Monday, December 21, 2015

RIZAL AND NEW DAPITAN (VISION FOR THE PHILIPPINES)

A presentation by Sir Edwin D Bael, KGOR
Supreme Archivist of the Knights of Rizal
during the 53rd National Rizal Youth Leadership Institute
on December 19, 2015 at the Teachers’ Camp, Baguio City

Juventud Filipina, Mga Kabataang Filipino:

Seeing Open Fields And Vast Horizons From Prison

Remember Chapter 3 of the Noli? At that point of the story, Crisostomo Ibarra had just left Kapitan Tiago’s party after coming home from abroad. He was followed outside by the old lieutenant; in an isolated street the lieutenant told him the truth - that his father, Don Rafael Ibarra, died in prison. Crisostomo was shattered. In a sympathetic voice, as he saw the emotion his words had caused in the young man, the officer said: “I thought that you knew it; but be brave. Here, you know, no man can be honorable without being imprisoned.”

That’s the way it was in those days. In his letter to the members of La Solidaridad, Barcelona, Jan 1889, Dr. Rizal counseled: “…it is advisable for each one to do his duty just for its own sake and at best to expect to be later treated unjustly, because in anomalous countries, injustice is the prize for those who fulfill their duties.”

Anomalous pa rin ba ang bansa natin?    Di na masyado!

Our country has definitely changed. Now, it is marked among others by many elected “honorables” in prison, and by the fact that in our national prison, or the Bilibid, drug lords and other nefarious beings hold sway, directing operations from within, and even have de facto control, borne out by a report the other month that Bilibid inmates with automatic weapons prevented the warden from moving their “bossings” to another block…

This bit and clip of our current state of affairs brings us to our theme: “Youth, Elections and the Future”. The question, to me, is:  In this hyper-connected world of a Philippines entering an ASEAN Common Market, confronted by a resurgent neighbor bully, with so much drug-related problems under the surface, and once again boiling in political games so focused on the ego, the personality, and the “personalan” that the true and lasting interests of the nation are forgotten, can you the youth of this generation make a difference for the future? 

I say, yes. Being the majority of our voters, if you get your acts together, you would be unstoppable.

Going to the topic of my speech this morning: “Rizal and New Dapitan (Vision for the Philippines)”, perhaps our question could be: Are there any tips, or operations manual, or suggestions for having a consensus on what we want our common future to be and for having a general approach to life?

In an essay entitled "Laughter and Tears" (1884), Dr. Rizal alluded to his general approach in the general situation he found himself in. He wrote: “It was a world which granted privileges to some and imposed prohibitions on others... Endowed with strength and eager to learn, one had to drag himself in a narrow prison cell when he could see an open field, a vast horizon in the distance; when he could feel the beatings of a heart; and when he believed himself entitled to enjoy the beauty of a dream.”

Our common people lived in the narrow prison cell of daily survival where they were compelled to seek connections so as to gain privileges and circumvent prohibitions. Has this general situation substantially changed?

I submit, not really; and therefore I also put forward, that no matter what our circumstances may be, we can follow Jose Rizal’s attitude of resolutely standing up to see open fields and vast horizons, feel the beatings of our hearts, and believe we are entitled to enjoy the beauty of a dream… in other words, as a strategic approach, to change our mindsets and focus our respective consciousness on opportunities, blessings, abundance.

Owning A La Juventud Filipina

You know every generation must fight its own battles; and the future is what you predict and create. Abraham Lincoln is quoted to have said: “The best way to predict your future is to create it”.

How do you create the future?

Dr. Rizal wrote in the first stanza of A La Juventud Filipina:


Crece, oh timida flor!
Alza su tersa frente,
Juventud Filipina, en este día!
Luce resplandeciente
Tu rica gallardía,
Bella esperanza de la Patria Mía!


Grow, oh timid flower!
Lift your smooth countenance
Filipino Youth, on this day!
Let shine with full radiance
your rich grace and gallantry,
beautiful hope of my country!

Young ones, I plead guilty to having helped formulate what now appears on your NRYLI T-shirts; in that print you take full possession and ownership of these Rizalian ideas, and declare to all the world: “I am, shy flower may be, yet rich with gallantry, and hope so lovely, of this my country!”

Since we started reading this poem which Jose Rizal wrote when he was 18, may I finish its entire English translation so you get to appreciate the complete sense of what he was saying? Here it goes:


TO THE FILIPINO  YOUTH
By Jose Rizal
Translated to English by Edwin D. Bael,
Revised August 30, 2015

               Grow, oh timid flower!
Lift your smooth countenance
Filipino Youth, on this day!
Let shine with full radiance
your rich grace and gallantry,
beautiful hope of my country!

Take wing, grand genius,
and let noble thought  infuse
those who launch their virgin mind
stronger than wind of gale kind
at the seat so glorious.

Descend to the amphitheater
O Youth, with pleasant glow
of arts and sciences, and sever
the strong heavy fetter
that chains your poetic flow.

See that in the zone a-burning,
the Spaniard, in shadows staying,
with a pious wise hand,
offers splendid crown grand,
to the son of this Indian land.

You, who ascend seeking,
in wings of your rich fantasy,
from Olympus in clouds hazy,
the most tender of poesy
ambrosia and nectar exceeding.

You, with accent from heaven,
melodious rival of Philomen,
who dispels, in varied recital
in the quiet night so serene,
bitter pain from the mortal.

You who, by the cruel agony
stirring your mental tendency
and the pure memory
of the genius refulgent,
eternalizes with genius prepotent.

And you, of varied charms that ripple
of Phoebus, darling of divine Apelles,
who translate the canvas simple
with magic paintbrushes
to that of nature’s mantle.

Hurry! For the laurel does await
to crown the genius’ sacred flame,
spreading around the fame
with trumpet that does proclaim
the mortal’s name for the long wait.

O happy, happy day at hand,
gentle Philippines, for your land!
Bless the Omnipotent Grand
who with loving yearning
sends you fortune and well-being.


A La Juventud Filipina
Por Jose Rizal, November 22, 1879

              Crece, oh timida flor!
Alza su tersa frente,
Juventud Filipina, en este día!
Luce resplandeciente
Tu rica gallardía,
Bella esperanza de la Patria Mía!

Vuela, genio grandioso,
Y les infunde noble pensamiento,
Que lance vigoroso,
Más rápido que el viento,
Su mente virgin al glorioso asiento.

Baja con la luz grata
De las artes y ciencias a la arena,
Juventud, y desata
La pesada cadena
Que tu genio poético encadena.

Ve que en la ardiente zona
Do moraron las sombras, el hispano
Esplendente corona,
Con pía sabia mano,
Ofrece al hijo de este suelo indiano.

Tú, que buscando subes,
En alas de tu rica fantasia,
Del Olimpo en las nubes
Tiernisima poesia
Mas sabrosa que nectar y ambrosia.

Tú, de celeste acento,
Melodioso rival de Filomena,
Que en variado concierto
En la noche serena
Disipas del mortal la amarga pena.

Tú, que la pena dura
Animas al impulso de tu mente,
Y la memoria pura
Del genio refulgente
Eternizas con genio prepotente.

Y tú, que el vario encanto
De Febo, amado del divino Apeles,
Y de natura el manto
Con mágicos pinceles
Trasladar al sencillo lienzo sueles.

Corred! Que sacra llama
Del genio el lauro coronar espera,
Esparciendo la Fama
Con trompa pregonera
El nombre del mortal por la ancha espera.

Día, día felice,
Filipinas gentil, para tu suelo!
Al Potente bendice
Que con amante anhelo
La ventura te envía y el consuelo.

Anong ibig sabihin nito sa madaling salita? Ansabi nya, magmadali tayo mga bata, in unfolding and manifesting our respective unique geniuses, dahil nag-aantay si laurel or the recognition of your excellence. Come on, let them shine with full radiance, in nobility, with arts and sciences, be they poetry, music, science or painting. 

And, may I say, own your future, whatever your potentials may be.

Yes my friends, to effectively create, you must own your future!

Always, the power to choose is yours.

But I can hear your question: what are the options for the future to choose from?

Actually, as many as you can imagine.

But there is one option that springs from our topic: New Dapitan.

New Dapitan

Why new Dapitan? Because there, Dr. Rizal put his ideas into practice and there he refined his ideas of what and how the Filipino can be; there, he fused ideas with action into his unique praxis.

I wish to submit to you that the poem-song “Himno a Talisay” or Hymn to Talisay is one such product of his visioneering for our country or how the Filipino can be or ought to be. For this presentation, let’s just assume this Himno is a main pillar of Rizal’s framework of ideas that we now call New Dapitan.

Before I take up this Himno with you, however, I want you to recall Dr. Rizal’s plan in the La Liga Filipina that Sir George Aseniero had wonderfully explained yesterday. Among the underlying tenets that caught my attention in the La Liga are the principles of cooperativism that Jose Rizal thought should underpin the workings of the entire organization to engage the rest of the Philippine population. 

Rizalian Cooperativism

Cooperativism and its principles were first set out in 1844 in Rochdale, England and have formed the bases for the principles on which co-operatives around the world continue to operate.

In 1889-1890, Dr. José Rizal spent several months in London first, to do his historical research on pre-colonial Philippines and second, to improve his English language skills. During that time, he annotated Antonio Morga’s 1609 “Historical events of the Philippines” and among others, sent out the Liham sa mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos.

I would submit that it is very probable Jose Rizal came across and learned of cooperatives and its principles during this stay in London or about 45 years after the establishment of cooperativism. But he could as well have learned it in Spain or other parts of Europe. He must have appreciated how these principles could co-exist with and yet counteract the monopolistic tendencies of those with political and economic power. Hence, he used them as the organizing principles underpinning the La Liga.

Just for our overview (as there is a need for a separate study on each of them) the seven principles of cooperativism, in summary form, are as follows:
1. Voluntary and open membership;
2. Democratic member control;
3. Member economic participation;
4. Autonomy and independence;
5. Education, training and information;
6. Co-operation among cooperatives; and
7. Concern for the community.

From this summary enumeration, you can already see how a democratic free market can be achieved through cooperativism.

That People Become Persons Worthy Of Liberty

But beyond the underpinnings of cooperative principles, Dr. Rizal pursued his frenetic activities under an overarching value.

That value was to “make men worthy”, especially Filipinos.

In a letter to Blumentritt dated February 2, 1890 in Brussels, Rizal narrated his exchange with his rhetoric professor, the Jesuit Priest Fr. Francisco Sanchez who defended the Noli in public. He wrote: “I told him that I wanted to awaken my countrymen from their profound lethargy and one who wished to awaken did not use soft and gentle sounds but detonations, blows, etc. ‘Are you not afraid of the consequences of your audacity?’ asked Fr. Sanchez. ‘Father,’ I replied, ‘you are a missionary. If you go on your mission, are you not afraid of the consequences of its fulfillment?’ ‘Oh, that is entirely different!” he responded. ‘Not at all,’ I answered, ‘your mission is to baptize the heathen, but mine is to make men worthy.’”­

But worthy of what?   Liberty, I submit.

In his manifesto of December 15, 1896 while incarcerated in Fort Santiago, Jose Rizal wrote: “I have given proofs as one who most wants liberties for our country and I continue wanting them. But I put as a premise the education of the people so that through education and work they might have a personality of their own worthy of liberties.”

A personality worthy of liberties is brave. For, as Rizal had written to the members of La Solidaridad in Barcelona, “(l)iberty is a woman who grants her favors only to the brave. Enslaved peoples have to suffer much to win her and those who abuse her lose her.”

Now, if you sell your votes, are you a person worthy of liberties?

If you just take and believe what other people say without critically thinking about its truthfulness and source-reliability, are you a person worthy of liberties?

Dr. Rizal clarified many things about this matter in his Liham sa mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos from London dated February 1889. He wrote on points that should be taken as tips on how to be a person worthy of liberties. Here are a few quotes from that long letter in Tagalog:

1.   “Ignorance is bondage, because like mind, like man. A man without a will of his own is a man without personality. The blind who follows other’s opinion is a like a beast led by a halter.”

2.   “God gave each one his own mind and his own conscience so that he can distinguish between right and wrong. All are born without chains, free, and no one can subject the will and spirit of another. Why would you submit to another your noble and free thought?”

3.   “Ignorance is ignorance, and not goodness and honor. God, fountain of wisdom, does not expect man, created in his image, to allow himself to be fooled and blinded. The gift of reason with which we are endowed must be brightened and utilized.”

4.   “Let us be reasonable and open our eyes, especially you women, because you are the ones who open the minds of men. Consider that a good mother is different from the one created by the friars. Raise your children close to the image of the true God – the God who cannot be bribed, the God who is not avaricious, the God who is the father of all, who is not partial, the God who does not fatten on the blood of the poor, who does not rejoice at the plaints of the afflicted, and does not obfuscate the intelligent mind. Awaken and prepare the mind of the child for every good and desirable idea – love for honor, sincere and firm character, clear mind, clean conduct, noble action, love for one’s fellow men, respect for God – teach these to your children. And because life is full of sorrows and perils, fortify their character against any difficulty, strengthen their hearts against any danger.”

5.   “Lack of self-respect and excessive timidity invite scorn”.

6.   “Men are born equal, naked, and without chains. They were not created by God to be enslaved, neither were they endowed with intelligence to be misled, nor adorned with reason to be fooled by others. It is not pride to refuse to worship a fellow man, to enlighten the mind, and to reason out everything. The arrogant one is he who wants to be worshipped, who misleads others and who wants his will to prevail over reason and justice.”

From Dapitan, in a letter dated December 20, 1893, Dr. Rizal counseled his nephew Alfredo T. Hidalgo, saying: “Go ahead then; study, study, and meditate well on what you study. Life is a very serious thing and only those with intelligence and courage go through it worthily. To live is to be among men and to be among men is to struggle. But this struggle is not just a brutal and material struggle with men alone; it is a struggle with them, with one’s self, with their passions and one’s own, with errors and preoccupations. It is an eternal struggle with a smile on the lips and tears in the heart. On this battlefield man has no better weapon than his intelligence, no other force but his heart. Sharpen, perfect, polish then your mind; and fortify and educate your heart.”

If I may say so, young friends, most of Rizal’s works can probably be categorized under the general rubric of “how to be a person worthy of liberties”.

Let’s move on to the Himno a Talisay before we take on many other things.

He made his students sing this Himno before start of classes and the Spanish Military Prosecutor used it in his Trial in Fort Santiago as corroborative proof of his alleged subversion of Spanish sovereignty.

Recall La Liga? That sent him to exile in Dapitan. (Di lang alam ng mga prayle at colonyalistang Espanyol na ipapadala ng Maykapal si Josephine Bracken doon para ma-ibsan ang lungkot ni Rizal sa pag-iisa).

And the Himno a Talisay? It served as added justification for the prejudgment to send him to death by firing squad in Bagumbayan. (And it gave him the chance to record for posterity in the last farewell, his high regard for Josephine, as his friend and his joy divine!)

Why? What was so important about these two writings?

La Liga was intended firstly to “unite the whole archipelago into one compact, vigorous, and homogeneous body,” secondly, for “mutual protection in every want and necessity,” thirdly, for “defense against all violence and injustice”; its motto was unus instar omnium, which had three connotations, namely: one like all, one equals all, one for all. If our people were to behave as a united archipelago, with mutual respect and teamwork, working together and refusing to quarrel with each other, then that behavior would undermine and defeat Spain’s strategic approach to colonization here, which was “divide and conquer”. So, they suppressed those ideas by exiling Rizal: trying to “cut the head off.”

The Himno a Talisay, on the other hand, was more potent. It described in the present tense the future condition of the Filipino standing as a free, learning, and overcoming being, marked with courage and self-esteem.

It describes the Filipino who has won his freedom not with the sword but, as Rizal wrote in the Fili, “by deserving it, exalting individual reason and dignity, loving the just, the good, the great, even dying for it.” And he continued in the Fili, “when a people reaches that height, God will provide the arms, and idols will fall, the tyrants will fall like a house of cards, and liberty will shine with the first dawn.”

Que horror! The colonialists must have thought: if the Filipinos behave as described in the Himno a Talisay, then indeed we could fall “like a house of cards.” We better kill this man to sow terror among the populace and discourage them from following his suggestions, they plotted.

Killing Rizal is just what occurred: after a kangaroo court trial, they had Filipino guardia civil marksmen shoot Rizal with the threat that if they hesitated, an equal number of Spanish regulars armed with Mauser rifles positioned behind them would include them in the execution.

However, the populace did not get cowed; his innocent's death became the loudest detonation and it awakened his countrymen; ang mga great, or great-great grandparents ninyo saw Rizal’s martyrdom as the last straw on the carabao’s back, so to say, and ended their limitless patience and placidity.

And the hostilities happened. The rest is history. The Filipino nation was born. [albeit, amid punyeta]. We are the latest manifestation and unfolding.

How can the Himno a Talisay help us today?

It could point us to a noble “choice of being” as a nation.

But note: just to point out, not to make us; because only our own choice and our resolute follow-up actions can make us do and become…

So, aside from what’s already in the Bagumbayan publication, here’s how I want to discuss this Himno with you: I’ll treat them in two stanza chunks for consideration, then the chorus, and lastly a general view.

Asilo Sagrado - Sacred Sanctuary

Stanzas 1 and 2 read as follows:


HYMN TO TALISAY                         
An English translation                     
By Sir Edwin D. Bael, KCR
Taguig, June 2013                                    
I
From Dapitan’s sandy shore and strand           
and the craggy rocks on mountain high
are your throne, O sacred sanctuary!   
where I spent my tender childhood.                
II
In your valley glazed by blooms grand,           
and shade and fruiting trees growing nigh;
our fully formed minds there do tarry,         
with our bodies and souls as we could.


HIMNO Á TALISAY                       
por José Rizal y Alonso                    
(Original text in Spanish,
Dapitan, 13 October 1895)                                

De Dapitan la playa arenosa                     
y las rocas del monte encumbrado
son tu trono, ¡oh asilo sagrado!              
donde paso mi tierna niñez.                  

En tu valle que esmaltan las flores
y sombrea frutal arboleda,                     
nuestra mente formada se queda,        
con el cuerpo nuestro el alma la vez.

Here we see the nation’s throne defined as stretching from shore to mountaintop. As we know, throne rooms form small areas in comparison to the entire building. It stands to reason that our entire territory would comprise our seas and islands since the throne is just beach to peak.

And so, taken together with the La Liga formulation for a unified archipelago, we have the archipelagic doctrine articulated by Rizal way back in 1892-95…

This doctrine is now incorporated in our 1987 Constitution as follows: “The national territory comprises the Philippine archipelago, with all the islands and waters embraced therein, and all other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or jurisdiction, consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial and aerial domains, including its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves, and other submarine areas. The waters around, between, and connecting the islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and dimensions, form part of the internal waters of the Philippines.”

This territory my friends, is asilo sagrado or sacred sanctuary, according to Dr. Rizal. Sacred, aside from the religious or spiritual connotation, refers to something entitled to reverence and respect, or highly valued and important. So our territory is a place that must be respected. We have to value it beyond claims of mere selfish ownership and ensure that others respect our territory too in its archipelagic meaning.

The 2nd stanza would remind us of a phrase popular among expat Filipinos, which is: “You can take the Filipino away from the Philippines, but you cannot take the Philippines away from the Filipino,” because where ever we may be, our minds “there do tarry.”

Hombres Fuertes – Strong Persons

Stanzas 3 and 4, read as follows:


III
We are children who, though born late,         
have souls with vigorous character,     
and strong persons we shall be in the future
who’ll know how to guard their families
IV       
Children who, nothing can intimidate
not waves, nor hurricane, nor thunder;           
with speedy arm and serene feature
we’ll know how to fight when in difficulties.



Somos niños, pues tarde nacimos,
mas el alma tenemos lozana,                 
y hombres fuertes serémos mañana     
que sabrán sus familias guardar.              

Somos niños que nada intimida                  
ni las olas, ni el baguio, ni el trueno;
pronto el brazo y el rostro sereno        
en el trance sabrémos luchar.

The 3rd stanza may refer to either or both being overdue or late bloomer… well, hanggang ngayon, tila hindi pa rin fully bloomed… (may I say, that’s your opportunity young people: make this country bloom fully!); and immediately the lines proclaim the vigor of your souls that ensure developing into strong beings protective of families…. walang pupwedeng makakasindak o di ba puporma’t magpapayuko; at kung magka-gipitan, marunong kaming makipaglaban, sabi ng fourth stanza.

I like the phrase “with speedy arm and serene feature”. It describes the demeanor of our arnis or eskrima masters: so cool and calm, and yet their arms blur in the flow of strikes and parries. You know of course that FMA or Filipino Martials Arts (Kali/Arnis/Eskrima) has been featured in “The Bourne Series,” “Mission Impossible III,” “The Hunted,” “I, Frankenstein,” and other Hollywood movies. It is acknowledged to be one of the best systems in CQC or Close Quarters Combat. Hence US, military, police and intelligence units train in it too. I personally know a Filipino guru who gives that kind of training there. But in the movies, you don’t get some screaming title saying this is FMA: if you know the moves, then when you see them you recognize them.

Jose Rizal envisioned that the Filipino practices this martial art form, which has a deeper significance. Maestra (Professor) Josephine Del Mar of the Hawaii Escrima Academy, a descendant of Lapu-Lapu, explained that "Escrima is a spirit for our school and our system; it is the spirit of Kali, which is the mother art.” [Dan Inosanto explained in an article that his gurus told him Ka comes from “kamut” or hand, and Li comes from “lihut” or movement] Maestra del Mar continued: “When they (the manongs) left the Philippines they had to conform to another way of living. The Filipinos are great adapters and impersonators. But they survived. And this is the essence of Kali: survival. The Filipinos were never completely conquered. They have been able to maintain this basic essence. This essence is the philosophy of escrima; that is what makes the Filipino. You have to have that soul, that depth, that feeling and the philosophy is what keeps the art going, too.”

And I think Dr. Rizal saw the outlines of this, or at least the survival and cool speedy essence, long before our global diaspora.

Nuestras Armas Alcanzan Doquier - Our Weapons Reach Everywhere

Stanzas 5 to 6 describe certain capabilities and attitudes. They say:


V
Our games scramble the sand;
caves and thickets we reconnoiter;      
on big rocks our houses stand,
our weapons reach everywhere.
VI                   
There is no darkness, no pitchblack night,
nor fierce storm or typhoon that we dread,
and should Satan himself come to sight,
he shall be captured alive or dead.      
           
Nuestros juegos la arena revuelven;
recorremos los antros, las breñas;        
nuestras casas están sobre peñas,
nuestras armas alcanzan doquier.        

No hay tinieblas, no hay noches oscuras
que temamos, ni fiera tormenta,            
y si el mismo Luzbel se presenta,          
muerto ó vivo cogido ha de ser.

The fifth stanza says the Filipino plays hard: our games stir up and scramble the sand… we also work hard, investigating and scrutinizing fearful places of unknown contents and consequences, like caves and thickets… and we build our habitations on hard, solid foundations…

Then in one innocuous line, Rizal puts the country in a very advanced stage: nuestras armas alcanzan doquier – our arms reach everywhere! Armas does not mean our upper limbs; these are called brazos – armas means weapons or weapons systems. Remember that was 1895 and Dr. Rizal was saying we have weapons that can target and hit all over.

What weapon or weapons can hit many targets one after another, or all at the same time? Did he envision having intercontinental ballistic missiles with multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicles? Or satellite- and laser-guided hypersonic cruise missiles? Or stealth air fighter-bombers and navy craft? Or a gigantic electro-magnetic pulse? Those are the things we can think of now as weapons that can reach everywhere… but they did not exist then, not even in the drawing stages…

Can you see the preconditions for that capability? Massive Industrialization; innovative advances in shipping and aircraft systems; and all other needed scientific, technological and human resource pre-requisites.

Are our political leaders (or other leaders for that matter) giving any attention to industrialization strategically, which after all is the only way to absorb our growing work force so that they do not have to go abroad to find greener pastures?

And can you see the implications to those who would try to bully our country? It would not be worth their while, unless they are very foolish.

Industrialization and readiness for eventualities is a strategic approach for a nation worthy of liberties: that’s what Rizal is saying here, I submit!

Never again the approach of funnel-minded balat-sibuyas egos ever-ready to pounce on and kill each other [punyeta] and ever-eager to be distracted and entertained by cheap, shallow shows, thus allowing the banyaga or those with money and connections to control and dominate.

In fact in the Fili, Rizal was enthusiastic about industrialization in the following passage: “Tomorrow we shall be citizens of the Philippines whose destiny will be beautiful because it will be in loving hands. Oh yes! The future is ours, it is rosy. I see life stirring in these regions, so long dead and lethargic… I see towns rising along the railways and factories everywhere and buildings like that in Mandaluyong. I hear the ship’s whistle, the concussion of trains, the clatter of machineries…”

Well, is any of our President-wannabes talking about full industrialization for our nation or just peripheral production for the industrialized first world or nothing at all? Hmmmm…

Take note that Rizal had the happy hope: that being then colonial subjects, they shall be citizens of the Philippines ensuring its future to be beautiful with loving hands.

For the coming electoral exercise in May next year, we may as well ask:
·    Do we vote for candidates who would make us continue to be slaves and subjects, ruling and disciplining us because we know no better and they seem to be the “better”? 
·    Do we choose candidates who would allow us to get away with getting what we want but not really need, unmindful of consequences and costs? 
·    Do we elect candidates who lead by guaranteeing continuing citizen participation in decision-making and subjecting themselves to citizen accountability for their platforms and behavior? and leaders who would ensure the nation’s beautiful future with loving management?


Now, let’s go to the sixth stanza: it talks about the character of courage and not fearing dark and confusing times; it talks about such vigilance and bravery that would not hesitate to go forth and capture the very devil himself or anyone who dares to be a devil in our national life.

It evokes the resolute watchfulness Dr. Rizal immortalized in the chorus of his poem entitled Himno al Trabajo or Hymn to Labor, an undated work presumed to be of the period in Europe. That chorus sings: 


HIMNO AL TRABAJO

Corro:
Por la patria en la Guerra,          
Por la patria en la paz,                 
Velera el Filipino                           
Vivira y morira!


HYMN TO LABOR

Chorus: (Simply translated)
For the country at war,
For the country at peace,
The Filipino will stand guard,
Will live and will die!

(A more elaborate translation says:)
For the homeland in war, conflict and rivalry,
For the homeland in amity and harmony,
The Filipino shall keep vigil and stand sentry,
Shall be alive and shall survive till extremity!

Do our leaders (especially those who want to be elected) and do we ourselves have that commitment?

Almas Grandes – Great Noble Souls

Stanzas VII and VIII talk some more of the Filipino nature and character. They read:


VII
The people call us Talisaynon,              
great noble soul in not so big constitution,
that in Dapitan and in all its region,
Talisay has had no competition.                      
VIII                 
Our pond has no contender,      
our dive is abyss so deep cavernous,   
and rowing, the world has no outrigger
that in a moment can overtake us.


Talisaynon nos llama la gente,      
alma grande en un cuerpo chiquito,   
que en Dapitan y en todo el distrito,   
no ha tenido Talisay su par.                   

Nuestro estanque no tiene rivales,      
nuestro salto es abismo profundo,       
y remando no hay banka en el mundo      
que un momento nos pueda pasar.

In Stanza VII, we are told of alma grande, translated as great noble soul, that animates a not so big body; actually Rizal describes the body as un cuerpo chiquito or literally a small cute body; but in Dapitan and in the region, Talisay (the country) has had no peer… This reminds us of the saying: it’s not the size of the dog, but the size of the fight in the dog, that matters.

Stanza VIII says our waters are unparalleled, that give us wide and almost bottomless diving thrills, and we are great team players, especially in rowing – no boat can overtake us in a moment.  Again, Rizal wrote this in 1895 but he somehow foresaw current Filipino dragon boat rowers becoming champions against well-known team rowers from around the world…

Multi-Habil Integradora - Integrative Multi-Skilled

Stanzas IX and X indicate that the Filipino approaches situations from a scientific, historical, linguistic and integrative perspective; and describe our people as multi-skilled multi-taskers in various fields…


IX
We study exact science challenges,       
and the history of our country,              
we talk in three and four languages,
making both faith and reason agree.
X
Our arms wield with skill and fine accord
the knife, the pen, the gardening hoe,
the pickaxe, the rifle, and the sword,  
companion of the strong fellow.

Los problemas de ciencias exactas,      
de la patria la historia estudiamos,
tres y cuatro lenguajes hablamos         
acordando la fe y la razón.   
                              
Nuestros brazos manejan á un tiempo            
el cuchillo, la pluma, la azada,              
la piqueta, el fusil y la espada,              
compañero del fuerte varón 

I suppose exact science challenges were those that had accurate quantitative means of testing hypotheses and repeating results. Probably Dr. Rizal was referring to the sciences that had rigor and that accounted for the many technological advances in his time, as he was interested in those things that advanced human progress. And he projected that future Filipinos would be adept in these areas.

But I believe he would also welcome quantum science and chaos theory, which did not exist yet in his time. For while at the macro level, things are measurable and predictable, at the micro level according to quantum theory, the intention of the observer changes the behavior of the phenomenon being observed. Rizal would probably appreciate the unceasing change in micro details given the infinite number of observers and would at the same time value the continuing reliability of certain macro- general principles and laws, like gravity.

And probably, he would also welcome chaos theory which posits that there is a butterfly effect, or the phenomenon whereby a minute localized change in a complex system can have large effects elsewhere; that everything matters such that even the flutter of a butterfly’s wings can cause a hurricane on the other side of the world and that if you change even the smallest of life’s details, you completely change its outcome. Yes, in chaos theory science-lingo, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later state.

The little details Rizal wanted changed in the life of the Filipino focused on their mindsets or belief clusters so that they stand as men and women worthy of liberties.

Can we still pursue these changes along the lines of science, hard or exact?

I believe we can.

But dear young ones: beware of a counterpoint to science - romance is not exact.

Ok, now to his succeeding vision.

Rizal also projected a people avidly studying their own history. For as he wrote in his essay entitled The Philippines within a Hundred Years: “to foretell the destiny of a nation, it is necessary to open the book that tells of her past.” Indeed, as George S. Patton advised: “Prepare for the unknown by studying how others in the past have coped with the unforeseeable and the unpredictable.” 

But then, Henry Kissinger wryly observed: “It is not often that nations learn from the past, even rarer that they draw the correct conclusions from it.” And author S. M. Sigerson has pointed out: “A nation which fails to adequately remember salient points of its own history is like a person with Alzheimer's. And that can be a social disease of a most destructive nature.” 

The third point Rizal predicted here, I’d say observed, is that we speak three and four languages; Filipinos are linguists, he says. Now, let’s clarify this. Dr. Rizal asserted that “(w)hile a people preserves its language: it preserves the marks of liberty.” And he also said in “Los Viajes” that: “Man is multiplied by the number of languages he possesses and speaks.” So for him, it’s perfectly okay to learn other languages so long as you preserve and continue loving your own.

The last point he described in Stanza IX is that we are integrative: we make both faith and reason agree. Our logic can take in stride and live with beliefs that are beyond logic. We do not fall into the strictness and intolerance of religious fundamentalism. In his essay entitled “Doubts” where he tackled the importance of religion to man, he said: “A man needs to believe and to love, he needs a goal towards which to steer his actions, to formulate for himself a purpose, to see something more beyond matter and noise, he needs in short an objective worthy of his being and his faculties!”

Stanza X describes the multi-tasking, multi-talented Filipino be it with the knife (in the kitchen or self-defense), the pen (writing, communications), the gardening hoe (agriculture), the pickaxe (mining and industries), the rifle (hunting and defense from a distance), and the sword (close combat) – all of which presume an agile mind and a perceptive heart behind effective body and hand movements…

Clara Estrella, Preciado Tesoro - Bright Star, Precious Treasure

Stanzas XI and XII express praise for provisions and strong inspirations.. They read:


XI
Hail, hail, Talisay rich with verdure!    
In chorus all our voices thee praise,     
bright star, precious treasure,    
of childhood’s true learning and solace           
XII
In the struggles that await man,   
subject to grief, pain, unease,
your memory shall be his talisman,
and in the tomb, your name, his peace.          



¡Vive, vive, frondoso Talisay!                  
Nuestras voces te ensalcen á coro,
clara estrella, preciado tesoro,              
de la infancia doctrina y solaz.              

En las luchas que aguardan al hombre,      
á pesares y duelos sujeto,                       
tu memoria sera su amuleto,                  
y en la tumba tu nombre, su paz.   

This is rootedness in a rich green homeland… deemed a bright star and precious treasure, that provides true guidance and real comfort… the attitude of gratitude is emblazoned here…

Which brings us to happiness, because “happiness comes from gratitude” according to David Stendl-Rast, a monk who studied a variety of world religions throughout his life; his message to the world is to “slow down, look at where you’re heading, and above all – be grateful.”

And Rizal was a model of gratefulness that was also rootedness - such strong emotional and cultural tie imparting strength in the face of life’s inescapable struggles, that the mere remembering of home fortifies the striving soul and grants an expectation of peace even if death should come… a wonderful stanch of a being so worthy of liberties…

Siempre Adelante – Always Advancing

The chorus sings of purposive persistence and mastery of elements.


CHORUS:                                                     
Be safe, Talisay! Firm and constant,
always advancing, you shall prosper.  
Every element, with you triumphant,
sea, land and air, you shall master!

CORO:                                                  
¡Salve, Talisay! Firme y constante,
siempre adelante, tú marcharás.   
¡Tú, victorioso, todo elemento,             
mar, tierra y viento, dominarás!

What does “always advancing” mean? Does it mean sugod ng sugod maski sumasalpak na sa sobrang kapal na pader?

Well, what did Bruce Lee advice? Be water.

Romantic oldies like me remember lyrics like: “Don't you know, Dindi (Gingi), I'd be running, searching for you? Like a river that can't find the sea; that would be me, without you, my Dindi (Gingi).”

Yes, there is an inevitable, inexorable sense that by gravity, rainwater would find its way to the sea, regardless of obstacles. It would go over, slide under, shift on the side, bore holes, break barriers, move obstructions, carve rivers, destabilize mountains, or even evaporate…

That is the sense of siempre adelante as used here. Hence, it is described as firm and constant – firme y constante - giving the impression of water drops falling one after another consistently over time creating holes in granite rocks.

It reminds us of Dr. Rizal’s advice on perseverance in his essay “Town Schools in the Philippines,” where he said:

“Whether the sacrifice be big or small, whether man be ungrateful and forgetful, whether malice be opposed, or whether sterile and barren egos mock, we ought not to be dismayed before an insignificant failure nor go backward at the least obstacle that is discerned in the horizon. xxxxx Let us work then together and instead of useless lamentations, of disconsolate complaints, of accusations and excuses, let us apply the remedy, let us build,  no matter if we begin with the simplest, for later we shall have time to erect new edifices on that foundation.

“Step by step one reaches the Temple of Progress whose numerous and fitful steps are not climbed without having faith and conviction in the soul, courage in the heart necessary to facing disillusions, and the gaze fixed on the future. xxxxx The road is ours as the present is ours, and if it is not given to us to reach the end, we may be sure that by fulfilling our duties, the future will be ours also – the future of blessings.”

That is what Dr. Rizal meant by siempre adelante.

The ideas of struggle, persistence and hope are also evoked in Dr Rizal’s poem entitled “A Mi…” or To My… (which refers to My Muse)


4
Muse, who in my past age
you inspired me sweet
love songs, go and repose;
Today I need a sword,
rivers of gold, and acrid prose.
5
I need to reason,
to meditate and to fight,
sometimes to cry,
for who wants to love much
must have to suffer much.
19
But if the victory with laurel crown
our efforts, and my fatherland united
emerges like a queen from burning zone,
white pearl from the morass liberated,
then return and with vigor entone
the sacred hymn of the new life,
that we the chorus shall sing
even when in the tomb we rest


4
Musa, que en mi edad pasada,
me inspiraste carinosa
cantos de amor, ve y reposa;
Hoy necesito una espada,
rios de oro, y acre prosa.
5
Necesito razonar,
meditar y combater,
algunas veces llorar,
pues quien mucho quiere amar
mucho tiene que sufrir.
19
Pero si el triunfo con laurel corona
nuestros esfuerzos, y mi patria unida
surge cual reina de ardiente zona,
blanca perla del fango redimida,
entonces vuelve y con vigor entona
el himno sacro de la nueva vida,
que nosotros el coro cantaremos
aun cuando en el sepulcro descansemos

Faith in eventual triumph permeated a stanza in Rizal’s “Mi Retiro”, another Dapitan poem that he penned around the time he wrote the Himno a Talisay. In that stanza he said:


And I have faith, and I hope it must shine one day
when the force of Idea conquers the brutal force,
that after the struggle and the protracted agony,
another voice, more sonorous, more happy,
will know how to sing the triumphal song perforce.
will know how to sing the triumphal song perforce.

Y  la tengo, y yo espero que ha de brillar un día
en que venza la Idea a la fuerza brutal,          
que después de la lucha y la lenta agonía,    
otra voz más sonora y más feliz que la mía
sabrá cantar entonces el cántico triunfal.   

One line here brings to mind a quote from Willliam E. Gladstone: “We look forward to the time when the Power of Love will replace the Love of Power. Then will our world know the blessings of Peace.” 

Young ones, will it be your generation to sing the triumphal song and to know the blessings of peace, in this country of ours?

Your choices and your actions will determine so.

And it might be good to remember Dr. Rizal’s observation in the essay Como se Gobiernan las Filipinas: “Filipinos don't realize that victory is the child of struggle, that joy blossoms from suffering, and redemption is a product of sacrifice.”

Overview on the Himno

You will note that the Himno a Talisay does not have a line saying “ang mamatay nang dahil sa iyo!” There is no advance acceptance that there is nothing else we can do but die; there is however such bold and audacious declaration of intention to catch Satan if he ever appears.

So when you sing the Lupang Hinirang, always connect the Himno a Talisay to the line “sa manlulupig, di ka pasisiil”; that is, in the normal, day-to-day events, we protect our families, we can fight if need be, we fear no one – we know how to take a stand and assert ourselves.

Yong huling mga linya, na: “aming ligaya na pag may mang-aapi, ang mamatay ng dahil sa iyo” should be understood as applying only to very extraordinary circumstances, such as the one that Dr. Rizal faced.

Remember, he had that inner strength, the tatag ng loob, the guts to expose the negative aspects of the ruling sect, the Friars, through his writings. In a letter to Mariano Ponce and companions of La Solidaridad, he said: “Let destiny be fulfilled! The day they lay their hands on us, the day they martyrize innocent families for our fault, goodbye friar government, and perhaps, goodbye Spanish government. The cruelties of Louis XIV and XV brought about the Revolution; the cruelties of the Inquisition killed monasticism. We demonstrate in books and writings that friars are not what they pretend to be nor are they ministers of Christ or the protector of the people, nor the support of the government. We write this and we affirm it, and the friars prove it by their deeds.”

And so everyone among his family and friends and other Filipinos were afraid for him, that he would be killed by the Spanish colonialists. But he still came home from Hongkong in 1892 where he left a sealed letter that among others said: “I wish to show those who deny us patriotism that we know how to die for our duty and our convictions.”

This sentiment was consistent with his 1890 letter to Mariano Ponce from Brussels saying: “We die only once and if we do not die well, we lose a good opportunity which will never come up again… If one has to die, at least one must die in his own country, by his country, and for his country.”

In a letter to Marcelo H. del Pilar, also in 1890 from Brussels, he wrote: “I am preparing myself for death; I put in order what I am going to leave behind, and I get ready for any eventuality. Laong Laan is my true name.”

Since 1890, Rizal was ready already… No wonder he was so cool, with normal blood pressure, standing before the firing squad in 1896.

Those were abnormal, extraordinary circumstances in Rizal’s time; “mamatay ng dahil sa iyo” should only be the last resort, like in those uncommon conditions where Rizal expected to be replaced by a pleiad of his countrymen; it should not be a cop out in the normal course of events, for giving up then saying bahala na! Normally, we should say: “di kami puedeng masisiil!” “kung dadaanin mo sa sapilitan, marunong kaming maki-paglaban!” “kung si satanas ka, hulihin ka namin, patay o buhay!”

Young friends, that is being worthy of liberties, a la new Dapitan!

Sons and daughters we could go on discussing more details on related topics like leadership, success, elections. But I guess we are running out of time. So let me wind this up.

Conclusion

We began with a Rizalian quote relating to prison and I would like to end this presentation with another quote from Rizal that is fictionally located in prison but I think very relevant to your considerations.

Jose Rizal had a poem entitled “Cervantes en Argamasilla de Alba”. It talked about Cervantes being depressed while in prison and being inspired by an angelic presence who told him what to do. Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote, was imprisoned in Seville, Andalucia for accounting discrepancies because a banker with whom he deposited the King’s funds went bankrupt. Since Cervantes says that Don Quixote was "engendered" in a prison, that is presumably a reference to this episode.

But Rizal situated his prison in the little town of Argamasilla de Alba in the region of La Mancha (where Don Quixote was supposed to have tilted against windmills). Argamasilla means mortar, ‘yon bang masilya sa atin, to cement tiles on concrete, etc.; of course alba means dawn --- the phrasing, gives you a sense about something that attracts and holds the dawn, something that brings hope… and here is where Rizal’s quote is relevant to you. It goes:


Go then, Miguel, and with your clear thinking,
light bulb, which on your land shall be shining,
that demented multitude, go redeeming
the dark sinister shroud ripping, rending.
And, as charged cloud, in your flight so lofty, 
scorching lightning lance gracefully
that brings down the god of insanity
making sprout celestial prosperity.

Ve pues, Miguel, y que tu clara mente,
foco de luz, que alumbrara tu suelo,
Redima a esa multitud demente
Rasgando el hosco encapotado velo.
Y, cual nube prenada, rayo ardiente
Airoso lanza en tu encumbrado vuelo
Que derribe al dios de la locura
Brotar haciendo celestial ventura.

Wow, nung panahon na ‘yon, Rizal had already figured out na ang sambayanan had become a people who did not have their own minds, esa multitud demente he called them - a crowd of people misinformed, misdirected, misled, miseducated and thus demented by the continuing obscurantism and deprecation of the occupying Spanish colonialists spearheaded by the Friars. You know of course that obscurantism is the practice of deliberately preventing the facts or the full details of some matter from becoming known; if consistently done for three centuries combined with control, abuse and condescension interspersed with random kindness, then you have a demented multitude.

So what was Rizal’s prescription?
Education, education, education, education.

Ngayon, dito ba sa sulok ng pitong libo at iilang mga islang ito, in this year of our Lord 2015, do we still have multitud demente?

Meron pa, e… and that is our continuing opportunity!

In more contemporary terms, young friends, taking off from the Cervantes en Argamasilla de Alba poem, it can be said, that you are called:

to cause positive changes in the mindsets of our crowds,
with clear thinking in chaos theory, and use of web in the clouds,
sending forth love and clarity to dispel inconsequence,
and to let surge and flow: moral and material affluence.

Inconsequence: walang nangyayari… nagbabago raw pero pareho pa rin; think electoral exercises; ngayon, talagang baguhin natin, at palakasin natin ang butterfly effect ni Rizal, gawin nating bagyo, para magkaroon ang Inang Bayan ng makabuluhang moral at materyal na kasaganaan.

The changes of course refer to Dr Rizal’s vision, a la New Dapitan.

And let’s do it with teamwork, just as Dr. Rizal appealed to his colleagues at the Café Habanero in Madrid on December 31, 1891: “Gentlemen,” he said, “let us maintain firmly union and solidarity among us; let the good of the mother country be our only cause; and let us prove to everyone and let us make it clear, that if a Filipino wills, he can.”

Remember your first lesson with Sir Maxx, how turtle and rabbit broke standing records of speed in accomplishing things with their teamwork?

Each one of you, in your own unique way, in teamwork with others, can make a big difference, very fast.

Every minute localized change you provoke and stimulate, in concert with your fellow NRYLI alumni all over, in this complex system we call Philippine society and eco-polity, can have large effects, sooner not later…

Ikaw na, nilalang na karapatdapat sa lahat ng mga kalayaan!

Marami pong salamat!




Thursday, June 11, 2015

CONSECRATION TO INDEPENDENCE 2015

By Sir Edwin D. Bael, KGOR

What’s the point of celebrating independence day?

One point could be to refresh in our minds some consecration to a great ideal. For: “it is a useless life that is not consecrated to a great ideal. It is like a stone wasted in the field without becoming part of an edifice.” (Jose Rizal, El Filibusterismo)  

Perhaps we can bring alive once more, in our minds and hearts, Dr. Rizal’s cause and vision of a free, dignified, self-respecting, and respected Philippines for which he died.

As we recall, Jose Rizal wrote in his Last Farewell: “My dreams when scarcely a lad adolescent, my dreams when a young man all filled with vigor, were to see you one day, jewel of the Sea of the Orient: the dark eyes dry, the smooth forehead held high unbent - without frown, without wrinkles, without stains of high color.”

In the following stanza of the same poem, Dr. Rizal poignantly exclaimed: “Dream of my life, my ardent, living passion and rallying cry: Health, shouts to you the soul that soon shall go and depart! Health! O, how beautiful it is to fall to give you power to fly, to die to give you vigor to live, beneath your heaven to die, and in your enchanted land, to sleep in eternity never apart.”

And what dreams they are! They see Inang Bayan cool, calm, collected, and confident (like the pearl-jewel from living matter formed by enfoldment of loving, iridescent nacre of things that irritate) in overcoming whatever life may throw her way (the dark eyes dry, the smooth forehead held high), without any reason for worry (frown), doubt (wrinkle), or shame (blushing color); they observe her moving with self-esteem as her children mutually respect each other (with power to fly together); and they notice her standing with dignity (with vigor to live) respected by other nations, as she knows how, and has the wherewithals, to fight when it is right.

As Dr. Rizal envisioned our capabilities in the Hymn to Talisay, we are a people “… who, none can intimidate: not waves, nor hurricane, nor thunder; with speedy arm and serene feature, we can fight when in difficulties.”  xxxxx “There is no darkness, no pitchblack night, nor fierce storm or typhoon that we dread; and should Satan himself come to sight, he shall be captured alive or dead.”         

These are the dreams and visions worth keeping in mind as we continue putting into effect the Preamble of our 1987 Constitution where we declare we want “to build a just and humane society and establish a Government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promote the common good, conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to ourselves and our posterity, the blessings of independence and democracy under the rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality, and peace…”

We note that we have rolled into one the “blessings of independence and democracy”. This brings to mind the importance of the coming electoral exercise in May 2016 when we shall, as a people, select our new crop of leaders to spearhead our nation’s direction(s).

Being able to stand on our own in self-respect and self-esteem as Dr. Rizal dreamed, is our vision of being independent, and of being the proper basis for our inter-dependence with other nations.

That vision shall come to pass if we, the sovereign voters live that dream in our own respective lives; and thus, it shall be the main criteria for our votes for those who eagerly claim they want to be our representatives and “abang lingkod”.

For those of you ambitious ones with some money who now think of joining the contests for leadership positions in the coming May 2016 elections, please make sure you have not added to or been part of the cause, in any way, to the damage, decay, decline, deterioration, impairment, slowness, stagnation, or weakness of Inang Bayan… for “the glory of saving a country is not for him who has contributed to its ruin” (Jose Rizal, El Filibusterismo).  

For us sovereign voters, let’s make sure not one of those who by selfish, corrupt, and other actions have contributed to our country’s continuing weakness and inability to firmly stand for itself in self-esteem in such a way as to command the respect of others.

On the above conception of ideals and purposes, perhaps we can re-consecrate ourselves this Independence Day 2015.


Indeed, “a life not consecrated to some rational, lofty purpose is like a tree that affords no shade, if it is not like a poisonous weed” (Emilio Jacinto, Kartilya ng Katipunan).  

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

THE SPIRIT BEHIND LA LIGA FILIPINA -
ITS CONTINUING POWER AND RELEVANCE 
By Sir Edwin D. Bael

Our nation came into being because, among others, one man intensely asserted: “In my heart I have suppressed all loves except that of my native land; in my mind I have erased all ideas which do not signify her progress; and my lips have forgotten the names of the native races in the Philippines in order not to say more than Filipinos.” (Jose Rizal, Speech, ‘Farewell to 1883’, MS)

Yes Dr. Rizal strongly advocated the idea of loving Inang Bayan for her whole progress as a unified single entity, at a time when Spain had successfully conquered and exploited almost all of our archipelago for more than 300 years through the main stratagem of making our forebears fight against each other by stoking regionalistic and personalistic pride.  

Filipino expats in Spain formed the La Solidaridad (The Solidarity) by December 1888 and published the broadsheet La Solidaridad from February 1889 to November 1895. In his farewell editorial, Marcelo H. del Pilar said: “We are persuaded that no sacrifices are too little to win the rights and the liberty of a nation that is oppressed by slavery.”

Such was the oneness of purpose of these propagandists that in a July 27, 1888 letter to Mariano Ponce, Jose Rizal said: “Let this be our only motto: for the welfare of the Native Land. On the day when all Filipinos should think like him (M H del Pilar) and like us, on that day we shall have fulfilled our arduous mission, which is the formation of the Filipino nation.”

Pursuing that mission, while Rizal was still in Hongkong in 1892, copies of the Estatuto de la Liga Filipina were circulated among trusted Filipinos. After arriving in Manila on June 26,1892, Rizal and friends organized the La Liga Filipina in the house of Doroteo Ongjunco, Ilaya Street, Tondo, Manila on July 3 1892.

La Liga Filipina sought to build a new group and involve the people directly in the reform movement. The league was to be a sort of mutual aid self-help society for scholarship funds, legal aid, loaning capital, and setting up cooperatives. But because of Spanish and Friar hatred of Rizal occasioned by his hurtful (to them) truth-telling in the Noli (1887) and the Fili (1891), the league became a threat to Spanish authorities that they arrested Rizal on July 6, 1892 and promptly shipped him to exile in Dapitan.

Sir George Aseniero, in a very scholarly published article (“La Liga in Rizal Scholarship”, Asian Studies: Journal of Critical Perspectives on Asia, Volume 49:1 [2013], pp. 139-149), summarized: the Liga’s radical program was “to create a civil society based on reciprocity and distributive justice” and “Rizal’s terms acquire a definitive meaning and a theoretical unity when understood in the revolutionary semiotics of the 19th century. These terms include the motto of La Liga - Unus instar omnium (one is equal to all); its aim - a compact, vigorous, homogenous civil society arising from a federation of associations all based on the principle of mutualism and animated with a national sentiment; and its preferred form of state - a federal republic.”

As we know the Liga was still-born; but somehow it resuscitated for a while, manifesting as two divided groups before finally fading away: one wanting the La Solidaridad idea of still working with Spain and the other the revolutionary Katipunan of Bonifacio. The rest is history, our checkered history.

But what does the Liga Filipina mean for us today?

It means we should never forget, even for a moment, that our enemies - internal and external, domestic and foreign – are adept at instigating us to fight against each other, so as to exploit, take advantage of, oppress, weaken, or otherwise defeat us. “Divide and conquer” is a tried and tested, verily a proven strategy against us: the peoples living in these seven thousand and so islands.

The only effective counter-strategy is resolute teamwork from the “atin” perspective and unstinting adherence to Dr. Rizal's principles of Filipino solidarity and national unity. This is the continuing power and relevance of the spirit behind the La Liga Filipina.


Saturday, April 11, 2015

RIZAL’S 9 POINTS FOR PHILIPPINE PROGRESS

By Sir Edwin D. Bael, KGOR
Studying Rizal means being swamped with the huge mass of his many works. Perhaps we can – from time to time – take from this mountain some bite-size morsels for our modern-day use. Here are what might be called Dr. Rizal’s 9 Points for Philippine Progress with supporting quotes. I believe that these could be of help in our strivings to also work “ad majorem Fil gloriam” or for the greater glory of the Philippines (Letter to Mariano Ponce, Ep. Rizalino II, No.191, p.46) and only “For the Welfare of Native Land” (Letter to Mariano Ponce, 27 July 1888): 
1. Conduct in Associations – being courteous and considerate.
“In young associations the spirit of tolerance ought to prevail when it concerns trifles that do not affect the essential part of a thing; in the discussions, the conciliatory tendency ought to dominate before the tendency to oppose. No one should resent defeat. When any opinion is rejected, its author, instead of despairing and withdrawing, should on the contrary wait for another occasion in which justice may be done him. The individual should give way to the welfare of society. And so that the very delicate self-esteem of the Filipino – who is besides an unconscious individualist – may come out least hurt in the discussion, and discontent may be avoided, it would be advisable that to all propositions, proposals, projects, etc. should always be added the ending: We think thus, if the other members have no objection, or any other similar phrase that you may deem more appropriate. I have heard many discussions arising from questions of self-esteem. Laying this aside, the decisions of the majority, after a sufficient discussion, are sacred and unquestionable.”  “A great deal of integrity and much good will. No one should expect rewards or honors for what he does. He who does his duty in the expectation of rewards, is usually disappointed, because almost no one believes himself sufficiently rewarded. And so that there may not be discontented or ill-rewarded members, it is advisable for eachone to do his duty just for its own sake and at best to expect to be later treated unjustly, because in anomalous countries, injustice is the prize for those who fulfill their duties.” “Thrift, thrift, thrift. Seriousness and equal justice for all. These are my admonitions, if the members of La Solidaridad have no objection.” (Letter to the Members of La Solidaridad, Barcelona, 28 Jan 1889)
2. Dignity.
“The duty of modern man to my way of thinking is to work for the redemption of humanity, because once man is dignified there would be less unfortunate and more happy men that is possible in this life”. (Science, Virtue, and Labor, a paper read at Solidaridad Lodge, Madrid, 1883)
“Lack of self-respect and excessive timidity invite scorn”. xxxxx “Men are born equal, naked, and without chains. They were not created by God to be enslaved, neither were they endowed with intelligence in order to be misled, nor adorned with reason to be fooled by others. It is not pride to refuse to worship a fellow man, to enlighten the mind, and to reason out everything. The arrogant one is he who wants to be worshipped, who misleads others and who wants his will to prevail over reason and justice.” (Liham sa Mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos, Feb1889). 
“A nation wins respect not by covering up abuses, but by punishing them and condemning them”. (The Philippines a Century Hence, La Solidaridad, 15 Dec 1889). 
“To fall with the head high and a serene brow is not to fall, it is to triumph. The sad thing is to fall with the stain of dishonor.” (Letter to his sister Soledad, Brussels, 6 June 1890).
“Man is not a brute, he is not a   machine… His object is to seek happiness for himself and his fellow men by following the road towards progress and perfection.” (The Indolence of the Filipino, La Solidaridad, 15 July 1890)
“Thus while they try to make of the Filipino a kind of animal, they expect from him divine actions. And we say divine actions because he must be a God who does not become indolent under the climate and the circumstances already mentioned. Deprive a man then of his dignity, and you not only deprive him of his moral stamina but also you render him useless even to those who want to make use of him. Every being in creation has his spur, his mainspring; man’s is his self-respect; take it away from him and he becomes a corpse; and he who seeks activity in a corpse will only find worms.” (The Indolence of the Filipinos, La Solidaridad, 31 Aug 1890)
“…I wish to show those who deny us patriotism that we know how to die for our duty and our convictions. What matters death if one dies for what one loves, for native land and adored beings?” (Letter to Countrymen, Hongkong, 20 June 1892)
“They have proposed to me to escape; but as I have nothing to reproach myself, I don’t want to be called later a runaway”. (Letter to Dr. Lorenzo Marquez, Dapitan, 15 Mar 1895).
3. Economic Nationalism.
“The smallness of the advancement that the Filipinos have made in three centuries of Hispanism is all due, in my opinion, to the fact that our talented men have died without bequeathing to us nothing more than the fame of their name. We have had very great intellects; we have had a Pinpin, a Dr. Pilapil, a Father Pelaez, a Father Mariano Garcia, a Dr. Joson, and others. We have still a Benedicto Luna, a Lorenzo Francisco, and more. Nevertheless, all that these men have studied, learned and discovered will die with them and end in them, and we shall go back to recommence the study of life. There is then individual progress or improvement in the Philippines, but there is no national, general progress. Here you have the individual as the only one who improves and not the species.” (Letter to Fr Vicente Garcia, Madrid, 7 Jan 1891).
Writing against certain monopolistic practices that restrain trade and prevent free market competition: “Here I have become half physician, half businessman. I have established a commercial company here. I have taught the poor Mindanao folk to unite for trading so that they may become independent and free themselves from the Chinese and thus be less exploited. But I have to talk a great deal with the local governor, who, despite being a good man, is a supporter of the Chinese and prefers the Mongols to the Mindanao people. Fortunately the company is prospering; we make a little profit; and the poor Dapitan folks are becoming active and satisfied”. (Letter to Blumentritt, Dapitan, 29 Aug 1894).
“The purposes of the Association of Dapitan Farmers, are to: improve farm products, obtain better markets for them; collect funds for their purchase; and help the producers and workers by establishing a store wherein they can buy prime commodities at moderate prices. (Dapitan, 1 Jan 1895).
“I vowed not to buy any more from them (Chinese), so that sometimes I find myself very hard up. Now we have almost neither dishes nor tumblers”. (Letter to his mother, Dapitan, 22 Oct 1895).
4. Education.
“All our efforts tend to educate our people – education, education, education, education of our people – education and enlightenment. (Letter to Blumentritt, The Rizal-Blumentritt Correspondence, p. 306)
“I will never be the one to lead the multitude to get by force what the government does not think proper to grant. No! I desire the country’s welfare, therefore I will build a schoolhouse. I seek it by means of instruction, by progressive advancement; without light there is no road.” (Ibarra’s response to Elias who urged rebellion, Noli Me Tangere, Berlin, 1887).
“A school is being founded and the school is the basis of society. The school is the book on which is written the future of the nations. Show us the schools of the people and we will show you what that people is.” (Remarks by the Alcalde of San Diego at the opening of the school funded by Crisostomo Ibarra, Noli Me Tangere, Berlin, 1887).
“Ignorance is bondage, because like mind, like man. A man without a will of his own is a man without personality. The blind who follows other’s opinion is a like a beast led by a halter.” xxxxx “God gave each one his own mind and his own conscience so that he can distinguish between right and wrong. All are born without chains, free, and no one can subject the will and spirit of another. Why would you submit to another your noble and free thought?” xxxxx “Ignorance is ignorance, and not goodness and honor. God fountain of wisdom, does not expect man, created in his image, to allow himself to be fooled and blinded. The gift of reason with which we are endowed must be brightened and utilized.”(Liham sa Mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos, Feb 1889). 
“Let us be reasonable and open our eyes, especially you women, because you are the ones who open the minds of men. Consider that a good mother is different from the one created by the friars. Raise your children close to the image of the true God – the God who cannot be bribed, the God who is not avaricious, the God who is the father of all, who is not partial, the God who does not fatten on the blood of the poor, who does not rejoice at the plaints of the afflicted, and does not obfuscate the intelligent mind. Awaken and prepare the mind of the child for every good and desirable idea – love for honor, sincere and firm character, clear mind, clean conduct, noble action, love for one’s fellow men, respect for God – teach this to your children. And because life is full of sorrows and perils, fortify their character against any difficulty, strengthen their hearts against any danger.” (Liham sa Mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos, Feb 1889). 
“I am assiduously studying the happenings in our country. I believe that nothing can redeem us except our brains.” (Letter to Marcelo H. del Pilar, Brussles, 4 April 1890)
“We cannot all be doctors; it is necessary that there be some who would cultivate the land.” (Letter to his sister Lucia about the education of his nephews, Ep. Rizalino IV, No. 681, p.274).
“By cultivating poetry and rhetoric [classical education], my sentiments were further elevated, and Virgil, Horace, Cicero, and other authors showed me another road through which I could walk to attain my aspirations”. (Reminiscences of a Manila Student, 1st Ed., pp. 24-25)
“We must confess that there (Philippines) indolence actually and positively exists; but instead of regarding it as the cause of the backwardness and disorder, we should regard it as the effect of the disorder and backwardness, which fosters the growth of a disastrous predisposition.” (The Indolence of Filipinos, La Solidaridad, 15 July 1890)
“Nurtured with the stories of anchorites who lead a contemplative and lazy life, the Filipinos spend theirs giving their money to the Church in the hope of miracles and other wonderful things. Their will is hypnotized. Since childhood they have learned to act mechanically, without knowing the purpose, thanks to the exercise imposed upon them very early of praying for whole hours in an unknown language, of worshipping without questioning, of imposing upon themselves absurdities, while protests of reason are repressed.    Is it any wonder that the Filipino, with this vicious dressing of his intelligence and will – who was formerly logical and consistent as proven by the analysis of his past and his language – should now be a monstrosity of disastrous contradictions? This incessant struggle between reason and duty, between his organism and his new ideals, this civil war which disturbs the peace of his conscience all his life, will in the end paralyze all his energies; and with the aid of the severe climate, makes his eternal vacillation, his doubts, the origin of his indolent disposition. --- “You can’t do more than old So and So! --- Don’t aspire to be greater than the curate! You belong to an inferior race! You haven’t any energy.” They say this to the child; and as it is repeated so often, it has perforce become engraved in his mind and thence it seals and shapes all his actions. The child or the youth who tries to be anything else is charged of being vain and presumptuous; the curate ridicules him with cruel sarcasm, his relatives look upon him with fear, and strangers pity him greatly. No going forward! Get in line and follow the crowd!” (The Indolence of the Filipinos, La Solidaridad, 15 Sept 1890)
“Teach, educate, and enlighten the Indio, rather teach us, educate us, and enlighten us, and indifference, apathy, and indolence will disappear. The blind man who has seen light cannot help but love it. He who has heard once the harmonies of Meyerbeer or the melodies of Rossini cannot help but love music. How who has seen the advantages of a better life will fight to get out of the moral ergastula in which he lives and will always tend towards and look for that object that men desire and dream, of which is the relief of their wretchedness if not the assurance of their happiness, a deity exiled from the earth by men.” (Town Schools in the Philippines, M.S.)
“Go ahead then; study, study, and meditate well what you study. Life is a very serious thing and only those with intelligence and courage go through it worthily. To live is to be among men and to be among men is to struggle. But this struggle is not just a brutal and material struggle with men alone; it is a struggle with them, with one’s self, with their passions and one’s own, with errors and preoccupations. It is an eternal struggle with a smile on the lips and tears in the heart. On this battlefield man has no better weapon than his intelligence, no other force but his heart. Sharpen, perfect, polish then your mind; and fortify and educate your heart.” (Letter to his nephew Alfredo T. Hidalgo, Dapitan, 20Dec 1893)
“My countrymen, I have given proofs that I am one most anxious for liberties for our country, and I am still desirous of them. But I place as a prior condition the education of the people, that by means of instruction and industry our country may have an individuality of its own and make itself worthy of these liberties. I have recommended in my writings the study of the civic virtues, without which there is no redemption. I have written likewise (and I repeat my words) that reforms, to be beneficial, must come from above, that those which come from below are irregularly gained and uncertain.” (Manifesto, 15 Dec 1896, Fort Santiago)
5. Filipino Solidarity and National Unity.
“In my heart I have suppressed all loves, except that of my native land; in my mind I have erased all ideas which do not signify her progress; and my lips have forgotten the names of the native races in the Philippines in order not to say more than Filipinos.” (Speech, ‘Farewell to 1883’, MS)
“Let this be our only motto: for the welfare of the Native Land. On the day when all Filipinos should think like him (M H del Pilar) and like us, on that day we shall have fulfilled our arduous mission, which is the formation of the Filipino nation.” (Letter to Mariano Ponce, 27 July 1888).
“He who wants to help himself should help others, because if he neglects others, he too will be neglected by them. One midrib is easy to break, but not a bundle of many midribs tied together”. (Liham sa Mga Kababayang Kadalagahan sa Malolos, Feb1889).
“Union, goodwill, and good feelings – these are all that we need” (Letter to Graciano Lopez Jaena, Paris, Mar 1889).
“Now the Filipino colony is getting to understand the advantages of unity; now we all know that iron is strong and air is compressible because the molecules of the latter have little cohesion while the other form a most compact mass, scarcely leaving any vacuum between them. I understand Gentlemen, that in this situation, the prerogatives of individual liberty suffer, but fate wills it so. The molecules of the most solid and compact body by are most compressed, and the most powerful armies are the most disciplined. What does it matter to us, Gentlemen, to sacrifice part of our liberties if we lay them down on the altar of the mother country, if those particles that we give up are in the grains that are saved to be planted and later we reap an abundant harvest? Gentlemen, let us maintain firmly union and solidarity among us; let the good of the mother country be our only cause; and let us prove to everyone and let us make it clear, that if a Filipino wills, he can.” (Speech at the Café Habanero, Madrid, 31 Dec 1891)
“The Aims of the Liga Filipina are: (a) To unite the whole archipelago into one compact, vigorous, and homogenous body; (b) Mutual protection in every case of difficulty and need; (c) Defense against every violence and injustice; (d) Development of education, agriculture, and commerce; (d) Study and application of reforms.” (Constitution of La Liga Filipina, 3 July 1892, Ilaya Street, Tondo, Manila) 
6. Good Citizenship.
“The principal thing that should be demanded from a Filipino of our generation is not to be a literary man but to be a good man, a good citizen who would help his country to progress with his head, his heart, and if need be, with his arms. With the head and the heart we ought to work always; with the arms when the time comes.” (Letter to Mariano Ponce, London, 27June1888).
“To serve our country, there is nothing like staying in it. It is there (Philippines) that we have to educate the people; it is there that we have to work. It is all right for young men to come here (Europe) to study, but those who have already finished their studies ought to return and live there.” (Letter to Jose M. Basa, Primrose Hill, N.W., Jan 1889)
“If our countrymen are counting on us here in Europe, they are very much mistaken. I do not want to deceive anyone. If there is no money, we cannot do much. But we can help them with our life in our country. That general error that we can help here in this distant country is very, very wrong. Medicine should be brought near to the patient. xxxxx The battlefield is the Philippines: There is where we should meet. God will that my parents may not die yet and you will see me then again in our native land. There we will help one another; there together we will suffer or triumph perhaps. (Fragment of a Tagalog letter of Rizal, Europe, Oct 1891)
‘Tomorrow we shall be citizens of the Philippines whose destiny will be beautiful because it will be in loving hands. Oh, yes! The future is ours, it is rosy. I see life stirring in these regions, so long dead and lethargic… I see towns rising along the railways and factories everywhere and buildings like that at Mandaluyong. I hear the ships’ whistle, the concussion of trains, the clatter of machineries… xxxxx We shall move rapidly in comfortable coaches to seek in the interior other airs, other panoramas on other beaches, cooler temperature on the slopes of the mountains… Our armed ships will guard the coasts. xxxxx Freed from the system of exploitation, without displeasures or mistrust, the people will work, because then work will cease to be opprobrious, will cease to be servile, as an imposition on the slave… xxxxx and commerce, industry, agriculture, the sciences will develop under the protection of freedom and wise and equitable laws….” (El Filibusterismo, Ghent, 1891)
“Where are the youth who will consecrate their budding years, their idealism and enthusiasm to the welfare of their country? Where are the youth who will generously pour out their blood to wash away so much shame, so much crime, so much abomination? Pure and spotless must the victim be, that the sacrifice may be acceptable! Where are you, youth, who will embody in yourselves the vigor of life that has left our veins, the purity of ideas that has been contaminated in our hearts? We await you, O youth! Come, for we await you!” (Final Soliloquy of Fr. Florentino, El Filibusterismo, Ghent, 1891)
7. Human Rights.
“We are struggling for our rights, for human rights.” (Letter to Blumentritt, Ep. Rizalino V, Part I, No. 47, p. 284)
“Liberty is a woman who grants her favors only to the brave. Enslaved peoples have to suffer much to win her and those who abuse her lose her. Liberty is not obtained bobilis bobilis (without pain or merit), nor is it granted gratis et amore. (Letter to members of La Solidaridad, Ep. Rizalino II, No 250, p.158).
“This entry [of Jesus into Jerusalem] decided the fate of the jealous priests, the Pharisees, of all those who believed themselves the only ones who had the right to speak in the name of God, of those who would not admit the truths said by others because they have not been said by them. That triumph, those hosannas, all those flowers, those olive branches, were not for Jesus alone; they were the songs of the victory of the new law, they were the canticles celebrating the dignification of man, the liberty of man, the first mortal blow directed against despotism and slavery…" (Dimanche des Rameaux, [Palm Sunday] a socio-political essay written in French, published in Berlin, 30 Nov 1886). 
“…there is no sufficient gunpowder in the world that can justify the attacks against the liberty of the individual, against the sanctity of the home, against the laws, against peace and honor…” (The Philippines A Century Hence, La Solidaridad, 15 Dec 1889)
8. Patriotism and Love of Country.
“At the sight of … injustices and cruelties, while still a child, my imagination was awakened and I swore to devote myself to avenge one day so many victims, and with this idea in mind I have been studying and this can be read in all my works and writings. God will someday give me an opportunity to carry out my promise.  xxxxx  Some will say: ‘these imprisonments and these deaths frighten and intimidate the others!’ If the people are really courageous, after the terror, they will return to the fight with more ardor and avenge the fallen, as it happens in the cauterization of a wound – it seems that the burnt part has died, but the next day it is seen that a new and more healthy element replaces the crust. If the people are not brave, if they are cowardly, like a diseased organism, infected, and close to disintegration, then fire is precisely the most recommendable. Fire awakens vitality, irritates the cellule, makes the fluid vibrate, etc. and the body dies only if no vitality exists in it. What for should we dedicate ourselves to labor for a people without a soul, without sentiments? Suppose we liberate them now from the tyranny of the friar, good; tomorrow they will fall into the tyranny of the government employees.” xxxxx “If these ideas seem to you acceptable, communicate them to our countrymen there, so that they may show more valor, more abnegation, less fear of death and torture, so as to make our enemies respect us.” xxxxx  “The first words that I had said to my family upon arriving in the Philippines, when they manifested to me their fear, were that they should not take the smallest step for my sake if I would be imprisoned nor interpose or spend anything for me, but to educate my nephews and let them avenge me. xxxxx Comfort then and encourage our countrymen over there that they may know that jail is not death and even if it were so, what is death? Don’t they believe in God? I suppose that in the other life there are not many friars to deal with and if there were, they would be reformed. And besides now the Indio is not killed thus.” (Letter to Mariano Ponce and Companions of La Solidaridad, Paris, 18 Apr 1889)
“It is necessary that you study the questions that concern our country. Knowledge of a thing prepares for its control: knowledge is power. We are the only ones who can acquire a perfect knowledge of our country, because we know both languages and besides we are informed of the secrets of the people among whom we had been raised.” (Letter to friends in Barcelona, Ep. Rizalino V, No. 219, p. 99)
“We die only once and if we do not die well, we lose a good opportunity which will never come up again… If one has to die, at least one must die in his own country, by his country, and for his country.” (Letter to Mariano Ponce, Brussels, 9 July 1890)
“I would rather give up my life for my people than remain here (Europe) to enjoy a life of leisure.” (Letter to Blumentritt, Brussels, 20 July 1890).
“…love of country is never effaced once it has penetrated the heart, because it carries with it a divine stamp which renders it eternal and imperishable.  It has been said that love is the most powerful force behind most sublime actions; well then, among all loves, that of country is the greatest, the most heroic, and the most disinterested.” (Love of Country, La Solidaridad, 31 Oct 1890)
“Some centuries hence when mankind shall become enlightened and redeemed, when there shall be no races, when all peoples shall become free, when there shall be neither tyrants nor slaves, nor colonies nor metropolis, when justice shall rule, and man shall become a citizen of the world, the cult of science alone shall remain, the word patriotism shall smack of fanaticism, and he who would boast of patriotic virtues will undoubtedly be confined as a dangerous sick man, as a perturber of social harmony.” (El Filibusterismo, Ghent, 1891, p.84)
“Patriotism can only be a crime among oppressors, for then it will be plunder baptized with a beautiful name, but however perfect humanity may be, patriotism shall always be a virtue among the oppressed, because at all times it will signify love for justice, liberty, and dignity itself…” (El Filibusterismo, Ghent, 1891, p. 51)
“I have to return to the Philippines… I have to give an example not to fear death even if this may be terrible.” (Letter to Blumentritt, Ghent, 22 Sept 1891).
“…the thought of my whole life has always been love of my country and her moral and material development.” (Letter to Governor and Captain General, Hongkong, 21 Mar 1892)
9. Perseverance.
“Whether the sacrifice be big or small, whether man be ungrateful and forgetful, whether malice be opposed, or whether sterile and barren egos mock, we ought not to be dismayed before an insignificant failure nor go backward at the least obstacle that is discerned in the horizon. In order that the work of one single individual be crowned with the most brilliant success, necessary are all the favors of Fortune, all the assistance of happy circumstances, a prepared ground, a propitious predisposition; otherwise the voice is lost in the void, like hopes and efforts. Let us work then together and instead of useless lamentations, of disconsolate complaints, of accusations and excuses, let us apply the remedy, let us build,  no matter if we begin with the simplest, for later we shall have time to erect new edifices on that foundation. Step by step one reaches the Temple of Progress whose numerous and fitful steps are not climbed without having faith and conviction in the soul, courage in the heart necessary to facing disillusions, and the gaze fixed on the future. Let us do for the generation that must follow us, which will be either our reward or our reproach, all that we would like to have been done for us by our ancestors, perhaps placed by fate in very fatal circumstances, though full of generous aspirations. The road is ours as the present is ours, and if it is not given to us to reach the end, we may be sure that by fulfilling our duties, the future will be ours also – the future of blessings.” (Town Schools in the Philippines, M.S)
“God has made man free and has promised victory to one who perseveres, to one who struggles, to one who acts justly.” (A Hope, La Solidaridad, 15 July 1890)
Main ReferenceQuotations from Rizal’s Writings, National Historical Institute, 4th printing, 1999

Monday, April 6, 2015

Rizal's Relevance to Contemporary Issues

A 31 March 2015 Commencement Address by Atty. Edwin D. Bael

The Honorable President of the Bukidnon State University, Dr. Oscar B. Cabaneles,
The Members of the BSU Board of Regents,
The pioneering President of this university, Dr. Jaime M. Gellor and Lady Rosemary Gellor,
Regent and President of the Student Council, Miss Angelica May Fortin, who brought me in for this privilege of speaking with you.
Vice President Dr. Estela C. Itaas, other officers and the TEACHERS of this respected university,
Guests, Parents, graduates, students, friends, ladies and gentlemen,
Mga kaigsoonan, mga kahigalaan:
Maayong buntag ug maayong kinabuhi!
Thank you Professor Lina Hidalgo for your kind introduction.
May I first seize this opportunity to express heartfelt congratulations to the Bukidnon State University for holding these annual commencement exercises, now for the 81st time… for 81 years this hallowed institution has been releasing graduates upon Bukidnon, upon Mindanao, the Philippines and the rest of the world.
Parents, relatives, teachers, school administrators, congratulations! After years of sacrifice and support, you are now ready to unleash these fresh graduates upon a hyper-connected world, marked by accelerating change – where the speed at which information doubles is getting faster and faster, now changing every 1-2 years, meaning that our stock knowledge gets outdated every one to two years… where multiple career changes have become common… and where we still expect a stable and reliable source of income from these new graduates… presumably, we expect them to be agile and flexible life-long learners who keep on updating their capabilities for social inclusion, active citizenship, and personal development, to include keeping up their competitiveness and employability, thus enabling them to adjust to unfolding situations, to prevail, and to prosper, despite the varying speeds of change…. and despite the enlargement of the pool of direct competitors from the nine other ASEAN member-countries, namely: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malays ia, Myanmar (Burma), Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. 
Or are we here loading too heavy a weight of expectations upon our graduates, even as we remind them of the waters beginning to boil in our national political scene for the 2016 contests, of the ASEAN decision to proceed with regional unification in the political, economic and the socio-cultural communities, and of the palpable shift of the global power balance into a multipolar world?
And we are to consider these, in light of our theme for today’s exercises, perhaps as directed by the Commission on Higher Education, which is “Enhancing ASEAN Regional Collaboration in Education”. The topic assumes there is already regional collaboration in education that all but needs to be enhanced. That is true.
The ASEAN Education Ministers is the "collective entity to enhance regional cooperation in education". This collective entity has determined four priorities for education: (1) Promoting ASEAN awareness among ASEAN citizens, particularly the youth; (2) Strengthening ASEAN identity through education; (3) Building ASEAN human resources in the field of education; and (4) Strengthening the ASEAN University Network. Members, like Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines, have experienced rapid development in education over the past 20 years. ASEAN initiatives plan to interconnect the member-countries' unique human and physical infrastructure to provide youth education, to sustain economic growth for the entire region. Various programs and projects have been and are currently in the process of being developed to fulfill these directives and to reach these future goals.
The ASEAN Education Ministers Meeting, which meets annually, oversees ASEAN co-operation efforts on education at the ministerial level. With regard to implementation, programs and activities are carried out by the ASEAN Senior Officials Meeting on Education (SOM-ED). SOM-ED also manages co-operation on higher education through the ASEAN University Network (AUN).
The ASEAN University Network (AUN) was established to (1) promote co-operation among ASEAN scholars, academics, and scientists in the region; (2) develop academic and professional human resources in the region; (3) promote information dissemination among the ASEAN academic community; and (4) enhance the awareness of a regional identity and the sense of "ASEAN-ness" among members.
For example, Batangas State University in the Philippines, is encouraging its faculty members, who are engineers by profession, to apply as an "ASEAN engineer" through the ASEAN Engineering Register (AER). The AER has spearheaded the mobility of engineers within ASEAN since 1998. As a result, seven (7) Mechanical Engineers and two (2) Industrial Engineers of the university were conferred the designation as ASEAN Engineers. The new president of Batangas State University was the first engineer in the province of Batangas to be named an ASEAN Engineer. This initiative is in line with the ASEAN Secretarial Program for the liberalisation of professional services which aims for globalisation under the World Trade Organisation (WTO) initiative.
All these actions are undertaken so as to be consistent with the six ASEAN Strategic thrusts, namely: 1. Economic transformation; 2. People empowerment and engagement; 3. Innovation; 4. Infrastructure development; 5. Human capital development; and 6. Bridging the digital divide.
I would submit that we here in BSU can enhance ASEAN regional collaboration in education by paying attention to these six strategic thrusts as we live our daily lives. It boils down to our capabilities to think critically and imaginatively, if we are to be empowered and engaged, to be developed as human capital, to bring innovations and thus economic transformation and infrastructure build-up as well as to bridge divides including the digital type.
Albert Einstein observed that: "Education is what remains after one has forgotten everything he learned in school." For life, out there after proper schooling, is really a matter of wisdom and imagination. "Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the life-long attempt to acquire it", Einstein avers, adding that this life-long attempt acquires more meaning with imagination, because, he said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world", and because: "The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent or absorbing positive knowledge."
The skills and competencies we acquire in school ought to be accompanied with a continuing effort to use our imaginations, to gain wisdom, and to act for the welfare of Inang Bayan.
If we do these, then we can say we are on the way to fulfilling Dr. Jose Rizal’s prediction in the El Filibusterismo that “the future of the Philippines will be beautiful because it will be in loving hands.”
Then we can help bring to reality Dr. Rizal’s magnificent obsession and dream, as he wrote in the Ultimo Adios: “My dreams when scarcely a lad adolescent, my dreams when a young man filled with vigor, were to see you one day, jewel of the sea of the orient, the dark eyes dry, the smooth forehead held high unbent, without frown, without wrinkle, without shades of blushing color.”
This dream sees Inang Bayan standing with dignity among the community of nations without frown (no reasons to doubt); without wrinkle (no reasons to fear); and without blushing colors (no reasons to be ashamed of anything). That is the dream and the vision we, here and now, are challenged to help actualize; a vision that shall enable our nation to effectively engage in whatever regional collaboration that might be needed – collaborations that call for cool, confident critical thinking.
In the conclusion of his Letter to the Maidens of Malolos, Dr. Rizal extolled critical thinking, which should characterize every well-educated person. He said: “May your desire to educate yourself be fulfilled; and may it be that in the garden of life’s learning you gather not bitter withered fruit, but that you choose well what you pick: thinking it out first, tasting before swallowing, because here on earth all are mixed, and it is not unusual for the enemy to plant destructive weeds together with the good seeds in the middle of your cultivated plot.”
With this kind of thinking, we can proceed with our nation’s inexorable march to progress as Dr. Rizal indicated in the Chorus of his Himno a Talisay: “Hail, Talisay (Filipinas), firm and constant, always advancing, you shall prosper. You, triumphant, all elements – sea, land and air – you shall master.”
Ladies and gentlemen, dear graduates of 2015, with our learnings seasoned with constant search for wisdom, use of imagination, and application of critical thinking, while keeping in mind the ASEAN’s six strategic thrusts, we can also help enhance regional cooperation in education by righting our nation’s moral keel. By doing so, we bring to pass that unconquerable faith written by Jose Rizal in his poem Mi Retiro: “And I have faith, and I hope it must shine one day, when the force of idea conquers the brutality of force, that after the struggle and the protracted agony, a voice other than mine, more sonorous, more happy, will know how to sing the triumphal song perforce.”
Yes, “victory is the child of struggle, joy blossoms from suffering, and redemption is a product of sacrifice” Dr. Rizal clarified in his essay Como se Gobiernan en Filipinas.
Thus, forged in struggle, suffering and sacrifice, we look to our country transforming and unfolding unto a nation that continually adjusts to circumstances and overcomes: in unity, solidarity, self-esteem, mutual respect, goodwill, cooperation, confidence, calmness, and abiding joy.
With these characteristics we shall definitely enhance our nation’s collaboration with other ASEAN member-states in education and in other fields.
In closing, it is suggested that we transcend the inward-looking, conflict-prone orientation and prevailing value of “akin”/”amin” or “mine”/”my group’s”, and move up to the unifying and transforming higher value of “atin” or “ours”. This transcendence would align our TEA – thoughts, emotions, actions – with the one and only motto that Jose Rizal proposed to his contemporaries in Madrid, Spain, like Graciano Lopez Jaena, Marcelo H del Pilar, and others. That motto was: “For the well-being of the Motherland”. From this perspective, we stand with our brothers and sisters in the ASEAN whose regional motto is: “One Vision, One Identity, One Community”.
Daghan kaayong salamat. 





Monday, February 23, 2015

THE “WHY” OF THE KNIGHTS OF RIZAL

In voluntarily working as a psychiatrist to inmates in the WWII concentration camps in Europe where he himself was held captive, tortured, and intended for cremation by the Nazis, Viktor Frankl found that the single most important factor in cultivating the kind of “inner hold” that allowed men to survive, was teaching them to hold in the mind’s grip some future goal. (Man’s Search for Meaning). He quoted Nietzsche who wrote: “He who has a why to live for, can bear with almost any how.”  
If that be so, what is the WHY of the Order of the Knights of Rizal so that we, the members, wouldn’t mind any of the HOW?

Section 2 of R.A. 646, the charter of our organization, provides that: “The purposes of this corporation shall be to study the teachings of Dr. Jose Rizal, to inculcate and propagate them in and among all classes of the Filipino people, and by words and deeds to exhort our citizenry to emulate and practice the examples and teachings of our national hero; to promote the associated knights the spirit of patriotism and Rizalian chivalry, to develop a perfect union among the Filipinos in revering the memory of Dr. Jose Rizal and to organize and hold programs commemorative of Rizal’s nativity and martyrdom.”

In inculcating and propagating Dr. Rizal’s teachings in and among all classes of the Filipino people, and in exhorting by words and deeds our citizenry to emulate and practice the examples and teachings of our national hero, we, the Knights of Rizal, seek to help realize Dr. Rizal’s cause and vision of a free, dignified, self-respecting, and respected Philippines for which he died.

As we recall, Jose Rizal wrote in his Last Farewell:
“My dreams when scarcely a lad adolescent,
my dreams when a young man all filled with vigor,
were to see you one day, jewel of the Sea of the Orient:
the dark eyes dry, the smooth forehead held high unbent -
without frown, without wrinkles, without stains of high color.”

In the following stanza of the same poem, Dr. Rizal poignantly exclaimed:
“Dream of my life, my ardent, living passion and rallying cry:
Health, shouts to you the soul that soon shall go and depart!
Health! O, how beautiful it is to fall to give you power to fly,
to die to give you vigor to live, beneath your heaven to die,
and in your enchanted land, to sleep in eternity never apart.”

And what dreams they are! They see Inang Bayan cool, calm, collected, and confident of overcoming whatever life may throw her way - without any reason for worry, doubt, or shame; they observe her moving with self-esteem as her children mutually respect each other; and they notice her standing with dignity respected by other nations, as she knows how to fight when it is right.

These are the dreams we are called upon to actualize. These are the visions we, the Knights of Rizal, have as the benchmarks for our organizational plans and actions, following his light.

Truth, reason, wisdom, information, compassion, knowledge, justice, divine love of country, and associated ideals, constitute and form part of Jose Rizal's light; and this light continues to shine, in alignment with what has been written: “et lux in tenebris lucet” (and the light shineth in the darkness); and the darkness did not apprehend, comprehend, or master the light; and the darkness did not extinguish, overcome, or overtake the light. (cf John 1:5) Walking under and guided by this “unconquerable light in the dark”, we the Knights of Rizal stand by the motto: Non omnis moriar. (Not every thing in me shall die.) For our lights, too, modelled after Dr. Rizal’s, shall go on, even though these may no longer be housed in the ephemeral tents we temporarily have as bodies.

We, the Knights of Rizal, hold on to this timeless Rizalian light, which can be equally applicable to similar human situations, as it is meant for sharing: (a) Dr. Rizal’s irrepressible hope expressed in the El Filibusterismo that “the future of the Philippines will be beautiful because it will be in loving hands…” in line with, and as the result of working, the only motto that he suggested: “For The Welfare Of The Native Land”;  and (b) Dr. Rizal’s abiding confidence in our inexorable march towards progress as envisioned in the chorus of his Himno a Talisay [read Talisay as Filipinas]:
“Hail, Talisay!
Firm and constant,
always advancing,
you shall prosper.
You, triumphant,
all elements -
sea, land and air:
you shall master!”

That is why we, the Knights of Rizal, uphold and embrace as our own, Dr. Rizal’s faith and expectation that the generations to follow shall triumph! In his Mi Retiro, he wrote:
“And I have faith, and I hope it must shine one day
when the force of idea conquers the brutality of force,
that after the struggle and the protracted agony,
a voice other than mine, more sonorous, more happy,
will know how to sing the triumphal song perforce.”

And so we, the Knights of Rizal, commit ourselves to: (a) keeping our own Rizalian lights ablaze, doing so with focused thoughts, emotions, and actions, in resolute devotion and hope along Dr. Rizal’s ideals; and (b) having full faith that the country – Inang Bayan – shall sing the song of victory through the force of her people’s ideas and continuing concerted actions, for we know from Dr. Rizal that “victory is the child of struggle, joy blossoms from suffering, and redemption is a product of sacrifice” (Como se Gobiernan en Filipinas).

We, the Knights of Rizal, hold in our minds and hearts Dr. Rizal’s above-described “dreams of overcoming” and “visions of triumph” through purposive and, if need be, sacrificial actions, all pursued with persistent perseverance; we commit to helping bring these dreams and visions to reality among our own people, our government, and our territory, in the context of our national sovereignty.

We, the Knights of Rizal, deem the national territory, as our "sacred sanctuary", as Dr. Rizal alluded to in Himno a Talisay; and we hold this territory as "our leafy haven, our tranquility serene, rest for our brains, and silence for our pains", as he suggested in Mi Retiro.

With love and respect we, the Knights of Rizal, honor Inang Bayan (Mother Country) as the perla del mar de oriente (pearl of the orient sea): the pearl being the only jewel formed out of living matter, made iridescent by layers of nacre over irritating grains of sand or bits of stone, like the continuing irritations and injuries still daily besetting our land, in terms of corruption, injustices, inequities, and oppressive conditions that are layered with the sweat, tears, and yes, the blood, of our peoples.

We, the Knights of Rizal pledge: to help in drying out Inang Bayan’s tears of sorrow; to aid in expunging all sense of helplessness in her; and to assist in her appreciation of the divine fact that at every moment man has a choice, to include letting oneself be pierced by the thorns of destiny, for the One Source of All does not dish out difficulties we cannot handle. We promise to dedicate our lives to deepening national moral rootedness to be the foundation rock upon which national equitable material prosperity is being built.

We wish to share Dr. Jose Rizal globally, if possible in every country, as his visions, principles, and teachings are applicable to human conditions where exploitation, indignity, inequality, inequity, injustice, oppression, untruth, violations of human rights and other sub-human conditions exist and abound.

We the Knights of Rizal look forward to seeing our country inevitably transform and unfold unto a nation that continually adjusts and overcomes: in unity and solidarity; in self-esteem and mutual respect; in internal harmony, goodwill, and cooperation; and in confidence, calmness, and abiding joy.

All these constitute the statement of our reason WHY: our raison d’etre (reason for being).

Mabuhay, Knights of Rizal!
______________________
By Sir Edwin D Bael, KGOR  (Author's Note: These are thoughts that I humbly propose to my brother Knights of Rizal for adoption as strategic guide to our organizational actions. Please take into account these are still proposed ideas and not (yet) adopted as official KOR statement; suggestions for refinement, addition, subtraction, or modification are welcome).


















Saturday, November 29, 2014

CONSECRATION TO A GREAT IDEAL

Acceptance Remarks upon KGOR Conferment
By Sir Edwin D. Bael, KGOR

12th Central Luzon Assembly
City Library, Angeles City, Pampanga
29 November 2014

Sir and Mayor Ed Pamintuan,
Esteemed Supreme Commander Sir Jerry Singson,
2012-2014 Supreme Commander Sir Reghis Romero II, who hails from this city,
Lady Amy Rosales and Lady Chuck Gueco of Las Damas de Rizal,
Central Luzon Regional Commander Sir Fr. Pahed,

Respected Deputy Supreme Commander Sir Dave Santos,
Appreciated Members of the Supreme Council, particularly  our Supreme Exchequer, Sir Rey Malig who is from Angeles City,
Elders, Leaders, Knights of Rizal in Central Luzon and other parts of the country,
Ladies, who are no less noble in espousing the ideals of Dr. Rizal; may I say - I am pleased to observe in this Rizalian gathering that the ladies are virtually equal to the men in numbers, which only highlights Dr. Rizal’s view in his Letter to the Maidens of Malolos that ‘women open the minds of men’,
Mga kasama:

I had the illusion of having the sash and medals of a KGOR. So I want to thank the Supreme Council led by Sir Jerry for making that illusion an actuality; they found me worthy of their trust, and appointed me to be part of the Supreme Council, 2014 to 2016. Behind it all, I give thanks to the Lord Almighty for “making a road in the wilderness” – so to say – that I may have the privilege of becoming a Supreme Trustee.

Illusions, however, have a tendency of giving way to greater reality. As an author said: "Pleasure can be supported by an illusion; but happiness rests upon the truth." (Sebastien-Roch Nicolas De Chamfort)  And as Dr. Rizal reflected in Mi Retiro, You offer me, O Illusions, the cup of consolation, and you come to stir and awaken my youthful years!

Illustrious Sirs, and Ladies, what is the greater truth I refer to that brings happiness, not just consolation or temporary envigoration?

May I submit a truth you already know, that Dr. Rizal pointed out in the Fili: It is a useless life that is not consecrated to a great ideal. It is like a stone wasted in the field without becoming part of an edifice.”

Consecration to a great ideal, my brothers and sisters, is not accomplished, I humbly submit, by wearing an embroidered barong and slinging over it a brown sash and some medals. Yes, being a Knight of Rizal, needless to say, entails moving away from the static existence of a boulder lying on the field gathering moss; it involves going beyond the simple water cycle of evaporating then falling down as rain. Indeed, we cannot be like sheep, whose only purpose is to eat, mingle, mate, or rule the herd; we cannot live as Knights of Rizal - as others might perceive - inwardly focused on the accoutrements, ranks, and trappings of supposed superiority while hiding behind the name of Dr. Rizal.

So, what is it that we must go beyond, to do?

How about making Dr. Rizal’s dreams come true?

In the Last Farewell, he said:

My dreams when scarcely a lad adolescent,
My dreams when already a young man filled with vigor,
Were to see you one day, jewel of the sea of the orient
The dark eyes dry, the smooth forehead held high unbent:
Without frown, without wrinkles, without stains of high color.

And what dreams they are! Seeing Inang Bayan so cool, so calm, so confident of overcoming whatever life may throw her way - without any reason for worry, doubt, or shame; observing her moving with self-esteem, as her children mutually respect each other; and noticing her standing up with dignity, respected by other nations…

That, is what we are called upon, to actualize. 

And with God’s grace, I too, consecrate my life to this great ideal.

Dr. Rizal explained in the next paragraph of the Last Farewell:

Dream of my life, my ardent, living, passion and rallying cry,
Health, shouts to you the soul that soon shall go and depart!
Health! O, how beautiful it is to fall to give you power to fly,
To die to give you vigor to live, beneath your heaven to die,
And in your enchanted land, to sleep in eternity never apart.

Now, our question is: how do we use that power to fly and that vigor to live as contributed to and imparted by Jose Rizal? Should not the Knights of Rizal have something to do with enabling, supporting, encouraging, and guaranteeing that our nation truly flies to its noble destiny and lives vigorously?

These are big questions my brothers and sisters, and would take a long time to answer. Suffice it to say at this point, that our existence as knights and ladies of Rizal, or as warriors of and for the light fostered by Dr. Rizal, only has meaning and significance if, it translates to or helps in bringing into reality, his dreams and visions for the country.  So, I submit.

I hope we think about it and let shine our own genius and that of new generations, to help transform Dr. Rizal’s breaking dawn to our nation’s high noon. 

If it’s all right with you, there is one point I’d like to suggest: let’s expand and shift our concept of family, to make the nation our family. Traditionally, for us, family is everything. The criteria we use in public and private life is “kung ano ang nakaka-buti sa amin”: ‘amin’ meaning ‘ours’ within the close family circle to include kumpadres and friends.

May I recommend that we move from “amin” to “atin”? This means our highest  priority is no longer limited to close kin and friends, but embraces the entire nation as family: so when we decide, intercede, or do something, we say: kung ano ang nakabubuti sa atin, sa ating lahat na Pilipino, di lang sa aming pamilya, dahil ang buong bayan, ay ang pamilya natin.

In his time, Dr. Rizal espoused the same idea and principle. In “Farewell to 1883”, he said: “In my heart I have suppressed all loves, except that of my native land; in my mind I have erased all ideas which do not signify her progress; and my lips have forgotten the names of the native races in the Philippines in order not to say more than Filipinos.”  In a letter to Mariano Ponce in 1888, he wrote: “Let this be our only motto: ‘for the welfare of the Native Land’”. Writing to Marcelo del Pilar in 1889, Rizal said: “The article Diputado por Filipinas written by Regidor is good, but I told him that he should not stir up regionalism or provincialism. If we have some good custom or virtue, it ought to be attributed to all provinces, to all the people of the Philippines.”

Yes, brother Knights and Rizalist Ladies, moving from the limitations and conflict-laden propensities of “amin”, to the unlimited possibilities of acting from the perspective of “atin”, aligns with Dr. Rizal’s thinking. And we can take action on that.

In conclusion, allow me to return to the greater truth and value of forming part of an edifice as a way to usefulness and happiness. We, Rizalists, want to think we are inextricably intertwined with the building of the Filipino nation. Perhaps we can truly form part of the Filipino national edifice – along an idea from St. Josemaria Escriva - not as gilded statues showing off on top of the building yet falling first when disasters strike, but rather as the hidden bricks and pillars in the deep foundations, ensuring that when earthquakes come our building stands.

Sirs and Ladies, with these thoughts on consecration to a great ideal, I humbly and gratefully accept the Order’s conferment upon me of the rank of Knight Grand Officer of Rizal. Thank you all.

Non omnis moriar!