Tuesday, October 14, 2008

His Life.

Graciano López y Jaena (December 18, 1856 - January 20, 1896)

Jaena was born to in Jaro, Iloilo to Placido López and Maria Jacoba Jaena. His parents were poor, as his mother was a seamstress and his father a general repairman. His father, however, had been to school and his mother was quite religious. At the age of six, young Graciano was placed under the watch of Father Francisco Jayme who noted his intellectual promise, especially his gift of speech.

His mother, feeling that the priesthood was the most noble of occupations and sent him to the Seminario de San Vicente Ferrer in Jaro which had been opened under the brief liberal administration of Governor General Carlos de la Torre. Here again, his talents were noted. While studying at this seminary, López Jaena served as a secretary to an uncle, Claudio López who was honorary vice consul of Portugal in Iloilofdfd. He even took charge of some minor matters that were brought to that office.

Despite his mother's desires, it was Graciano’s ambition to be a physician and he finally convinced his mother that this was the better course of action. He sought enrollment at the University of Santo Thomas but was denied admission because the required Bachelor of Arts degree was not offered at the seminary in Jaro. However he was directed to the San Juan de Dios Hospital as an apprentice. Unfortunately, financial backing ran out and his poor parents could not afford to keep him in Manila. He returned to Iloilo and practiced medicine in outlying communities with such knowledge as he had.

During this time his visits with the poor and the common people began to stir deep feelings about the injustices that were common. At the age of 18 he had the audacity to write the story "Fray Botod" which depicted a fat and lecherous priest. Botod’s false piety "always [had] the Virgin and God on his lips no matter how unjust and underhanded his acts are." This naturally incurred the fury of the friars who knew that the story depicted them. Although it was not published a copy circulated in the region but the Friars could not prove that López Jaena was the author. However he got into trouble for refusing to testify that certain prisoners died of natural causes when it was obvious that they had died at the hands of the mayor of Pototan. López Jaena continued to agitate for justice and finally left for Spain when threats were made on his life.

López Jaena sailed for Spain. There he was to become a leading literary and oratorical spokesman for the cause of Filipino freedom. Historians regard López Jaena, along with Marcelo H. del Pilar and José Rizal, as the triumvirate of Filipino propagandists. Of these three López Jaena was the first to arrive and may be said the Genesis of the Propaganda movement.

He pursued his medical studies at the school of medicine at the University of Valencia but did not finish the course. Once Rizal reproached Lopéz Jaena for not finishing his medical studies. Graciano replied, "On the shoulders of slaves should not rest a doctor's cape." Rizal countermanded, "The shoulders do not honor the doctor's cape, but the doctor's cape honors the shoulders."

He then moved to the field of journalism. It must be said that López Jaena had his faults. Often careless and, indeed, lazy, he perhaps enjoyed the café life of Barcelona and Madrid a bit too much. However, his friends would forgive him these indiscretions due to his appeal with words and oratory. Mariano Ponce who was another of the Filipino propagandists in Spain observed, "... a deafening ovation followed the close of the peroration, the ladies waved their kerchiefs wildly, and the men applauded frantically as they stood up from their seats in order to embrace the speaker." Rizal noted, "His great love is politics and literature. I do not know for sure whether he loves politics in order to deliver speeches or he loves literature to be a politician."

In addition he is remembered for his literary contributions to the propaganda movement. He founded the fortnightly newspaper, La Solidaridad (Solidarity). When the publication office moved from Barcelona to Madrid the editorship went to Marcelo H. del Pilar.

Unfortunately, López Jaena died of tuberculosis on January 20, 1896. His death was followed on July 4th by Marcelo H. del Pilar and on December 30th of José Rizal by firing squad, thus ending the great triumvirate of propagandists. He died in poverty just shy of his fortieth birthday and two and a half years before the declaration of independence from Spain by Emilio Aguinaldo.

reference: www.wikipedia.org

His Works. part V

This is a Letter written by Dr. Graciano Lopez-Jaena to Dr. Jose Rizal, congratulating him on his new novel, El Filibusterismo. All of his works found posted in this blog was copied from the book stated in an earlier post, Graciano Lopez-Jaena: Speeches, Articles and Letters.



TO RIZAL: CONGRATULATIONS ON EL FILIBUSTERISMO

Barcelona, 2 October 1891

Mr. José Rizal

Ghent

Renowned Patriot: The Filipino colony of Barcelona has read with unusual enthusiasm your new book whose style, being original, is comparable only to the sublime style of Alexander Dumas, senior. It can be considered a model and precious gem I the now decadent Spanish literature. The novel has vigorous and energetic passages that recall the impetuosity of the proclamations……………………………...

Its pages contain a torrent of lofty as well as redeeming thoughts.

Like a new Moses, with your immortal work you have endowed the Philippines with the Decalogue for her political redemption and human dignification.

If the Philippines would know how to follow the commandments, precepts, and counsels beautifully transcribed in your novel, she would very soon make of an abject, enslaved people, a people free, great, prosperous, and master of its destinies.

Therefore, this colony has the greatest pleasure in congratulating you, wishing El Filibusterismo a flattering success in all its varied manifestations, trusting that our common mother, the Philippines, will support the efforts and respond gallantly to the lofty purposes of the author.

Your most affectionate, countrymen, and admirers.

SANTIAGO BARCELONA GRACIONO LOPEZ JAENA

ENRIQUE MAGALONA SANTIAGO ICASIANO

ISIDORO DE SANTOS JOSE GUSTILLO

RAYMUNDO ANDRES RAMON RIEGO

EMILIANO CAMACHO FELINO CAJUKOM

BERNABE BUSTAMANTE VICENTE REYES

His Works. part lV

Another work of Dr. Graciano Lopez-Jaena. All of his works found posted in this blog was copied from the book stated in an earlier post, Graciano Lopez-Jaena: Speeches, Articles and Letters.

THE REPUBLIC IS COMING*

I will say with Christ: Estote parati in qua hora non putatis, filius hominis veniet. Be prepared, because when you least expect it, the Son of Man will come.

Republicans! Be prepared because when you least expect it, the Republic will come.

The day of victory is approaching. These disasters that we see occurring everywhere, immorality enthroned in central and municipal spheres proclaim the downfall of the present state of things.

Puppets have no place in Spain. There mission was to conserve, but the conservative period is over; the vital cells are decrepit and death will not be long in coming.

It is agonizing!

Vile tricks, lies, malversations, the irregularities and vices of past administrations are exposed equally in Cuba, the Philippines, in the busy sectors of Tibidabo and Montserrat, in the snow cap peak of Sierra Monera, as well as in the regions washed by rachitic Manzanares and the heights of Moncayo: all these are the precursor of the death of the present administration.

Just as upon the coming of the Messiah in Jerusalem, everything was iniquity and sin, as the present time in this Jerusalem washed by the Mediterranean and the Cantabrian, everything is evil and inconsistency, confusion and disorder reigning within her borders.

In Messianic times there was Tiberious, the Roman emperor incompetent and of no account; under the present circumstances the institutions are vacilliating and weak; at that time Herod had no control of the government and was devoid of common sense; today Sagasta is impotent; made uneasy by his own followers and by those who are not; he has his Pilate in Cánovas, who is ruining him.

Everything sees to be conspiring in favour of the Republic.

Get ready, Republicans, to receive and greet the new era which is going to regenerate us.

Prepare your…throats, Spaniards, and let us trust in the future.

In the meantime, let us shout bravely:

Long live the Republic!

*An article published in El Pueblo Soberano, Barcelona, 1889.

His Works. part lll

This reflection was written by Dr. Graciano Lopez-Jaena as a tribute to the death of Pepe Panganiban. All of his works found posted in this blog was copied from the book stated in an earlier post, Graciano Lopez-Jaena: Speeches, Articles and Letters.


TO PEPE PANGANIBAN*

Here lies the avenger of Filipino honor.

(Meditation)

You went down to your grave young. Your brief life resembles that of Imbert Gallois who, desirous of fame, went to Paris from Geneva in search of renown and glory; but instead of applause, distinction and honor, he found only misery and with misery his early death. You, too, avid for learning came to Europe in search of the infinite life; but, alas, you found only the infinite of nothing: death.

The parallel between you two cannot be more perfect: two graves, two pits opened up for two young lives who could have brought honor and glory to their native countries.

Imbert died in poverty, forgotten and lost among the masses who breath their last in he dunghill of poverty. Notwithstanding, a letter of his – only one letter – found on the corpse of Imbert, sufficed to reveal to the immortal pen of the immortal Victor Hugo a genius, dead no sooner than born. Thus, likewise, through your writings, certainly very few, because of the disease undermining you health and paralyzing your mind, we discovered, we observed that in your fragile body a genius was quickening, now a lost hope for the Philippines.

Your brain was a fountain of beautiful ideas. What a pity that you did not have time and inexorable death prevented you from revealing the sublime conceptions of your fecund mind, which could have earned you an illustrious name in the history of science, a distinguished name in the history of rational eclectic philosophy to whose study you were truly dedicated.

*This tribute to José María Panganiban (1 Feb. 1863 – 19 August 1890), nom de plume “Jomapa”, was published in La Solidaridad, 1890.

José María Panganiban died of tuberculosis. – T.A.A

Monday, October 13, 2008

His Works. part ll

This speech was delivered at a banquet given by the Filipinos of Madrid in Honor of the Minister of Colonies Mr. Fernando de León y Castillo who signed on 25 June 1881 the royal decree providing for the abolition of the tobacco monopoly. The Filipinos rejoiced because they had long suffered under the oppressive monopoly. Under the monopoly, the government compelled the natives to cultivate a fixed number of tobacco plants and punished them severely if their harvests were unsatisfactory.

All of his works found posted in this blog was copied from the book stated in an earlier post, Graciano Lopez-Jaena: Speeches, Articles and Letters.



The Abolition of the Tobacco Monopoly
An Excerpt (last three paragraphs of the speech)

Now, then, that she has received a new and immense benefit from this solicitous mother with the abolition of the tobacco monopoly initiated by the Minister of Colonies, who presides over this modest banquet, and sanctioned by the King, the dawn of a new future is described under a heaven of hopes. And there is no doubt that when finally the time comes to be on the road of opportunities, when the barriers that oppress the spirit of the country, which are making difficult her progress, are broken, Philippine society would become more vigorous. When freedom and the promotion of the arts reach the level of those in Metropolis and offer new sources of prosperity and wide horizon to labor, there is no doubt, I repeat, that the rich province, justly called the beautiful Pearl of the Orient, will be a fecund and an inxhaustible emporium of riches for Spain. (Very good, applause)

This small Filipino colony residing in this city, assembled now at a fraternal banquet, full of the most respectful affection for its sovereign and for its worthy Minister, informs the whole world of its eternal gratitude for the lifting of the monopoly on tobacco.

And lastly, gentleman, in these moments of madness, of vertigo for the ideas of progress in those Islands, since we cannot toast the dead, let us not forget them, let us dedicate to them an eternal remembrance, let us shed a tear which, falling on the tombs of Legazpi, Magellan and many others, will penetrate into the bottom of those tombs and serve as a palpable proof of our sincere and enduring gratitude. (Deafening applause. Congratulations to the orator)




Sunday, October 12, 2008

His Works.

I happen to be forunate enough to take hold of a copy of a book about his life's works. This book was published during the early 1970's and is a special issue made in tribute to his brilliance, stainless patriotism and immense love for the Philippines.

The book is entitled Graciano Lopez Jaena: Speeches, Articles, and Letters.





The following page is Dr. Graciano Lopez Jaena's Dedication from the first edition of his book Barcelona, 1891.
Here he tells his readers what to expect from his works.

A Letter To The Filipinos

TO THE FILIPINOS by Graciano Lopez Jaena

Persons with whose friendship I feel highly honored have succeeded in overcoming my tenacious opposition to the publication of my speeches and various articles which I consider works of passing interest, products of improvisation, unconnected with each other, at the time of writin, lacking in value and interest like all works written for publication in magazines and newspapers.

I am giving you this warning, my compatriots, to whom I dedicate this modest work: Do not look in it for literary gems which it does not have; or profound and luminous thoughts, or ingenious and sublime concepts, or even coherent ideas, because such conseptions cannot sprout from a dwarfish intellect like mine.

Though the work suffers from these defects, yet you will discover in it, you will note throbbing on all its pages three sublime aspirations., for in this respect I yield to no one, which are--

1. A stainless patriotism, an immense love of the Philippines; the Philippines, constant love of my heart, my perennial illusion!
2. My aim, my vehement desire to improve her lot, to see the sun of progress, liberty, and
law shine over her horizons;
3. My earnest desire to unmask her oppressors, those responsible for her immense
misfortunes.

It is said that in certain towns in India are found trees called manzanillos whose shade brings death to those who unfortunately seek shelter under their leafy but poisonous bowers.

"Voila l'ennemi", said Gambetta; see there the enemy, we say: The friars are the human manzanillos, more poisonous than those trees, under whose "protective" shade Philippine towns languishing and agonizing.

Having pointed out the evil, the "tree" being known, it only remains for us all in solidum to pull it up by the roots and thereby render an immense servise to our Motherand the Philippines and to all humanity.

Barcelona, 1891
Graciano Lopez Jaena: Speeches, Articles and Letters

Pictures of Dr. Graciano Lopez Jaena

Pictures of Dr. Graciano Lopez Jaena




Sources:
www.wikipedia.org
www.thenoewstoday.info