I was trying to come up with a gentle way of describing my disdain for Renato Constantino’s sadly influential speech Veneration without Understanding. And alas, I can’t. It’s crap. It’s a hodgepodge of twisted leftist ideology masquerading as historical commentary; it’s historical fiction presented as fact, with a heavy dose of conspiracy theories and logical fallacies all rolled into a nice little bundle of nonsense. Not to mention the complete and utter hilarity that comes with accusing Jose Rizal of being a colonial construct, while the entire time mimicking some of the worst of colonially influenced thought. Or maybe it’s just the audaciousness that comes with undermining the legacy of Jose Rizal for the purpose of propping up Andres Bonifacio; which I will never ever understand. They were more in accord than many of us know today. Sadly, Bonifacio the figure that has become so much more myth than man, completely shorn from historical fact. To his detriment in fact.
Maybe the curiousness of Constantino is just how removed the ‘critiques’ of Rizal are from serious scholarly work and actual historical research. He pulls quotes out of the air, mistranslates others, inevitably ignores reams of primary source material that contradicts his thesis in favor of pushing a perverted vision of Philippine history. This is propaganda masquerading as ‘history’ at its worse. Polemic, untenable, bereft of substantiating evidence, at odds with known records, and so bound up in a restrictive and foreign ideology as to be unintelligible. Because, quite frankly, so much of what is in the essay is unintelligible.
I have had the misfortune of reading this ‘essay’ in the past and sadly forgot most of what irritated me about it in the first place. So, I picked up another copy in National Bookstore, where surprisingly it was located in the Philippine History section (not Humor) and I decided to read it again with the intention of writing a Bad History post. After slogging through, let’s just pull out some of the choicest parts.
In our case our national hero was not the leader of our revolution. In fact, he repudiated that Revolution…
Constantino goes on for a while some how trying to make us believe this is true. And he is accurate in a sense, but only if you cherry pick historical record, ignore all of his writings and merrily dance through source materials with blinders on. Rizal, in fact, did not approve of the revolution AT THAT MOMENT. His entire time in the public eye, Rizal agitated for reforms, in Filipinos. He firmly believed that the country was not ready for a successful revolution. He abhorred bloodshed, but understand that when Filipinos were truly ready for self rule violence would be a necessity, a must for true independence.
Underlying this thought is the assumption that a man can only be considered a hero if he engages in bloodshed. How…blood thirsty. A hero is someone who stands on principles, who fights for what he believes and is not swayed by the moments of passion and verve. Who builds a philosophy and stays true to it. Who takes the long view and fights and dies for something far greater than momentary glory.
As a matter of fact, those words were treasonous…
Treasonous? By every measure Rizal was the driving force behind the construction of the Filipino identity. Before him the idea of an identity, of a nation built by Filipinos, had only when whispered and never fully articulated. His Noli, Morga and Fili were roadmaps to nationalism and nationhood. That is far from treasonous. For Constantino, in fact, repudiating Bonifacio’s revolution is treasonous. Was there a nation upon which treason could be committed? Was he told to fight by his sovereign leader and repudiated that? Of course not. Rizal was staying true to his beliefs; that the Philippines was not ready for true revolution. When it was, when Filipinos achieved what he dreamed of for them through education, then there is no doubt that Rizal would have supported revolution. That is peppered through out his writings.
This means Constantino is doing exactly what he accuses everyone else of doing with Rizal: Putting one man above the idea of a nation.
It was Governor William Howard Taft who in 1900s suggested to the Philippine Commission that the Filipinos be given a national hero.
Correct that Taft said that, wrong in so many ways. Fact was the first Rizal Day was ordered by Aguinaldo in 1898. Thus, the leaders and men of the Revolution and the Philippine Republic honored Rizal well before the Americans.
In fact, more than anything, Constantino is pushing the idea of Rizal as reformist and pro-Spanish. An idea wholly derived from colonial sources! He’s not even going back and trying to reconstruct the real Rizal, he’s just basing his assumptions on colonial thought and using that thought to attack colonialism. Rizal the reformist is completely pulled from three gentlemen: Pardo de Tavera, Austin Craig and WE Retana. Pardo de Tavera is, of course, one of the first Filipinos to side with the Americans in exchange for influence and political favor. Craig was a pro-American historian and Retana hated Filipinos and the Philippines. They subverted Rizal and constructed Rizal as the Americans wanted.
Constantino’s basic premise that we should remove colonialism from our history is completely undermined by his reliance on colonial historians to push his twisted agenda.
Rizal’s preoccupation with education…
Ah right, because being concerned with education, wanting to prepare a nation for self-rule is such a dangerous thing. Consider in the world of Constantino it is. For him revolution is spontaneous, derived from the nameless faceless masses who rise up when needed. He doesn’t attribute to them capabilities of thinking or cogent thought. No, they are driven by emotion. While on the other hand Rizal had the respect of his countrymen, he worked with them in the fields and in the streets of Manila. He fought for them in the papers of Madrid and returned home to try and work with them. To ignite their spirit, to mold them into a nation. He respected his countrymen. Rizal saw them as something beautiful, wonderful, worth fighting and dying for.
Bonifacio, not as Hispanized as the ilustrado, saw in people’s action the only road to liberation.
I have attempted to studiously avoid this issue of Bonifacio vs Rizal; primarily because they did not see themselves at odds. Their aims were the same, their goals identical. The difference lay in the timing and pre-requisites for success. Rizal had foresight, foresight that Bonifacio relied on to pepper his speeches and polemics against Spain. Bonifacio frequently translated Rizal’s works into Tagalog and disseminated them. The idea that they were at odds (reformist vs revolutionary) would have shocked them. Hell, Bonifacio was shocked when Rizal rejected the revolution as premature. Why would he have been shocked unless prior their thoughts were fairly in accord?
It is Constantino and Agoncillo before, and all after, who forced the dichotomy of Bonifacio vs Rizal into our history. For the sole purpose of raising Bonifacio to a hallowed status. In essence, what we have seen is character assassination of Rizal in favor of Bonifacio.
The funny part is that Bonifacio was as much an ilustrado as, let’s say, Mabini. Or Jacinto. Bonifacio was educated, educated enough to get jobs with multinational corporations. Educated enough to read the biographies of American presidents, French novels, Spanish texts and to translate Rizal’s works. Educated enough indeed. More so than landed gentry like Aguinaldo (who was even more a successful man of action).
…the ilustrados joined the Revolution where, despite their revolutionary rhetoric, they revealed by their behavior their own limited goals…
And then we come to Constantino’s true aim, his attempt to cleave the ilustrados from the revolution, to claim that they had nothing to do with the revolution, in fact they joined in only when it was apparent it was going to be occur.
I’ve already written on ilustrado, how the term is nonsensical in its historical application. Because it is. Only those, it seems, who were of the masses can be considered revolutionary, all others are ilustrados, weak reformists. A conceit so far from historical record, so disassociated from what occurred as to be almost a joke.
Ilustrados, enlightened ones, the middle class - whatever we want to call them - along with their brethren from all walks of life, had to be in accord for the revolution to begin and end successfully. The 1896 Revolution, and its successful 1898 counterpart, were all extensions of growing nationalist thought. Thought that was brought into the Philippines as early as the late 1700s. It was expressed in the agitations of the creoles, in the attempts to gain secular priests, in the deaths of Gomburza and the street protests of the mestizos and others.
Constantino derides Rizal without every truly understanding him. He fixates on the colonial interpretations of Rizal, without ever trying to discover why he was held in such high regard by his contemporaries- contemporaries from all walks of life and social strata. To side step that sticky issue, he attempts to deride all ilustrados. When faced with the fact that Bonifacio revered Rizal and his writings, he manufactures a schism between the two. Essentially, Constantino perverts our history, our past and our heroes, for the sole purpose of pushing his leftist, Marxist frameworks of the nameless masses as the pure drivers of revolutionary change. Bloodshed without philosophy, death without being consecrated to a higher purpose, is useless murder. That is something that Rizal could not ignore. He did not want to see useless death and murder, when the end result would have been the slaves becoming tyrants themselves.
Constantino ignores social and intellectual development, he evades the depth of Rizal and the other revolutionaries writings in favor of a wholly superficial take on our history. His history is in service of his political ideology. Even worse, he ignores the importance of the middle class in a successful revolution, he forgets that Filipinos, that a people, have to work together to be truly successful.
He is as bad as the colonialists he derides throughout his essay.
The space I have here is to limited for a true negation of all that Constantino slings around in his “Veneration.” The truly pathetic thing, for me, is just how little understanding of the social, political and revolutionary realities of the 19th century he demonstrates. Sans that, lacking that fundamental grounding in history, he is nothing more than a master manipulator and propagandist. A con man in the guise of a historian. A huckster trying to trick people into following his own perverted view of life and country. It’s not just bad history. It’s just bad. And the end result has been a people shorn from their own history.
That is the legacy of Renato Constantino: Bad History. But maybe it is time to take his advice and to throw off the shackles of colonial thought that pervade our history. To truly write a Filipino history. The place to start then, is with him.