0% found this document useful (0 votes)
445 views17 pages

Chapter 10 Report

Rizal returned to the Philippines in 1887 after living in Europe for 5 years. He practiced medicine in Calamba and introduced European sports. However, his book Noli Me Tangere was controversial and upset the friars. While Governor General Terrero supported Rizal, pressure from the friars grew. Rizal befriended Lieutenant Taviel but faced threats over his writings. He investigated abuses on the friar estates but was eventually forced to leave Calamba for his safety in 1888.

Uploaded by

Brando Lapada
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
445 views17 pages

Chapter 10 Report

Rizal returned to the Philippines in 1887 after living in Europe for 5 years. He practiced medicine in Calamba and introduced European sports. However, his book Noli Me Tangere was controversial and upset the friars. While Governor General Terrero supported Rizal, pressure from the friars grew. Rizal befriended Lieutenant Taviel but faced threats over his writings. He investigated abuses on the friar estates but was eventually forced to leave Calamba for his safety in 1888.

Uploaded by

Brando Lapada
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Chapter 10

First homecoming 1887-1888


Introduction to Chapter 10
• Rizal stayed for 5 years in Europe
• He remained at the heart a true Filipino
• Returned to PH in August 1887
• Practised medicine in Calamba
• Noli was resented by his enemies
Decision to return home
• Rizal was warned not to return to PH after publication of Noli
• Rizal’s reasons for returning:
– Operate on his mother’s eyes
– Serve his people
– oppressed by the Spaniards
– To find out how Noli affected the Filipinos & Spaniards in PH
– Inquire why Leonor Rivera remained silent
• Blumentritt to Rizal
- live in Madrid & continue to write from there
Delightful Trip to Manila
• Marseilles – a French port that Rizal rode from Rome
• Djemnah – Haiphong
– Played chess
– Rizal as an interpreter
– Djemnah = Orient via Suez Canal –Aden = Saigon
– Haiphong – Manila
• Rizal found Manila the same as he left it
Happy Homecoming
• Rizal: welcomed affectionately; also worried about his
safety
– Paciano did not leave him on his first day of arrival
– Don Francisco did not let him go out alone
• He established a medical clinic in Calamba
– First patient - Dona Teodora (his mother)
– Operated eyes; could not perform surgery because
her eye cataracts were not ripe – called “Doctor Uliman”
– he came from Germany
– P900 – P5000 medical fees
Happy Homecoming (cont.)
• Rizal opened a gymnasium & introduced European sports
– Fencing and shooting
– discourage cockfights & gambling
• Rizal’s one failure (6 months – Calamba)
– unable to see Leonor Rivera
– Tried to go to Dagupan
– Leonor’s parents forbade him to go – son-in-law
– Custom Marriage arranged by parents of both bride &
groom
Storm over Noli
• His enemies plotted his doom
• Translated German poems of Von
Wildernath to Tagalog
• Governor General Emilio Terrero
– requested Rizal to the Malacanan Palace
– Noli – subversive ideas
– Rizal denied the charges against him
– exposed the truth; did not advocate
subversive ideas
Storm over Noli (cont.)
• Asked the Jesuits for the copy he sent – no
• Fathers: Francisco de Paula Sanches, Jose Bech
& Federico Faura – glad to see him
– Noli – speaks the truth; you may lose your head
for it
• Governor General Terrero
– liberal-minded Spaniard
– Assigned Spanish Lieutenant Don Jose Taviel
de Andrade as bodyguard of Rizal
– Cultured and knew painting
– Could speak English, French & Spanish
Storm over Noli (cont.)
• Governor General Terrero found nothing
wrong with Noli
• Msgr. Pedro Payo (Dominican Archbishop
of Manila)
– sent a copy of Noli to Father Rector
Gregorio Echavarria (UST) for examination
by the faculty
– Noli – heretic, impious & scandalous in the religious
order; anti- patriotic, subversive of
public order, injurious to the government of Spain & its
functions in the PH islands in the political order
– Governor General Terrero – dissatisfied w/ the report
– Dominicans were prejudiced against Rizal
Storm over Noli (cont.)
• Permanent Commission of Censorship – composed
of priests and laymen
– Fr. Salvador Font (Agustinian cura of Tondo) –
head of the Commission
– Noli – subversive ideas against the church & spain
– Importation, reproduction and circulation of the
“pernicious” book in the islands be prohibited
– Banning of Noli only made it popular
• No one was arrested or executed thanks to
Governor General Terrero
– Refused to be intimidated by the friars
Attackers of the Noli
• Father Jose Rodriguez (Prior of Guadalupe) – published a
series of eight pamphlets (Cuestiones de Sumo Interes –
Questions of Extreme interest)
– To blast Noli & other anti-spanish writings
– Sold daily in churches after mass – Filipinos were forced
to buy
• Storm over Noli reached SpainGeneral Jose Salamanca,
General Luis M. de Pando & Sr. Fernando Vida
– Vicente Barrantes (Spanish academician of Madrid) –
criticized Noli – La Espana Moderna (Spanish newspaper
of Madrid)
Defenders of the Noli
• Marcelo H. del Pilar, Dr. Antonio Ma. Regidor,
Graciano Lopez Jaena, Mariano Ponce & other
Filipino reformists – upholded the truths of Noli
• Fr. Sanchez (Rizal’s favorite teacher at the
Ateneo) – defended and praised the Noli to the
public
• Don Segismundo Moret (former Ministry of the
Crown), Dr. Miguel Morayta (historian &
statesman) & Professor Blumentritt (scholar &
educator) – read and liked the novel
Defenders of the Noli (cont.)
• Rev. Vicente Garcia – Justo Desiderio Magalang – wrote a defense of
the Noli w/c was published in Singapore as an appendix to a pamphlet
– Rizal as a graduate of Spanish universities; recipient of scholastic
honors
– Attacked the Spanish officials; not Spain
– Mortal Sin?
• Rizal defended Noli against Barrantes’ ignorance of PH affairs and
mental dishonesty – unworthy of an academician – Rizal as his master in
satire and polemics
• Fernando Canon (Geneva) – Noli – from five pesetas (one peso) to
fifty pesos per copy
Rizal and Taviel de Andrade
• Friendship between Lt. Jose Taviel de Andrade & Rizal
• Enjoyed fencing, shooting, hunting and painting
• Lt. Andrade of Rizal – “….refined, educated and
gentlemanly… Mt. Maliking – rumors – Hoisting of
German flag on top of the mountain & proclaimed
sovereignty over PH – Friars of Calamba • What marred
Rizal’s happy days in Calamba w/ Lt. Andrade
– Death of Olimpia
– Tales that he was a German spy, agent of Bismarck, a
protestant, a mason, a witch, a soul beyond salvation, etc
Calamba’s Agrarian Trouble
• Governor General Terrero – influenced by facts from Noli, ordered the
investigation of the friar estates (land taxes w/ tenant relations)
• Rizal’s findings of the Friar Estate w/ the tenants’ signatures w/ three
officials of the Calamba Hacienda
– Haciendas – towns
– Increase of rentals – increased profits of the Dominican Friars – No
contributions from the hacienda owner
– Fiesta
– Education of children
– Improvement of agriculture
– Tenants (cleaning) – dispossessed of lands for flimsy reasons
– High rates of interests – delayed payments ----confiscation of carabaos,
tools and homes
Farewell to Calamba
• Friars exerted pressure on the Malacanan Palace to eliminate Rizal –
Asked Governor General Terrero to deport Rizal; no valid charges in court
• Anonymous death threats received by Rizal’s parents ---- advised Rizal to
go away (parents, relatives & friends incl. Lt. Taviel)
• Governor General Terrero – summoned Rizal and “advised” him to leave
PH for his own good. Rizal was given a chance to escape
• Reasons for compelled decision to leave
– His presence jeopardizes the safety and happiness of his family &
friends
– He could fight better his enemies & serve his country’s cause
w/greater efficacy by wrtiting in foreign countries
A Poem for Lipa
• Poem as commemoration - Calamba’s elevation from
a town to a villa (city) – Becarra Law of 1888
– Himno Al Trabajo (Hymn to Labor)

You might also like