The Philippine Star

Our revolution­ary heroes were so young

- JARIUS BONDOC

Today, National Heroes Day, allow me to rerun a research from five years back, about the age of our revolution­ary heroes: “The Youth is the fair hope of the Motherland” was José Rizal’s most famous line. As in his time, the reflection holds true today, when 53 percent of Filipinos are below 20 years old and only three percent above 65. Rizal himself started young in inspiring Filipinos about nationhood. He was only 26 when he published “Noli Me Tangere” in 1887. Going by the World Health Organizati­on definition of “youth” as age 15 to 34, Rizal was barely out of his youth when he was executed at 35. Filipino life expectancy then was 66.1 years.

Many leaders of the Revolution­ary Period – from the Propaganda Movement in the 1880s to the setting up of a national government in 1907 – were as young. A partial listing:

• Graciano Lopez Jaena was 32 when he founded the newspaper “La Solidarida­d” in Madrid. He endured hunger and disease to expose to the Spanish people the aspiration of indios in their colony, Las Islas Filipinas.

• Marcelo H. del Pilar was probably the oldest of our young heroes. He was 39 when he took over editorship of “La Solidarida­d.” Yet he started writing against friar rule in his native Bulacan as a lawyer aged 30. So stinging were his articles that he had to flee to Spain from persecutio­n.

• Isabelo de los Reyes was 25 when he started writing in Ilocano and Spanish against abuses of the colonizers. He was barely 30 when thrown to the dungeons in Madrid for inciting fellow-Ilocanos to speak out against the oppressors.

• Rizal finished his second novel “El Filibuster­ismo” in 1891, when he was 30. His writings caused his exile to Dapitan the following year. Blamed for the spark of the Revolution in 1896, he was martyred that same year.

• Andres Bonifacio founded the Katipunan when he was but 29.

• When the Revolution began, his faithful comrade-in-arms Emilio Jacinto was only 21. Youth did not deter Jacinto, after the Supremo’s death two years later, from carrying on the struggle in the mountains of Laguna.

• Gregoria de Jesus was only 22 when she became Bonifacio’s widow. Courageous­ly she fought on for independen­ce.

• Emilio Aguinaldo was the victorious general of the Revolution at age 27. He founded the first Republic in Asia on June 12, 1898, three months after turning 29.

• Maestro Artemio Ricarte was 32 when he taught the Katipunan trench warfare. His invaluable field tactics prevented Spanish troops from capturing Cavite.

• Marcela Agoncillo was 37 when she sewed the first Philippine flag for unfurling in Kawit, Cavite, on June 12, 1898.

• Gregorio del Pilar became a general of the Katipunan at age 21. He had just turned 24 when he fought his last battle as Aguinaldo’s rear guard at Tirad Pass, 1899.

• Apolinario Mabini was 34 when he took on the intellectu­al leadership of the Malolos Republic and drafted its Constituti­on.

• Miguel Malvar was 36 when, after Aguinaldo’s capture, he took over the Revolution­ary government in 1901.

• Macario Sakay was 31 when he continued the War of Liberation against the new US colonizers in 1901 to 1904.

• And Sergio Osmeña and Manuel Quezon were both only 29 when they boldly became the Speaker and Majority Leader, respective­ly, of the first Philippine Assembly under American rule in 1907.

There surely were thousands other young Filipino heroes during the countless revolts against 333 years of Spanish rule. Diego Silang was 32 when he led the Ilocano uprising against abuses and taxation in 1762. He was assassinat­ed at age 33 the following year. His wife Gabriela, only a year younger, carried on the fight for four months until captured and executed.

The Dagohoy Revolt in Bohol could not have lasted almost 85 years, 1744 to 1829, without the participat­ion of youthful fighters.

During the Japanese invasion, the Filipino soldiers at Bataan and Corregidor were also young. A good number of them were college ROTC cadets; others were enlistees in their 20s in the US Armed Forces in the Far East. Thousands of them were forced on a Death March

Rizal was only 26 when he wrote his first novel; Bonifacio 29 when he sparked the Revolution; Aguinaldo also 29 when he founded Asia’s first republic.

to prisoner-of-war camp in Tarlac. Survivors carried on the fight, as guerrilla leaders of yet more youth recruits.

One such hero was Sgt. Jose Calugas of the Philippine Scouts, who led his squad in a last-ditch battle against hundreds of advancing enemy troops. Captured, he joined the torturous march to Capas, Tarlac, went undergroun­d upon release in 1943, and lived to tell the story of his buddies till age 91. Had they been older than they were then, they might not have survived the rigors of battle, prison, and jungle.

* * * The Sigma Kappa Pi has elected the new Fraternity Council for 2017-2020, to govern global activities coinciding with its 50th anniversar­y in 2018. Now with the EKIT-FC are Brothers Jerome Cruz (UPM), Don Marcelino (UEP), Vince Rasalan (SLU), Chris Nadres (SLSU), William Aguilar (Pampanga), Jonathan Pansacola (USA) and Tomas Valencia, Rey Mendoza, and Fer Cao (UPD).

Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM).

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