Biyernes, Pebrero 28, 2014

The Diaries of Jose Rizal


The Diaries of Jose Rizal
MADRID -- 1 JANUARY 1883 - NOVEMBER 1884


1st January 1883

Night, I don't know what vague melancholy, an indefinable loneliness, smothers my soul. It is similar to the profound sadness that cities manifest after a tumultuous rejoicing, to a city after the happiest celebration. Two nights ago, that is, 30 December, I had a frightful nightmare when I almost died.1 I dreamed that, imitating an actor dying on the stage, I felt vividly that my breath was failing and I was rapidly losing my strength. Then my vision became dim and dense darkness enveloped me -- they were the pangs of death. I wanted to shout and ask for help from Antonio Paterno, feeling that I was about to die. I awoke weak and breathless.

The last day of the year I spent at the home of Mr. Pablo Ortiga.2 I was gay; I don't know why I joked a lot and lost.3 We went home at five o'clock and Pat., Cal., Per., and Let.4 slept at home. We spent the day together and went to Elvira's house...lottery and I lost. I went home at night and wrote.
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Segunda Katigbak: Jose Rizal's First Love


Segunda Katigbak: Jose Rizal's First Love
Jose Rizal was only a young boy of sixteen (16) when he first fell in love, and it was with Segunda Katigbak, a girl from Lipa, Batangas and two years his junior. 


According to Rizal, "She was rather short, with eyes that were eloquent and ardent at times and languid at others, rosy-cheeked, with an enchanting and provocative smile that revealed very beautiful teeth, and the air of a sylph; her entire self diffused a mysterious charm."

A Painting on a Pair of Mother of Pearl


A Painting on a Pair of Mother of Pearl



These are shells painted by Rizal in Dapitan and given as a gift to Doña Leonor Valenzuela and later passed into the hands of Doña Margarita Valenzuela.


Leonor Valenzuela is one of Rizal's love interest. She is a tall girl from Pagsanjan. Rizal sent her love notes written in invisible ink. They could only be deciphered over the warmth of the lamp or candle. He visited her on the eve of his departure to Spain and bade her a last goodbye.

Works of Rizal



Novels

• NoNoli Me Tangere
• El Filibusterismo

Poems

• To Josephine (A Josefina)
• To Miss C.O. y R. (A Senorita C.O. y R.)

• To My (A Mi)

• To The Philippines (A las Filipinas)

• Water and Fire (Aqua y Fiego)

• Saint Eustache, Martyr (San Eustaquio, Martir)

• By the Banks of the Pasig River (A Orillas del Pasig)

• Along the Pasig ( Junto al Pasig )


• Kundiman (Canto)
• My Childhood Impressions
• A Tribute to My Town (Un Recuerdoa mi Pueblo)
• To the Virgin Mary (A la Virgen Maria)
• To The Very Reverend Father Pablo Ramon, S.J. (Al muy Padre Pablo Ramon S. J.)
• To Don Ricardo Carcinero (Al Don Ricardo Carnicero)
• My Last Farewell (Mi Ultimo Adios)
• They Ask Me for Verses! (Me PidenVerson)
• Conquest of Granada or Triumphal Entry of the Catholic Kings in Granada (La Conquista de Granada)
• Intimate Alliance Between Religion and Education (Allianza Intima del Educacion y religion)
• Great Solace in the Greatest Misfortune (Gran Consuelo en la mayor Desdicha)
• Goodbye to Leonor (Adios a Leonora)
• Flower Among Flowers
• Felicitation (Felictación)
• Elcano Was a Spaniard, The First to Circumnavigate the Earth
• El Heroismo
• Columbus and John II (Colon yJuan II)
• Cervantes at Argamasilla de Alba
• Captivity and Triumph ( ElCautivo y el triunfo)
• To the Child Jesus (Al Niño Jesús)
• Abd-El-Azis and Mohammed (Abd-El-Azizy Mahoma)
• A Poem That Has No Title
• To my Creator (A mi Creador)
• To the Flowers of Heidelberg (A los Flores de Heidelberg)
• To the Filipino Youth (A LaJuventud Filipina)
• Hymn To Labor
• Hymn to Talisay (Himno a Talisay)
• My Retreat (Mi Retiro)
• Our Mother Tongue
• To My Fellow Youth (Sa Aking mgaKababata)
• Education Gives Luster to Motherland
• The Song of Maria Clara (Canto deMaría Clara)
• First Inspiration
• Memories of My Town
• My Last Thought
• Song of the Wanderer
• A Fragment
• The Embarkation (El Embarque (Himno a la flota deMagallanes)
• The Battle Urbiztondo, Terror of Jolo (El Combate: Urbiztondo, Terror de Jolo)

Prose

• The Fisher Woman and the Fish
• The Kite and the Hen
• The Legend of Dona Geronima The Enchanted
• The Sense of the Beautiful
• The Significance of Palm Sunday
• Two Brothers
• On Travel
• By Telephone (Por teléfono)
• Rizal's Impression of Madrid
• Vision of Friar Rodriguez
• The Tortoise and the Monkey
• The Council of the Gods (ElConsejo de los Dioses)
• The Lord Gazes at the Philippine Islands
• Unten den Linden
• Mariang Makiling
• A Free Thinker
• A Pompous Gobernadorcillo
• A Reminder To Those Fond of Lawsuits
• A Soiree at the Home of Mr. B
• After Mass
• Alphonse Daudet: Tartarin Sur les Alpes
• Dapitan
• Essay on Pierre Corneille
• Juan Luna
• Love of Country
• Marie Colombier the Pistol of the Little Baroness
• Memories
• Reminiscences of a Cock
• Rizal Revista de Madrid
• Rizal’s Response to the Welcome of the President
• Sinagtala and Maria Maligaya
• The Ancient Tagalog Nobility
• The Feast of Saint Isidore


Memorable and Political Writings
• Annotations to Morga's 1609 Philippine History
• To Barrantes regarding the Tagalog theatre
• To Barrantes regarding the Noli
• The turkey that caused the Kalamba land trouble
• The Spanish schools of my boyhood
• The Religiosity of the Filipino
• To the Young Women of Malolos
• Reflections of a Filipino
• The Philippines a century hence (Pilipinas dentro de cien anos)
• Manifesto to certain Filipinos
• An excerpt from Rizal's speech at the Café Habanero
• Additions to my defense
• The Injustice done my mother
• The Best known speech of Dr. Jose P. Rizal
• The Indolence of the Filipinos (La Indolencia)
• How One Governs in Filipinas (Comese gobiernan las Filipinas)
• Constitution of the Liga Filipina
• The Friars and the Filipinos by José Rizal

Poem: Back to Love

Back to love

Everybody sees its you
I'm the one that lose the view
Everybody say's were through
I hope you haven't said it too.

Why did i change the pace
Hearts were never meant to race.
Always felt the need for space, 
and now I can't reach your face.

So we'll crawl 'til we can walk again
Then we'll run until we're strong enough to jump.
And then we'll fly , Back To Love.

Miyerkules, Pebrero 26, 2014

Rizal's Life


JOSE P. RIZAL

The Life
Who was Jose Rizal?

   JOSE RIZAL, the national hero of the Philippines and pride of the Malayan race, was born on June 19, 1861, in the town of Calamba, Laguna. He was the seventh child in a family of 11 children (2 boys and 9 girls). Both his parents were educated and belonged to distinguished families.
His father, Francisco Mercado Rizal, an industrious farmer whom Rizal called "a model of fathers," came from Biñan, Laguna; while his mother, Teodora Alonzo y Quintos, a highly cultured and accomplished woman whom Rizal called "loving and prudent mother," was born in Meisic, Sta. Cruz, Manila. 

Educational Foundation

   At the age of 3, he learned the alphabet from his mother; at 5, while learning to read and write, he already showed inclinations to be an artist. He astounded his family and relatives by his pencil drawings and sketches and by his moldings of clay. At the age 8, he wrote a Tagalog poem, "Sa Aking Mga Kabata," the theme of which revolves on the love of one’s language. In 1877, at the age of 16, he obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree with an average of "excellent" from the Ateneo Municipal de Manila. In the same year, he enrolled in Philosophy and Letters at the University of Santo Tomas, while at the same time took courses leading to the degree of surveyor and expert assessor at the Ateneo. He finished the latter course on March 21, 1877 and passed the Surveyor’s examination on May 21, 1878; but because of his age, 17, he was not granted license to practice the profession until December 30, 1881. In 1878, he enrolled in medicine at the University of Santo Tomas but had to stop in his studies when he felt that the Filipino students were being discriminated upon by their Dominican tutors. On May 3, 1882, he sailed for Spain where he continued his studies at the Universidad Central de Madrid. On June 21, 1884, at the age of 23, he was conferred the degree of Licentiate in Medicine and on June 19,1885, at the age of 24, he finished his course in Philosophy and Letters with a grade of "excellent." 
    He was an expert swordsman and a good shot. In the hope of securing political and social reforms for his country and at the same time educate his countrymen, Rizal, the greatest apostle of Filipino nationalism, published, while in Europe, several works with highly nationalistic and revolutionary tendencies. In March 1887, his daring book, NOLI ME TANGERE, a satirical novel exposing the arrogance and despotism of the Spanish clergy, was published in Berlin; in 1890 he reprinted in Paris, Morga’s SUCCESSOS DE LAS ISLAS FILIPINAS with his annotations to prove that the Filipinos had a civilization worthy to be proud of even long before the Spaniards set foot on Philippine soil; on September 18, 1891, EL FILIBUSTERISMO, his second novel and a sequel to the NOLI and more revolutionary and tragic than the latter, was printed in Ghent. Because of his fearless exposures of the injustices committed by the civil and clerical officials, Rizal provoked the animosity of those in power. This led himself, his relatives and countrymen into trouble with the Spanish officials of the country. As a consequence, he and those who had contacts with him, were shadowed; the authorities were not only finding faults but even fabricating charges to pin him down. Thus, he was imprisoned in Fort Santiago from July 6, 1892 to July 15, 1892 on a charge that anti-friar pamphlets were found in the luggage of his sister Lucia who arrive with him from Hong Kong. While a political exile in Dapitan, he engaged in agriculture, fishing and business; he maintained and operated a hospital; he conducted classes- taught his pupils the English and Spanish languages, the arts.

Execution and Death

   When the Philippine Revolution started on August 26, 1896, his enemies lost no time in pressing him down. They were able to enlist witnesses that linked him with the revolt and these were never allowed to be confronted by him. Thus, from November 3, 1986, to the date of his execution, he was again committed to Fort Santiago. In his prison cell, he wrote an untitled poem, now known as "Ultimo Adios" which is considered a masterpiece and a living document expressing not only the hero’s great love of country but also that of all Filipinos. After a mock trial, he was convicted of rebellion, sedition and of forming illegal association. In the cold morning of December 30, 1896, Rizal, a man whose 35 years of life had been packed with varied activities which proved that the Filipino has capacity to equal if not excel even those who treat him as a slave, was shot at Bagumbayan Field.