Jose Protacio Rizal Mercado y Alonso Realonda
José Rizal was born on June 19, 1861 in Calamba,
Philippines. While living in Europe, Rizal wrote about the discrimination that
accompanied Spain's colonial rule of his country. He returned to the
Philippines in 1892, but was exiled due to his desire for reform. Although he supported
peaceful change, Rizal was convicted of sedition and executed on December 30,
1896, at age 35.
On June 19, 1861, José Protasio Rizal Mercado y Alonso
Realonda was born in Calamba in the Philippines' Laguna Province. A brilliant
student who became proficient in multiple languages, José Rizal studied
medicine in Manila. In 1882, he traveled to Spain to complete his medical
degree.
While in Europe, José Rizal became part of the Propaganda
Movement, connecting with other Filipinos who wanted reform. He also wrote his
first novel, Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me Not/The Social
Cancer), a work that detailed the dark aspects of Spain's colonial rule in
the Philippines, with particular focus on the role of Catholic friars. The book
was banned in the Philippines, though copies were smuggled in. Because of this
novel, Rizal's return to the Philippines in 1887 was cut short when he was
targeted by police.
Rizal returned to Europe and continued to write, releasing
his follow-up novel, El Filibusterismo(The Reign of Greed)
in 1891. He also published articles in La Solidaridad, a paper
aligned with the Propaganda Movement. The reforms Rizal advocated for did not
include independence—he called for equal treatment of Filipinos, limiting the
power of Spanish friars and representation for the Philippines in the Spanish
Cortes (Spain's parliament).
Exile
in the Philippines
Rizal
returned to the Philippines in 1892, feeling he needed to be in the country to
effect change. Although the reform society he founded, the Liga Filipino
(Philippine League), supported non-violent action, Rizal was still exiled to
Dapitan, on the island of Mindanao. During the four years Rizal was in exile,
he practiced medicine and took on students.
Execution and Legacy
In
1895, Rizal asked for permission to travel to Cuba as an army doctor. His
request was approved, but in August 1896, Katipunan, a nationalist Filipino
society founded by Andres Bonifacio, revolted. Though he had no ties to the
group, and disapproved of its violent methods, Rizal was arrested shortly
thereafter.
After
a show trial, Rizal was convicted of sedition and sentenced to death by firing
squad. Rizal's public execution was carried out in Manila on December 30, 1896,
when he was 35 years old. His execution created more opposition to Spanish
rule.
Spain's
control of the Philippines ended in 1898, though the country did not gain
lasting independence until after World War II. Rizal remains a nationalist icon
in the Philippines for helping the country take its first steps toward
independence.
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