Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Welcome to AralRizal

Welcome to aralrizal!

In this blog I will try to create lessons about the life and works of Dr. Jose P. Rizal, the Philippines' national hero. Look forward to each lessons as I will also post some downloadable powerpoint presentations, quizzes, and exams that will be helpful for students and teachers as well who are looking for resources in their studies and class lessons. I am hoping that this will be helpful for them.

Click the following links to go to the pages on this blog:

Jose Rizal: A Summary of His Life
Rizal's Family

Side notes:
The downloadable powerpoint presentations are on rar files and available on 4shared.com. You need to register or log-in first before you can download the file. Registration to the site is free.

Rizal's Family


The Mercado-Rizal Family
            The Rizal family is considered one of the biggest families during that time. Domingo Lam-co, the family’s paternal ascendant was a full-blooded Chinese who came to the Philippines from Amoy, China and married a Chinese half-breed lady named Ines de la Rosa. It was also said that the Mercado-Rizal family had also traces of Japanese, Spanish, Malay, and Negrito.

            Jose Rizal’s family is composed of 13 members including his parents, and nine sisters and one brother. Jose is the 7th child in the family.

Francisco Mercado (1818-1898)
Jose's father is Francisco Engracio Rizal Mercado y Alejandro is an industrious father whom Rizal called "a model of fathers". He came from Biñan, Laguna. His parents are Juan and Cirila Mercado and was the youngest of the 13 offsprings. He was born in Biñan, Laguna on April 18, 1818. He studied in San Jose College, Manila. He died in Manila on 1898.

Teodora Alonzo (1827-1913)
            Jose’s mother is Teodora Alonzo y Quintos is a highly cultured and accomplished woman whom Rizal called “loving and prudent mother”. Her parents were Lorenzo Alonzo and Brijida de Quintos. She was born on November 14, 1827 in Sta. Cruz, Manila. She studied at the Colegio de Santa Rosa. She was a business-minded woman, courteous, religious, hard-working, artistic, and well-read. She died in Manila on 1913.

Saturnina Rizal (1850-1913)
            Saturnina is the eldest child in the family. She married Manuel Hidalgo of Tanauan, Batangas. Their children were Alfredo (1883-1952), who married Aurora Tiaoqui; Adela (1886-1946), who married Jose Ver; Abelardo; and Amelia and Augusto, who both died young. In 1909 Doña Saturnina published Pascual Poblete’s Tagalog translation of the Noli Me Tangere.

Paciano Rizal (1851-1930)
            Paciano is the only brother of Jose Rizal and the second child in the family. He studied at San Jose College in Manila and became a farmer and later became a general of the Philippine Revolution.

Narcisa Rizal (1852-1939)
            Narcisa is the third child in the family. She married Antonino Lopez, a teacher and musician from Morong, Rizal. Their children were Emilio; Angelica, who married Benito Abreu; Antonio (1878-1928), who married Emiliana Rizal (the daughter of Paciano Rizal); Consuelo; Leoncio, who married Natividad Arguelles; and Isabel, Francisco, Arsenio, and Fidela, all of whom died young. It is said that Doña Narcisa could recite from memory almost all the poems of Rizal.

Olympia Rizal (1855-1887)
            Olympia is the fourth child in the family. She married Silvestre Ubaldo, a telegraph operator from Manila. Their children were Aristeo, who married Leonarda Limjap; Cesario and another boy, both of whom died young.

Lucia Rizal (1857-1919)
            Lucia is the fifth child in the family. She married Mariano Herbosa of Calamba, Laguna. Their children were Delfina, first wife of Gen. Salvador Natividad and who helped Marcela Agoncillo make the first Filipino flag in Hong Kong; Concepcion; Patrocinio, who married Jose Battalones; Teodosio, who married Lucina Vitingco; Estanislao; and Paz, Victoria, and Jose, all of whom died young.

Maria Rizal (1859-1945)
            Maria is the sixth child in the family. She married Daniel Faustino Cruz of Biñan, Laguna. Their children were Encarnacion, who married Rosendo Banaad; Mauricio, who married Concepcion Arguelles; and Petrona, Paz, and Prudencio, who all died young.

Jose Rizal (1861-1896)
            Jose is the second son and the seventh child in the family. He was born in Biñan, Laguna on June 19, 1861 and died in Bagumbayan, Manila on December 30, 1896 through execution of the Spaniards.

Concepcion Rizal (1862-1865)
            Concepcion is the eight child in the family. She died early at the age of 3 and became Jose Rizal’s first sorrow since the two were very close.

Josefa Rizal (1865-1945)
            Josefa is the ninth child in the family. She was an epileptic and died a spinster.

Trinidad Rizal (1868-1951)
            Trinidad is the tenth child in the family. She also died a spinster and was the last of the family who died.

Josefa and Trinidad lived together until their deaths. Both became members of the Katipunan. Trinidad was the custodian of Rizal’s elegy, “Mi Ultimo Adios.”

Soledad Rizal (1870-1929)
            Soledad was the youngest child in the family. She married Pantaleon Quintero of Calamba, Laguna. Their children were Trinitario, who married Maria San Mateo; Amelia, who married Bernabe Malvar (son of Gen. Miguel Malvar); Luisa, who married Jose Arguelles; and Serafin and Felix, both of whom died young. Soledad, who became a teacher, is said to have been “the best educated” among Rizal’s sisters.

His sisters’ families also became very much involved in Rizal’s life. Saturnina, Narcisa, and Lucia, along with their parents and Manuel Hidalgo and Mariano Herbosa, were ordered to be deported, charged with rousing the people to refuse to pay land rent, and with causing the unrest in Calamba. Hidalgo was first exiled “as a conspirator and representative of Jose Rizal,” and again, as Rizal observed, “without any accusation, without his knowing any crime of which he was accused, excepting that he was my brother-in-law.” Herbosa, who died of cholera in 1889, was denied a Christian burial because of his relation to Rizal. Rizal’s nephews were also known to have traveled with Rizal to Dapitan in 1893 or visited him there.  

          Rizal’s sisters figured largely in his life as much as his brother Paciano did. With Concepcion, Rizal shared games and stories made up by their governess. Rizal confided to Olimpia about his first sweetheart, Segunda Katigbak; and to Maria, he talked about wanting to marry Josephine Bracken, whom Rizal’s family apparently disapproved of. To support Rizal’s studies in Europe, the two older sisters pawned their jewelry and peddled clothes. All of Rizal’s sisters wrote to him about their parents and their own families as well as local occurrences such as the outbreak of cholera or the land taxes being imposed by the friars. They also visited him when he was exiled in Dapitan and right before his execution in 1896 (Trinidad had planned Rizal’s escape from Dapitan beforehand). Narcisa painstakingly searched the cemeteries in Manila for Rizal’s burial place. She had to bribe a gravedigger to place a marker on it, for she would not be allowed near the body, which had been buried without a box of any kind. Two years later, Rizal’s sisters dug up the body at the Paco cemetery. They found only the hero’s bones, shoes, and hat.

Sources:

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Jose Rizal: A Summary of His Life

Jose Rizal (1861-1896)

          Jose Rizal, son of a Filipino father and Chinese mother, came from a wealthy family. Despite his family's wealth, they suffered discrimination because neither parent was born in the peninsula. Rizal studied in Ateneo, a private high school, and then to the University of Sto. Thomas in Manila. He did his post graduate work at the University of Madrid in 1882. For the next five years, he wandered through Europe discussing politics wherever he went. In 1886, he studied medicine at the University of Heidelberg and wrote his classic novel Noli Me Tangere, which condemned the Catholic Church in the Philippines for its promotion of Spanish colonialism. Immediately upon its publication, he became a target for the police who even shadowed him when he returned to the Philippines in 1887. He left his country shortly thereafter to return to Spain where he wrote his second model, El Filibusterismo (1891), and many articles in his support of Filipino nationalism and his crusade to include representatives from his homeland in the Spanish Cortes.

          He returned to Manila in 1892 and created La Liga Filipina, a political group that called for peace change for the islands. Nevertheless, Spanish officials were displeased and exiled Rizal to the island of Mindanao. During his four years there, he practiced medicine, taught students, and collected local examples of flora and fauna while recording his discoveries. Even though he lost touched with others who were working for Filipino independence, he quickly denounced the movement when it became violent and revolutionary. After Andres Bonifacio issued the Grito de Balintawak in 1896, Rizal was arrested, convicted of sedition, and executed by firing squad on December 30, 1896.

Source(s):
Jose Rizal - The World of 1898: The Spanish-American War

Resource(s):
Jose Rizal: A Summary of His Life (ppsx/pptx)