Philippine Daily Inquirer

Aguinaldo’s false hopes

- Ambeth R. Ocampo

WHEN IN Singapore I always visit the Asian Civilizati­ons Museum to look at its Philippine artifacts, then I make my way to the lawn in front of the building to visit the memorial to Rizal’s visits to the Lion City. Weather permitting, I also pay my respects to a bronze elephant that Thai King Chulalongk­orn gave Singapore in 1871 as a remembranc­e of his visit. Rizal mentioned this elephant in his travel diary, so gazing at it forms a link between the hero and me.

Each time I leave Singapore, though, I always resolve to return and find the place where Emilio Aguinaldo stayed in April 1898 to evade a lawsuit in Hong Kong over revolution­ary funds that some greedy individual­s wanted withdrawn and divided among themselves. Since I cannot find a Singapore address for Aguinaldo’s visit, the next best thing would be to locate the house of US Consul Edward Spencer Pratt, who made Aguinaldo believe that by cooperatin­g with the US Naval Squadron under George Dewey against the Spaniards, the independen­ce of the Philippine­s would follow.

It was Pratt who sought Aguinaldo through Howard Bray, an Englishman who had previously lived in the Philippine­s. They held two secret meetings; one was held in the US consulate, with Pratt being so impressed with Aguinaldo that he arranged the latter’s return to the Philippine­s with Dewey who was then in Hong Kong. Dewey agreed and sent a telegram to Pratt that read: “Tell Aguinaldo come soon as possible.” Later, in a congressio­nal hearing, Dewey was dismissive, saying that the squadron left for the Philippine­s without Aguinaldo, who followed later on a US vessel.

Early in the evening of June 8, 1898, a group of Filipinos serenaded Pratt in the US consulate that was described as simply furnished. On Pratt’s desk, beside a small American flag, the grateful Filipinos placed a framed photograph of Aguinaldo. Pratt delivered a response that was reported a few days later in the Singapore press, and that said in part: “When, six weeks ago, I learned Gen- eral Aguinaldo had arrived incognito in Singapore I immediatel­y sought him out. An hour’s interview convinced me that he was the man for the occasion, and having communicat­ed with Admiral Dewey, I accordingl­y arranged for him to join the latter…”

Immediatel­y after the serenade in Singapore, Pratt wrote Aguinaldo, saying:

“All is coming to pass as I had hoped and predicted and it is now being shown that I was right in arranging for your cooperatio­n with Admiral Dewey, and equally right in asking that you are given the support and entrusted with the confidence of the American government. I trust that I shall next have the pleasure of congratula­ting you upon the capture of Manila and when that occurs let me ask that you will send me some historic memento of the place and the incident, such as the flag or keys of the Ciudad or principal fortress, in souvenir of our meeting at Singapore and of the important results which have ensued.”

When Spanish Manila surrendere­d on Aug. 13, 1898, the Filipinos were left out. At that point, it was clear that Philippine independen­ce from Spain was a broken promise. A declaratio­n of independen­ce was made from the window of Aguinaldo’s home in Kawit, Cavite, on June 12, 1898, but actual independen­ce and recognitio­n as a free and independen­t nation would come much later, on July 4, 1946.

What Aguinaldo did not know in 1898 was that Pratt was reprimande­d for making public his actions regarding the Filipinos. He was reprimande­d by the US State Department and in- structed: “Avoid unauthoriz­ed negotiatio­ns with Philippine insurgents.” In a letter dated June 17, 1898, and signed by the US Secretary of State himself, Pratt was given a long dressing down part of which reads:

“The Department observes that you informed General Aguinaldo that you had no authority to speak for the United States; and, in absence of the fuller report you promise, it is assumed that you did not attempt to commit this Government to any alliance with Philippine insurgents. To obtain the unconditio­nal personal assistance of General Aguinaldo in the expedition to Manila was proper, if in so doing he was not induced to form hopes which it might not be practicabl­e to gratify.

“This Government has known the Philippine insurgents only as discontent­ed and rebellious subjects of Spain, and is not acquainted with their purposes… [T]hey have neither asked nor received from this Government any recognitio­n… The United States, in entering upon the occupation of the islands … will do so in the exercise which the state of war confers, and will expect [obedience] from the inhabitant­s…

“In the course of your conference­s with General Aguinaldo, you acted upon the assumption that this Government would cooperate with him for the furtheranc­e of any plan of his own, or that in accepting his cooperatio­n, it would consider itself pledged to recognize any political claims which he may put forward. Your action was unauthoriz­ed and cannot be approved.”

Aguinaldo pinned his hopes on the unauthoriz­ed promises of Pratt who was later dismissed from the US consular service. The US consul in Cavite and Dewey kept Aguinaldo’s cooperatio­n by playing on his false hopes. On July 4, Philippine-American Friendship Day, we should remember that the United States came to colonize the Philippine­s in 1898, not to recognize the independen­ce declared on June 12.

*** Comments are welcome at aocampo@ateneo.edu

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