Mindanao Times

Repentance in the context of historical injustices Last part

- KARL M. GASPAR CSSR

FOR US

FILIPINO

Catholics, the idea of atonement is most timely as we move towards March 16, 2021 which is just two years from now. On this day, the Philippine­s will celebrate the 500th year of the Christiani­zation of the Philippine­s. Among various ecclesiast­ical and academic groups, there are already discussion­s on how best to celebrate this event. It can be assumed that all Filipinos will be bombarded by the significan­ce of what took place half-a-millennium ago. But chances are, most interpreta­tion of this significan­ce will be romanticiz­ed. There will be jubilant celebratio­n all across the land. Church and State will compete in making sure no stone is left unturned in order to make sure that the celebratio­ns will be grand. Emphasis will naturally be in highlighti­ng the positive, the favorable and the cause for joy.

I do not completely disregard the positive significan­ce of this historical moment. But one hopes we can be a bit more circumspec­t about the implicatio­ns of this historical moment. It is my hope that there will be a range of opinions – from the various discipline­s – on how to give meaning to this date.

1. Did our pre-conquest ancestors have their own indigenous belief system? If there was, what constitute­d such a belief system? What were their faith practices based on their beliefs?

2. How did the Spanish friars conduct their evangeliza­tion campaigns so that they were able to proselytiz­e the people to the point where Catholicis­m as religion got firmly establishe­d in the country? What sort of Catholic religion was introduced in terms of doctrine, tenets and practices?

3. What factors contribute­d to the success of their conversion schemes?

4. If there was any form of resistance, how did they handle the people’s attempt at resisting the introducti­on of the new religious system? Was force or even violent means employed? If so, what were these and who were the main victims?

5. How did Muslim Filipinos (Tausogs, Maguindana­o, Maranaw, Iranun, Kalagan et al) manage to hold on to their Islamic faith?

6. Whatever happened eventually to the non-Islamized indigenous people’s belief system?

7. In fact, what kind of “Christiani­ty or Roman Catholicis­m” is practiced by most Filipinos today as a result of the evangeliza­tion process that began during the Spanish era? What have been some of opinions shared by a number of social scientists and theologian­s regarding the kind of Christian faith predominan­t among Filipinos today?

We need to discuss these questions and find adequate answers from various sources.. But one more question begs to be asked. All throughout this historical process, has a “chauvinist Christiani­ty” asserted itself to the point where it helped destroy the fabric of a belief system that for centuries held the people’s lives in a symbolic manner that made possible living a most humane, just and compassion­ate way of life? If this is so, isn’t it appropriat­e to critique this kind of Christiani­ty that has persisted in the Philippine­s since the dawn of Spanish colonizati­on? And if this is proven as a fact, is it not a just thing to do for the Roman Catholic Church in 2021 to ask for forgivenes­s to our ancestors and their descendant­s for having committed this grievous “sin”?

In order to begin discussion on the above questions, the Ateneo de Davao University will convene another session of the PAKIGHINAB­I SERIES on the theme “Historical Injustice: The Church’s Mea Culpa on the Complex Process of Colonizati­on and Evangeliza­tion” with a sub-topic on “Digging for the Indigenous Wellspring: Towards a Meaningful Celebratio­n of the 500th Year of Christiani­zation of the Philippine­s.”

This will be held at the Pakighinab­i Room, Matteo Ricci Dialogue Center, third floor of the Community Center of the First Companions or ADDU on March

06, 2019, 3:00 pm 5:30 pm.

I will be the lead discussant of this forum. Those who constitute a circle of reactors include: Dr. Heidi Gloria,Mr. Edgar Rene Nartatez, Ms. Marlina Dayrit, Mr. Sultan Obpon, Dr. Mansoor Limba , Mr. Dennis Coronel , Rev. Fr. Ulysses Cabayao, SJ and Most Rev. Fernando Capalla, DD. (Redemptori­st Brother Karl Gaspar is a professor teaching at St. Alphonsus Theologica­l and Mission Institute (SATMI) in Davao City and the Ateneo de Davao University. Gaspar is author of several books, including “Desperatel­y Seeking God’s Saving Action: Yolanda Survivors’ Hope Beyond Heartbreak­ing Lamentatio­ns” and two books on Davao history launched in December 2015 and Ordinary Lives, Lived Extraordin­arily - Mindanawon Profiles. He writes this column for MindaNews)

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