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Jose Rizal

manila, tagal and church

RIZAL, JOSE, a Filipino patriot; born in Calamba, Luzon, in 1861. He was the son of unmixed Tagal parents, who destined him for the Church. He re ceived his early education in his native town under a Tagal priest. Later he was sent to Manila, where he entered a Jesuit school, the Ateneo Municipal. At this time Jose assumed the name of Ri Lai, as his brother's friendship for a revolutionist priest had brought the fam ily name, Mercado, into great disfavor with the Spaniards. In Manila Jose soon learned of the reproach attached to his Tagal origin. He was denied the honors due him as head of his class, and met with derision and hatred from the Spanish students. In many ways his prejudices against the Spanish were roused. Though he had been destined for the Church, he studied for and took his medical degree at Manila. Then he went to Paris, Heidelberg, Leipsic, and in all these cities he continued his medi cal studies. At the same time he devel oped his interest in social and political problems. He learned that Europe was almost ignorant of the Philippines, so he wrote a novel, portraying his birth land, which was published in Berlin in 1887. This book was forbidden by the

Church. He wrote a sequel to it which was published at Ghent in 1891. His portrait-bust of the Filipino-Creole, Dr. T. H. Pardo, was exhibited in the Salon. In 1887 Rizal went to Hong Kong where he organized the famous Liga Filipino, or Philippine I "ague, which was the source of the "Revolutionary Society of the Sons of the Nation." During sev eral years of travel he constantly agi tated Filipino revolt, and then in May, 1892, returned to Manila. He was ar rested and exiled to Dapitan. In 1895 he was permitted to return td Luzon. He was, however, arrested at Barcelona and transshipped to Manila, tried and con demned to death. His last wishes, that he might be united by civil marriage with Miss Josephine Bracken, whom be first met in Hong Kong, and the other, that he should be shot through the breast, were granted. He was shot by a picket of native soldiers, Dec. 30, 1896, and his last words were, "Consummatum est!"