FACTOID # 124: Teachers make up 7.8 percent of Iceland’s labor force - and they only have to teach 38 weeks per year.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Propaganda Movement
José Rizal
José Rizal

José Protacio Rizal Mercado y Alonzo Realonda (June 19, 1861 - December 30, 1896) is the national hero of the Philippines. He was a doctor, a painter, a sculptor, a poet, a dramatist, and a novelist. He was in fact a polyglot, who was able to speak several languages--including Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, English, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Malayan, Portuguese, Russian, Sanskrit, Spanish, Tagalog, and other regional Philippine languages.

Contents

Family

The seventh of eleven children of Francisco Mercado and Teodora Alonzo, he was born into a prosperous Chinese-mestizo family in Calamba, Laguna Province. A wealthy fifth generation Chinese-mestizo, Rizal is a direct male descendant of Domingo Lam-co, a full-blooded Chinese who sailed to the Philippines from Amoy, China in the latter part of the 17th century. Lam-co married a Chinese-mestiza by the name of Inez de la Rosa. To free his descendants from the racist anti-Chinese policies of the Spanish authorities, Lam-co changed the family surname to the Spanish surname "Mercado" (market) so that they would not forget their Chinese merchant roots. The surname was again changed by José himself, from Mercado to "Rizal", after he received advice from his older brother, Paciano Mercado, to do so to avoid bringing the family into problems that he was embroiled in with the authorities.


Aside from Chinese and Malay ancestors, recent geanological research has found that José had traces of Japanese, Spanish and Negrito ancestry. His maternal great-great-grandfather (Teodora's great-grandfather) is Eugenio Ursua, a descendant of Japanese settlers, who married a Filipina named Benigna, with her surname anonymous. These latter two gave birth to their daughter Regina Ursua who married a Chinese-mestizo from Pangasinán named Atty. Manuel de Quintos, Teodora's grandfather. Their daughter Brígida de Quintos married a Spanish-mestizo named Lorenzo Alberto Alonso, the father of Teodora.


Education

He first studied under Justiniano Cruz in Laguna. He went to Manila to study at the Ateneo Municipal de Manila (now Ateneo de Manila University) where he received his bachelor of arts in 1877. He continued his education in the Ateneo Municipal to obtain a degree in land surveying and assessor, and at the same time in the University of Santo Tomas where he studied Philosophy and Letters. Upon learning that his mother was going blind, he then decided to study medicine (opthalmology) in the University of Santo Tomas, but did not complete it because he felt that Filipinos were being discriminated by the Dominicans who operated the University.


He then went to Madrid, Spain, against the wishes of his father, to study medicine at the Universidad Central de Madrid where he earned the degree of Licentiate in Medicine.


He continued his studies at Paris and Heidelberg where he earned a second doctorate.


Writings

José Rizal was quite well known for writing two novels, Noli Me Tangere (1887) and El Filibusterismo (1891), which are social commentaries of the Philippines under Spanish colonial rule. These two books are responsible for the development of a unified Filipino consciousness and identity.


Legacy

Rizal was a reformer for a more open society, rather than a revolutionary for political independence; as a leader of the Propaganda Movement of Filipino students in Spain, he contributed newspaper articles to La Solidaridad in Barcelona with the following agenda:

  • That the Philippines be a province of Spain
  • Representation in the Cortes (Parliament)
  • Filipino priests rather than the Spanish Augustinians, Dominicans, or Franciscans
  • Freedom of assembly and speech
  • Equal rights before the law (for both Filipino and Spanish plaintiffs)

Had these reforms had been accepted, Rizal's books would have been legal. But, the authorities in the Philippines could not brook this nonviolent agenda, as the social reforms threatened the status quo; thus upon his return to Manila in 1892 he was exiled, being wrongly accused of subversion for forming a nonviolent reform movement La Liga Filipina. While exiled in Dapitan, Mindanao, he founded a school and a hospital.


However, when in 1896 the Katipunan national secret society rebelled, he was implicated by association, arrested, tried for sedition, condemned, and executed by firing squad in Bagumbayan (now Rizal Park) in Manila. He was offered a chance to evade execution by serving as a doctor in Cuba but chose death instead. On the eve of his execution, he wrote his last poem, "Mi Último Adiós" (My Last Farewell). He belongs to the greatest generation of Asian nationalist leaders -- Jose Rizal and his fellow countrymen Andres Bonifacio and Emilio Aguinaldo along with Mohandas Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore of India, and Sun Yat-sen of China, all were born in the decade of the 1860s.


The anniversary of Rizal's death, December 30, is now celebrated as a holiday in the Philippines, called "Rizal Day".


See also

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
HateFilter - Stop Hate Front Page (703 words)
Holocaust Denial is an Anti-Semitic propaganda movement active in the United States, Canada, and Western Europe that seeks to deny the reality of the Nazi regime's systematic mass murder of six million Jews during World War II.
This neo-Nazi movement also dismissed the testimony of survivors from the concentration camps as exaggeration and lies.
Many proponents of Holocaust denial claim that their propaganda has been misrepresented, and that they are victims of yet another conspiracy, also led by Jews, to suppress independent research.
Mein Kampf - Volume II, Chapter XI (6087 words)
It was due to the effect of our propaganda that within a short period of time hundreds of thousands of citizens became convinced in their hearts that we were right and wished us victory, although personally they were too timid to make sacrifices for our cause or even participate in it.
Accordingly, the director of propaganda voted on a question that concerned the man who had to do with the finances and the latter in his turn voted on a question that concerned only the organization as such, the organizer voting on a subject that had to do with the secretarial department, and so on.
The movement had still so few members that it was hard to find among them a suitable person for the job who would be content with very little for himself and at the same time would be ready to meet the manifold demands which the movement would make on his time and energy.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.