The strong women behind our heroes
By: Ambeth R. Ocampo
By: Ambeth R. Ocampo
June 06, 2018
Jose Rizal' relief sculpture depicting a man lifting a barbell sold for 17.5 million pesos (Source: Leon Gallery) |
In addition to these is a large relief sculpture on
Philippine hardwood by Jose Rizal depicting a man lifting a barbell, made
sometime during his Dapitan exile in 1892-1896. The sale comes a week before
our 120th Independence Day, and two weeks before Rizal’s 157th birthday.
Over a century old, these documents resonate in our times,
framed by some in the context of a strongman president bullying a handful of
pesky women: a vice president, a chief justice, a senator, and an ombudsman. We
all know that Philippine history has been largely written by men, its narrative
dominated by great men who would not be such if not for the strong women who
made them whole.
The coming auction is significant because the lots are
related to women who are largely absent in the national narrative, except as
footnotes. Rizal would not be around if not for Teodora Alonso. Marcelo H. del
Pilar would have turned out differently without Marciana or “Tsanay.” Then, of
course, there was Oryang—Gregoria de Jesus, the muse, the Lakambini of the
Katipunan, Bonifacio’s better half.
All these historical relics are billed as “Extremely Rare
and Highly Important” by the auction house writers, who are well-advised to use
a thesaurus for more engaging descriptions. While collectors covet originals,
historians are concerned about content. While collectors put a premium on
antiquarian and monetary value, historians require access.
Marcelo Del Pilar's letter sold for 467,000 pesos (Source: Leon Gallery) |
Del Pilar complains that Tsanay had not sent the chocolate
she promised, or funds expected from friends that remained empty promises. Del
Pilar’s life in Spain was hard; he needed living expenses or fare to return
home. He had to borrow money, beg for food, collect cigarette butts from the
street, and the only job openings were for servants:
“Sa pautang-utang na lamang ang ikinabubuhay ko … Ako ang
natataya sa kahihiyan dine, ang kakanin ko lamang ay dinidiligencia ko
araw-araw. Nakarating na ako sa mamulot ng beja ng cigarillo makahitit lamang …
Dine ay walang paghahanap na masosooyam. Liban na sa pumasok na alila;
datapua’t matanda na ako kung gayon ko lang sisimulan ang pagka alila …”
That so many expatriate overseas Filipino workers today can
relate to Del Pilar’s letter to his wife underscores the fact that not much has
changed in over a century.
The short letter from Gregoria de Jesus to Emilio Jacinto,
dated Oct. 29, 1898, comments not just on her own hardships, but also those of
her brother and parents who have lost their livelihood. Worse, she is helpless
to aid her mother, who scrapes small change from working in a [fish?] pond,
mistranslated by the auction house as “water tanks”: “Ang aking ina ay
nagtitiis pumasok sa istangki. Gumagana ng sikapat, isang araw, nagtitiis araw
gabi … Ako nama’y walang sukat magawa …”
Contrary to auction house notes that claim an undated
document by Oryang has never been seen in full, the first accurate
transcription from the original was made by me, presented at a conference in
1989, but deliberately left out of the published proceedings. It relates the
unfortunate events that led to the Tejeros Convention and its tragic aftermath.
Oryang’s account is but one biased source that needs to be
read with others to reveal the painful truth that Bonifacio was set up and
betrayed, not by Aguinaldo and Magdalo, but by the Magdiwang he trusted with
his life, because its leaders were related to his wife.
Auction prices are tempting historical documents out of
hiding. As long as historians have access to them and digital copies shared,
then we can slowly complete the jigsaw puzzle that is our history.
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