Note: This is an abstract of my paper delivered in the 3rd CSSP Graduate Student Research Conference April 28-29, 2017 Palma Hall, UP Diliman
The paper will discuss the period when the Philippines is under Empire of Japan, (1941-1944 ), which focus on one of most important institution in the Philippine government the Supreme Court. While several publication in Philippine History focus mostly on biography, the Executive Department and member of the Army, this paper give some insight to the Judicial branch of the Commonwealth Government in the crucial period of our history. What will the Supreme Court will do case the war broke out?; Quezon’s controversial instruction that “You have to do what they ask you to do except one thing –the taking of any oath of allegiance to Japan.”; the participation of the Supreme Court Justices in the preparation to war, the tale of the two Chief Justices, Jose Abad Santos, his participation and death and Jose Yulo, his works under the Japanese guidelines; Gen. Homma’s captivity of the Judiciary, his orders and instructions, the 1943 Constitutional provision on the power of the Supreme Court and how it all end with the members accused as a collaborator.
Key Terms: Japanese Occupation, Instructions, courts, invasion, Supreme Court
Thursday, May 4, 2017
Monday, May 1, 2017
Filipina: A Powerful Change Maker
Note: My Essay Won the Essay Writing Contest in UHG in regards to Women's Celebration last March 2017 and I want to share it with you!
We are all familiar
with some women who made change in the passage of time. We read them from
books, we saw them in the movies or known it personally. Joan of Arc expanded the losing Kingdom of
France in 1400; Elizabeth Expanded the British Empire into the largest
exporting country in the world and Ann Frank mesmerized us on what the real war
looks like in the heart of a teen age girl. However, in the Philippines, our
textbooks and pop culture stereotype that women are always, in the past, has a
Maria Clara attitude, always depend on the husband decision and not
participating in social change, then change to a modern-liberal western-oriented
women. I do not agree with that, since
history will teach us that Filipina has already a change-maker since the
beginning of this nation.
A question will rise in this essay. Are we really familiar with our own women- a
Filipina, who made a remarkable achievement that change our history? I’m a
history student so pardon me for the use of my example. But my argument will stand the women in the
Philippines made change, and we can see it in the passage of time. And those
changes they made affect all of us as a citizen, as a nation and a
Filipino. Let me start we my definition
of change. In this essay, change is something that is political, social and
economic. Without those change, we are
not what we are now. Then, the word “women”.
I used the term Filipina, for this is the right term for those women who live
in the Philippines, off course with honor and pride.
Before the Magellan set
foot in the sand of Samar and saw the women of the Visayas, a powerful women
in Pangasinan name Prisesa Urduja was already known as a warrior and men are
restrain to duel with her for they afraid to lose their honor. Lucky, Magellan did not set foot in Luzon and
the periodization that they have, then save the image Lapu-lapu as a great
warrior who killed Magellan in the Battle of Mactan.
During the Silang
rebellion in Ilocos, Diego, the revolutionary leader was assassinated and his
wife immediately took over the leadership.
The four month of leadership ended with her execution in the present
they Plaza in Vigan, Ilocos Sur. That
rebellion, though considered by Renato Constantino as action without ideas,
appears in history that the Spanish government ruled with brutality and inhumane
attitude toward the Filipino.
And who can forget the twenty
women of Malolos who signed and presented a letter to Governor-General on
December 12, 1888 requesting permission to open a night school where they could
be taught Spanish. Rizal made an essay
about this in Sol amid a daring attempt to show how powerful Filipina women
have in the time of terror and colonization. After a decade, this education
will be given, off course not by the Mother Spain but the Imperialist United
States.
Before, when we used
the Philippine bill for transaction, the only women you will see there is Josefa
Llanes Escoda, who founded the Girls Scout of the Philippines, and engage in a
guerilla activities during the Japanese occupation. Imagine the terrible consequence
of that to women, were incident of rape and murdered were rampant due to the
Japanese brutal occupation. But what she
did was a show of encouragement that a Filipina can stand for her country amid
the time of war.
At the time of
dictatorship of Ferdinand E. Marcos, were political writings are controlled by
the military and ideas can only be sought through novel and essay, who can
forget about Lualhati Bautista, the author of Dekada’70 (a story of a family live in the period of Martial Law), Gapo (discussed
about the prostitution in Olongapo City) and Bata-bata Paanoi ka Ginawa? (a mother who live with her feministic
idea) . Those controversial novels that question the authority of the dictator
made us realized that the women are also powerful in pen. Probably Mr. Marcos no longer read those
novels, but the next generation will have an idea how dangerous the era have.
And who can forget the
women, a housewife without experience in governance, who fought against the
dictator in 1986 Snap Presidential Election, established a revolutionary
government and restored the democracy that the millennial women enjoyed at this
time. Corazon Aquino, made to the Time
Magazine and US Congress as one of the most significant women in Asia. We almost fall in a tremendous bank loans,
thanks to restoration of the three branches of government, were plunder is now
a high crime. Her legacy continued to
exist, for democracy is the basic principle in a strong Republic.
So what is the meaning
of this entire example? History will say that a Filipina did change in the
passage of time. From the pre-colonial period to the restoration of democracy,
women in the Philippine can never set aside. They are participant in very
change that the society required. Women
in the Philippines are politically and socially oriented, for they have the
courage to be an active participant which made them a real Filipina.
The millennials today,
with their so called “pabebe”
attitude, but not all, can also be like what the Filipina in the past did. They
can also be a central personage in history. The society needs change, but it
does not have a qualification who can be the one who will make it. You don’t
need to be a president who voted by 16 million people, or a dictator to start a
change in the society. Those Filipina,
which provided here as an example, made and change history, not because they
were powerful, but they have the courage to be empowered. Women empowerment is
the key for change, for they are not only a wife for a husband, or a mother of
their child, but rather, a women in the Philippine who willing to do change.
That’s made them a Filipina, a woman of a Filipino nation.
Occidental Mindoro November Tour 2016
It was my first time: first, to travel 14 hours via
bus and Ro-Ro, second, to experience zip line. Occidental Mindoro is
separated in Luzon where Tamarraw and Crocodile inhabit, and the indigenous
tribe of Mangyan. When I first set foot, in San jose, I was amazed since
it was a first class municipality. We went to one of the oldest train which
started its combustion in 1900 for the Sakadas. In Sablayan, I enjoyed the
longest island-to island zip line in South-East Asia. It proved to me the
reality of the quotes that once said by a director ( Miss Lee) in a conference “ love the place, not your friend. Your friend will leave
you, but the place will stay where it is forever.”
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