploitation of
Philippine natural resources. In addition, American citizens and
corporations enjoyed the right to acquire land of the public domain,
right to acquire grazing, fishing and mining rights, and the right to
engage in the ownership and operation of public utilities. The people
approved the parity amendment issue in the plebiscite of 1947.
Luis Taruc and his colleagues in the Democratic Alliance were
against the parity rights amendment because they perceived it as
more disadvantageous to the Filipino people. The Huks together
with a new party, the Democratic Alliance, composed of intellectuals
and peasants, succeeded in electing Taruc and their other members
to Congress in 1946. Upon the alleged instigation of President Roxas,
the Congress passed a resolution ejecting Taruc and his six fellow
party members from Congress on the ground of alleged electoral
frauds and terrorism committed by the Huks in Pampanga and
Nueva Ecija. The removal from office of Taruc and his companions
paved the way to the amendment of the Constitution.
Another government action that also generated varied opinions
was the military bases issue. The Military Bases Agreement signed on
March 14, 1947, gave the U.S. free use of 23 base sites for 99 years
(shortened to 25 years in 1959) renewable on expiration of this treaty.
The largest active bases were the Clark Field Air Base in Pampanga
and Subic Naval Base, and the US Seventh Fleet base in Zambales. A
provision of the Military Bases Agreement granted American
military authorities an exclusive jurisdiction over all the offenses or
crimes committed by American personnel within the bases or outside
w
7
hile in the performance.
Taruc returned to his people and thereafter cooperated with
President Roxas in the pacification campaign in the countryside. It
was during the pacification campaign that Taruc and Mateo Castillo
got an intelligence report that they would be killed by their
adversaries, among whom were allegedly government officials. The
two Huk leaders took precautions as forewarned. Whereas, Juan
Feleo, the peasant leader of Nueva Ecija, who did not receive the
warning on time, was kidnapped and murdered while in the
company of MPs who were supposed to provide him security in his
pacification campaign from barrio to barrio. Following this tragic
incident was the killing of Jose Joven, a labor leader.
Believing that the Roxas administration was bowed on checking
the movement of the masses by liquidating its leaders, Taruc wrote a
letter to President Roxas reminding the latter of their demands,
which were mentioned in three prior conferences with the
government. These included the following: the temporary rights of
the people to keep their firearms due to present insecurity, protection
of constitutional rights, removal of some government officials like
Governor (Pablo Angeles) David of Pampanga and the creation of
social welfare projects and agrarian reform. The Huks also
demanded the collectivization of farmlands and the abolition of
tenant farming. They were able to organize a new rebel government
with its own military and administrative procedure.
Inefficient production and very low incomes were among the
basic problems of the people. After the liberation, the economy
improved but for many workers, wages were inadequate.The
government military and the Huks were plunged into hostilities. The
civilians, caught in the crossfire, lived in fear and hunger as
agricultural production decreased due to constant skirmishes
between the contending forces. The government had spent millions
of pesos to apprehend Taruc and his men. For two years, the Roxas
administration tried to pacify the local dissidents but failed.
To solve the peace and order situation, President Roxas issued a
proclamation on March 6, 1948'declaring the Hukbalahap and the
Pambansang Kaisahan ng mga Magbubukid (PKM), which was
reorganized after the war by Mateo del Castillo, as illegal

associations organized and maintained to commit acts of sedition.
People having affiliation with these groups were considered as
enemies of the State and thus, liable to be arrested and imprisoned.
This proclamation outlawing the Huks and PKMs in effect resulted
to indiscriminate arrests and detention of people suspected to be
aiding the rebels.
As early as July 29,1946, President Roxas had already issued
Republic Act No. 4 that called for the surrender of firearms not later
than August 31. The Huks upheld the principle of the people's right
to bear firearms. There was this sentiment among the Huks that their
physical survival depended on their keeping their arms and
ammunitions.
There were wealthy landlords who hired civilian guards to
assail Huk regions. Willful disregard for civil rights was shown in
the Masico Affair in Laguna, in which a group of old and young men
were machine-gunned. The same transgression was committed in
Maliwalu, Bacolor in Pampanga where a group of men and women
were fired upon while they were having a party at night. Those who
committed these acts were not penalized for their crimes. Internal
strife ensued as local dissidents continued to defy the duly
constituted authorities.
The peasants and workers were socially and economically
dislodged due to societal constraints. There were instances wherein
the landlords backed by their civilian guards, coerced their tenants
into signing 50-50 agreements, with crop expenses paid by the
tenants. This was inconsistent with Republic Act No. 34 (approved
on September 30, 1946), which gave the tenants a better share in the
rice harvests, with 70% for tenants and 30% for the landlord.
Fraudulent practices like takipan, which consisted in paying 100%
interest; talinduwa, consisted in paying 50% interest on a loan; and
pasunod, where the peasant was forced to borrow from his landlord
whether he liked it or not, continued to oppress the masses.
Postwar unionism became active. In 1948, the Committee on
Labor Organization (CLO) unions led strikes in large corporations
such as the Philippine Refining Company, Benguet Consolidated
Mines, Manila Trading Company, the Luzon Stevedoring Company,
and Franklin Baker in Laguna.
After the CLO's initial successes, the Partido Komunista ng
Pilipinas (PKP) members in the organizing committee began to
invite non-affiliated labor leaders to join. Cipriano Cid who was then
the first CLO president was succeeded in 1947 by Amado
Hernandez.
President Roxas incessantly undertook other activities to
promote the people's welfare. On April 15, 1948, President Roxas
made a public statement on the reaffirmation of Filipino loyalty to
the United States at the Kelly Theater in Clark Air Base, Pampanga.
The audience enthusiastically received his speech. At that time, he
was no longer feeling well. By evening, his condition became worse.
At around 9:30 p.m., he died of heart failure at the residence of Major
General E. L. Eubank at Clark Field.
Two days later, Vice-President Elpidio Quirino took his oath of
office as President of the Philippines, serving the unexpired term of
the late President Roxas. His first official act was the proclamation of
a state of mourning throughout the country for the former Chief
Executive.

2. Quirino Administration (1948-53)
President Elpidio Quirino took the task of resolving the peace
and order situation of the country so that economic mobilization
could be achieved. The President saw his mission as restoring the
people's faith in government. To realize this objective, the President
sent his brother, former Judge Antonio Quirino to have a dialogue
with Taruc and his men to know what the Huks wanted.
Through the representatives of the Manila Chronicle, I. P.
Soliongco and a photographer, the meeting with Taruc was set on
June 6 in a barrio between the towns of San Miguel and Baliuag,
Bulacan. The negotiations were not readily disclosed to the public.
Taruc allegedly entered into an agreement with Judge Quirino,
which led to his jubilant entry to Manila.
On June 21, Taruc went to Malacanang and in his presence,
President Quirino issued a proclamation granting amnesty to all
Huk and PKM leaders and members. The amnesty given was
absolute and covered crimes of rebellion, sedition, illegal association,
assault, resistance, and disobedience to persons in authority.
The Huks agreed to surrender their arms and ammunitions to
duly constituted authorities within a period of 50 days following the
amnesty grant. Taruc resumed his seat in Congress and collected his
three years' back salaries.
Three hours after the 50-day period, a clash between the 507
th

MP Company and a band of 50 Huks occurred in a barrio of

Cabanatuan. Fighting between the military and the Huks ensued.
Taruc accused the Quirino administration of bad faith when it
refused to give the peasants on- the-spot permits for possessing
firearms, which they need for self-defense. He denounced the
noncompliance of the government to the agreement, which was
approved by Judge Quirino. According to him it included the
following: scrapping of the Bell Trade Act; no resumption of trade
with Japan; division of large estates for distribution to tenants;
release of all Huk prisoners; industrialization; and no military bases
agreement with the United States. Judge Quirino disproved Taruc's
allegations.
The Huk rebellion became more intense in 1949 to 1950. The
Huks continued terrorizing Central Luzon and the provinces around
Manila. They believed that programs regarding land reform were
not instituted. There was no breakup of vast landed estates. The
government did not release more than 600 imprisoned Huks and
PKMs.
The Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (PKP) decided to place their
main emphasis on an armed struggle. The PKP worked out a
systematic expansion program and changed the Hukbalahap to
Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan (HMB) or Army of National
Liberation.
The peace and order contingency reached its climax when on
April 28, 1949, Mrs. Aurora Aragon Quezon, the late President
Quezon's wife, her daughter, Baby, and 10 others were ambushed in
Bongabon, Nueva Ecija. Taruc denied any Huk involvement in the
incident.
In the presidential elections of November 8,1949, President
Quirino was elected, besting Jose P. Laurel (Nacionalista Party) and
former Senate President Jose Avelino (rebel Liberal). He promised to
restore the people's faith in the government.
President Quirino created the President's Action Committee on
Social Amelioration (PACSA) to aid the needy families, the Labor
Management Advisory Board, to advise him on labor matters and
the Agricultural Credit Cooperative Financing Administration
(ACCFA) to help the farmers market their crops. Rural banks were
also established in the rural areas to facilitate credit facilities.
President Quirino also launched his "Total Economic Mobilization
Program" to employ natural resources, manpower, and technical
knowledge for economic progress.
Nongovernmental organizations were also given approval from
the administration. In 1949, the Philippine Jaycees (Junior Chamber
of Commerce) was organized. It is best known for the selection of the
TOYM (Ten Outstanding Young Men) in various fields of endeavor.
In promoting news and information, the Philippine News Service,
the first news agency in the country was established in 1950.
In 1951, Fort Santiago was declared a national shrine. During
the Spanish era, this served as a detention cell where many Filipinos
suspected of rebellion died. It served the same purpose during the
Japanese occupation.
In the realm of diplomacy, President Quirino impressed foreign
heads of states and world statesmen by his intelligence. He
represented the Republic in his official travels to the United States,
Europe, and Southeast Asia.
The Bell Mission was sent by the United States to survey all
aspects of the Philippine economy. It found out that the country had
low income, excessive volume of imports, misdirected investment,
mounting deficits, and corruption in the government.
The Bell Report recommended the following: improvement of
production, higher taxes, a more efficient collection of government
revenues, a minimum wage law, a tax on the sale of foreign
exchange, reforms in public administration, and land reform.
The principal item of the Bell Report was the recommendation
that the United States grant $250 million in economic aid provided
that the Philippine Government would implement the Mission's
suggested programs. To secure this aid, President Quirino had to
accept the recommendations of his American advisers. Thus, on
November 14,1950, the Quirino-Foster Agreement was signed
wherein the Americans would decide on how the Philippine money
would be spent. Under the provision of technical cooperation, the
Philippines had to accept American overseers in various
departments, especially those dealing with military, economic, and
educational matters.
The U.S. Pentagon-State Department sent the Melby Mission to
the Philippines to look into the military equipment needs of the
Philippine Armed Forces and to set up a program for improving its
counter-insurgency capability. The Joint U.S. Military Assistance
Group (JUSMAG) was assigned the task of implementing the Melby
Mission's recommendations, especially on its anti-Huk campaign.

Strict security measures were implemented to check rebel
activities. HMB suspects were arrested and taken to Camp Murphy.
Ramon
Magsaysay, the Secretary of National Defense, based his activities on
the government's objective in eliminating the HMB threat. Secretary
Magsaysay urged President Quirino to suspend the writ of habeas
corpus to be able to detain the Communist suspects beyond the six-
hour limit pending the filing of charges.
President Quirino sent Magsaysay to meet a rebel leader,
Commander Arthur or Taciano Rizal who wanted to surrender.
Rizal told Magsaysay about certain high ranking rebel officers who
were operating in Manila. The Military Intelligence Service (MIS) of
the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) worked to hunt down the
nerve center of the HMB Politburo, the administrative body of the
HMB Central Committee.
Before dawn of October 18,1950, 22 units of the Armed Forces,
aided by the Manila Police raided several places simultaneously.
Among those arrested were Atty. Jose Lava, Federico Bautista,
Simeon Rodriguez, Salome Cruz, Ramon Espiritu, Angel Baking, and
others. Important rebel documents were taken and presented as
evidence in court. The Manila Court of First Instance, presided by
Judge Oscar Castelo pronounced them guilty of the crime of
rebellion. They were sentenced to life imprisonment. This resulted to
the demoralization of a number of HMB members. Many
surrendered and were brought to Mindanao for rehabilitation.
In September 1951, the Philippine government signed a peace
treaty with Japan. However, in early 1952, the agreement was
suspended because the Philippines demanded $8 billion in war
damages. Pending the conclusion of talks on the issue, the Philippine
legislature refused to ratify the peace treaty.
In the last days of the Quirino administration, Moises Padilla, a
Nacionalista Party candidate for town mayor, was mauled and
murdered. After a painstaking investigation, Magsaysay ordered the
arrest of Negros Governor Rafael Lacson, allegedly involved in the
crime. As a result, Magsaysay unquestionably turned out to be the
hero of the people or "man of the masses" for his crusade for peace
and justice.
Magsaysay was able to project his image to the public as a
simple and dedicated man. When the proper opportunity came,
Magsaysay resigned from his cabinet position and joined the
opposition, the Nacionalista Party, which subsequently nominated
him as the presidential standard bearer. This time, he would run
against the Chief Executive.
Magsaysay's presidential campaign was characterized by his
emphasis on both the barrio and the masses. He moved from barrio
to barrio and listened to the grievances of the common people. He
shared with them his humble meals and projected himself as a friend
of the people. He became more popular with his slogan, "land for the
landless."
To ensure peaceful, clean, and honest elections throughout the
country, the National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) was
formally inaugurated in August 1951 with Jaime Ferrer, as the
director. Throughout the Philippines, NAMFREL chapters were
organized. Rallies were held and leaflets were distributed to urge
citizens to vote freely and be vigilant against possible fraud. In the
1953 presidential elections, the Liberal Party lost. Nacionalista Party's
bet Ramon Magsaysay won a decisive victory over the incumbent
president.

3. Magsaysay Administration (1953-57)
On December 30,1953, Ramon Magsaysay and Carlos P. Garcia
were inducted into office at the Luneta amidst a million spectators.
Both of them were dressed in barong tagalog. President Magsaysay
opened the gates of the Malacanang Palace to the masses. He used
the basi, an Ilokano drink, instead of the customary foreign liquor to
exchange toasts with foreign diplomats. He banned nepotism.
Moreover, he prohibited the naming of towns, plazas, bridges, and
avenues after him.
As President, Magsaysay was empowered to purchase large
estates and distribute land to tenant farmers. To implement his land
reform, three legislations were made. The Agricultural Tenancy Act
of 1954 resulted to the shift of share tenancy system to leasehold
system. This law also provided the reduction of land rentals as well
as the prohibition of ejection of tenants except for just cause. The
Court of Agrarian Relations was also created to determine if there
was a just cause in the ejection of tenant. The Land Reform Act of
1955 was also passed to improve landlord-tenant relations.
The Presidential Assistant for Community Development
(PACD) was also established to ensure rural development. The
PACD was created for increased productivity, building of feeder

roads, and improvement of government services in the barrios in the
field of health and education.
Community roads and irrigation projects were expanded.
Agricultural experts were sent to the barrios to instruct farmers in
improved agricultural production. Loans were extended to farmers
through the Agricultural Credit and Cooperative Financing
Administration (ACCFA). Marketing associations, known as Farmers
Cooperative and Marketing Associations (FACOMAs) were
organized throughout the country. The legislation approved by the
Congress on August 11, 1955 empowered the President to break up
large landed estates. Lands were to be distributed to tenant farmers.
Some public lands were also distributed to qualified settlers.
During the first year of the administration 28,000 land patents,
covering 241,000 hectares were issued. The following year, the
number of land patents was increased to 33,075. In 1955, the National
Resettlement and Rehabilitation Administration (NARRA) resettled
some 8,800 families in 22 settlement projects.
It was during Magsaysay's term that Japan agreed to pay war
reparations brought about by World War II amounting to $800
million to the Philippines over a 20-year period.
Mitigation of peasant unrest became the most successful
achievement of the Magsaysay administration. Early in 1954,
President Magsaysay secretly sent Benigno "Ninoy" S. Aquino, Jr., a
journalist of the Daily Mirror and known Filipino war correspondent
in Korea, to confer with Taruc.
After four months of negotiations, Taruc on May 17, 1954
unconditionally surrendered to the government and duly recognized
the authority of President Magsaysay. Taruc was tried in court and
sentenced to 12 years in jail. Many of his men likewise surrendered
or were arrested, except Dr. Jesus Lava (later became the chief of the
Communist Party of the Philippines), who was captured in May 1964
in a house on P. Leoncio St., Manila. The back of rebellion fell into
government custody.
To counteract the communist activities in the Philippines and
the rest of neighboring countries in the Southeast Asian region the
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was established in
Manila. On September 8, 1954, the SEATO, patterned after the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was founded with the
following member-states: Australia, France, Great Britain, New
Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Thailand, and the United States.
Senator Claro M. Recto had been lukewarm to the idea of
SEATO, for such organization might unnecessarily provoke some
Asian neighbors. He was also against the commitment of Filipino
troops in foreign wars particularly in Indochina. On the Senate floor,
Recto mentioned that President Magsaysay had committed the
Philippines in excess of his constitutional authority.
Recto opposed Magsaysay on several issues. This included the
Foreign Investment Bill, which allowed private U.S. investment in
the Philippines, labeling it as another American scheme to impede
the country's economic development.
Another issue that Recto criticized was about the signing of the
Laurel-Langley Agreement that took place on December 15,1954,
signed by Senator Jose Laurel and James Langley in Washington
D.C. This agreement provided for the gradual abolition of free trade
between the U.S. and the Philippines from January 1, 1956 to July 3,
1974. According to him, such agreement would perpetuate the status
of the Philippines as an economic satellite.
Recto's Rizal Bill, which proposed to make Rizal's Noli Me
Tangere and El Filibusterismo compulsory in all universities and
colleges was opposed in the Senate by Decoroso Rosales, brother of
Archbishop Rosales; Mariano Cuenco, brother of Archbishop
Cuenco; and Francisco Rodrigo, former president of Catholic Action.
Their contention was that the measure would violate freedom of
conscience and religion.
On May 12, 1956 the controversial bill was finally approved by a
substitute measure authored by Senator Laurel and based on the
proposals of Senators Roseller T. Lim and Emmanuel Pelaez. It was
now possible for students to be exempted from using the
unexpurgated edition of the Noli and Fili on grounds of religious
beliefs. By virtue of Republic Act No. 1425, the Rizal Bill was signed
as a law on August 26,1956.
President Magsaysay, who was hoping for reelection died in a
fatal airplane crash at Mt. Manunggal in Cebu on March 17,1957. The
next day, March 18
th
, Vice-President Carlos P. Garcia was inducted
into office to complete the last eight months of Magsaysay in office.
In the presidential elections of November 12,1957, Garcia ran
under the Nacionalista Party with Jose Laurel, Jr. as his running
mate. Jose Yulo and Congressman Diosdado Macapagal of the
Liberal Party; Manuel Manahan and Vicente Araneta of the
Progressive Party; and Senator Claro M. Recto and Lorenzo Tariada

of the Lapiang Makabarisa (Nationalist Citizens Party) ran for
President and Vice-President, respectively.
The election of 1957 was recorded in history as one of the
noisiest and most expensive. Garcia won his four-year term as
president, but his Liberal Party rival defeated his running mate.
Voters were allowed to split their votes for president and vice-
president.

4. Garcia Administration (1957-61)
On December 30, 1957, President Carlos P. Garcia and Vice-
President Diosdado Macapagal were inducted into office.
Underscoring the socioeconomic problems that confronted the
country, President Garcia anchored his program of government in
austerity, which involves temperate spending, less imports, and less
extravagant consumption. He was instrumental in pressing the
Philippine case in the United States for war damage claims arising
from World War II.
President Garcia expressed himself as against alien domination
in the national economy. On August 28,1958, the National Economic
Council passed Resolution No. 204, officially promulgating the
Filipino First policy of the administration. The resolution called for
the adoption of guidelines giving preferential treatment to Filipino
businessmen. Despite pressure from the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), President Garcia refused to liberalize import controls.
Not surprisingly, Garcia's nationalistic policies caused
disapproval from foreign business quarters. The American Chamber
of Commerce vehemently opposed the measure. A. V. H.
Hartendorp, editor of the American Chamber of Commerce Journal,
mentioned that the passage of the NEC resolution would willfully
destroy existing industry. The
Filipino Chamber of Commerce resigned from the International
Chamber of Commerce because of the latter's opposition to the
policy.
On November 16,1958, a coup d' etat plan of a group of military
men was revealed by Bartolome Cabangbang, Congressman from
Garcia's home province of Bohol. According to Cabangbang, the
initial steps consisted of a propaganda campaign to brand Garcia as a
communist supporter and to build up Defense Secretary Jesus
Vargas as the heroic defender of the Philippine democracy in the
1951,1953,1955, and 1957 elections.
Garcia's administration was also criticized for graft and
corruption. Cabangbang claimed that the coup planners had not
gone beyond the first stage of their schemes because they could not
get the support of the armed forces.
As a result of the publications of Cabangbang's revelations, a
libel suit was filed against him by Colonel Nicanor Jimenez, one of
those alleged to have been involved. Cabangbang won the case.
Secretary Vargas and the Chief of Staff, General Alfonso Arellano,
later resigned.
Nevertheless, a considerable number of accomplishments may
be attributed to the Garcia administration. International goodwill by
state visits to Japan, the United States, South Vietnam, and Malaysia
were also made stronger.There was the revival of Filipino culture.
Filipino folk dance groups like the Bayanihan Dance Troupe were
encouraged. The government sponsored the annual Republic
Cultural Heritage Awards for Filipino scientists, artists, musicians,
fiction writers, and historians. The Dr. Jose Rizal Centennial
Commission was created to supervise the compilation of writings of
Dr. Rizal.
From the 1950s to 1969, Carlos "Botong" Francisco, a modernist
became popular for his work on paintings and murals. He portrayed
scenes from history and characters from Philippine folklore such as
Mariang Makiling. He did the mural for the Manila City Hall.
Hernando R. Ocampo, Vicente Manansala, and Cesar Legaspi also
became known in the art scene. In sculpture, Napoleon Abueva
became a byword among art enthusiasts. He uses a wide variety of
materials like wood, stone, metals, and a combination of these.
Comic strips reflected the concerns of the times as in Kenkoy by Tony
Velasquez, Darna and Captain Barbell by Mars Ravelo, Kalabog en
Bosyo and Asyong Aksaya by Larry Alcala.
In the presidential election of November 14,1961, the results
showed that Garcia's zealous campaign had not garnered adequate
electoral support. Graft and corruption in the bureaucracy continued
to plague the society. The administration failed to stop inflation,
smuggling, and criminality. President Garcia lost his bid for
reelection. The Liberal Party once again mounted into power.

5. Macapagal Administration (1961-65)
On December 30, 1961, Diosdado Macapagal with his running
mate Emmanuel Pelaez were inducted into office. In addressing the

Congress on January 22,1962, President Macapagal targeted the
following areas for his administration: self-sufficiency in the staple
food of the people, conditions that will provide more income and a
well-formulated socioeconomic program. He promised to strengthen
the sense of morality of government by instituting modes of reform
and set the example of honest and simple living.
On the eve of the turnover of Malacanang to him, Garcia
appointed more than 200 of his followers to some important
positions in the government. One of these was that of the Central
Bank Governor. It was given to former Secretary of Finance
Dominador Aytona by outgoing President Garcia. Macapagal
appointed Andres Castillo to the said position. Both appointees held
office at the same building. On January 2, 1962, the Philippine
Constabulary Rangers, called in by Castillo through Defense
Secretary Macario Peralta, besieged the building to throw out
Aytona.
Aytona then filed with the Supreme Court an appeal for the
issuance of a writ of prohibition and mandamus with preliminary
injunction to pull out Castillo from the Central Bank Governor's
chair. The Supreme Court in its decision, upheld Castillo as the
legitimate governor of the Central Bank.
When Macapagal occupied Malacanang, he vowed that he
would root out graft and corruption in the government. High
government officials, from cabinet to congressman were constantly
the focus of public attention owing to rumors of illegal transactions
involving million of pesos.
On March 3, 1962, Secretary of Justice Jose W. Diokno ordered
the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) agents to raid the offices
of the Industrial and Business Management Corporation on San Luis
Street (now Teodoro M. Kalaw St.). Arrested were Harry S. Stonehill
and his associates John L. and Robert P. Brooks. The NBI raided
some forty widely scattered business establishments owned by
Stonehill.
Seized during the raids were huge amounts of cash, electronic
devices, which included telephone-tapping instruments and
telephone-jamming device, and most importantly, the so-called Blue
Book, a small orange book containing the names of persons in and
outside the government, who allegedly received various sums from
Stonehill.
During the congressional investigation of the Stonehill case,
President Macapagal ordered the immediate deportation of Stonehill
and Robert P. Brooks since their presence constitutes a menace to the
welfare and security of the country. The order was severely criticized
by many. Senator Arturo M. Tolentino, a Nacionalista, called the
presidential order a dangerous precedent.
Six months after his election, President Macapagal issued an
executive order shifting Philippine Independence Day from the
traditional July 4 to June 12, the day, when in 1898, Philippine
Independence from Spain was proclaimed at Kawit, Cavite by
Emilio Aguinaldo. Former President Aguinaldo was the guest of
honor during the first Independence Day celebration in 1962. July 4
was then declared Philippine-American Friendship Day.
In continuing his campaign for nationalism, President
Macapagal encouraged the use of the Filipino Language in
diplomatic passports, diplomatic credentials, school diplomas, traffic
signs and stamps as well as naming of typhoons. It was d uring his
term that the Philippines officially filed her claim over North Borneo
(Sabah) on June 22,1962.
President Macapagal, who loved to call himself the "poor boy
from Lubao," saw the need of beneficial changes in the countryside.
He was called the "Champion of the Common Man" because of his
accomplishments in improving the plight of the masses. On August
8, 1963, Republic Act No. 3844 or the Agricultural Land Reform
Code was signed into a law after stormy debates in the Congress.
Under the Code, share tenancy system in agriculture had to be
replaced with agricultural leasehold system. It provided for the
purchase of private farmlands and distribution of lots to landless
tenants on easy terms of payment. Experiment in leasehold system
was conducted in 12 towns in Central Luzon, declared as land
reform areas by President Macapagal. Plaridel, Bulacan became the
first land reform area. The new system had reportedly improved the
living conditions in the land reform areas.
The President also sponsored notable projects like the
construction of the North and South Expressway, housing for
soldiers and government employees, beautification of Rizal Park,
and the establishment of the Philippine Veterans Bank.
In external affairs, the Philippines had been cultivating closer
relations with Asian countries. President Macapagal proposed a
conference among the leaders of the Philippines, Indonesia, and

Malaya. The conference held in Manila from June 7 to 11,1963
resulted to a 16-point agreement known as the Manila Accord
approved on July 31 and was signed by President Macapagal,
President Sukarno of Indonesia, and Prime Minister Tunku Abdul
Rahman of the Federation of Malaya. Then, on August 6, the three
national leaders issued the Manila Declaration, which laid down the
principles that would direct their countries known as
MAPH1L1NDO (Malaya, Philippines, and Indonesia).
In preparation for the creation of Malaysia in 1963, which
would include Federation of Malaya and former British crown
colonies North Borneo (Sabah) and Sarawak, President Macapagal
refused to recognize the establishment of Malaysia to force the latter
to recognize the country's territorial claim to Sabah.
In the 17
th
century, Sabah was given to the Philippines as a part
of the agreement between the sultan of Sulu and sultan of Brunei
until it was leased in 1878 to British North Borneo Company, which
had no authority to bestow Sabah to Malaysia. The contract of lease
of 1878 used the word "padjack," which means "lease" according to
Dutch, American, and Spanish scholars. The British had translated it
to "cession."
The Philippines, in an attempt to resolve the Sabah issue
suggested that the question be elevated to World Court for decision,
but the Malaysian leaders refused. The Cobbold Commission formed
by the British and Malayan government determined that about two-
thirds of Sabah residents wanted to join Malaysia. A United Nations
mission sent to Borneo held a poll regarding the Sabah territorial
claim issue. It had a similar finding. The Federation of Malaysia was
established. On September 16, 1963, the Philippines severed
diplomatic ties with Malaysia. Malaysia closed its embassy in Manila
as well. MAPHILINDO ceased to operate.
The President's integrity and impressive record of
accomplishments made it possible for him to lead his people and
withstand the pressing needs of the nation. Despite the government's
concern to solve the problem of peace and order, graft and
corruption as well as inflation, the Nacionalista Party took advantage
of public displeasure on some issues like the administration's
decontrol policy, which favored foreign investors and the floating
rate of the peso. Instead of P2 to $1, the peso devaluated to the dollar
at a P3.90.
Many hopeful candidates exercised various political schemes in
upcoming elections. Senate President Ferdinand E. Marcos had his
film biography shown titled Iginuhit ng Tadhana (Written by Fate). It
did a lot to project a good image of the leading character in the
movie. People came to know the life story of Marcos.
Senate President Marcos was born in Sarrat, Ilocos Norte in
1917. While he was still a law student he was incriminated in a
politically motivated murder in 1937. Marcos was convicted in
November 1939 for the assassination of Assemblyman Julio
Nalundasan, one of his father's political rivals. In the Laoag
Provincial Jail he spent time preparing his defense. Released on bail,
he graduated at the University of the Philippines (U.P.), topped the
bar, appealed his own case before the Supreme Court, and won
acquittal. During World War II, he served as an intelligence officer of
the liberation forces. In 1949, he was elected to the House of
Representatives and to the Senate in 1959 under the Liberal Party.
In 1964, he joined the Nacionalista Party and became the party's
presidential bet. His wife Imelda and her circle of "Blue Ladies" gave
him full support. His popular maxim, "This nation can be great
again," won the hearts of the Filipino people. In the presidential
election of November 9, 1965, the Liberal Party lost. The Nacionalista
Party once more became the party in power. Marcos won a big
majority.

6. Marcos Administration (1965-1986)
For more than 40 million Filipinos, what they wanted to see at
that time was whether or not the present government can provide
the leadership necessary to restore peace and harmony in the society.
During the first term of his administration (1965-1969), President
Ferdinand E. Marcos met the enormous task of restructuring the
country's social and economic conditions.
Prior to his term of office, the national treasury was primarily
empty due to heavy government spending. The government-owned
bank itself, the Philippine National Bank (PNB) was nearly insolvent,
due to unpaid loans to government corporations, which amounted to
more than P400 million. President Marcos was able to stabilize the
government finances by means of effective collection of taxes and
getting loans from foreign banks and governments.
To achieve self-sufficiency in rice and corn, financial aid and
technological assistance were extended to farmers. More aid to

agriculture was offered by the government through the construction
of more irrigation systems, cultivation of a rice variety called LR8
better known as Miracle Rice and other fast growing rice seeds. This
Miracle Rice propelled the Green Revolution in rice production in
many Third World countries.
Building of more roads, bridges, schoolhouses, and other
structures like the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) complex
in 1969, which consists of a theater for the performing arts, museum,
and an art library were likewise done to best serve the needs of a
growing population.
Vigorous campaign against smuggling, kidnapping, drug
trafficking, and other crime syndicates was also given emphasis,
since the peace and order situation was quite alarming owing to the
rising incidence of criminality.
Rapid development and economic progress characterized
President Marcos' first term. In general, the people were satisfied by
the President's performance, thus resulting to his reelection in 1969.
He was the only President of the Philippines to be reelected for a
second term. On December 30,1969, he took his oath of office in the
native language, the first ever for a Philippine president.
President Marcos also met opposing views during his first term
in office. The people were surprised when he allowed the
Philippines to give military support to the United States in the
Vietnam War. Late in 1964, when Marcos was still the Senate
President, he opposed the bill providing for the sending of a military
engineering battalion to Vietnam. He made clear that the sending of
Philippine combat troops to war is unconstitutional. Based on the
1935 Philippine Constitution, the country renounces war as an
instrument of national policy.
No less than 3,000 members of the youth sector demonstrated
on the first day of the Manila Summit scheduled from October 24 to
25,1966. They rallied near the American Embassy and the Manila
Hotel, where the U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson was billeted.
They denounced the participation of the country in the Vietnam War
as well as condemned the abuses and brutality of the police who lost
their temper at the height of the political protest.
The police reacted by filing charges against 41 students for
breach of peace and assault. President Marcos ordered the dropping
of the charges against the students to put the situation in order.
The Summit was held regarding the settlement of the war in
Vietnam. Delegates from the United States, Thailand, Australia, New
Zealand, South Vietnam, and South Korea were invited. The
conference resulted to the preparation of three documents: a joint
communique; a declaration of peace and progress in Asia and the
Pacific; and the goals of freedom.
The joint communique pertained to the summary of the
discussions of the seven nations, with emphasis on conditions in
South Vietnam, the search for peace, economic stability, and
progress. The declaration of peace and progress included the
following ideals: that aggression must not succeed; that the bonds of
poverty, illiteracy and disease be broken; that the economic, social,
and cultural cooperation within the Asian and Pacific region be
strengthened; and that there would be reconciliation and peace
throughout Asia. The third document, "The Goals of Freedom,"
contained a commitment to achieve the ideals contained in the
second document.
President Marcos succeeded in including in the communique
that aid to South Vietnam refers not to military but to the economic
and social assistance. Any Philippine effort to increase her aid to
South Vietnam shall be subjected to constitutional and congressional
ethics.
Be that as it may, Marcos was reelected to an unprecedented
second full term in 1969. He based his campaign on his
achievements, which include the increase of gross domestic product,
expansion of infrastructure, and the breakthrough in rice production
in which made us an exporter of the product. His popularity started
to decline due to perceived dishonesty in the 1969 campaign, alleged
government corruption, and worsening peace situation.
With the global economic crisis brought about by the rising oil
price, the Philippine economy was adversely affected in the 1970s.
Aside from economic recession, civil unrest caused by the
ascendancy of dirty politics, graft and corruption continued to afflict
the nation. There was also the upsurge of communism and
subversion. The increasing gap between the rich and the poor
became more evident. The 1935 Philippine Constitution was seen by
the Marcos administration as unable to cope with the new
socioeconomic problems of the country.
Due to the deplorable conditions of the country, student
militarism became intense. Realizing the need for unification and the

importance of knowing the issues, student organizations, councils,
and fraternities were formed.
Among the militant groups were the Kabataang Makabayan (KM)
and the National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP).
Professors and other intellectuals played a major role in providing
support. Some had formed and headed their own organizations and
provided some radical ideas through lectures, meetings, symposia,
and classroom discussions. Aside from them, various labor groups
closely associated themselves with student movements.
In January 1970, President Marcos met NUSP President Edgar
"Edjop" Jopson of the Ateneo de Manila and other student leaders in
a dialogue at Malacanang. This took place four days after a riot took
place following the State of the Nation Address of the President on
January 26.
These youth leaders were calling for a nonpartisan
Constitutional Convention. They wanted an assurance that the
president would not run for a third term for this is sanctioned by the
present constitution. However, the dialogue was unproductive.
Another confrontation occurred between riot police and about
2,000 demonstrators outside the Palace. The demonstrators were
attempting to ram a fire truck through Gate 4 of Malacanang. This is
now known as the "Battle of Mendiola." By dawn, six students had
already been killed. The press dubbed these events as the beginning
of the First Quarter Storm.
Protests and riots continued. After holding a People's Congress
in Plaza Miranda, around 3,000 youths and militant groups attacked
the U.S. embassy in Manila in February. They were accusing the
United States with being a fascist imperialist power supporting the
Marcos administration. Various schools in Manila became nurseries
of student activism.
The following month, the Movement for a Democratic
Philippines organized a People's March, a 23-kilometer march from
Quezon City- Manila Rotonda along the streets of Manila and ending
at the Post Office building (Plaza Lawton) in Manila.
Tt was in the 1960s that President Marcos allegedly created a
military force composed of Muslim youths to forcibly take Sabah.
The invasion did not take place. The Muslim young recruits were
killed by their commanders after they have discovered the real
reason of their training. The marchers were prevented from entering
the U.S. embassy.
By the early 1970s two separatist groups, the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF) and the communist New People's Army
(NPA) waged guerrilla warfare against the Marcos administration.
Nur Misuari, a respected intellectual and campus radical at the
University of the Philippines (in the mid-1960s), formally established
the MNLF in an island off the coast of Perak, Malaysia in 1971.
Muslim secessionist movement in Mindanao was gaining ground.
Misuari was among the first group of 90 trainees who worked for the
independence of the Moro nation (Bangsa Moro).
Founded two years thereafter was the National Democratic
Front (NDF), serving as the political arm of the Communist Party of
the Philippines (CPP). It was given the duty to make strategic
alliances with militant, government, and other opposition groups.
The NPA became the military force (Hukbo) of the CPP.
The political dissension reached its peak in the so-called "Plaza
Miranda Massacre" on the evening of August 21, 1971 during the
proclamation rally of the Liberal Party (LP) candidates for the local
elections scheduled on November 8,1971.
Unidentified men on the platform hurled two fragmentation
grenades and killed 8 persons and injured 120, including most of the
opposition senatorial candidates. Among those injured were Jovito
Salonga, John Osmena, Eddie llarde, Ramon Mitra, and Eva Estrada
Kalaw. (The CPP-NPA under the direction of Jose Maria Sison
admitted decades after that they had caused the bombing. Sison had
anticipated that the split of political leadership in a revolutionary
situation would lead to a communist takeover).
President Marcos blamed the communists for the bombing
incident. He vowed to impose martial law if the communist attacks
persist. On the same day, President Marcos issued Proclamation No.
880, suspending the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in order to
maintain peace and order and preserve the au thority of the State.
However on January 12, 1972, the President restored this
constitutional right, except for those who were already in detention.
Terrorist bombings of public and private property and
residences ensued. On September 11, two explosions hit the main
office of the Manila Electric Company. Assassination attempts on
President Marcos, Congressman Eduardo Cojuangco, Senator Jose
Roy, and Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile were allegedly to be
carried out by the rebels. These destabilization efforts would
ostensibly warrant the imposition of martial law in the country.

Senator Ninoy Aquino who became the most outspoken critic of
the Marcos administration in various issues, mentioned in his
privileged speech, that sources in the Armed Forces had revealed to
him plans for Oplan Sagittarius, which would place Manila and its
environs under martial law. Soon this revelation became a dismal
reality.
Facing leftist insurgency and mass unrest, Marcos declared
martial law. On September 23, 1972, at 7:30 p.m., President Marcos
appeared on nationwide radio and television to formally announce
that he had placed the entire Philippines under martial law as of 9
p.m. of the previous day.
The implementation of martial law in the country was pursuant
to Proclamation No. 1081, which he had signed on September
21,1972. This law was declared by the President "to save the
Republic" from lawlessness and civil strife. Some sectors believed
that President Marcos declared martial law as his second term was
about to end. The constitution was suspended. The Congress was
dissolved and President Marcos governed by issuing presidential
decrees, letters of instruction, and other rules deemed favorable to
the society.
Under martial law, President Marcos being the Chief Executive
had emergency powers. The President suspended the writ of habeas
corpus and curtailed the freedom of speech, press and assembly. He
also imposed strict implementation of curfew.
Political opponents and detractors were arrested and detained.
Among them were Senators Ninoy Aquino, Jose Diokno and Ramon
Mitra, Teofisto Guingona, Jose Nolledo, Jose Mari-Velez (radio-
television commentator), and journalist Maximo Soliven.
Mass media were closed and placed under military control.
Some of them were later permitted to reopen but under strict
censorship. Even public utilities and industries were seized and
placed under.government control. These included the Manila Electric
Company (Meralco), Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company,
and the Iligan Integrated Steel Mill.
Student demonstrations, public political meetings, and labor
strikes were strictly prohibited. All schools were closed for one week.
Curfew was imposed from midnight to 4 a.m. Travel ban was
imposed on Filipinos who wanted to go abroad, except on official
missions. The ban was lifted on August 22,1977, together with the
curfew.
A force of nearly 1,000 men attacked Marawi City on October
21,1972. The assailants called themselves the Mindanao
Revolutionary Council for Independence, led by a former police chief
of Marawi City. After the incident, Nur Misuari and his Bangsa Moro
Army (BMA) likewise initiated armed struggle in Sulu, Cotabato,
and Zamboanga. Muslim separatist movement in South began in the
1970s. After the country gained independence, the Filipino
government has encouraged non-Muslims to move to Mindanao.
The Filipino-Muslims view this policy as designed to de-Islamize the
region and to take control of the island's resources. This resulted to
years of bloody encounters between the government and the
separatist groups.
Amidst confusion in the country, President Marcos outlined his
land reform program in accordance to Presidential Decree No. 27.
This law provides that all tenants whose landlords own more than
seven hectares of rice and corn lands are to be sold at a price two-
and-a-half times the average annual production. The eligible tenant
would receive a Certificate of Land Transfer (CLT) identifying his
cultivated area and promising him the right to purchase the land.
President Marcos took forceful steps against the heightening
illegal drug trade. On January 3,1973, he ordered the immediate
execution of Lim Seng by firing squad for drug trafficking. The
highly publicized execution, shown on national television was meant
to serve as a warning for drug dealers.
A new constitution was promulgated. The 1973 Constitution
established a modified parliamentary form of government with the Prime
Minister as the head of the government and the President as
ceremonial head of state. Both were to be elected by the unicameral
National Assembly.
In the plebiscite of January 10-15, 1973, the citizen assemblies,
composed of voters (including the 15-year olds) were reported to
have ratified the constitution by 95% positive majority, in open and
group voting by raising their hands. (The assembly could declare a
quorum with 20 percent attendance). At noon of January 17,1973,
President Marcos signed the constitution and thus, such body of laws
was put into effect.
Mr. Marcos ruled as President and Prime Minister under
martial law powers until 1981. The transitory provisions of the
constitution legalized all decrees, proclamations and orders of the
President, and extended his term of office beyond 1973.

President Marcos sought popular sanction of his acts by
referendums. A referendum held on July 27-28,1973, asked the
people to decide whether they wanted President Marcos to continue
beyond 1973. According to the official results, 90% of the voters
voted yes. President Marcos, moreover, continued exercising his
emergency powers under martial law as approved by 92% voters in a
third referendum held on February 27-28, 1975.
The President claimed that martial law was the prelude to
creating a Bagong Lipunan (New Society) based on new social and
political values. HLs proposed reforms for the building of this New
Society are based on the acronym PLEDGES.
P - Peace and Order
L - Land Reform
E - Economic Development
D - Development of Moral Values
G - Government Reforms
E - Educational Reforms
S - Social Services
To check the abuses of the military men, President Marcos
established the military tribunals to try military officers and men
who commit crimes.
The citizen assemblies used to ratify the constitution and
amendments subsequently became the barangays. The Kabataang
Barangay (Youth
Council) was later added at local, provincial, and national levels of
government, headed by Tmee Marcos, the president's eldest
daughter. At the end of 1975, the Sangguniang Bay an was created in
every town council. The National Legislative Advisory Council
(Batasang Bayan) was created in September 1976.
Before conducting the first national election under Martial Law,
President Marcos implemented a new Election Code of 1978. Marcos
formed the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL or New Society
Movement), which fielded candidates in all regions, headed by Mrs.
Imelda Romualdez Marcos in Metro Manila.
The opposition parties of the past, such as the Liberal Party
boycotted the elections. However, Lakas ng Bayan (Laban or
People's Power) led by former Senator Benigno Aquino Jr. became
the principal contending party of the KBL for the national elections.
This election brought about a landslide victory for the KBL.
In 1975, the Metro Manila Commission was organized through
Presidential Decree No. 824 to supervise community development
and services in the National Capital Region. Its first governor was
Mrs. Marcos, the First Lady.
Mrs. Marcos sought for the construction of edifices for the
Filipino people. In 1975, the Manila Planetarium, a dome-shaped
structure was inaugurated. It was primarily built for students to
ponder on lessons about celestial bodies while seated.
The Philippine International Convention Center (PICC) was
made operational in 1976. The structure was regarded as the most
modern institution in Asia on world conferences and meetings.
To provide low-cost shelter facilities to urban families, the
BLISS program (Bagong Lipunan Improvement of Sites and Services)
was established on June 11,1978.
President Marcos took steps in liberalizing Philippine policy
toward Communist countries such as the People's Republic of China
(June 9,1975) and the Soviet Union (June 2,1976). He opened
diplomatic relations with Romania and Yugoslavia and granted
permission for Communist traders and vessels to enter the country,
thus, ending a ban that had been in force since 1945.
Relations with the United States continued. The status of the US
military bases was redefined when some amendments to the RP-U.S.
Military Bases Agreement in 1947 was signed on January 6,1979,
where the U.S. acknowledged the sovereignty of the Philippines over
the American military bases and reduced their total area. The
contract also provided that the U.S. would pay rentals to the
Philippines for the use of the bases.
In 1979, through the joint cooperation of the Philippine
government and the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), the Philippine Refugee Processing Center
(PRPC) was established in Morong, Bataan for the war refugees from
Vietnam, Kampuchea, and Laos. In 1980, the Light Rail Transit
Authority was organized to construct the first light railway transit
(LRT) system in the country. This was to ease the problem of traffic
and congestion from Monumento to Baclaran.
Several opposition groups including the church hierarchy
sought for the end of martial law. Urban insurgents carried out series
of bombings in Manila in defiance to military rule.
Finally on January 17, 1981, President Marcos signed
Proclamation No. 2045 ending martial law in the country. Changes in

1981 gave birth to the "New Republic," historically speaking, the
Fourth Philippine Republic.
On June 16, 1981, the first presidential election after the lifting of
martial law was held. President Marcos (KBL presidential candidate)
won a new six-year term. He prevailed over other candidatesAlejo
Santos of Nacionalista Party and Bartolome Cabangbang of the
Federal Party. Santos was a former guerrilla leader and defense
secretary while Cabangbang was then the President of the Statehood
USA movement.
Opposition to the Marcos administration persisted as the
conditions during the martial law ensued. Protestations against the
administration continued to be restricted under the provisions of the
Presidential Commitment Order (PCO) and arrest and seizure
without warrant orders (ASSO). These laws allowed the president to
order the detention of anyone suspected of subversion or rebellion.
Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr., a leading oppositionist to President
Marcos was brutally murdered by a shot from behind while going
down the plane of China Airlines (CAL) on August 21,1983 at
around 1:00 p.m. When he decided to come back in 1983, the
government tried to stop him, noting that some people wanted to kill
him. Yet he was able to fly back to the Philippines upon returning
home from exile in the United States.
Ninoy Aquino, born in 1932 entered politics at the age of 22 and
became the youngest mayor, then governor, and finally a senator of
the Philippines. He was married to Corazon Cojuangco in 1954. He
was imprisoned in 1972 after martial law was declared. He spent
nearly eight years in a military detention cell at Fort Bonifacio.
President Marcos allowed him to leave the country in 1980 and to
move his family to the United States to undergo a heart bypass
surgery.
Upon Aquino's arrival at the Manila International Airport (now
named the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in his honor), he was
shot dead while in the custody of the guards from the Aviation
Security Command (AVSECOM). Government reports placed the
blame on Rolando Galman, the alleged lone gunman. They laid the
body of the assassin near Aquino on the airport tarmac.
The assassination led the country into the forefront of
international news. Thousands of Filipinos sympathized with
Aquino's bereaved family. Many joined his funeral march. His
assassination became a catalyst that united the Filipinos to fight the
evils of dictatorship openly.
The battlecry "Ninoy, hindi ka nag-iisa" (you are not alone) and
other similar slogans were heard in various demonstrations that had
erupted in Metro Manila and other areas in the country. Many
militant and cause- oriented groups were organized. They called for
an end to Marcos regime. These groups included the following:
August Twenty-One Movement (ATOM), Justice for Aquino, Justice
for All QAJA), and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN).
The opposition members of the Batasan took the step in filing a
case for the impeachment of the President for graft and corruption,
culpable violence of the Constitution, gross violation of his oath of
office, and other high crimes. On August 13, 1985, the impeachment
signatories filed the resolution. On the same date, the pre-
government KBL, with the majority vote of 105 (over 55 opposition
members) decided to reject the resolution to impeach the President.
Investigation of Aquino's death and that of his alleged killer,
was assigned to a five-man independent body created pursuant to
Presidential Decree No. 1886 issued by President Marcos on October
14,1983. The body known as Agrava Fact-Finding Board (AFFB) was
headed by Mrs. Corazon Juliano Agrava, a retired Court of Appeals
Justice. The four other members were businessman Dante Santos,
labor leader Ernesto Herrera, lawyer Luciano Salazar, and educator
Amado Dizon.
After almost two years of investigation, AFFB submitted two
reports to President Marcos the Minority and Majority Reports. The
Minority Report, written by the Chairman alone, submitted on
October 23,1984, stated that the Aquino Murder was a military
conspiracy. It implicated that only Brig. Gen. Luther Custodio
(commander of the AVSECOM) and six other soldiers. Chairman
Agrava cleared General Fabian Ver and Major General Prospero
Olivas of the crime.
The Majority Report signed by all the four members of the
board confirmed that Aquino's murder was a military conspiracy
with a soldier as an assassin but it implicated 26 men in the crime,
including General Ver, Maj. Gen. Olivas, Brig. Gen. Custodio, and
others.
President Marcos referred the two reports to the Sandiganbayan
for trial of the 26 accused people (including one civilian). The trial of
the Aquino-Galman double murder case, known as the "Trial of the

Century," began in February 1985 and lasted for seven months. On
December 2, 1985, the three-member Sandiganbayan presided over
by Justice Manuel Pamaran, released its verdict unanimously
acquitting all the 26 accused. The people were skeptical on the
outcome of the prosecution.
In 1985, the Philippine political and economic scenario
worsened. There was a slow down of economic activities largely
brought about by the increase of oil price in the world market. In
contrast, the country's traditional exports such as sugar and coconut
oil were experiencing price decline. The government's recovery
scheme, which started in 1984 through Sariling Sikap livelihood
program suffered a setback due to graft and corruption in the
bureaucracy. Foreign investors were apprehensive to expand
resources because of political instability. Furthermore, the anti-
Marcos demonstrations affected the tourism industry.
To have enough supply of foreign exchange and to restructure
the country's foreign debts, President Marcos negotiated with
foreign creditors, which include the World Bank, International Bank
for Reconstruction and Development, and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). The country's foreign debt has reached $26
billion.
The country's foreign creditors pressured President Marcos to
institute reforms as a condition for the grant of additional economic
and financial help. Since the President needed a new mandate from
the people to carry out a national economic recovery program, the
Batasang Pambansa enacted a law scheduling a special presidential
election on February 7, 1986. This was to prove that Mr. Marcos was
still in control of the situation.
There were several opposition leaders who would like to run
for presidency and one of them was former Senator Salvador "Doy"
Laurel, son of the late President Jose P. Laurel who was nominated
in June 1985 by the United Nationalist Democratic Organization
(UNIDO).
Majority of the opposition and other anti-Marcos groups
proposed Mrs. Corazon "Cory" Aquino, wife of the slain oppositon
leader, be the presidential standard bearer. Mrs. Aquino agreed to
run if at least one milllion people would sign a petition urging her to
run for that position. Joaquin "Chino" Roces, who organized the
Cory Aquino for President Movement (CAPM), was able to obtain
more than a million signatures nationwide.
The snap presidential election of February 7,1986, witnessed for
the first time, a woman candidate under the joint UNIDO-PDP-
Laban Party (United Nationalist Democratic Organization-People's
Democratic Party- Lakas ng Bayan). Doy Laurel, upon the advice of
Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin decided to sacrifice his presidential
ambition for the sake of a united opposition. He became the vice-
presidential candidate.
In the official tallies made by the Commission on Elections
(COMELEC), as certified by the Batasang Pambansa, the Marcos-
Tolentino ticket won. But as tabulated by the National Movement for
Free Elections (Namfrel), with their Operation Quick-Count, Aquino
and Laurel had a margin of around 800,000 votes to win against the
KBL candidates.
There were reports of fraud, ballot box snatching, vote buying,
and intimidation during the snap elections. Thirty computer workers
walked out of the COMELEC tabulation center at the Philippine
International Convention Center (PICC), protesting that the results
were being manipulated.
On February 15, 1986, the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the
Philippines issued a pastoral letter to be read in all Catholic
churches, saying that the government had lost its moral basis due to
pieces of evidence of electoral fraud.
The following day, Cory Aquino led a rally called Tagumpay ng
Bay an (Victory of the People) at the Luneta Grandstand. Over two
million people attended the assembly. She proclaimed a victory for
the people despite the proclamation of Marcos as the winner. She
vowed to lead a civil disobedience campaign against Marcos. She
also allowed the boycott of crony-owned companies and products.
She presented an initial list of crony enterprises that would be the
target of consumer boycotts. These included the three major
newspapers, the San Miguel commercial empire (which was then
controlled by Eduardo Cojuangco, her cousin but a strong Marcos
supporter) and a number of banks reportedly managed by Marcos
cronies.
While the anti-Marcos sentiment in the country was becoming
more intense, a group of young officers in the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP) was planning to overthrow the Marcos
dictatorship. The group was known as Reform the AFP Movement
(RAM). This movement started in March 1985.

This group of officers who graduated from the Philippine
Military Academy wanted the restoration of professionalism in the
military and to regain its honor and pride. Minister of Defense Juan
Ponce Enrile secretly sympathized with the RAM. The RAM soldiers
were also known as reformists.
Colonel Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan, chief security officer of
Enrile, together with the reformists decided to stage a coup d' etat
after President Marcos and AFP Chief of Staff Fabian C. Ver faltered
to consider RAM's pleadings. Nonetheless, the President discovered
the coup plot. Many of the reformists were arrested.
Consequently, the RAM soldiers sought refuge at the Ministry
of National Defense building at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City.
General Fidel V. Ramos, the AFP vice-chief of staff and Philippine
Constabulary Chief, sided with the reformists. He took control of the
Philippine Headquarters at Camp Crame, located across Epifanio de
los Santos Avenue (EDSA) from Camp Aguinaldo.
On February 22,1986, at 6 p.m., Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and
Deputy Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos, gave a press conference
announcing their withdrawal of support for the President. Minister
Enrile admitted that it was Mrs. Aquino who won the elections.
Marcos had won through fraud. He called on Marcos to step down
from his office. He also asked the people to support the military
defectors. Immediately, Jaime Cardinal Sin through the Radio
Veritas, appealed for public support.
On the same day, thousands of people went to Epifanio de los
Santos Avenue (EDSA) to form a human barricade. These protests
were the culmination of people's resistance against the 20-year
Marcos regime. Now known as People Power Revolution (also
known as EDSA Revolution), these nonviolent mass demonstrations
that lasted for four days involved over 200,000 civilians, as well as
political and military figures. Men stood and served as perimeter
guards and set up barricades and makeshift sandbags in case loyalist
troops decided to attack. Priests and nuns led prayer vigils. The
people were armed only with prayers, rosaries, and statues of Mary,
the mother of Jesus. The mood in the street later on became festive,
with a number of them bringing their whole families. Several groups
sang Bay an Ko (My Land) and frequently flashed the LAB AN (fight)
sign, an "L" formed with their thumb and index finger.
On February 23, the Marcos loyalist troops under General Ver
prepared to attack. At about 8 p.m., of the same day, armored tanks
and carriers under the command of Brig. Gen. Artemio Tadiar,
arrived at EDSA in front of Camp Crame to assault the camp.The
soldiers were not able to carry out the plan because of the people
blocking the way. Guns and tanks were met with statues of Mother
Mary, rosaries, flowers, sandwiches, and even hot coffee from
demonstrators.
At dawn, marines captured the Logistics Command inside
Camp Aguinaldo. The 15
th
Air Force Strike Wing with seven
helicopter gunships led by Colonel Antonio Sotelo decided to defect
to the rebels' side. Reformist soldiers led by Colonel Mariano
Santiago took over Channel 4, the government television station. At
Villamor Air Base, rebel helicopters had already assaulted.
Malacanang was being fired upon.
Mr. Marcos, by that time was advised by U.S. Senator Paul
Laxalt to "cut now and cut cleanly" meaning that, he should now
step down and leave. Senator Laxalt, a close confidante of U.S.
President Ronald Reagan, was called up by Marcos earlier that day
to get an indication of mood in Washington. President Ronald
Reagan was said to have offered political asylum in the United
States.
On the morning of February 25, Ferdinand Marcos took his oath
of office at the Malacanang Palace grounds. At around 7 a.m., a clash
between the loyal government troops and the reformists took place.
When the snipers stationed at the government-owned Channel 9
began shooting at the reformists, many rebel soldiers surged to the
station. Before the end of the ceremonies, some television channels
went off the air after the rebels destroyed their transmission lines. By
9:00 p.m., of the same day, Marcos and his family and some friends
fled Malacanang Palace and were taken by four U.S. helicopters to
Clark Air Base in Pampanga, then to Guam and finally to Honolulu,
Hawaii by U.S. military planes.
Within minutes after the Marcoses had fled, the palace guards
left their posts. The people in front of the Palace gate stormed into
the building. Many Filipinos celebrated the downfall of despotism
after the four-day People Power Movement that prompted President
Marcos to seek refuge in America. Throughout his 20-year tenure,
Marcos maintained a close alliance with the United States. When the
Marcoses left the Philippines, the country was burdened with $27
billion in external debt. Ln 1988, Marcos was indicted by a US grand
jury in New York on federal racketeering charges relating to his

years in office. Before he could stand trial, Marcos died in Honolulu
on September 28, 1989. The Philippine government allowed Imelda
Marcos to return to the Philippines and place Marcos's remains in a
refrigerated crypt in Ilocos Norte in 1991.

7. Aquino Administration (1986-1992)
On February 25,1986, Mrs. Corazon C. Aquino took her oath of
office at Club Filipino in San Juan, Metro Manila simultaneous with
the oath-taking ceremonies taking place at the Malacanang Palace for
Mr. Marcos. After the Marcoses had left the palace, President Aquino
immediately worked for the reorganization of the government.
President Aquino is credited primarily for restoring democracy in
the Philippines. The promulgation of a new constitution in 1987 gave
rise to the Fifth Republic.
At the onset of her administration, she formed a provisional
government, restored civil liberties like freedom of speech and press,
released political detainees, dissolved the Batasang Pambansa,
appointed new Supreme Court justices, and ordered the resignation
of incumbent government officials. She established the Presidential
Commission on Government Reorganization (PCGR) under Luis
Villafuerte. The Presidential Commission on Human Rights (PCHR)
was also created under the leadership of former Senator Jose W.
Diokno.
On May 5, 1987, the Commission on Human Rights replaced the
PCHR pursuant to Executive Order No. 163. Aside from its
primordial task to investigate cases of human rights violations
committed during the previous administration, the Human Rights
Commission has the power to examine the administration and
conditions of jails, prisons or detention facilities. The commission
shall also investigate the violations committed by the present
government, as well as private parties.
The Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG)
was also created to recover the ill-gotten wealth taken by corrupt
government officials. This was chaired by former Senator Jovito
Salonga. The private ownership of media was retained but
newspapers and radio-television stations that were believed to be
owned by Marcos cronies were sequestered. Media companies that
were taken by Marcos were returned to their owners among them,
the ABS-CBN Network of the Lopezes.
The Constitutional Commission, pursuant to Article V of
Proclamation No. 3 (issued on March 25,1986) was assigned to draft
the 1987 Philippine Constitution. With 48 members, under the
chairmanship of Justice Cecilia Munoz-Palma, the Constitutional
Commission convened on June 2, 1986 at the Batasang Pambansa
Building in Diliman, Quezon City.
The proposed constitution was approved by the Constitutional
Commission on the night of October 12,1986, by a vote of 44-2.
Delegate Decoroso Rosales signed subsequently by affixing his
thumbmark at his sickbed on October 14,1986, in favor of the draft.
Delegate Lino Brocka had resigned earlier.
The plebiscite held on February 2, 1987 led to the ratification of
the proposed constitution after the people voted in favor of it. This
body of laws superseded the Freedom Constitution, which had
repealed the 1973 Charter of the Marcos regime. The 1987 Philippine
Constitution included a provision limiting the presidency to a single
six-year term.
On May 11, 1987, the first election under the new Constitution
took place. It was for the Members of the Congress. The election of
all members of the city or municipal council was held subsequently
to that of the Congress. The barangay elections were held on March
28,1989.
To improve the living standards in the rural areas, President
Aquino launched the Community and Employment and
Development Program (CEDP). Infrastructure projects as well as job
opportunities were made possible through this program.
The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARL) pursuant to
Republic Act No. 6657 was implemented on June 10,1988. This was
designed to include all agricultural lands not only to lands devoted
to rice and com. This law instituted the Comprehensive Agrarian
Reform Program (CARP) to promote justice and industrialization.
From 1988-1989, the Program for Decentralized Educational
Development (PRODED) was instituted in all public elementary
schools to enhance the quality standard of education in the said
level. In secondary education, the Secondary Education
Development Program (SEDP) was likewise adopted.
The launching of a five-year program by the Department of
Tourism (DOT) known as "Philippines: Fiesta Islands of Asia"
improved the tourism industry. Festive celebrations were made in
different parts of the archipelago to attract more tourists and

generate income not only for the townfolks but for the government
as well.
The Aquino administration intensified the privatization of the
business sector. The 1987 Constitution does not favor an economy
managed or controlled by the state. Regarding the justice system,
death penalty was abolished to give the criminals a chance to
rehabilitate. For capital offenses, the penalty imposed was reclusion
perpetua or life imprisonment.
In 1988, President Aquino made foreign trips to strengthen
friendly relations with other countries, which include China,
Switzerland, Italy, Hong Kong, and Vietnam.
On September 13 of the same year, President Aquino signed
Republic Act (RA) No. 6675 known as the Generic Act. It provided
for the prescription and production of drugs and medicines
identified by their generic names to promote drug safety and ensure
the adequate supply of drugs at the lowest price. The Department of
Health pursuant to Executive Order No. 119 adopted the use of
generics. Community Health Service was also established in every
locality to promote the physical state of every community.
Despite the government's popular support, opposition within
the military as well as Communist insurgency continued. Slow pace
of economic development in the country aroused discontent. In
December 1989, a coup attempt was staged against the Aquino
administration. The U.S. Air Force jets assisted the Philippine
government forces in suppressing the mutiny.
It was on May 23, 1989 that former Senator Arturo Tolentino
and former Solicitor General Estelito Mendoza submitted a petition
to the Supreme Court for and in behalf of the petitioners. The
petition prayed that the Supreme Court issue a writ of mandamus to
compel the issuance of travel documents to former President Marcos
and his family. The health of Mr. Marcos has greatly deteriorated
and he was insistent in returning to the Philippines.
The petitioners mentioned that President Aquino has no power
to bar former President Marcos and his family to return home since
the President has neither the power to impair the liberty of abode nor
the power to impair the right to travel.
The Aquino government refused to allow Marcos and his family
to return to the Philippines on the ground that their return would
endanger the national security and the national interest of the
country. Owing to the police power of the state, President Aquino
may bar former President Marcos and his family to return. Solicitor
General Frank Chavez, the counsel for the respondents, defended the
decision of President Aquino based on the provisions of the
Constitution concerned with the protection of the people and the
police power of the government.
Tolentino and Mendoza answered that those constitutional
provisions are not sources of power of the President. They pointed
out, the police power is not properly to be exercised by the executive
but a power exercised by the legislative branch. The lawyers for the
petitioners also claimed that the right to travel was not only
guaranteed by the Constitution but also by international law. The
lawyers for the petitioners argued that even if the respondents had a
discretion to withhold the giving of travel documents or perform acts
that would bar Marcos and his family to return to the Philippines,
this discretion was not allowable because it would be a grave abuse
of discretion.
On October 13,1989, the Supreme Court affirmed its original
decision against the petitioners. The Court declared the power of the
President to bar a Filipino citizen to return to his country a residual
power, which is lodged in the executive power of the President.
Chief Justice Marcelo Fernan labelled it as a presidential prerogative.
The distinction between right to travel and the right to return made
by Justice Cortes in the decision of the Court is the secondary basis to
bar former President Marcos and his family to return to the
Philippines. Although the right to travel is explicitly provided in the
Bill of Rights of the 1987 Philippine Constitution, the right to return
is not.
Mr. Marcos had already died in Honolulu on September 28,
1989. Finally, the Philippine government allowed Imelda Marcos to
return to the Philippines and place Marcos's remains in a refrigerated
crypt in Ilocos Norte, his home province in 1991.
It was in December 1990 that 16 military men were convicted in
the Aquino-Galman double murder case. However, the mastermind
of the military conspiracy was still unascertained. The issue was
reopened and investigated after the Supreme Court had declared a
mistrial of the case.
It was also during the Aquino administration that the review of
the Military Bases Agreement (MBA) between the U.S. and the
Philippines took place. This review was reported to have led to an
agreement increasing to $1.2 billion, the total amount of U.S.

economic and military aid to the Philippines during the last two
years of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement.
On September 16, 1991, the Philippine Senate, by a vote of 12-11,
rejected the RP-US Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Security,
which will take the place of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement
upon its expiration. The eleven votes in favor of the treaty's
ratification were below the two-third votes needed to ratify a treaty,
as prescribed by the Constitution.
Those who voted for the retention of these bases were Senators
Heherson Alvarez, Edgardo Angara, Neptali Gonzales, Ernesto
Herrera, Joey Lina, John Osmena, Vicente Paterno, Santanina Rasul,
Alberto Romulo, Leticia Shahani, and Mamintal Tamano.
Those who voted "no" to bases were Senators Jovito Salonga,
Juan Ponce Enrile, Agapito Aquino, Joseph Estrada, Teofisto
Guingona, Sotero Laurel, Ernesto Maceda, Orlando Mercado,
Aquilino Pimentel, Rene Saguisag, Wigberto Tanada, and Victor
Ziga.
The eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, which spewed lahar to nearby
provinces in Luzon affected the possible extension of the bases
agreement. With the Clark Air Base in Pampanga covered with
heavy tons of volcanic ashes, the U.S. government decided to move
its servicemen and their families out of the country. Not far from
Clark Air Base, the Subic Bay Naval station was also closed in 1992.
The series of volcanic eruptions caused by Mount Pinatubo
took place from July 12 to 15, 1991. Its ashfalls reached as far as
Metro Manila, Mindoro, and Palawan to the South and Cambodia
to the east. Considered as the world's worst volcanic eruption in
the 20
th
century, the Mt. Pinatubo eruption has caused great loss of
lives and properties.
The country was once again visited by an environmental
disaster after it had a dreadful one a year earlier, which took place
on July 16,1990 at 4:26 in the afternoon (DST), where two strong
earthquakes struck Luzon.
Typhoons and floods had caused the wear and tear of many
roads and highways. Due to deforestation and illegal logging
practices, which had started in the past administrations, even mild
typhoons caused some flash floods and devastation such as
typhoon "Uring" in Ormoc, Leyte on November 5,1991.
The Philippines likewise suffered economic losses from El
Nino in 1990-1992, P4.1 B ($158 M) in damage was recorded mostly
in agriculture. As expected, the El Nino phenomenon extended a
long dry spell, which has resulted in the drying up of water
sources, reduction of water supply, the consequent damage to
livestock and agricultural crops nationwide, and the rise of various
diseases aggravated by the long drought. In the midst of these
natural disasters, the government managed to mobilize its
regional, provincial, urban, and municipal subunits to coordinate
operations in badly affected areas.

8. Ramos Administration (1992-1998)
President Corazon Aquino, prohibited by the Constitution to
run for a second term, endorsed Defense Minister Fidel V. Ramos
in the 1992 presidential elections. Ramos won under a new political
party, the Partido Lakas Tao, based on his long-held political
doctrine of people empowerment. Many of its members called
themselves non-traditional politicians like their leader. Elected
Vice-President was former movie star, San Juan Mayor and
senator, Joseph "Erap" Estrada.
Upon his assumption of office, he worked on an Agenda for
Reforms to make the Philippines a New Industrialized Country
(NIC) by the year 2000. Five days after President Ramos assumed
office, he announced the creation of a "Malacanang of the South,"
to "bring Malacanang closer to the people."
At the onset, President Ramos had encountered problems,
which were remnants of the previous two administrations and these
were as follows: mass poverty, ailing economy, power crisis, high
crime rate, graft and corruption, environmental problems, and
insurgency. These difficulties triggered President Ramos to
formulate his agenda for reforms to achieve progress and stability.
To secure the economy, President Ramos ordered the dismantling of
monopolies and cartels. Legislative measures were also approved to
increase domestic and foreign investments, improve human
resources, and enhance the country's links with other nations in the
global economy.
In 1992, around 781,000 new jobs became available in the
country. The national unemployment rate from 9.8 percent in 1996
was reduced to 8.4 percent as of 1997. From 1992 to 1997, the
country's per capita income increased from $800 to $1,240. Overseas
Filipino Workers (OFWs) were able to receive protection with the
enactment of the Migrant Workers Act of 1995. Ten additional labor

attaches were deployed in the countries where there are large
concentrations of OFWs.
On July 8,1992, President Ramos created the Presidential Anti-
Crime Commission (PACC) and appointed the Vice-President as its
head. After a year of its operations, the PACC had encountered
various crime syndicates, arresting over 150 of their suspected
members and forcing 58 others to voluntarily surrender.
On health care services, the government pursued preventive
health care programs, which have gained popular recognition.
Delivery of medical services to distant areas was made possible
through the "doctors to the barrio program." The average life
expectancy gained a new ceiling from 67.5 years in 1992 to 69.1 years
in 1995.
While the Ramos administration has been promoting artificial
methods of birth control, the Catholic Church continues to promote
abstinence or natural birth control methods among couples. The
Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) in a pastoral
letter read in churches nationwide said that the government's birth
control program would destroy family ties. It also virtually endorses
abortion.
President Ramos launched the Social Reform Agenda (SRA) on
June 17, 1994, "to help the poorest of the poor help themselves."
Twenty provinces from the most depressed category have been the
beneficiaries of poverty-alleviation measures that include housing
projects, agrarian reform programs, employment opportunities, and
health care initiatives.
The Smokey Mountain, once the center of abject poverty, was
transformed into a model, affordable, and clean area for residential
and commercial purposes, in terms of public infrastructure, from
1992 to 1998, the government has completed the construction and
upgrading of 36,050 kilometers of roads and 45,464 lineal meters of
bridges.
The Philippine National Railways (PNR) main south line
(Albay), was rehabilitated. It used to be nonoperational since 1986.
The Pasig River Ferry service was also revived to promote the use of
inland waterways as an alternative means of transport.
In Metro Manila, more infrastructure were also built - the
circumferential road known as C-5, two more Light Rail Transit
(LRT) systems, the Manila Skyway, and the New Ninoy Aquino
International Airport Terminal (NAIA II). In other parts of the
country, additional international airports were opened like Subic,
Clark, General Santos, and Zamboanga.
The administration started the interlinking of the major island
grids into one national power grid with the completion of the Leyte-
Cebu interconnection in 1997 and Leyte-Luzon interconnection in
1998.
Programs and projects were also implemented to protect the
country's environment and conserve its natural resources. Critical
areas such as the Tubbataha and Apo reefs, Boracay, and the Ifugao
rice terraces were protected and rehabilitated under the National
Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS).
The government embarked on an intensive foreign relation
campaign based on economic diplomacy. President Ramos expanded
global linkages by building and strengthening partnerships through
foreign trips, which have been much criticized.
The United States continued to be the country's top trading
partner, accounting for 26.78 percent of the total trading partners in
1990 and 26.66 percent in 1991. The country's trade with Japan had
been on an uptrend, with 19.84 percent of the country's total trade
during the year.
The People's Republic of China (PROC) continued to be the
country's leading communist trading partner. The increase of
Philippine exports to PROC in 1991 was attributed to the huge
demand for manufactured fertilizers.
In the pursuit of peace and in nation building, the Ramos
administration was able to forge a just and honorable peace with the
Repormang Alyansang Makabansa (RAM) and the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF) by initiating dialogues and agreements.
This won the respect of the world as evidenced by the 1997 United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) peace prize awarded to the country. Peace talks were also
held with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), Communist
Party of the Philippines (CPP) and National Democratic Front (NDF)
so that they may "rejoin the mainstream of civil society."
It was on September 15, 1993 when President Fidel V. Ramos
signed Executive Order No. 125, Defining the Approach and
Administrative Structure for the Government's Comprehensive
Peace Efforts. It directed the government to pursue a comprehensive
peace process along the Six Paths to Peace as recommended by the
National Unification Commission (NUC). The NUC recommended

the creation of the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace
Process (OPAPP), which managed and implemented the mandate of
the government.
Likewise in 1993, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono
apologized for Japan's having coerced some women into prostitution
during the Pacific War. Three years later, on the 50th anniversary of
Japan's surrender, Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama
acknowledged the damage and suffering caused by Japan to many
Asian countries.
The Philippines once regarded as "the sick man of Asia" has
transformed into a nation towards the path of peace and sustainable
development. Under his management, President Ramos devised a
new plan, which he called "Philippines 2000," his blueprint for
national economic recovery to transform it into a tiger economy by
the next millennium.
The program intended to have economic development that will
be propelled and sustained through the promotion of efficiency in
the marketplace and the advancement of social equity in terms of
asset reforms. It also included just sharing of the benefits of growth
and effective people participation in the political and economic
mainstream.
Despite the reversal of economic interests in Asia since late 1996
and 1997, the Ramos administration managed to keep the local
economy stable. The large number of overseas Filipino workers
(OFWs) and Filipinos who do business abroad provided a steady
supply of dollar remittances supporting the local currency against
the exchange rate shifts.
Likewise, President Ramos repealed the anti-subversion law to
bring the communist leaders to the negotiating table. This has
resulted to forging of several agreements between the NDF and the
government and the subsequent decrease in bloody clashes with
government troops. Many communist leaders had also returned to
the fold of law after Ramos approved an amnesty program. From
26,000 members in 1987, the rebels decreased to 10,000.
In the early 1990s, militant activities by Muslim separatist forces
continued in Mindanao. In 1996, the Government of the Republic of
the Philippines (GRP) finally reached a peaceful settlement with one
of the largest rebel groups in the country, the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF). The signing of the GRP-MNLF Peace
Agreement on September 2, 1996 in Malacanang Palace formally
ended the armed conflict in Mindanao. The Final Peace Agreement
was signed in the presence of the leaders of the Organization of
Islamic Conference (OIC). The signing was considered a "crucial
step" in the arduous process of constructing peace in Mindanao.
The GRP-MNLF peace accord specifically provided for the
establishment of a Special Zone of Peace and Development in
Southern Philippines (SZOPAD), consisting of 14 provinces; the
Southern Philippines Council for Peace and Development (SPCPD);
and a Consultative Assembly. It also called for the integration of
MNLF forces into the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the
Philippine National Police (PNP). The peace agreement also
included economic assistance to the region.
In 1997, Ramos's supporters sought to amend the constitution;
however such Charter Change (Cha-Cha) movement was denounced
by different sectors including the Catholic Church. It was viewed as
a scheme to allow the president a second term, which the 1987
Philippine Constitution had forbidden.
In 1999, President Ramos, through Executive Order 137
declared the month of July every year as the National Disaster
Consciousness Month. During the month, national and local
government agencies have to implement disaster awareness
campaigns and would also allow for the consolidation of the Civil
Defense Deputization Program or Tanggol Patrols by the local
government units, who serve as focal points of civil protection and
disaster management programs.
In late 1997 to early 1998, the Philippines was in the forefront of
the worldwide campain to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases
leading to global warming and eventual change. International
concerns were presented at the UN Conference convened in Kyoto,
Japan to discuss this phenomenon.
The Kyoto Conference identified three major sources of
greenhouse. gases consisting of carbon dioxide compounds in the
atmosphere that cause warming: Electric power generation, still
principally coal-fired around the world; emissions of factories
without decarbonising systems; and millions of motor vehicles
spouting deadly exhaust fumes. Climate-friendly, renewable
technologies like wind, solar, cellulosic ethanol, and hydrogen are
opted to be used by countries to protect the environment from
further disaster.

At the end of President Ramos's term, the observance of the
first Centennial of Philippine Independence was carried out through
the National Centennial Commission (NCC) and other
nongovernment organizations (NGOs). The NCC through a five-
year plan, assigned themes for every year for five years from 1994 to
1998, each one laying the foundation for the success of the major
celebrations on June 12,1998 until January 23,1999.
The Centennial Programs had the following objectives: revive
love of country, restore appreciation for the true Filipino identity,
relearn the values of the country's historic struggle for independence
and use these for development of the future; and generate greater
active participation in the centennial commemorative celebration to
accelerate nation-building. The desired effects of the Philippine
Centennial gave birth to its slogan, "Kalayaan, Kayamanan ng Bayan."
In the May 1998 presidential elections, President Ramos and the
ruling coalition supported Jose de Venecia, the House Speaker.
However, it turned out that the opposition had the popular support
for the presidency. Joseph Estrada, vice-president under the Ramos
administration became the next head of the state.

9. Estrada Administration (1998-2001)
President Joseph "Erap" Estrada from the Lapian ng Masang
Pilipino (LAMP) took his oath of office on June 30, 1998 at the historic
Barasoain Church in Malolos, Bulacan. On the same date, he gave his
inaugural address at the Quirino Grandstand where he promised to
bring peace to the people and harmony to the society. He also
pledged to fight corruption within the government and continue the
economic reforms of the past administration. Elected Vice-President
was Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo from the LAKAS-NUCD.
Erap Para Sa Mahirap became the campaign slogan of former
Vice- President Estrada. He drove his election campaign vehicle
JEEP, which contains his pro-poor program of government. It meant
Justice, Economy, Environment, and Peace. JEEP covered Mr.
Estrada's vision of government. It revealed his 10 "steps" toward a
dynamic and progressive Philippines, namely:
- Efficient bureaucracy to generate more income with less
expenses Economic recovery through fiscal reforms
- Check all forms of criminality, particularly kidnapping,
bank robberies, drug trafficking, and other heinous crimes
- Stronger infrastructure to unify the nation
Encourage private business as government's partner in
nation building
- Delivery of basic social services to the people
- Food security through better agricultural technology
- Providing education to ever)' Filipino
- Harnessing Filipino talents in science and technology
- Sustainable development through a comprehensive
environmental program
(Source: MagNegosyo, May
1999)
It was Mr. Estrada's identity with the masses that launched him
to the presidency in the May 1998 elections. He won over his
opponents that included former Speaker Jose de Venecia, former
Defense Secretary Renato de Villa, former Manila Mayor Alfredo
Lim, Senators Raul Roco, and Miriam Defensor-Santiago.
Tn the midst of economic turbulence in the Asia-Pacific region,
President Estrada stirred high hopes to institute reforms aimed at the
development of the country's social, economic, and political well-
being. Government support was given to ERAP (Enhanced Retail
Access for the Poor) sari-sari stores and Lingap sa Mahirap stores
under the National Food Authority (NFA) component. These retail
stores provided livelihood assistance to indigent families especially
in remote barangays, in view of the administration's goal to weed
out poverty.
In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, President Estrada received
assurances of economic aid amounting to $5 billion from the
assistance to be extended by developed economies from the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum.
President Estrada was designated as the spokesman of Third
World countries in the Sixth APEC meeting in Malaysia. He voiced
the concerns of developing economies. APEC leaders later approved
the proposal of President Estrada calling for greater multilateral aid
to crisis-hit Asian economies.
Twenty-one APEC member States include Australia, Brunei
Darussalam, Canada, Chile, China, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong,
Indonesia, Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua
New Guinea, Peru, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Thailand, the
United States of America, and Vietnam. Many of the Southeast Asian
countries facing the challenge of how all economies of the APEC

member states can benefit from the opportunities presented by
globalization.
The Philippine and U.S. governments had signed on October 9,
1998 the counterpart agreement on the Visiting Forces Agreement
(VFA), which sought to define the legal treatment of Filipino troops
visiting the United States. Domingo Siazon and Thomas Hubbard
signed the US-RP Visiting Forces Agreement. The Philippine
government lobbied for Senate concurrence by mentioning military
and economic benefits from doing so. The VFA was submitted to the
Philippine Senate on October 6, 1998.
The VFA in the eyes of the Philippine government provided for
the mechanism for regulating the circumstances and conditions of
US armed forces and defense personnel in the Philippines. The
government also stressed that much could be gained from the
military technology and equipment that will be given to the AFP.
Joint exercises were perceived to help improve the skills of Filipino
troops in military operations.
US Defense Secretary William Cohen emphasized that the VFA
was not directed against any country, particularly China, which has
an existing territorial conflict with the Philippines over the Spratlys.
The US Department of Defense stressed that they were not seeking
military facilities or bases.
Facing the task of reform, President Estrada made moves
towards the actualization of his visions. The administration had
successful negotiations regarding the Subic controversy. The
congressional pork barrel, seen as a source of graft, was abolished.
There was the lowering of interest rates, promotion of savings, and
reduced dependence on foreign borrowings. A presidential task
force against crime was established. There was also the peaceful
resolution of the Philippine Airlines' labor strike.
The ground crew union of the Philippine Airlines (PAL) ended
its five-day strike after signing an agreement with the management,
under the auspices of the National Conciliation and Mediation Board
(NCMB) of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE).
The end of the strike, the second to hit PAL in a span of two
months came about after nearly 15 hours of nonstop negotiations
between the two sides. The PAL Employees Association (PALEA)
agreed to cease all pickets and the strike within 24 hours from the
signing of the agreement. The management guaranteed not to
commit any retaliatory action against the striking PALE A members.
PAL and PALEA agreed to reduce the airline's workforce by
1,800 employees, all PALEA members. This became effective on
August 16,1998. But the affected employees were given privileges
and benefits like travel privileges for them and their dependents;
opportunity to attend livelihood seminars organized by PAL for a
period of three years; separation benefits in two installments;
benefits from the PAL Dependents Medical Plan for three years; and
first preference in hiring, in the event PAL increases its manning
complement in the future.
The agreement came after President Estrada personally took
direct hand in solving the conflict, together with the efforts of the
DOLE particularly Labor Secretary Bienvenido Laguesma. The PAL
management was guided by the directions of PAL Chairman Lucio
Tan and President Jose Antonio Garcia. The PALEA board, headed
by its President Alex Barrientos signed for the union.
The government intensified its drive against illegal recruiters.
Administrator Rey Regalado mentioned that the Philippine Overseas
Employment Administration (POEA) closed 11 illegal recruitment
agencies in the year 2000 on 13 closure orders he had issued. More
than 400 cases of illegal recruitment were brought to the POEA's
legal assistance division, 80 percent of which had already been duly
filed with the special prosecutors.
The deregulation reforms initiated during the past
administration opened up an abundance of business opportunities
for the industrial machinery and materials industry. With the
liberalization of foreign exchange, reforms followed in
telecommunications, shipping, aviation, and automotive industries-
all of which required industrial machinery and materials, including
metal and steel manufactures.
Laws intended to create business environment conducive to
local and foreign investment were enacted in the year 2000. They
included the Retail Trade Liberalization Act (liberalizing foreign
ownership of retail firms), the General Banking Law of 2000
(reforming the financial system), the Electronic Commerce Act
(establishing regulations promoting E-commerce), and the Securities
Regulation Code (enhancing capital market competitiveness).
In infrastructure, President Estrada's three-year-building
program included the installation of 316 steel bridges in 78
provinces. The bridge program was funded through the assistance of
the Austrian government. One of the* steel bridges undertaken by

the program was installed in the country in the remote barrio of
Masalipit, San Miguel, Bulacan. This 50-meter long bridge cost P16
million.
Senior Deputy Executive Secretary Ramon Cardenas, who
chaired the President's Bridge Program's Technical Working Group,
indicated that 61 steel bridges had been completed in the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) since the project
started last 1999. Fifty-one more bridges had been opened under, the
"Tulay ni Erap"- Salam (Peace) Bridge Project in four provinces of
ARMM, namely: Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Tawi-Tawi, and Sulu.
The project was likewise expected to spur socioeconomic
investments in the whole of Southern Philippines and convert the
region into the next food basket of Asia.
The Metrostar or the MRT III along the stretch of EDSA was
finally made operational after three years of construction. This rail
system has provided not only speedy transportation for commuters
to their destinations but also helped ease the heavy flow of traffic
along EDSA particularly on peak hours.
The government had provided measures to pursue its housing
program. To intensify its housing project, the government had
required subdivisions being developed to have a portion for
socialized housing.
Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council
(HUDCC) spearheaded the government's low-cost housing project.
HUDCC Chairwoman Leonora Vasquez de Jesus introduced the
multi-window lending system endorsed by President Estrada, to
make the housing finance system more accessible to the
marginalized sector. Such system placed under the President's
National Shelter Program, planned to build 350,000 shelter units per
year until the end of Estrada's term in 2004.
In the commitment of providing shelter for the homeless,
President Estrada did raise funds for the new building of the
orphanage of the Asociacion de Damas de Filipinas, which was
destroyed by a dawn fire in 1998, killing at least 24 children and
injuring others. He also provided the equipment and facilities
needed by this institution for efficient management.
One of the events that rocked the country was the hostage
drama in Mindanao, which involved foreign nationals as well as
Filipinos. The Abu Sayyaf, a group of Muslim extremists, abducted
21 western vacationers in an island resort in Sipadan, Malaysia and
one Filipino resort worker, Roland Ilia.
The rebels brought the hostages to jungle camps in Jolo. This
was followed by the kidnapping of two French journalists and two
local TV reporters and 13 "prayer warriors" of a religious group
including its leader. The hostage crisis, which lasted for several
months, projected the Abu Sayyaf to international notoriety.
All hostages were able to return to their families except Roland
Ulla, still being held captive by the Muslim extremists. Task Force
Comet, an operational arm of the military, was assigned to launch
offensives against the Abu Sayyaf to rescue remaining captive Ulla
and to neutralize the terrorist group.
Taking into account the peace condition in Mindanao, a
Philippine travel ban was issued by the German government to its
nationals. Nevertheless, the ban had been finally lifted after five
months. Tourism Secretary Gemma Cruz Araneta disclosed on
October 20, 2000 that the German government had issued a new
travel advisory stating that travel to the Philippines is safe.
However, the advisory still discouraged German tourists from going
to some parts of Mindanao, specifically Jolo and Sulu, where military
operations continued against the Abu Sayyaf. They were allowed to
travel to Northern Philippines with comfort and safety.
The United States government was the first to issue a travel
advisory advising its citizens to skip the Philippines because of the
bombing incidents that hit Mindanao and some areas of Metro
Manila.
Abu Sayyaf leader Ghalib Andang also known as Commander
Robot told chief government negotiator and Flagship Secretary
Robert Aventajado that his group was not in any manner involved
with the kidnapping of the American Jeffrey Craig Edwards
Schilling in Zamboanga City.
Schilling was in the Philippines for several months and married
to Ivy Osani, a cousin of Abu Sabaya, another Abu Sayyaf leader.
Osani, a widow of a former Abu Sayyaf member, happened to be the
nephew of the slain founder of the Abu Sayyaf, Abdurajak Janjalani.
Abu Sabaya tagged Schilling as an agent of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), which the US Embassy denied
vehemently. The authorities had verified reports that Schilling
stayed in Zamboanga for six months. There were also reports that
Schilling himself had been seeking out this rebel group.

One rebel group that opposed the administrations of the past
wanted to return to the negotiating table. Muslim leaders
subsequently approved a manifesto urging the Estrada
administration and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) to
resume the peace negotiations that were scrapped following the
outbreak of hostilities in Mindanao. It was also supported by at least
100 groups comprised of organizations from the religious,
professionals, farmers, and other sectors of the Bangsamoro people.
Lawyer Macapanton Abbas, Jr. of the Royal Houses in
Mindanao pointed out that for the peace process to proceed anew, it
was necessary for the government to declare a cease-fire. Criminal
charges and warrants of arrest against MILF chairman Ustadz
Salamat Hashim, vice-chairman for Military Affairs, A1 Haj Murad
and MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu were also asked to be dropped.
Manila was once again shuddered by inconsiderable
demonstrations and strikes, which loudly protested on injustice,
stunted growth and progress of the country's economic life, and the
perpetuating poverty of the great masses of the country's
population. The public had also given their views about
Malacanang's proposal to amend the constitution and allow
foreigners to own land in the country. These problems had been the
issues of most debatps in the land.
While Cardinal Sin demanded for President Estrada's
resignation, Cebu Archbishop Ricardo Cardinal Vidal maintained
his silence and refused to join the movement to remove the President
from office. He merely advised the President to change and reform
his ways.
Senate President Franklin M. Drilon and 10 of his colleagues in
the Senate rejected the call for holding a snap presidential elections
as an answer to the current political agitation brought about by the
jueteng gambling payoff charges leveled against President Estrada.
They gave varied reasons discarding the Senate resolution filed by
Senator Juan Ponce Enrile asking both the Senate and the House of
Representatives to pass a law authorizing the holding of snap
elections.
Secretary Lim cautioned the people to be vigilant. He clarified
that economic recovery program of the administration had already
made concrete gains. He also added that, if the constitutional process
or the rule of law would not be followed there would be chaos,
anarchy and violence; and the country would be transformed into a
banana republic instead.
The Office on Muslim Affairs Executive Director Acmad M.
Tomawis expressed hope that the Muslims and other Filipinos
would remain steadfast in their support to President Estrada amid
the expose' on jueteng.
According to him, the administration prioritizes the plight of the
poor and the marginalized people in running the affairs of the
nation.
Just a day before 2000 year end, 14 people were killed instantly
and more than 60 others were wounded in five bomb explosions in
Metro Manila. The Philippine National Police (PNP) Command
under PNP Chief Director General Panfilo Lacson directed all PNP
units in Metro Manila to assist and provide security and maintain
peace and order in the wake of these bomb attacks.
The first bomb blasted at around 12 noon in a coach of the Light
Railway Transit (LRT) at Blumentritt station on its way to
Monumento. Fifteen minutes later, another explosion hit Plaza
Ferguson in Ermita, some 200 meters away from the United States
embassy. The third bomb blew up and ripped off the roof of Edsa
bus at the northbound lane of EDSA in Cubao, Quezon City in front
of the Superlines bus terminal. Another bombing incident followed
at the NALA cargo terminal area in Parariaque. Then, at around 2:20
p.m., another bomb explosion took place at a Petron gasoline station
located across EDSA from Dusit Hotel in Makati City.
Four officials of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (M1LF),
headed by Chairman Hashim Salamat were charged of multiple
frustrated murder by the Department of Justice (DOJ) in connection
with the December 30 bombings in Metro Manila. The MILF officials
have also pending cases with the DOJ in connection with the May 17
and 21, 2000 bombings of malls in Metro Manila.
According to PNP Senior Supt. Raul Bacalzo, the December 30
bombings had been conceived by the MILF and the plots were
unearthed in an undated document coded "Feasibility Project" that
detailed the bombings and economic sabotage in Metro Manila. The
document was taken from Camp Bushra in Lanao del Sur and
detailed the plots to bomb malls, the Light Railway Transit, water
districts, provincial trains, and other structures.
President Estrada condemned these bombing incidents that
rocked Metro Manila and said that those behind it have resorted to

acts of desperation and cowardice in order to satisfy and advance
their political agenda.
With the ongoing impeachment trial, President Estrada
continued his provincial visits particularly in Mindanao and in the
depressed areas in Metro Manila. The government has released more
infrastructure funds through the regional offices of the Department
of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) for the President's
Mindanao's development projects. This was part of Malacanang's
confidence-building measures to push his campaign against poverty.
While the staging of another People Power revolt was being
contemplated by some sectors in the society, the President himself
cited another evident emergency situation, i.e., the sight of
uncollected garbage in the Metro Manila. The dumpsite at San
Mateo, Rizal was closed at the end of that year when its operating
contract expired. The Payatas dumpsite in Quezon City was earlier
blocked in July 2000 after a landslide killed more than 200 people
living in the area. San Mateo and Payatas have been receiving some
6,000 tons of solid waste a day, from Metro Manila's 12 million
population.
In the midst of a garbage crisis, President Estrada ordered on
January 11,2001 the reopening of the San Mateo Landfill. The
residents of San Mateo and Antipolo however, vehemently rallied
against this memorandum by preventing trucks from unloading tons
of garbage from Metro Manila. With no alternative site for garbage,
the government tried to dispose some of the metropolis' trash on
Semirara Island, 45 kilometers (30 miles) from Boracay, a premier
tourist destination. This proposal was also thwarted by public
protest.
On the other hand, the Department of Trade and Industry,
earlier sought the delay of the implementation of the Clean Air Act,
which intended to improve the environmental compliance of
industries. This was to give the industries more time to raise money
and acquire new technology to ensure compliance. Majority of the
industries had to retool their operations.
As the future of the country became more uncertain, Senator
Pimentel resigned his post as Senate head on the evening of January
16, 2001 after the motion to have the second sealed envelope opened
was defeated in an 11-10 vote by the Senate impeachment tribunal.
The political allies of the President in the Senate voted not to open
the second envelope that was said to contain incriminating evidence
against the President. The second envelope from Equitable PCI Bank
allegedly contained bank records of President Estrada alias Jose
Velarde totaling some P3.3 billion.
The 11 senator-judges, which included Senate President Pro-
Tempore Bias Ople, Senate Majority Leader Francisco Tatad,
Senators Teresa Aquino- Oreta, Robert Jaworski, Nikki Coseteng,
Ramon Revilla, Gregorio Honasan, Juan Ponce Enrile, Miriam
Defensor-Santiago, and Vicente Tito Sotto rejected the prosecution's
motion to open the second envelope. For them, the trial should be
limited to the articles of impeachment as specified by the House of
Representatives. The so-called Velarde account was not in the
articles of impeachment.
The 10 senator-judges who voted that the second envelope be
opened in the interest of truth were Senators Rodolfo Biazon, Raul
Roco, Franklin Drilon, Teofisto Guingona, Juan Flavier, Loren
Legarda-Leviste, Rene Cayetano, Serge Osmena, Jun Magsaysay, and
Nene Pimentel.
The 11-man House prosecution panel, headed by Minority
Leader Feliciano Belmonte walked out of the impeachment court in
protest of the Senate decision. Joker Arroyo, a member of the
prosecution panel, hinted a potential constitutional crisis due to the
stalemate that emerged following the irrevocable resignation of the
House prosecutors. However, Senate Majority Leader Francisco
Tatad conveyed to the public that the impeachment court had not
been disbanded. It had simply recessed to allow the House to
address the problem presented by the resignation of prosecutors.
Malacafiang expressed optimism that President Estrada's
impeachment trial would resume soon. His lawyers were ready to
present their pieces of evidence to prove false the prosecution's
charges against him. Acting Press Secretary Michael Toledo asserted
that if the case would close following the resignation of the
prosecutors, it would not be the fault of the defense panel. House
Speaker Arnulfo Fuentebella made clear that they have developed
certain options on the impeachment prosecutors' resignation as he
assured all the decisions they would make in the process would be
the decision of the House as a whole.
House Assistant Majority Leader Francis Joseph Escudero (1
st

district of Sorsogon) pointed out that one way to resolve the
deadlock at the Senate impeachment tribunal was for the House
minority to choose another set of 11 congressmen to serve as

prosecutors in the impeachment trial against the President.
Nevertheless, Governor Singson avowed before the Integrated Bar of
the Philippines (IBP) regional convention, that if he would not be
satisfied with the decision of the Senate in the impeachment case, he
would surely bring the fight to the highest court, which is the
people.
Shortly after the evidence against President Estrada was
blocked at the Senate, thousands of Filipinos went out of the streets
to show protest. The demonstrators stayed at EDSA Shrine for four
days (January 16 to 20, 2001) demanding the President to step down
from the office.
The Church once again lived up its role as the moral guardian
of the society. Jaime Cardinal Sin initiated the prayer rally at the
shrine with Vice-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and former
Presidents Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos were present in the
area. After the resignation of the prosecution panel, more Filipinos
trooped to EDSA. Text messages were instrumental in drawing a
mammoth crowd at EDSA Shrine. Countless mobile phones were
buzzing with the latest text messages about Malacanang and the
protest rally. Nearly two million people went to the streets.
At the same time, pro-Estrada rallyists gathered at Mendiola
Bridge near Malacanang as early as 12 noon of January 17 to
denounce the 10 senators who voted for the opening of the second
envelope. The pro-Erap supporters stayed in the Mendiola area to
secure all entry points leading to Malacanang.
President Estrada intended to finish his term until 2004. He
appealed to those exercising their right to expression and assembly
for calm and sobriety and assured the public that the government is
in control of the security situation. He even ruled out the possibility
of resignation as called for by his political opponents. He asked the
Filipino people to allow the constitutional process to take its course.
Nonetheless, the last-minute defections of politicians even gave
more tension to these tumultuous days. They, too, aligned
themselves with the people demanding Estrada to step down from
office.
Mass resignation of the Cabinet was triggered by the defection
of the Armed Forces led by the Chief of Staff, General Angelo Reyes.
The military announced through media that they had already
withdrawn their support for the Estrada presidency, invoking
Article 2, Section 3 of the 1987 constitution, wherein the Armed
Forces of the Philippines shall protect the people and the State.
Likewise, Director General Panfilo M. Lacson, chief of the Philippine
National Police announced at a press conference that the PNP had
also withdrawn support for President Estrada, stressing that the
police organization respects the decision of the citizenry.
The pronouncement of the military was a powerful blow to the
President. Nonetheless, President Estrada still refused to resign and
insisted on a snap presidential election. However, the President
together with his family, reportedly left Malacanang after knowing
that the Supreme Court had already issued en banc resolution
declaring the seat of the presidency vacant.
The Supreme Court declared President Estrada unable to rule in
view of mass resignations from his government. The High Court
likewise through its resolution authorized Chief Justice Davide to
administer the oath of office of then Vice-President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo as the 14
th
President of the Republic, succeeding
President Estrada. However, the deposed President insisted that he
did not resign but merely left Malacanang Palace to prevent
bloodshed as protesters were already close to Malacanang to
physically eject him from his post.

10. Arroyo Administration (2001-2010)
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was catapulted into power
by the People Power Revolution II at EDSA, which ended on January
20, 2001. Facing the task of leading 76 million Filipinos in rebuilding
the nation towards peace and progress, the President urged the
people to help her in the "healing process" of the country. For her,
healing should be with justice.
The Supreme Court had its deliberation on four petitions filed
in its office involving the presidency of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Two petitions sought clarification from the tribunal on whether Mrs.
Arroyo is the Acting President or President. Another petition asked
the High Court to declare Mrs. Arroyo as the duly constituted
President. The fourth petition pleaded for the nullification of Mrs.
Arroyo's oath as the President and to declare her as the Acting
President.
On March 2, 2001, the Supreme Court upheld the legitimacy of
the Arroyo government in a unanimous decision vote. The High
Court ruled out that President Estrada had effectively resigned his
post with his acts and statements and declared Mrs. Gloria

Macapagal-Arroyo the duly constituted President of the Philippines.
Nine justices voted without reservation, while four justices reserved
their votes on the loss of immunity from suit of Mr. Estrada. The
High Court gave Ombudsman Aniano Disierto the legal authority to
file the cases of the former President, which include plunder,
perjury, and illegal use of alias before the Sandiganbayan.
Regarding the Estrada impeachment trial, the Senate had
officially concluded on February 7, 2001 its role as an impeachment
court. This was based on Senate Resolution 927 filed by Senate
President Pimentel. The resolution also contained that the pieces of
evidence in impeachment case No. 001-2000, including the second
envelope be sent to the Senate archives.
The Senate by 18-0 vote, unanimously confirmed the
designation of Sen. Teofisto Guingona jr. as the new vice-president
following a resolution sponsored by Sen. Loren Legarda confirming
the nomination of Sen. Guingona for the position.
In her first few days as the Chief Executive, President Arroyo
directed government officials to forbid her family and relatives from
entering or influencing directly or indirectly official transactions
with the government. These transactions include the procurement or
purchase of property, supplies and materials, appointment of
government personnel, and recommendations for positions in all
government agencies and offices.
In an effort to make the new President more accessible to the
general public, Malacanang came up with a scheme to allow
everyone to send their suggestions and opinions to the Chief
Executive via Short Messaging Service (SMS) called "Text GMA
Service." President Arroyo also placed in one of her administration's
priority programs the installation of modern telecommunications
facilities in every municipality. The Department of Transportation
and Communication (DOTC) was assigned to provide these
telecenters, which include a telephone line, a personal computer, a
scanner, a printer or copier, and an Internet connection.
The Arroyo government at the onset was constrained by the
country's fiscal condition, with P225 billion budget deficit inherited
from the previous administration. The President and the Congress
leaders agreed to reactivate last year's national budget to finance
government expenditures. To trim the ballooning budget deficit, the
President imposed frugality on all government agencies.
President Arroyo established her priorities and set the direction
for economic recovery. Efforts in poverty reduction and promoting
good governance were among the pillars of her administration. Mrs.
Arroyo likened her style of government to that of her father, the late
President
Diosdado Macapagal, with concern for the poor, the reliance on free
enterprise, fight against poverty, and the emphasis on social equity
and land reform. One of the major thrusts of the government was the
intensified program of opening new job opportunities by attracting
more venture capital from overseas as well as local entrepreneurs.
As referred to in the State of the Nation Address on July 23,
2001, President Arroyo pointed out that the government financial
institutions had about P20 billion available for mass housing
programs. In the first 100 days of Housing and Urban Development
Coordinating Council (HUDCC) Chair Michael T. Defensor, shelter
was generated for more than 100,000 families, with P450 million in
housing loans released for employees in the Armed Forces and
police, teachers, local government employees, and private sector
workers. Implementation of the community mortgage program was
done where landowners were persuaded to sell their lands to
squatters residing on the land. The government provided the
financing to the beneficiaries who in turn should pay at least P400 to
P500 per month for a number of years until such the full payment to
the lot purchased has been paid in full.
Solid Waste Management Act, Republic Act (RA) 9003 was the
first piece of legislation that Mrs. Arroyo signed as President. This
law sought to institute mechanisms of waste minimization, resource
recovery, appropriate collection and transport services, and
treatment and disposal of garbage. The law also empowered the
local government units to pursue their respective solid waste
management systems in their area of jurisdiction. RA 9003
symbolized the reforms that the new administration would like to
implement.
In the second quarter of 2001, the country's Gross National
Product (GNP), which was 3.5 percent, was higher than the market's
estimate of about 2.25 percent growth. The economy showed
sufficient resiliency in the midst of political turmoil. It was during
this period when the government faced destabilization attempts,
including the May attack on the presidential palace by people
supporting detained former President Joseph Estrada.

A year after the second People Power Revolution, President
Arroyo affirmed that she had shown capable leadership during her
first year of administration. The GNP growth rate in 2001 was 3.7%.
The country benefitted from its electronics industry, (IT-enabled
services, tourism, transport and telecommunications, among others)
due to structural reform measures designed to enhance productivity
and market competition, such as the liberalization of retail trade,
telecommunication and utilities. NEDA noted the return of investor's
confidence for the increase of gross domestic capital formation by 4.3
percent from 2.3 percent in 2000. This was augmented by
investments in public construction and breeding stock and orchard
development.
The President focused on the economy and implemented pro-
poor programs to provide jobs, food, education, and housing for
Filipinos at the end of her term. This included her Kapit-bisig Laban sa
Kahirapan (Kalahi) program for poverty alleviation projects and
services and the Ahon Kabuhayan Project of the Ginintuan at
Makabayang Alay (GMA) Foundation. Economic growth is aimed
not only at increased productivity, but also at the proper use of the
country's resources and positive changes in the social structure of a
country.
In an effort to stabilize the country, President Arroyo supported
the passage of legislations in congress such as the Power Reform Act
and the Anti-Money Laundering Law. To improve rice productivity
and generate thousands of jobs between 2002 and 2004, the
Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Trade and Industry
(DTI), the National Food Authority (NFA), and their respective
agencies promoted the large-scale use of the hybrid rice technology.
This was pursuant to Administrative Order No. 25 (AO 25), which
targeted 135,000 hectares (ha.) in 2002; 200,000 ha. in 2003; and
300,000 ha. in 2004. The hybrid rice program was adopted by the
administration under the GMA CARES Rice Program. In other
highly populated countries like China and India, the hybrid rice
technology was proven to be successful.
To fulfill the vision of promoting economic growth and
agricultural modernization in Mindanao, the Philippine government
entered into an agreement with the World Bank (WB) for its $289.5 M
loan funding the 12-year program in the area. The Mindanao Rural
Development Program is in charge of the implementation of the
project envisioned to address Mindanao's need for food security by
improving agricultural productivity, mobility for goods and services,
and local capabilities in using and managing its own resources.
To refurbish the educational system, the Department of
Education (DepEd) has provided the Basic Education Curriculum
(BEC), otherwise known as the millennium curriculum. The BEC was
pursuant to Republic Act No. 9155, "An Act Instituting a Framework
of Governance for Basic Education, Establishing Authority and
Accountability, Renaming the Department of Education, Culture and
Sports as the Department of Education, and for other purposes."
RA 9155 transferred to the Philippine Sports Commission, the
sports promoting functions of the DepEd. It also gave the National
Commission for Culture and the Arts, the culture promotion
functions of the department. The collegiate and higher studies
functions were given to the Commission on Higher Education
(CHED).
The 2002 restructured BEC focuses on the 3Rs, namely: reading,
writing, and arithmetic, as well as science and patriotism. It includes
the integration of values in all learning areas from elementary to
secondary levels. The curriculum consists of the following subjects:
Filipino, English, Math, Science, and Makabayan.
The millennium curriculum decongests the overcrowded
subject areas. It seeks to prepare the students' readiness for lifelong
learning. BEC stresses integrative and interactive teaching-learning
approaches. These involve group learning and sharing of ideas
between teachers and students, and among students. President
Arroyo had outlined that one of the pillars towards winning the war
against poverty is quality education. Education offers opportunities
for people to acquire skills and become more productive.
The Arroyo administration with an ardent regard to peaceful
settlement, extended amnesty to NPA guerrillas who wish to rejoin
the society. It also avowed to resume aborted peace talks with the
secessionist groups. President Arroyo expressed concern to restore
peace and order through negotiations with both the communists
(NDF/NPA) and Muslim separatists (MILF). She ordered the
immediate suspension of offensive military operations against them
as a prelude to the administration's conciliatory move.
The Muslim leaders wanted the full implementation of the 1996
Peace Agreement signed on Sept. 2,1996 between the Government of
the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the Moro National
Liberation Front (MNLF). On the other hand, the National

Democratic Front (NDF) discarded the peace negotiations with the
Philippine government two years ago following the approval of the
Senate of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), which allowed US
forces to hold training exercises in the country.
The GRP peace panel left for Oslo, Norway via Paris to resume
formal peace talks with their counterparts in the NDF, which began
on April 27, 2001. President Arroyo sent off a five-man team headed
by former Justice Secretary Silvestre Bello III. The GRP peace panel
included Agrarian Reform Secretary Hernani Braganza, Riza
Hontiveros, Rene Sarmiento, and Atty. Chito Gascon. The President
expressed the government's willingness to discuss the NDF's
political demand with an open mind.
Regarding the military strikes in Afghanistan, President Arroyo
offered to the United States the use of its former military bases in the
Philippines for refueling US jets. This was in support of the war
against terrorists harboring Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda
organization, primary suspects in the September 11 attacks on the
World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington,
D.C. The fourth jetliner, which crashed in Pennsylvania, was
believed to be the handiwork of these terrorists. The separatist MILF
denied any link with international terrorist Osama bin Laden, the
prime suspect of the series of attacks in America that left nearly 6,000
people dead and several others wounded. Muslims in the country
called for moderation in the continuing campaign to wage war
against terrorism.
In an attempt to end terrorist elements in the country, the
Department of National Defense cited support for the military
exercises between the United States and the Philippines, which was
officially opened on January 31, 2002. The exercises dubbed as
Balikatan 02-1 or Freedom Eagle was expected to take place for a
period of six months. This was sanctioned under the RP-US Visiting
Forces Agreement duly ratified by the Philippine Senate in 1998. The
command structure of the Balikatan (shoulder to shoulder) was under
the command of the Armed Forces.
Some 660 US military personnel and Filipino soldiers had been
directed to participate in joint military training exercises held in
Basilan, Mactan Air Base in Cebu, Zamboanga del Sur, and Camp
Enrile in Zamboanga City. US forces were not allowed to operate
independently in the Philippine territory at any time. However, the
American troops were allowed to fire back and take a defensive
position against an assault during the training.
The government made its staunch commitment against
terrorism. Mindanao, particularly, had suffered much from decades
of local insurgency. In her second State of the Nation Address
(SONA), President Arroyo described terrorists and criminals as
enemies of the State. She brought her call for a strong Republic,
declaring total war against criminals and terrorists. She pointed out
that a strong republic must be able to win the twin battles against
terrorism and poverty. It should efficiently deliver basic services to
the people and uphold the law. Furthermore, it should be
autonomous of dominant classes and sectors to represent the
people's interests.
To strengthen the society and the family, President Arroyo and
former President Aquino headed the campaign for peace by their
Prayer Power Campaign 2002. The campaign sought to consecrate
families to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of
Mary. Praying the rosary and masses were held in big churches and
campuses around the country. This was part of preparations for the
4
th
World Meeting of Families (4WMF) on January 22 to 26, 2003 with
the Philippines as the host.
The WMF is held every three years upon the invitation of the
Pope, the pontifical head of the Catholic Church. It is a reunion
where families gather to pray and deepen their understanding of
how the Christian family can fulfill its role as the initiator of
evangelization in the modern world.
The Holy Father Pope John Paul II named the Third
Millennium, the Asian Millennium because it is the millennium for
the proclamation of the Name and Gospel of Jesus in Asia (with four
billion people). The Pope chose the Philippines as the venue for the
4WMF. Seventy million out of 120 million Christians in Asia are in
the Philippines. Despite the eagerness of the Pope to attend the WMF
assembly, his doctors shove aside his travel to the Philippines due to
his frail condition. The Holy Father sent Alfonso Cardinal Lopez
Trujillo to the country.
One of the top priorities of the Arroyo administration is its
renewed and intensified campaign against illegal drugs. Interior and
Local Government Secretary and Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB)
OlC-Chairman Jose D. Lina ordered the mobilization of anti-abuse
councils nationwide and the monitoring of drug testing centers by

the local chief executives (LCEs). The DDB's implementing arm, the
Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), created by Republic
Act No. 9165 and established in July 2002, is expected to crush the PI
50 billion or more or so illegal drug business in the country. The
Philippine National Police (PNP) Anti-Illegal Drug Task Force has
been assigned to validate the arrest and file appropriate charges on
drug pushers and drug-users.
To restrict the addiction to smoking, the Congress likewise
passed the 2003 Tobacco Regulation Act (Republic Act No. 9211),
which imposes an absolute ban on smoking in public places and
restricts the packaging, use, sale, distribution and advertisement of
cigarettes and other tobacco products. President Arroyo signed this
law as part of her administration's commitment to a cleaner,
healthier, and safer world. The increasing prevalence of smoking in
the Philippines with around 20,000 Filipinos who die every year due
to tobacco-related diseases, prompted many Filipino legislators to
regulate the distribution and use of cigarettes in the country.
Peace agreements with rebel groups as well as closure of
wounds caused by divisions due to EDSA 1 and 2 are also being
targeted by the Arroyo administration. On the other hand, the
separatist MILF seeks to solve through peaceful means the problem
in Mindanao with the pre-condition for signing a final peace
agreement with the Philippine government that must be just, lasting,
and comprehensive.
The perennial attempted coups in the military could be
manifestations of power struggles among the members of the
conservative elites and discontent brought about by slow pace of
economic and political change in the country. Antonio Trillanes
(elected Senator in the 2004 elections) together with the Magdalo
group of junior military officers and 300 soldiers staged a mutiny
against the Arroyo administration in the former Oakwood Premier
Hotel in Makati in July 2003. The soldiers were allegedly planning to
attack Batasang Pambansa a day before President Arroyo delivers
her State-of-the-Nation Address on July 24. For the Arroyo
administration, this was another destabilization attempt against the
government. Eleven of the Magdalo group were charged with coup
d' etat.
Amidst political turmoil, President Arroyo completed the
remaining term of former President Estrada and ran for reelection
against Fernando Poe, Jr., a.k.a. FPJ, a popular actor, in May 2004.
Mrs. Arroyo and her running mate Noli de Castro were eventually
proclaimed the winners of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential
elections. FPJ made his electoral protest; however it was later junked
by the Supreme Court shortly after he died in December of a stroke.
This 2004 presidential election was widely seen as a test of
legitimacy for the presidency of Mrs. Arroyo. The President credited
her victory to public approval of her pro-poor, pro-growth, and pro-
peace agenda. She delivered her inaugural address at the Quirino
Grandstand, Rizal Park, Manila then later flew to Cebu City where
she took her oath. President Arroyo and Vice-President Noli de
Castro took their oath before Supreme Court Chief Justice Hilario
Davide Jr. Shortly after, the President hosted the vin d' honneur, the
traditional reception for the diplomatic corps led by ambassadors
from different countries
President Arroyo would like to uplift the economy and unify
the nation by the end of her term in 2010. Her administration aims
for the creation of six to 10 million jobs by tripling loans for small
business owners and development of one to two million hectares of
land for agricultural business. Regarding education, the construction
of new school buildings, classrooms, provision of books and
computers for students, and scholarships to poor families are being
envisioned.
Likewise, the government intends to balance the national
budget in view of the country's debilitating deficit and to
decentralize progress and development across the country through
the development of transportation networks like the roll-on, roll-off
ferries and digital infrastructure.
The provision of power and water supply to all barangays is
also a priority project of the government. The administration would
also work for the decongestion of Metro Manila by forming new
cores of government and housing centers in Luzon, Visayas, and
Mindanao. The government would likewise take steps for the
development of Clark and Subic as the logistics center in Asia.
Automation of the electoral process is also being considered.
Phase 1 of the President's economic reform agenda centered on
revenue reforms topped by the passage of higher taxes on tobacco
and alcohol products, the Attrition Law, and the Expanded Value
Added Tax (E-VAT). On fighting poverty, the administration's
micro-finance program hopes to generate jobs and uplift the lives of
the poor. The economic reform program would somehow trim the

country's unemployment rate and help create six to 10 million jobs.
President Arroyo would like to see the day that the job abroad is an
option and not longer a necessity.
Some people may not be readily able to find available work or
may earn wages too low to support a family. For these reasons,
numerous NGOs in the Philippines were quick to adopt the Grameen
Bank model (Bangladesh) in poverty eradication schemes. Peasants,
fisherfolk, and upland farmers whose daily earnings are insufficient
have availed of the microfinance services from host providers. The
entrepreneurial poor who operate microenterprises and depend on
microfinance services run by NGOs and Credit Cooperatives are able
to pay on time and save regularly on a weekly basis.
In 2005, demonstrations calling for President Arroyo to resign
took place in various areas of the country. A tape recording of
President Arroyo talking with a Commission of Elections official
through telephone surfaced, suggesting that she might have
influenced the outcome of the 2004 elections. Former National
Bureau of Investigation (NBI) deputy director Samuel Ong made his
expose' of the so-called "mother of all tapes," which according to
him, contains the alleged original wiretapped telephone
conversation between COMELEC Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano
and Mrs. Arroyo.
The President publicly apologized for what she called lapse of
judgment for calling an unidentified election official before Congress
could proclaim the winner of the election She denied accusations of
cheating and expressed her intention to serve until the end of her
term on June 2010.
The probe on the wiretapped conversation was jointly
conducted by five committees in the House led by Gilbert Remulla of
Cavite. During the probe, Environment and Natural Resources
Secretary Mike Defensor presented findings of an American expert
on the tape that would discredit the charges that the President
rigged the May 2004 presidential elections. Based on the findings of
American forensic audio/video identification expert Barry Dickey,
the two tracks submitted to him have several anomalies, which
include the alteration of words in the conversation.
The Hyatt 10, a group of Cabinet officials who called for
President Arroyo to resign and accused the President of using
charter change initiatives to evade persistent questions about her
credibility is composed of former Secretaries Cesar Purisima of
Finance; Corazon "Dinky" Soliman of Social Service; Juan Santos of
Trade; Emilia Boncodin of Budget; Florencio Abad of Education;
Rene Villa of Land Reform; Teresita Deles, adviser on the peace
process; Guillermo Parayno of the Bureau of Internal Revenue; and
Alberto Lina of the Bureau of Customs.
Party-list groups and other organizations seeking the ouster of
President Arroyo organized the "Bantay Impeachment" information
bureau to provide the people with an alternative news source on the
impeachment case against the President. The groups are Anakpawis,
Bayan Muna, and Gabriela Women's Party. The other Bantay
Impeachment organizers are the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan,
Kilusang Mayo Uno, Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, Kalipunan
ng Damayang Mahihirap, Youth Demanding for Arroyo's Removal,
Migrante International, Promotion of Church-People's Response,
Gloria Step Down Movement, and Anakbayan.
The pro-impeachment group of Congressmen include
Representatives Rolex Suplico (LDP, Iloilo), Alan Peter Cayetano
(Taguig-Pateros), Ronaldo Zamora (San Juan), Joel Villanueva (Party
List, Citizens' Battle Against Corruption), Benigno Aquino III
(Tarlac), Rodolfo Plaza (Agusan del Sur), and Mujiv Hataman (Party
List, Anak Mindanao).
Citing technical grounds, Atty. Pedro Ferrer, the lawyer for
President Arroyo asked the House Committee on Justice to strike out
all other impeachment complaints filed against her aside from the
first one filed by lawyer Oliver Lozano. The House Committee on
Justice junked the impeachment complaint against President Arroyo.
The committee voted to declare the petition "insufficient in
substance" and to dismiss it. Pro-impeachment lawmakers alleged
that the original complaint was weak. They also suspected that the
Lozano complaint was filed so the administration can apply the one-
year ban rule on Mrs. Arroyo's case. The Lozano complaint accuse
the President of betraying public trust when she allegedly cheated in
the May 2004 elections.
President Arroyo, from the start, was not affected by the
impeachment complaints filed against her, and even dared the
opposition to prove its claims that she bribed lawmakers to stop the
process. Unfazed by political intrigues, the President showed no sign
of retreat. She vowed not to waver her commitment to institute fiscal
and economic reforms.

In the 8
th
SON A of the President before the joint session of
Congress, the National Welfare Program became the main thrust to
protect the people and the economy from increasing costs of oil and
food. The President called on Congress to extend the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Law (CARL) for another five years. She sought for
the inclusion of the use of farmland as loan collateral in the CARP
extension bill.
President Arroyo asked the Congress to pass a Consumer Bill of
Rights promoting the rights of consumers against price gouging,
false advertising, and other marketing malpractices. However, the
President did not endorse the reproductive health bill in Congress
but instead defended the government's policy on natural family
planning and female education.
The government spent P8.6 billion of revenues from Expanded
Value- Added Tax (E-VAT) on social services and infrastructure in
the first six months of 2006. Important infrastructure projects,
particularly railways and rural electrification projects, as well as
education and health initiatives that enhance the skills of our
workforce were prioritized. Supplemental budget for the
rehabiliation of typhoon-hit provinces in Western Visayas was
obtained from the proceeds of the E-VAT.
The Arroyo administration launched an energy efficiency and
conservation program to cushion the adverse impact of oil price
increase. The government drafted its energy independence program,
which includes increasing the indigenous oil and gas reserves,
developing the renewable energy, and increasing the use of
alternative fuels. Coco diesel, ethanol or alcogas, and compressed
natural gas (CNG) are among the alternatives that could be
combined with gasoline to reduce oil purchases. Ethanol is an
alternative energy resource produced from crops such as corn, grain
sorghum, wheat, sugar, and other agricultural feedstocks. The use of
ethanol as an additive would encourage sugar planters that shifted
before to planting other crops to go back to sugar production. Under
the government's National Fuel Ethanol Program, private entities are
encouraged to invest in the production of bio-fuels and distribution
of bio-fuel blends.
In the midst of facing the challenges of the times, President
Arroyo asked Congress to begin the process of rewriting the
constitution, changing the presidential system of government into a
federal-parliamentary system. In her State of the Nation Address in
2005, the President said she favored Charter change via the
constituent assembly. For the President, charter change is the best
way to respond to widespread dissatisfaction with Philippine
politics. The political system is the same as that designed by the
American colonial government and is not anymore capable of
responding to the needs of the country of the 21
st
century.
President Arroyo emphasized the benefits of the parliamentary
system for local government units since it will give more power and
autonomy to local officials under the federal system. For the
President, the federal- parliamentary form of government will
improve the political interface between the executive and the
legislature.
Proponents of federalism believe that it is the answer to the age-
old problems of inequitable distribution of wealth, slow pace of
development in the countryside, and the peace and order situation in
Mindanao. At that time, Speaker Jose de Venecia called Charter
Change (Cha-Cha) the country's last chance for change to break the
deadlock in our democracy. He said that the shift to a parliamentary
system and a unicameral assembly would install in the Philippines a
political structure free from destabilizing coup attempts or frequent
impeachment crisis.
For Secretary Ignacio Bunye, the parliamentary system is also
more politically stable as a simple vote of no-confidence is enough to
remove an ineffective leader. For former President Fidel Ramos, the
proposed parliamentary system will also provide proportional
representation for the country's leaders in Philippine politics since
members of the parliament will be elected in their respective district,
including the prime minister. The Muslim Movement for Federal
Philippines appealed to the nation to support President Arroyo and
former President Ramos' proposal to change the form of government
to improve its performance and eradicate corruption.
The country registered its highest economic growth in three
decades in 2007. However, the benefits of the growth have been slow
in trickling down to the poor. The latest Index of Economic Freedom,
prepared by the Washington based Heritage Foundation with the
Wall Street Journal ranked the Philippines 104
th
among 183 countries
in terms of economic freedom. The index gave the country the lowest
score in freedom from corruption.
The Arroyo administration has taken strides to address the
problem of graft and corruption in the public sector. Part of the

campaign against corruption include the allotment of additional
funds for the Office of the Ombudsman, the Presidential Anti-Graft
Commission, and other investigative arms of the government.
Lifestyle checks have led to the dismissal and / or prosecution of
some officials. There are a number of graft-related issues still waiting
to be resolved, which include $329-million broadband project deal
with ZTE Corp., the P728-million fertilizer scam, and alleged cash
gifts distributed to some politicians.
The country is in need of feasible solutions to achieve lasting
peace and prosperity. The government alone could not carry out the
arduous tasks. The Philippines, naturally blessed with bountiful
resources and a historic past, has withstood the difficult times. It is
resilient yet staunch like a bamboo. The nation has been striving for
its primary concern, its people from its foremost strength, the
Almighty God.
At the beginning of 2009, the 42
nd
World Day of Peace was
celebrated with the theme, "Fighting Poverty to Build Peace." In the
message of Pope Benedict XVI, he highlighted the need for human
family to find an urgent response to the serious question of poverty,
which is not only a material problem, but above all, a moral and
spiritual one.

Study Guides
A. Terms / Concepts to Understand
Bell Trade Act Coup d' etat
Parity Rights Blue Book
Military Bases Agreement Oplan Sagittarius
Bell Mission AVSECOM
Melby Mission APEC
Rizal Bill Visiting Forces Agreement
Filipino First Policy SONA
B. Questions to Answer
1. Cite incidents under various political administrations
wherein the following qualities were evident:
a. creativity and resourcefulness
b. faith and religiosity
c. dishonesty and treachery
d. loyalty and bravery
2. What brought about the People Power 1 and 2? Discuss the
results of these mass actions.
3. What should the Filipinos do to achieve a sustainable
economic growth?
4. Is there a need to change the 1987 Philippine Constitution?
Why?


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