The Reformist Movement

RayhanahDecampong 1,266 views 23 slides Jul 05, 2020
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About This Presentation

The reformist movement, whose formation was greatly influenced by the gomburza, was a movement among ilustrados, exiled liberals, and students aiming for reforms for the Filipinos.


Slide Content

the reformist movement

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gomburza
Mariano Gómez, curate of Bacoor, Cavite
José Burgos, curate of the Manila Cathedral
Jacinto Zamora, parish priest of Marikina
three secular priests executed by false charges
before the propaganda

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before the propaganda
PacianoMercado was a protégé of
Padre Burgos when he was implicated
in the Cavite Mutiny. Hence, Rizal not
using the surname Mercado.

rise of the middle class
▸brought by the economic
development (Galleon Trade to
international trade)
▸composed of Spanish and Chinese
mestizos
▸education produced intelligentsia,
among them the ilustrados, who had
grown critical of colonial rule
▸were sent to Spain and were exposed
to Spanish liberal and European
nationalist ideals
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before the propaganda

the propaganda
movement
In 1872, ilustrados, exiled
liberals, and students
formed the Propaganda
Movement, a cultural
organization aiming for
reforms for the Filipinos
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“They believed
in the power of
words, not of
the sword.”
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the filipinocircle( 1882 )
founded by Lopez Jaenaand other reformers to bring the
attention of the peninsularesto the problems in the
Philippines, but dispersed after the Minister of the Colonies
discouraged it
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la solidaridad
españaenfilipinas( 1887 )
newspaper put out by Eduardo de Leteand others to voice
out the desires of the Filipinos. funds were collected in the
Philippines as advanced subscription, but it had ceased to
exist before the money reached de Lete

•established in 1889 as the official organ
of the Propaganda Movement
•first editor: Graciano Lopez Jaena
•funded by Filipino expatriates and
supporters from the Philippines
•first editorial came out in Feb 15, 1889
and every fifteen days
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la solidaridad

( from the first editorial of The Sol )
“With regard to the Philippines, since she needs
the most help, not being represented in the
Cortes, we shall pay particular attention to the
defense of her democratic rights, the
accomplishment of which is our patriotic duty.
That nation of eight million souls should not,
must not be the exclusive preserve of theocracy
and traditionalism.”

aims
1)become a province of Spain, so as to enjoy the same rights and privileges as a Spaniard (e.g. immune from abuses, freed from unreasonable taxes)–assimilation
2)have a representative in the Spanish Parliament (aka the Cortes) to propose and participate in the approval of laws beneficial to the country
3)removal of the friars and secularization of the parishes
4)active participation in the affairs of the government
5)freedom of speech, of the press, and of assembly
6)wider social and political freedom
7)equality before the law
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the movement

members were composed of:
1.filibusterosthrown in the Marianas
Islands after the Cavite mutiny,
2.young men sent to Europe to study, and
3.refugees who escaped the Philippines to
escape from persecution
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the movement

…propagrandists
§Graciano Lopez Jaena(Diego Laura)
§Marcel H. del Pilar (Plaridel)
§José Rizal (Dimasalang, LaongLaan)
§Antonio Luna (Taga-Ilog)
§Juan Luna
§Felix Hidalgo
§Mariano Ponce
§José M. Panganiban (Jomapa)
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propagandists
§Eduardo de Lete
§Pedro Serrano Laktaw
§Pedro Paterno
§Jose Alejandrino
§DominadorGomez
§Fernando Canon
§Isabelodelos Reyes

prominent propagandists
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propagandists

marceloh. del pilar
•lawyer and journalist from Bulacan
•founded DiariongTagalog, the first
bilingual newspaper, where he edited
the Tagalog section
•campaigned for freedom and
progress in plazas, cockpits, and
tiendas –was imprisoned for a month
•wrote pamphlets and parodies of
AmaNaminand the 10
Commandments to mock the friars
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propagandists

marceloh. del pilar
•became the editor for The Sol after
Lopez-Jaena
•Works: Dasalanat Tocsohanand
CaingatCayo(1888)
•On the eve of his death, he resorted
to a violent revolution:
“Insurrection is the last remedy, especially
when the people have acquired the belief
that peaceful means to secure the
remedies for evils prove futile.”
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propagandists

gracianolopez-jaena
•the great orator from Ilo-ilo
•his mother wanted him to become a priest but did not agree with it
•at age 18, wrote Fray Botod, a story mocking the friars
•continued to fight for justice, until threats were made on his life
•he went to Spain 1880
•first editor of The Sol
•died of tuberculosis in 1896
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propagandists

joseprotaciorizal
mercadoy alonzo
•medical doctor, scientist, and writer
from Calamba, Laguna
•studied medicine, read a lot, and
mastered several languages
•at 21, in 1882, went to Spain
•at 26, finished NoliMe Tangere
•at 30, finished El Filibusterismo
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propagandists

joserizal
•made the revolution fail in Fili
•in a letter to Father Florentino:
“I do not mean to say that our liberty will
be secured at the sword’s point, … but
that we must secure it by making
ourselves worthy of it, by exalting the
intelligence and the dignity of the
individual, by loving justice, right, and greatness, even to the extent of dying for
them
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propagandists

( from Rizal’s Manifesto a AlgunosFilipinos
written in Fort Santiago in 1886 )
"From childhood, I was educated by Spaniards and
was nurtured in the great examples of the History of
Spain, Greece, and Rome.In later years, all my
professors in Spain were great thinkers and great
patriots.Everything--books, periodicals, examples,
and reason itself--prompted me to love the good of
my native land, as the Catolonianloves the good of
Catalonia, and Basques, Galicians, Andalusians
respectively love Biscay, Galicia, Andalusia etc."

la ligafilipina
established by Rizal in 1892, a week after his return to Manila, to disseminate the Propaganda Movement’s aims and reformist, nonviolent ideals
the meeting in the house of DoroteoOngjuncowas attended by at least 20 Filipinos, including Andres Bonifacio and Apolinario Mabini
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propagandists

joserizal
•arrested, thrown into Fort Santiago and then banished to Dapitan
•after 4 years, requested to enlist as military doctor in Cuba
•his request was granted but before he could dock in Spain, he was arrested and tried for baseless charges of treason and complicity in the revolution
•he was sentenced to die and on Dec 30, 1896, was shot in Luneta
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propagandists

a failure.
•Spain was too busy with its internal
problems to give attention to the
colony
•La Solidaridadwas counteracted by
the friars’ publication, La Politicade
EspañaenFilipinas
•funds became scarce, there were
no sufficient means to carry out the
reforms
•the propagandists were divided
against themselves; too
conservative and lacked the
courage to continue the campaign
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conclusion

cuerpode
compromisarios
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conclusion