We Need More Heroes Like This Guy

Published: Fri, 12/05/14


Author Mary Cronk Farrell 
Hello ,   

It seems a fitting week to write about a man taking a stand against oppression, about the kind of courage that refuses to back down from the powers of violence and injustice.

It's also the week to remember Pearl Harbor, and in particular, I'm thinking of the women whose lives turned upside-down when the Japanese attacked American bases in the Philippines that fateful day. See video here...
Standing Against Violence
and Injustice
We had a lovely guest for Thanksgiving dinner, a young woman from the Philippine Islands. I asked her what holidays she celebrated in that country, and she told me about National Hero Day, December 30th.

The day honors José Rizal, a man so at peace with himself and circumstances that he faced his execution without a hitch in his heartbeat. That's what the doctor said who checked Rizal's pulse as he faced the firing squad in 1896.
Jose Rizal faces firing squad
José was born and grew up Laguna, a farming community in the Philippines. His intelligence became apparent early and his family gave him the best education available.

He decided study ophthalmology after his mother began to lose her eyesight. But due to discrimination against native Filipinos, Rizal was forced to leave his studies at Manila's Santo Tomas University. (American nurses were held at Santo Tomas when the Japanese made it a prison camp during WWII.) 

At 21, Jose caught a ship to Spain and enrolled in the Universidad Central de Madrid to finish is medical degree. He earned a second doctorate at the University of Paris and a third in Germany. He excelled at whatever he put his mind to, including art, poetry, science, philosophy and architecture. Some say he spoke ten languages, others say the number is 22.

José Rizal became a prolific writer and blistering critic of Spanish colonialism, laying bare the cruelties inflicted on native Filipinos by Spanish and Church authorities. His books sparked fury and fear around the world among powerful elites with a vested interest in colonialism. In the Philippines, his books proved a catalyst for revolution.
Jose Rizal
 In 1892, Rizal had returned to the Philippines and formed a group to work for reform through peaceful and legal means. He believed, that united, Filipinos could protect themselves from violence and injustice and gain freedom from Spanish oppression.
 
Using nonviolent protest more than 25-years before Mahatma Gandhi led his campaign of civil disobedience against the British Empire, Rizal led tenants to protest ever-increasing rents, evictions, and the destruction of Filipino farms. 

His dauntless courage and his hope for Filipino freedom threatened the status quo. He was soon declared an enemy of the state, arrested and imprisoned. Without benefit of a trial, authorities deported Rizal to a remote town on the Philippine Island of Mindanao.

“…our liberty will (not) be secured at the sword’s point…we must secure it by making ourselves worthy of it. And when a people reaches that height God will provide a weapon, the idols will be shattered, tyranny will crumble like a house of cards and liberty will shine out like the first dawn” – José Rizal

Dr Rizal Treating His Own Mother, Romeo Enriquez, 1960. Courtesy of the National Historical Institute, Manila, the Phillipines
Dr Rizal Treating His Own Mother, Romeo Enriquez, 1960. Courtesy of the National Historical Institute, Manila, the Phillipines

Exile did not dampen Rizal’s fervor. In his four years of banishment, he built a school for boys, a hospital, water supply system and invented a machine for making bricks. He practiced medicine and scientific study, continued his artistic and literary works, farmed and kept up a wide correspondence with family and colleagues around the world.

In 1896, after Rizal was allowed to return to Manila, Filipino liberationists revolted against the Spanish. Though he was not involved, Rizal was arrested, charged with sedition, conspiracy and rebellion. He was sentence to death with no chance to face is accusers or defend himself. Dr. Jose Rizal was executed by a firing squad, December 30, 1896. He was 35.

"It is a useless life that is not consecrated to a great ideal. It is like a stone wasted on the field without becoming a part of any edifice."
 – José Rizal

The Filipino revolution against Spain never fully succeeded, and when the United States won the Spanish American War, Rizal’s native land became a possession of the U.S. A year later Filipinos tried again for independence, the First Philippine Republic declaring war on the U.S.A. The effort was short-lived.  

But later the U.S. Congress passed legislation forming a democratic government in the Philippines. One of Jose Rizal’s poems was read as evidence that Filipinos were not barbarians unable to govern themselves. Rizal penned My Last Farewell just hours before he faced the firing squad.

We need more heroes and heroines with courage like this.  Am I a stone wasted on the field without becoming part of any edifice? Are you?  I'd love to know your thoughts.
News and Links 
One of the speakers I heard at the NCTE Convention last month was Pulitzer Prize Winning Journalist Sonia Nazario, author of Enrique's Journey. It's the story of an 11-year-old boy traveling alone from Honduras to the United States to find his mother. Buy the book here...

Along the way, Enrique was badly beaten, slept in sewage tunnels and trees, and at one point had no water to drink for two days. It's hard to imagine he survived. What's more, there are nearly 500,000 other kids like him.

Sonia Nazario says, “These children are fleeing some of the most violent places on Earth. They are being conscripted by gangs and by narco cartels to join up or be killed.” Read the Los Angeles Times series here...

My Schedule
If you're in the neighborhood, stop by and say hello.

PURE GRIT booksigning
Saturday, December 6
2-4pm Hastings, 2512 East 29th Avenue, Spokane

If you missed it, here's my Pearl Harbor Day post What About the Women?

Thanks for time. If you know someone who might enjoy this newsletter, please forward this e-mail.  Currently, new subscribers will be entered in a drawing to win a $25 gift certificate to their favorite independent books store.

I will never spam you or sell your email address, you can unsubscribe below anytime with a single mouse click. 

If you'd like to get your hands on a copy of PURE GRIT, here's the place!

If you'd like a signed copy and I'm not coming to your neighborhood soon, let me know. I can send you a personally autographed book or a signed bookplate.

To find out more about my books, how I help students, teacher and librarians, visit my website at www.MaryCronkFarrell.com. 

My best,

Mary


Questions? Comments? Contact me at MaryCronkFarrell@gmail.com. Click here to subscribe to this newsletter.