Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

A Century Hence

Better Essays
916 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Century Hence
Senor Dr. Jose Rizal, I am honored to have been given the privilege of writing to you. I have just read your work “The Philippines: A Century Hence”, and it has, by all means, astounded me. You see, I am now writing to you as a student of the University of the Philippines – formed from the freedom you so dearly fought for which has now been achieved. Which brings me back to your aforementioned work. A lot of people – myself included - think of it as a prophecy come true. Reading into your essay, I found out about the different causes of the sufferings of the Filipino people. If what you said is true, then the Spaniards were either making us into people we’re not or just basically driving us into extinction. It must have been the latter although it proved to be too hard so they settled for the former. In your fight for our freedom, we lost a lot along the way – the fire and spirit of the Filipinos, our creativity, and our choice. I’d say they turned us into some living robots, almost no different to the former African slaves, the only difference being only men were forced to work and women and children were kept sort of dormant, doing nothing and locked at home, if ever learning only what is basic, or violated in worst case scenarios or rather commonly if you ask me. The arrival of the Spaniards, sword and cross in hand, caused the deterioration of the Filipino culture. No longer were we the happy, friendly, thriving, and free people we used to be. We lost confidence in our rich heritage, what we used to be, what we’re supposed to be. We questioned what we had and lost hope of a better future. The so-called enlightenment of the Spanish friars only made us passive, not moving, not caring, only fearing the injustice and wrongful acts of their supposed church. But then you raised the question of whether or not the Spaniards would be able to prevent the progression of the Philippines and that had me wondering. Was that really what they had in mind? To keep us from improving? If so, then were they really just after the land and God, gold, glory be damned? Then I read further into your essay and thought. Probably so.
The foreigners you talked about, although with a few exceptions, seem heartless and brutal to me. How they managed to enslave a whole nation without thought for its people left me dumbfounded. I do not and probably never will understand how people could treat others so differently, and rather harshly might I add, just because they’re not as civilized. Is it because of the way they dress? Or the way they live perhaps? With houses of only wood and leaves, a livelihood of fishing and little agriculture, and maybe a little under educated, does that mean they’re inferior? Should they not be given space for improvement? Should they be kept from standing on their own two feet? Well I think not! But our colonizers seem to think otherwise. They’ve deemed themselves superior – the best at what they do. But where did they end up? How did they end up? I don’t suppose they liked the answer much.
All the pain, all the suffering – yours and others’ – were not overlooked. It awoke the nationalism in peoples’ hearts and it strengthened day by day. And of course Spain was not able to keep up with it. Filipinos rose from nothing to something, something we can take hold of and claim ours, something significant, something recognized. Despite all their efforts, they ended up in vain. The Filipinos would defeat them competition after another and we were learning. We leveled them and faced them head on and if we didn’t end up in a draw, we won. “History does not record in its annals any lasting domination by one people over another, of different races, of diverse usages and customs, of opposite and divergent ideas. One of the two had to yield and succumb.” This excerpt from your work proves to be very powerful and true. We and Spain weren’t one and the same, we’re different, with as much difference there is from what the friars practiced to what they preached. And therefore, we cannot be ruled by them – well at least without problems.
The freedom you fought to attain, we cherish. The freedom you gave us, we will fight for. And with these in our hearts and minds, we will never be conquered again. We will stand up as one strong race, united against those that strive to take our freedom away.
I am thankful for one gift of Spain though. I am now a very faithful Christian and if there is one thing I learned, we all have a choice. And you knew that because you chose the right thing. You fought for what you believed in despite everything that hindered you. You had will-power and you battled with a fiery spirit that cannot be appeased. You believed in what is right and you got what you fought for although maybe it came a little late for you. As Elias did say “Mamamatay akong hindi namamasdan ang pagbubukang-liwayway sa aking bayan.” You fought bravely and died with honor.

For everything you did for us, I am eternally grateful. You will forever be my hero.
Respectfully yours,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Geography of Food Paper

    • 4612 Words
    • 19 Pages

    Baringer, S. E. (n.d.). The Philippines. Retrieved November 5, 2011, from Countries and their Cultures: http://www.everyculture.com/No-Sa/The-Philippines.html…

    • 4612 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Wanting to be a major force to be reckoned with, the U.S. saught territories in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and finally, The Phillipines. In the process of taking The Phillipines, a young commander named Emilio Aguinaldo thought the U.S. was trying to help them gain their independance. As word spread that they wanted to keep the country for their own benefit, Aguinaldo rallied up troops in effort to fight the U.S. for independance. Despite the horrible things the U.S. did to the Filipino peoples, The Phillipines didn’t gain independance till later in history, but there was a huge effort to do so at this time by the…

    • 390 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Spanish American War was the most powerful colonial nation by the end of the 19th century. 1898 is when the United States went to war to help Cuba win its independence from Spain. The United States won and gained the territories of The Philippines, Guam and Puerto Rico. The U.S should not have annexed the Philippines because the Philippines were a country of their own. Additionally, they had their own language, their own currency and their own culture and tradition, very much different than our own. Some people would argue that the U.S. wanted to educate the residents of the Philippines. However, this is wrong. The feeling towards American imperialism during that time was fairly supportive of expansionism and a "we're better for you than you are for yourselves" attitude, that certain type of attitude was not held by the Filipino people. They were proud of their history and did not welcome American annexation.…

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The irony of the 1898 Spanish-American war was that Americans fought partly to aid Cubans in the fight for Cuban sovereignty, and the United States ended up colonizing some territories they won from Spain, like the Philippines. Despite America’s previous claims of only supporting independence and democracy, the United States became an imperialist power and colonized the Philippines (Introduction to the Spanish-American war and the Filipino insurgency in the assignment sheet). This led to a Filipino insurgency, led by discontent Filipinos, who fought American troops through guerrilla warfare (Conlin 545). Conlin states that many Americans died fighting against a “popular revolution” in the Philippines for independence (Conlin 545). Years ago, Americans were fighting for Cuban independence. During the Filipino insurgency, the United States fought to suppress anger among the Filipinos against American colonization of the Philippines. Americans justified colonizing the Philippines by arguing that Anglo-Saxons were superior to the Filipinos, Filipinos were incapable of sustaining a sovereignty, and a colony in the Philippines would benefit the United States economically.…

    • 1569 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Zinn Chapter 12 Essay

    • 417 Words
    • 2 Pages

    President McKinley thought it was wise to spread the fortune and good interests of Americans to the Philippine nations. The Americans took them all to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize them, and Christianize them. It seemed that McKinley’s sole purpose for the brutal treatment of the Filipinos was to civilize them. It was this idea that was presented and accepted by the American public. It was not accepted so lightly by the Filipino people. The idea of a country across the Pacific ruling them was unthinkable. They rose in revolt against the United States. Everything…

    • 417 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the ways America took over the Philippines was false hope. When the Filipinos were at war with Spain to gain their freedom, America joined the war at the right time and sided with the Filipinos. They told the Filipinos that they were here to help them win the war, but in reality, they wanted to take over the Philippines (“U.S. War Crimes…”). As President McKinley (the U.S. president at that time) told them, “we come not as invaders or conquerors, but as friends, to protect the natives in their homes, in their employment, in their personal and religious rights.” (Toribio).…

    • 1521 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Coming from a country of seven thousand plus islands and a culture where "…women were considered equal to men,"(1) according to Linda A. Revilla in her article entitled, "Filipino Americans: Historical Review," Filipino Americans have presently become the second largest immigrant group to enter the US annually. The Spanish colonization of the islands now known as the Philippines, started in 1521 when Ferdinand Magellan set foot on soil and claimed the land for Spain. The Spaniards succeed in the colonization of the Philippines in many ways. Catholicism was integrated into the lives of the majority of the population. A strong education system was also established in the Philippines. Most vital to the economy of Spain may have been the use of Manila as a port for trade between Asia. The stay of the Spanish eventually ended in 1896 when the Philippine Revolution started. The Treaty of Paris gave America "rights" to the Philippines for a dollar amount of twenty million dollars. During the American Colonization, "Americans continued the western tradition of exploiting the Philippines for the benefit of the United States."(1) The Americans furthered the Spanish efforts of colonization and "…set[ing] up education, public health, and public work programs."(1) During the colonization of the Philippines, it became evident that the land present would not suffice the amount of people living it; this started a migration of Filipinos to the United States.…

    • 2253 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    They intensified the conversion of the Filipino elite to Western cultural norms did not necessarily identify them with the true Westerners, the really “civilized ones,” for they still felt themselves to be of the native earth. Their increasing number excluded their easy acceptance into the “civilizing” Spanish elite, not only because of the weight of the elite mentality that derived from the bipartite historical ideology. Feeling themselves natives while subconsciously wanting to be (and sometimes being) Spaniards, the hispanized youth of the second half of the nineteenth century where the ones who could really react to the racial and cultural calumny behind the tripartite view of Philippine history: the Indios basically barbarian in nature (even when dressed as a Spaniard and speaking Spanish), his incapacity for intellectual and artistic pursuits, his ingratitude to the Spanish “motherland” and the Mother Church. The archipelago was even then considered simply as the stage for the action of Spain, so that the historical consciousness that viewed and integrated as such action was, in the end, one which saw Philippine history as merely that of “Spain in the Philippines.” It was a conscious that could not help but consider the Indio as the object of the historical action by the Spaniard who, in his…

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Cracks in the Parchment Curtain – 17 essay compiled into one to reveal factual information on the 300 year master-and-slave relationship of the Philippines and Spain. In here, we’ll see desolate angle of Filipinos living through the Spanish shadow for three centuries. An American author with Dutch-Lutheran decent uncovers the Philippine’s neglected history with an aim to put a window on every angle during the three century colonial rule of Spain. The book contains facts from primary sources in which the author patiently cracked through persons, places and time. Among them are musty books and documents coming from libraries to libraries, countries to countries, parishes to parishes and persons to persons. These were the keys in unsealing and renewing the Philippine history with the realistic glimpse of the Filipinos who have hungered for freedom and dignity in the chains of foreign power.…

    • 1472 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Twenty Years from Now

    • 1512 Words
    • 7 Pages

    An Essay: Twenty years from now, the world will be a better place to live in…

    • 1512 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    NOTE: All her thoughts before journalist James Fallows visited and wrote his popular piece about our "damaged culture," i.e. absence of Filipino nationalism, in 1987. Fallows must have read this essay by Mrs. Constantino. Again, we Filipinos due to our colonial…

    • 379 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reading through the essays of Rizal, one could say that the hero is not just as great writer but a great Historian as well. His essay, The Philippines a Century Hence presents a radical prophesy of Rizal of how the Philippines would be through the century. Rizal presented a clear idea of how our Motherland will end up centuries later proposing that our country will end up in either of the three ways;(1) that the Philippines will remain to be a colony of Spain but will be in good terms with it’s captors;(2) that the Philippines will try to cut the ties of our Motherland from it’s captors through violent means;(3) and lastly that we will be colonized by another country. The thoughts of Rizal were not only based on his mere imagination, he tried to read in between the lines of the History of the many nations to come up with his recommendations of how the Philippines would look like. Rizal saw how the uprising in different nations started and thought that if Spain continuous to ignore the cries of its inhabitants, there will come a time that the oppressed will come into arms to recapture their lost freedom. In his essay, Rizal exposed the several issues that concern our country. The abuse of human rights, the lack of freedom of the press and the lack of representation in the Spanish Cortes are the key points discussed in the lengthy essay of Rizal. According to Rizal, the Filipinos must enjoy liberty of the press so that they can voice out their cries against the cruelty of the Spaniards. In addition, they must also have a representative in the Spanish Cortes to “make known to the government and to the nation whether or not their decrees have been duly obeyed. Lastly, Filipinos are also seeking for justice and for human rights. Given these things, Rizal warned Spanish that if they wouldn’t stop their abuse to the natives, they will plot separatist movements putting justice into their own hands. As a reader of Rizal, we could…

    • 567 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Indolence

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “The Indolence of the Filipinos” is an essay written by Dr. Jose Rizal to explain the alleged idleness of the people during the Spanish Colonization.…

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    We owe it to ourselves as Filipinos to revisit the writings of Dr. Rizal and try to gain an understanding of his ideals and hope for the Philippines. Dr. Rizal is a great gift of God to us, if we are to see it in a Christian perspective. But Dr. Rizal may be like a precious gift left unopened in the closet of our lackadaisical minds.…

    • 2175 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Miseducation of Filipino

    • 444 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Personally, I learned and realized many things about the history and relationship between the Americans and the Filipinos upon reading this paper. It is quite intriguing what the main reasons really were the Americans in taking power over the Philippines. Was it for the good of the Filipinos or the Americans’ good? Whatever it was, they succeeded in almost every aspect of conquering the land because they knew the most effective way to subjugate Filipinos minds: by controlling our education. They created a new generation of good colonials, the “unFilipino” Filipinos. The indigenous ways of life of Filipinos had been changed to the American way of life. That was ridiculous because certainly, America and Philippines vastly differed from each other in so many ways, and therefore, their ways of life based on their differing needs should be entirely different. But the Americans insisted on creating a “carbon-copy” of themselves in Filipinos through the imposition of their language in their…

    • 444 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays