Tuesday, October 13, 2015

On Filipinos' loss of respect towards Aguinaldo...


by Angelo J. Aguinaldo

Up to this time, Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo has been vilified and seen as plain villain in the story of the revolution. As students of history were taught to blame the so-called failure of the revolution to one single person since he was president of the Republic, a lot of documents and reference materials are still available for reading. The story of the 1935 elections is one area that many should study. Meanwhile, the succeeding points are just a few notes to explain why Saulo noted a kind of historical writing "incompatible with our status as a free and sovereign nation " and create an image of Aguinaldo as someone who has done nothing for our liberation.

Renato Constantino wrote in one of his books: “Aguinaldo led the force that pre-empted the revolution. The elimination of Bonifacio assured the leadership to the elite. The result was Biak-na-bato, that shameful betrayal of people’s sacrifices…”

Aguinaldo did not pre-empt the Philippine Revolution. He even started it in Cavite on August 31, 1896. It began in Cavite on the day after the Katipunan revolt led by Bonifacio collapsed in the Battle of San Juan del Monte, which according to Zaide , resulting in 153 Katipuneros killed and about 200 taken prisoner. Aguinaldo turned the Katipunan revolt into a full-scale revolution. He salvaged the revolt by beating the best of Spanish generals in “fair combat.”

Bonifacio, himself, as presiding officer of the Tejeros Convention, also presided over the death of the Katipunan, a secret society. From then on, Aguinaldo continued the libertarian struggle against the Conquistadores until the inauguration of the First Philippine Republic on January 23, 1899.

Bonifacio was not eliminated. Such a statement has misled a lot of students since he was “executed” for sedition and treason against a constituted revolutionary government. He was tried by a military court which others refer to as “kangaroo court”. It could not be such as the military court was composed of Mariano Noriel as chairman, and with Tomas Mascardo, Mariano Riego de Dios, Crisostomo Riel, Esteban Ynfante, Sulpicio Antony, and Placido Martinez as members. Riego de Dios, Riel, and Ynfante even had to abstain from voting since they opposed the death verdict.

The elimination of Bonifacio assured the leadership to the elite is simply not true. It is a case of “appraising a past event in the light of present standards.” Historians have always failed to note that during the first phase of the revolution, there was no such elitism. As observed by Saulo (1987) everybody regardless of social standing joined the struggle out of sheer love of country. If truly, Bonifacio is not as poor as many had perceived him to be since he was for so many years labelled as the “great plebeian” and now that many historians debunk his being poor then clearly, Don Andres is also from the elite.

Biak-na-bato, is not a shameful betrayal of people’s sacrifices. Aguinaldo made the best of bad bargain. He accepted the Pact but made a secret agreement to use the Spanish indemnity to purchase arms abroad and resume their unfinished revolution. He did purchase arms and return to the Philippines to continue the revolution in May 1898. That could not be a betrayal.
And seemingly following the American colonial policy of denigrating anything that Aguinaldo did resulting into the Filipinos loss of respect towards him, Constantino went on to add that “ because Aguinaldo declaration was not a real independence proclamation, and because it is associated with a man whose revolutionary integrity is in question, June 12 should not be the symbol of our effort to achieve independence…”

With a man whose revolutionary integrity is in question ? Such accusation referred to the oft repeated issue on handling of the Spanish indemnity of Php 400,000.00. 43 Filipino revolutionary leaders in Hongkong already voluntarily signed an affidavit attesting to the honest handling of that amount on April 23, 1898 as noted by Taylor (1971). These leaders include Mariano Llanera, Miguel Malvar, Tomas Mascardo, Jose Alejandrino, Servillano Aquino, and Mamerto Natividad. American historian John R. M. Taylor who would have been biased to the American point of view, also had a good word for Aguinaldo’s handling of the fund. Jose Alejandrino also defended Aguinaldo’s integrity. Alejandrino emphasized that Aguinaldo “had the integrity and unselfishness to return to his country to expose again his life for an ideal which is the ideal of his people and his race.” Most ironically, Quezon in 1941 even mentioned that “Aguinaldo was as poor as he was when the war started” when he addressed the US House of Representative. Such integrity could not be in question. But politics soon would again change everything.

June 12 should be the symbol of our effort to achieve independence. The proclamation could not be associated with one man alone. June 12 is valuable to the birth of our nation as evidenced by the fact that we Filipinos succeeded in holding a revolutionary congress, writing and promulgating our own constitution and our own laws (which many of this generation do not even know), creating our own flag and national hymn, and most of all, establishing the First Republic in Asia!

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Aguinaldo and Antonio Luna

from The Truth About Aguinaldo and other Heroes
By Alfredo B. Saulo






























































































Mabini on Aguinaldo


by Angelo J. Aguinaldo

Said Mabini of Aguinaldo:

 "The Revolution failed because it was badly directed, because its leader won his post not with praiseworthy but with blameworthy acts, because instead of employing the most useful men of the nation he jealously discarded them. Believing that the advance of the people was no more than his own personal advance, he did not rate men according to their ability, character and patriotism but according to the degree of friendship or kinship binding him to them; and wanting to have favorites willing to sacrifice themselves for him, he showed himself lenient to their faults. Because he disdained the people, he could not but fall like an idol of wax melting in the heat of adversity. May we never forget such a terrible lesson learned at the cost of unspeakable sufferings!"
(Source: 
http://j.mp/Malacanang)

Aguinaldo, the leader Mabini was referring to, got elected in absentia. Being chief flag officer of the Magdalo Council, he commanded the revolutionary force which was pinned down in a seesaw battle with Spanish General Jose Lachambre’s army in Pasong Santol. He refused to leave the battle front until Crispulo, his older brother, vowed to take his place so he, together with Mariano Trias could take their oath as elected President and vice-president. The election was presided over by Magdiwang Council. Only Aguinaldo was elected among the officers of the Magdalo. Crispulo died in the Battle of Pasong Santol.  That’s not blameworthy. Mabini did not even see action during the first phase of the Revolution.

On Aguinaldo’s jealously discarding some useful men:

Dencio Yuson, an observer, has this to say: "The Full Story of Aguinaldo's Capture" by Lazaro Segovia (1969ed). The appendix contains an article by American journalist O.K Davis which appeared in Everybody's Magazine Vol.V Aug. 1901 that contains the remarkable unpublished "Aguinaldo Resignation Letter". I will excerpt the following from the said article:
In December, 1898, at the time when the Filipinos were in the hey-day of their power, Aguinaldo wrote a letter resigning the office of the president of the revolutionary government. For eight months they had been perfecting their organization and increasing their strength... They understood, both leaders and people, that the conflict with the Americans was approaching rapidly. 
He (Aguinaldo) went on to say... that the crisis was too great for him to deal with, that it required a man of greater strength and better education, an abler and older man to lead them through the difficulties which were before them... and he asked the people to give him as 'Aguinaldo', release from the office of the president, and allow him to resign in favor of a man more fitted than he to guide them.
 his letter was never circulated. Mabini and his colleagues discovered that Aguinaldo had written it and they succeeded in persuading or compelling him to suppress it. THE TRUTH IS THAT AGUINALDO WAS THE IDOL OF THE FILIPINOS, THOUSANDS OF WHOM WOULD FOLLOW HIM BLINDLY WITH ABSOLUTE CONFIDENCE. IF THAT LETTER HAD BEEN MADE PUBLIC BY AGUINALDO THE INSURRECTION WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN POSSIBLE. 

Too bad, that the whole letter was not published along with the article. This letter proves that Aguinaldo was not the scheming, power hungry TRAPO politician, an image prevailing today.

 Mabini may have also referred to himself when he said: “because instead of employing the most useful men of the nation he jealously discarded them.” He resigned from the Cabinet due to intrigues and other members of the Cabinet began seeing him as Gen. Aguinaldo’s “dark chamber.”

Mabini opposed the declaration of Philippine Independence on June 12, 1898 and instead suggested the reorganization of the government. Aguinaldo, however, felt otherwise. He believed that the proclamation would serve as a great rallying point.

Felipe Agoncillo recommended Apolinario Mabini and  Antonio Luna. Mabini became Prime Minister; Antonio Luna was promoted several times even to the rank of lieutenant general. So, that may have been the favoritism Mabini noted.

Said Aguinaldo of Luna in an interview conducted by Vicente Albano Pacis (A Second Look at America, New York, 1957):

“Neither, indeed, did Luna go to a military school, for he was a pharmacist by training; but in addition to his undeniable valor, he was an avid student of military theory and history. Not only was he our ablest commander but also he had the foresight and ability to open and operate a military school with which he trained most of our officers. We need him to keep our forces as a coordinated unit. And we needed even his terrible temper to impose discipline on our unschooled army.”

And Mabini had reservations to Luna’s appointment. He event wrote Emilio Aguinaldo on March 7, 1899 (a month after the start of the Philippine-American War) asking the latter NOT to give to Gen. Antonio Luna the position of Secretary of War and calling the general "a despot" and not fit to command an Army ("Kundi bagay sa mando ng Hokbo ay lalong hindi sa oficina, sapagkat despota").














It is not surprising that Mabini changed his opinion of Aguinaldo when he was exiled in Guam as he expressed in his Memoir “La Revoluciion Filipina.” He blamed everybody whom he thought abandoned him. Also, he was likely influenced by Artemio Ricarte who was also with him in Guam. Ricarte also had an axe to grind against Aguinaldo.


Credits: Dencio Yuson, Dr. Vic Torres, Alfredo B. Saulo.

Friday, October 9, 2015

List of Materials as References/Bibliography On Emilio Aguinaldo

Books

Achutegui, P.S. de & Miguel A. Bernad, M.A. (1972). Aguinaldo and the Revolution of 1896. A Documentary History. Ateneo de Manila.

Aguinaldo, Emilio F. (1998). Mga gunita ng himagsikan. Manila, Philippines: National Centennial Commission.

Aguinaldo in retrospect. Garcia, M. (Ed). Philippine Historical Association Historical Bulletin. Vol XIII. January-December, 1969. Nos. 1-4. Manila,      Philippines: Philippine Historical Association.

Alip, Eufronio M.(1969). In the Days of General Emilio Aguinaldo. Manila,             Philippines: Alip and Sons, Inc.

Arcilla, J. (Ed.). (2006). Unknown aspects of the Philippine Revolution. Makati City, Philippines: St Pauls Philippines.

Austria, J.A. and Calairo, L.R. (2000) (Eds). Sahiyang. Mga Piling Sanaysay sa Kasaysayang Kabitenyo. Cavite Studies Center De La Salle University. Dasmarinas City, Philippines: Cavite Historical Society.


Calairo, E.F. (1998). Cavite El Viejo. Kasaysayan. Lipunan. Kultura. Cavite           Studies Center De La Salle University. Dasmarinas City, Philippines: Cavite Historical Society.

Calairo, E.F. (2002) Sentiments: Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo's Response to the Accusations of the Sublime Paralytic. Cavite Studies Center De La Salle University. Dasmarinas City, Philippines: Cavite Historical Society.

Canseco, T. (1998) Kasaysayan ng Paghihimagsik ng mga Pilipino sa Cavite 1897. Hernandez, J.R. (Trans). Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine Dominican Center of Institutional Studies.

Corpuz, O.D. (1989). The roots of the Filipino nation. Volume II.  Quezon City,    Philippines: AKLAHI Foundation, Inc. 

Corpuz, O.D. (1998).The Filipino revolution in our collective memory. In E. Ordonez (Ed.) The Philippine revolution and beyond. (vol 1 pp 3-43). Manila, Philippines: Philippine Centennial Commission.

Corpuz. O.D. (1999). Saga and triumph:the Filipino revolution against Spain. Manila, Philippines: Philippine Centennial Commission.
   
Emilio Aguinaldo Reseña veridica de la revolucion Filipina (True version of the   Philippine Revolution), (2002). Manila, Philippines: National Historical             Institute.

Guerrero, M.C.  (1998). Reform and revolution.  In M.C. Guerrero & J.N. Schumacher (Eds.), J.N. KASAYSAYAN: The Story of the Filipino people. Volume 5. Asia Publishing Company Limited.

Guevarra, A.M. (1988). History of one of the initiators of the Filipino revolution.   Corpuz, O.D.  (Trans.). Manila, Philippines: National Historical Institute.

Kalaw, T.M. (1997). Ang himagsikang Filipino. (Ikalawang paglilimbag). Manila, Philippines: Ang Pambansang Suriang Pangkasaysayan.

Ocampo, A. R. (2009). 101 Stories on the Philippine revolution.      Pasig,Philippines: Anvil Publishing, Inc.

Quiason, S.D. (1998). The Philippine revolution and her majesty’s consuls plus       two British army officers. In E. Ordonez (Ed.). The Philippine Revolution     and Beyond (vol 1 pp 408-439). Manila, Philippines: Philippine Centennial       Commission.

Ronquillo, C.V. (1998).“Ilang talata ng paghihimagsik (revolucion) nang 1896-97.” In I. R. Medina (Ed.) Quezon City, Philippines: University of the Philippines Press.


Saulo, A.B. & de Ocampo, E.. (1985). History of Cavite. Trece Martires City,            Philippines: Provincial Government of Cavite.

Saulo, A.B. (1983) Emilio Aguinaldo: Generalissimo and President of the First Philippine Republic, First Republic in Asia

Saulo, A.B. (1987) The truth about Aguinaldo and other heroes.


Turot, H. (1981). Emilio Aguinaldo first Filipino president 1898-1901. Aguinaldo et          les Philippins par Henri Turot (Paris, 1900). P. Castro (Trans). (2nd Ed).         Manila,Philppines: Foreign Service Institute.

Magazine Articles

Zapanta, R.A. (1969, June 15). Aguinaldo’s Military Campaign. The Sunday  Times Magazine. 18-24.

Lu, Nancy T. (1969, June 15). More Filipinos Than Filipinos. A Chinese     Comrade-in-Arms. Sunday Times Magazine. 42-43.


Roces, A. (1989, June 25) .The birth of the first republic. Philippine Panorama,        12-25.

True Version of the Philippine Revolution by Don Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy

http://www.fullbooks.com/True-Version-of-the-Philippine-Revolution.html

This was obviously written to counter Otis and Merritt's reprehensible lies and propaganda, crap which "non-Leftist" American historians seem to be very willing to accept without question to this day, while holding on to their own nationalist myths.

Aguinaldo was not the scheming, power hungry TRAPO politician, an image prevailing today

From Dencio Yuson:
"The Full Story of Aguinaldo's Capture" by Lazaro Segovia (1969ed). The appendix contains an article by American journalist O.K Davis which appeared in Everybody's Magazine Vol.V Aug. 1901 that contains the remarkable unpublished "Aguinaldo Resignation Letter". I will excerpt the following from the said article:
In December, 1898, at the time when the Filipinos were in the hey-day of their power, Aguinaldo wrote a letter resigning the office of the president of the revolutionary government. For eight months they had been perfecting their organization and increasing their strength... They understood, both leaders and people, that the conflict with the Americans was approaching rapidly. 

He (Aguinaldo) went on to say... that the crisis was too great for him to deal with, that it required a man of greater strength and better education, an abler and older man to lead them through the difficulties which were before them... and he asked the people to give him as 'Aguinaldo', release from the office of the president, and allow him to resign in favor of a man more fitted than he to guide them.
This letter was never circulated. Mabini and his colleagues discovered that Aguinaldo had written it and they succeeded in persuading or compelling him to suppress it. THE TRUTH IS THAT AGUINALDO WAS THE IDOL OF THE FILIPINOS, THOUSANDS OF WHOM WOULD FOLLOW HIM BLINDLY WITH ABSOLUTE CONFIDENCE. IF THAT LETTER HAD BEEN MADE PUBLIC BY AGUINALDO THE INSURRECTION WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN POSSIBLE. 

my comment:
Too bad that the whole letter was not published along with the article. This letter proves that Aguinaldo was not the scheming, power hungry TRAPO politician, an image prevailing today.



















Isa ding dahilan ang letter of resignation na yan ang nakikita kong dahilan kung bakit napakapowerful ng nilikha nilang "council of government"........sa sistema nila noon ang pangulo ay magiging simbulismo na lamang ng pagkakaisa at ang "Council of Government" ang siya talagang mamamalaha sa paggogobyerno......solusyon na sa tingin ko kung bakit napapayag nilang manatili si Hen. Miong sa pwesto.(Maging guiding star ng bansa/moto stella) - Kasaysayan At Iba Pa...









Ayon kay TM Kalaw ang plano ni Hen. Miong ay gawing Pangulo ng bansa si Mabini, subalit tinanggihan sapagkat wala ang prestihiyo sa kanya sapagkat ang pangulo lamang ang kinikilala ng mga tao.......ang sagot sa tingin ko sa problema na kinahaharap nila noon sa leadership ng bansa ay ang Makapangyarihang Council of Government at Prime Minister...


Batay sa Malolos Constitution ano mang akta(act) ng pangulo na walang pagsangayon(pirma ng council)ng mga secretaryo ay hindi irerecognized ng mga public officials......imagine that.....napaka pwerful ng pwesto ng pagka Punong Ministro...


Ayaw ni lang malaman itong katotohanan na ito sa sinabi ni Mabini.Mas gusto nila yung pagsisinungaling ni Mabini.Para ma justify yung kanilang mga inaakusa kay Aguinaldo. - Willie Pangilinan

Thanks to Kasaysayan atbp

ANG MGA ALABALDEROS AT ESCOLTA NG PANGULO(1898-1901)

ANG MGA ALABALDEROS AT ESCOLTA NG PANGULO(1898-1901)Ang isang dahilan kung bakit hindi nauunawaan ng mga Filipino ngayon ang posibilidad na ang pagkamatay ng Hen. Antonio Luna ay isang aksidente lamang ay dahil sa kakulangan ng pagunawa ng mga tao sa trabaho ng mga Alabalderos at Escolta ng Pangulo NG BANSA.......
















Thanks you to Kasaysayan atbp....

Thursday, October 8, 2015

MABINI'S WISDOM: BLAME OTHERS EXCEPT HIMSELF


MABINI'S WISDOM: BLAME OTHERS EXCEPT HIMSELF

"And so we come to the juridical Mabini of the last days, sternly pronouncing judgement, as the paralysis crept up from limb to heart, on the tragedy of the Revolution.

The gentry was to blame, the clergy was to blame, the ilustrados were to blame. Congress was to blame, the Constitution was to blame, the generals were to blame, the troops were to blame—and most of all AGUINALDO was to blame for being such an idol of wax. EVERYBODY WAS TO BLAME. EXCEPT MABINI."

Nick Joaquin,
A Question of Heroes
Anvil Publishing, Inc. 2005. p. 160


Thanks to Ian James Andres.

Antonio Luna's Being A Traitor


"EL KATIPUNAN ES LA LA LIGA FILIPINA. Se ha traducido Liga, asociación, por Katipunan. SU AUTOR ES DR. JOSE RIZAL"
- ANTONIO LUNA
[Archivo Del Bibliofilo Filipino IV, 199 (XIX) ec seq.]
ANTONIO LUNA: THE GREAT TRAITOR
Your Honor: Mr. Judge Advocate. Col. Don Francisco de Olive,
"...I am not a rebel or a Mason or an agitator; all the contrary, I am an informer! The Katipunan is La Liga Filipina. They have translated Liga, (association) to Katipunan. ITS FOUNDER IS DR. JOSE RIZAL...I am going to repeat: I am not a rebel, nor a filibuster nor a Mason. I SIDED WITH THE GOVERNMENT AS IT IS MY DUTY, and I DENOUNCED ALL THAT I KNEW with all the natural risk."
Sgd. ANTONIO LUNA
Manila, November 12, 1896
===Antonio Luna's November 12, 1896 testimony provided the Spanish authorities a valid, legal reason for Rizal's execution.===
NOTE: Dr. Jose Rizal's was imprisoned at Fort Santiago on November 3, 1896. His trial began on December 6, 1896. The Spanish military court found Rizal guilty "without reasonable doubt" for the crime of rebellion and formation of illegal organization. He was publicly executed by firing squad on December 30, 1896.
The captured members of Rizal's La Liga Filipina, also known as the "13 Martyrs of Bagumbayan" were executed by firing squad on January 11, 1897–-- twelve days after Dr. Rizal’s death.
The "Thirteen Martyrs" were Domingo Franco, a tobacco merchant; Numeriano Adriano, a lawyer; Moises Salvador, member of the Liga Filipina; Francisco Roxas, a businessman; Jose Dizon, a Katipunan member; Benedicto Nijaga, a second lieutenant in the Spanish army; Cristobal Medina, a corporal in the Spanish army; Antonio Salazar, a businessman; Ramon Padilla, an employee of the Manila customs house; Faustino Villaruel, a merchant from Pandacan; Braulio Rivera, a Katipunan member; Luis Enciso Villareal, member of the Liga Filipina; and Faustino Manalac.
---By Ian-James R. Andres---






















Sources:
Leon Ma. Guerrero,
The First Filipino [Centennial Edition]
Guerrero Publishing, 2010. pp. 332; 343.
Jaime C. Veyra,
Document 389: Antonio Luna's Denunciation of the Katipunan
A Translation of Wenceslao R. Retana's Archivo del Biblio Filipino, op. cit., Vol IV, 199 (19) ec seq. pp. 200-206
_________________

"NAGALAW PA BA?" Tinitiyak ni Tinidad Famy - ina ni Aguinaldo na bangkay na si Heneral Luna!




















GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT

FICTION:

"Nagalaw pa ba?" - Trinidad Famy
Tatad ng taga at tama ng bala, bumulagta si Heneral Luna sa patyo ng Simbahan. Dumungaw sa bintana ng malaking bahay sa tapat ng simbahan si Kapitana Trining, ina ni Aguinaldo at tinanong ang kanilang mga tauhan.


"NAGALAW PA BA?"
Tinitiyak ni Tinidad Famy - ina ni Aguinaldo na bangkay na si Heneral Luna!

-TOM AGULTO & "HENERAL LUNA" THE MOVIE

FACT:

“One account, that of General Venancio Concepcion’s, makes the old woman, Aguinaldo’s mother, shout from the window: ‘How’s he? Is he still moving?’ [Ano, nagalaw pa ba yan?]. THIS ACCOUNT IS BASED ON RUMORS.”

-TEODORO AGONCILLO
[Malolos, Crisis of the Republic, 1960. p. 596]


Salamat kay Ian-James Andres.
_______________________
Join our official group:
Pearl of the Orient: Discover Old Philippines Official Group
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On President Aguinaldo ordering the assassination of Luna



ALAM NYO BA?

In 1933 General Pantaleon Garcia made a startling revelation that President Emilio Aguinaldo ordered him to assassinate General Antonio Luna in 1899. Said Garcia:


"Before General Luna was killed, I received a verbal order from General Emilio Aguinaldo that I will lead the projected assassination of Gen. Luna, which would be done at Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija.

It so happened that , I had not yet fully recuperated from my illness, so that I was unable to perform that order. After some days passed I received the news that Gen. Luna was murdered at Cabanatuan by the soldiers from Kawit."

FACT:

It was because of politics that Aguinaldo was accused, quite understandably, by a former subordinate officer. When Pantaleon Garcia made the statement in 1933, he was Sergeant-at-arms of the Philippine Senate of which Quezon was the President, and that about this time the Aguinaldo-Quezon political controversy was "already going full blast with the Commonwealth Presidential election barely two years away."

Evidently the Garcia statement has political undertones tending to becloud the image of General Aguinaldo. The Garcia statement should therefore be viewed "in the light of the Aguinaldo-Quezon political controversy."

[NOTE: The descendants of Aguinaldo and some writers believed that Aguinaldo is not personally involved in the death of Gen. Luna and maintained that the murder was merely the "spontaneous and voluntary action of the Kawit Presidential Guards" and not a premeditated murder or assassination.]

----By Ian-James R. Andres---

References:

Alfredo B. Saulo,
Emilio Aguinaldo: Generalissimo and President of the First Philippine Republic, First Republic in Asia
Phoenix Publishing House, 1983

Philippine Social Sciences and Humanities Review,
Volumes 36-37, 1971

Biography of Gen. Pantaleon Garcia
Elises Clan of Cavite
elisescavite.webs.com

Ellen Tordesillas
Aguinaldo Descendant says Antonio Luna not Assassinated
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/…/aguinaldo-descendant-says-anto…

(Portrait of General Pantaleon Garcia courtesy of Elises Clan of Cavite page)


Salamat kay Ian-James Andres!
_______________
Pearl of the Orient: Discover Old Philippines Official Group
https://www.facebook.com/groups/pearl.orient.ph/

Heneral Luna: its sensationalism of history; portraying Luna as this larger than life character,while demonizing Aguinaldo

by Bien Canonizado

Firstly,let me say that I am extremely happy that the recent Luna biographical picture has broken even in the box office recounting its two million Dollar budget.

This is very important,it shows that the general public can appreciate movies other than the shallow garbage star cinema turns out.

It also means that future film producers will be encouraged to invest in historical films;and by accident,Luna the film has also resurrected the historical film genre long thought to be dead.
In my humble opinion,what made the movie successful was its ability to resonate with people's discontentment with the current political system.

Also,it portrayed history using a style of story-telling similar to the 1930s pulp-fiction brand of action and grit.

Think of movies like Captain Blood,The four feathers,and the first magnificent seven picture...
My only real problem with the film was its sensationalism of history;portraying Luna as this larger than life character,while demonizing Aguinaldo.

This has resulted in a sudden spike in the number of instant Wikipedia and internet historians over night who calls Aguinaldo a traitor.

I think the film was overly harsh on Aguinaldo for the following reasons:

1). Painting Aguinaldo as an ineffective leader who was weak and indecisive.
Not true since actual accounts of the time,specially those contemporary accounts by Generals Pantalion Garcia,Mariano Llanera,and Emilio Jacinto all point to Aguinaldo as a very competent military commander from 1896-1898...

He won several battles,specially in the southern theater of operations.
He also wasn't a 'weak leader' Aguinaldo ordered several field executions(albeit he preferred exile as a means of discipline).

2). The film imposes 21st century moral judgment on 19th century problems;Ok folks,Political correctness and the uniform code of military justice had not been invented yet.

The Geneva convention had not been ratified;their were no formalized rules of war. War was dirty,Aguinaldo had to make several tough decisions,including not investigating and punishing Luna's killers within the Cawit battalion.
Understand this,the revolutionary army of 1896-1901 was not a true army in the traditional western sense;instead think of it as a rabble of untrained and undisciplined peasants lead by a few officers who literally had to whip their men into obeying orders.

Their was no concept of command responsibility as understood now; the men were loyal not to the army as a whole,but rather to their individual generals who spent their own money to equip them.

Think of it more like the Mongol horde,with Aguinaldo being Khan,and the revolutionary army as a whole being his 'Tumen'.

A Tumen is a very loose body of men lead by a war-lord called a Tumetu.

These are Chinese/Mongolian terms most suited to the revolutionary army. Unlike the Americans,our forces did not have a "general staff" which functioned properly,instead the army often stole and foraged for its supplies. The position of army quarter-master was a kin to head thief,who used open banditry to provision the standing army.
After Luna's assassination by individuals within the Cawit battalion,the facts did not reach Aguinaldo who himself was on the run.

Also,because of difficulties in communication,it was several days until Aguinaldo learned of the facts,all he had to work was with rumors.

What people now do not understand was that,communications and command-structure were very difficult then.
It took several days and weeks for orders to get relayed;often field commanders were given much autonomy to do as they pleased because the situation on the ground was very fluid.



When a theater commander issued orders via horse-currier(the telegraph was extremely unreliable) he did not know if they would be followed...

And consider,if Aguinaldo had punished the Cawit battalion in its entirety,a great portion of the southern soldiers would have deserted on mass.

3). The movie did not show the Cawit battalion's true motives in having Luna killed. You see Luna in his haste to evacuate military supplies and personnel,sequestered and seized a train of fleeing civilians who consequently dependents of the Cawit battalion.

Luna made the mistake of whipping mothers,daughters,and children in front of their own husbands in order to clear the train of cargo space.

This was probably necessary to preserve the army's baggage train,but was not politically astute,because members of the southern companies held a very serious grudge against him.
4). The movie used historical accounts from president Quezon written in the 1930s,as opposed to those by Teodoro Agoncillo which were written earlier.

Remember,Quezon had a very clear reason to demonize Aguinaldo because they were political opponents in the 1935 elections...

Agoncillo,being an unassociated third party was more objective.

I know that many of you have already made up their minds concerning Aguinaldo,however I do ask that you read these scholarly articles and proceed with an open mind... Before commenting,I humbly ask that you first read the supporting documents/links included with this post so that we may have an informed exchange

http://iwriteasiwrite.tumblr.com/post/4041919704/aguinaldo-in-perspective

Aguinaldo - A Tarnished Hero

An inquiry into the meaning of the events of 1896 to 1906 as contemporary Filipinos should understand...

http://macapili-filipino.blogspot.com/2007/04/why-filipinos-are-not-patriotic-people.html




Aguinaldo Anecdotes


As for his character, Gen. Alejandrino, in 1941, made reference to his fine character and
incorruptibility. According to Gen. Alejandrino, a well-known Chinese merchant told him “that Aguinaldo no person, is angel; I speak to him of a business wherein he can make money; he alone put saliva, but he does not like. That man, him no person, that angel.”

-from Aguinaldo: Father of the Philippine Republic by Esteban A. de Ocampo, former
chairman, National Historical Commission. Published in the MLQU Graduate Journal, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2nd Semester, 1971-72.

*****

   On Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, Marcelina Agoncillo – Samoy recalled that he was a rich kind man who never ever said curses to anyone. “Mayaman siya pero ang bait at hindi marunong magmura.”

-Marcelina “Celing” Agoncillo – Samoy, niece of Maria Agoncillo, second wife of Gen. Emilio F. Aguinaldo. Aling Celing lived with Maria Agoncillo at the mansion (now Aguinaldo Shrine).

******

“Sabi po ng nanay ko soft- spoken daw po si Gen. Emilio...mabait kaya loyal sa kanya ang mga katipunero. Nakausap lang po sya ng nanay ko ng ginanap po ung grandball ng Kawit 
highschool sa aguinaldo shrine..taga kawit po kami kaya kilala po talaga sya na mabait sya..”

-Eldrin Mascardo Samaniego Reyes, great grand nephew of Gen. Tomas Mascardo.

On Aguinaldo being a Japanese collaborator

by Tommy Matic IV

Things to consider about the "Aguinaldo was a Japanese collaborator" accusation:
When WW2's Japanese occupation happened, Aguinaldo (who very understandibly bore a grudge against the Americans) sided with the Japanese. Artemio Ricarte, who never swore allegiance to America - one of the very VERY few heroes that didn't, not just Aguinaldo - returned and sided with the Japanese. So why don't we damn Ricarte as a traitor along with Aguinaldo? That's inconsistent.
Another thing - the Filipino people are, essentially, very weird for hating Aguinaldo for siding with the Japanese against the Americans insofar as he was technically siding with a nation that had, in 1898, been the ONLY nation that was even the least bit sympathetic to the Filipino cause against the Americans. It's not a surprise Ricarte went there - the Japanese represented a very real possibility in 1898 for international recognition or at least clandestine support. Many of the rifles that Revolutionary Army soldiers fired were Japanese Murata rifles, an indigenous copy of western contemporary bolt-action rifles.

Consider that the Japanese in WW2 treated their prisoners savagely and their treatment of Indian prisoners of war, notably in the Malaya/Singapore campaign of 1941-42 was no exception. When the Japanese Imperial Guards Division destroyed the British Indian Army's 45th Brigade along with some Australian troops fighting alongside, the prisoners, most of them Indian, were kicked, beaten with rifle butts, tied up with wire and then lined up on the edge of a bridge so the Japanese could shoot one and the whole group would fall into the river and drown, machine gunned some, sliced off the balls of others and otherwise mutilated them, doused badly wounded men with gasoline and set them ablaze while still alive and ran them over with trucks until their corpses were unrecognizable. And that was just at Parit Sulong. Further atrocities occurred with the Indian 17th Division was caught at the Sittang River debacle. The POWs that survived were kept in Japanese Prison camps where Indian Nationalists under Chandra Bose were trying to get them to join the pro-Japanese Indian National Army. Many Indians actually joined the INA which was like the Pinoy Makapilis. Those that didn't starved, died of disease, were worked to death building the 'Kwai Railway of Death' and those that survived - get this - those that survived were and are looked at as TRAITORS by the Indians of today because they fought for the British and not the pro-Japanese INA. Those that betrayed the British and fought for the pro-Japanese INA became HEROES of Indian independence. That's like saying the USAFFE of 1941 were traitors to the Philippines because they fought for America while the MAKAPILIs were the heroes because they fought against America. It's no wonder MANY Sikhs, Indians, etc. that fought in the British Indian Army emigrated to America, Britain and Canada - their own nation was saying that they were traitors.
Yet the Filipinos call Aguinaldo a traitor for being friendly to the side that fought against the Americans.
When MLQ left the Philippines he ordered several of his cabinet, notably Jose P. Laurel and Manila mayor Jorge Vargas to remain behind and 'take care of the Filipino people'. He also gave them the impossible command 'Don't swear allegiance to the Japanese' and essentially threatened them with the death penalty if they did.
Question, President Quezon - how the hell do you "Take care of the Filipino people" and "not swear allegiance to the Japanese" at the same time? The Japanese of WW2 were among the most ruthless and inhumane conquerors of the Twentieth Century. Jose Abad Santos and Josefa Llanes Escoda discovered pretty quick that you could not "take care of the Filipino people" without swearing allegiance to the Japanese outside of working with the guerrillas. JP Laurel and Jorge Vargas furthermore had been instructed by Quezon to serve as the functioning Filipino government to protect the Filipinos. How were they supposed to do that and not swear allegiance to Japan? Quezon essentially condemned his friends and colleagues to eternal infamy as traitors.
Furthermore - many people including Fernando Poe Sr. worked for the Japanese and yet supported the Allied cause behind the Japanese's backs. The whole 'traitor' issue in WW2 is really insanely difficult to sort out and it is never wise to look at it in black and white terms.
Furthermore, whatever happened AFTER the war have no bearing UPON the war because we are discussing the Revolutionary period, not the period after it. If you want to call Aguinaldo a traitor for being supposedly 'pro-Japanese' you have to be consistent and say Ricarte is a traitor. And once again, whatever Aguinaldo may or may not have done AFTER the war are irrelevant to what he did BEFORE and DURING the war.
It is very easy for Filipinos today, enjoying and taking for granted the blessings of freedom to judge Filipinos of the past for the sins these heroes committed when in their place, these same modern Filipinos would be crapping their pants.


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