Bonifacio's
Birth and Early Life:
Andres Bonifacio was born on November 30, 1863 in Tondo, Manila. His
father Santiago was a tailor, a local politician and a boatman who operated a
river-ferry; his mother, Catalina de Castro, was employed in a
cigarette-rolling factory. The couple worked extremely hard to support Andres
and his five younger siblings, but in 1881 Catalina caught tuberculosis ("consumption")
and died. The following year, Santiago also became ill and passed away.
At the age of 19, Andres Bonifacio was forced to give up plans for
higher education and begin working full-time to support his orphaned younger
siblings. He worked for the British trading company J.M. Fleming & Co. as a
broker or corredor for local raw materials such as tar and rattan. He
later moved to the German firm Fressell & Co., where he worked as a bodeguero or
grocer.
Family
Life:
Andres Bonifacio's tragic family history during his youth seems to
have followed him in to his adulthood. He married twice, but had no surviving
children at the time of his death.
His first wife, Monica, came from the Palomar neighborhood of Bacoor.
She died young of leprosy (Hansen's
disease).
Bonifacio's second wife, Gregoria de Jesus, came from the Calookan
area of metro Manila. They married when he was 29 and she was just 18; their
only child, a son, died as an infant.
Establishment
of Katipunan:
In 1892, Bonifacio joined Jose Rizal's new
organization La Liga Filipina, which called for reform of the Spanish
colonial regime in the Philippines. The group met only once, however, since
Spanish officials arrested Rizal immediately after the first meeting and
deported him to the southern island ofMindanao.
After Rizal's arrest and deportation, Andres Bonifacio and others
revived La Liga to continue pressure on the Spanish government to free the
Philippines. Along with his friends Ladislao Diwa and Teodoro Plata, however,
he also founded a group called Katipunan.
Katipunan, or Kataastaasang Kagalannalangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng
Bayan to give its full name (literally "Highest and Most Respected Society
of the Children of the Country"), was dedicated to armed resistance
against the colonial government. Made up mostly of people from the middle and
lower classes, the Katipunan organization soon established regional branches in
a number of provinces across the Philippines. (It also went by the rather
unfortunate acronym KKK.)
In 1895, Andres Bonifacio became the top leader or Presidente
Supremo of the Katipunan. Along with his friends Emilio Jacinto and Pio
Valenzuela, Bonifacio also put out a newspaper called the Kalayaan, or
"Freedom." Over the course of 1896, under Bonifacio's leadership,
Katipunan grew from about 300 members at the beginning of the year to more than
30,000 in July. With a militant mood sweeping the nation, and a multi-island
network in place, Bonifacio's Katipunan was prepared to start fighting for
freedom from Spain.
Philippines
Uprising Begins:
Over the summer of 1896, the Spanish colonial government began to
realize that the Philippines was on the verge of revolt. On August 19, the
authorities tried to preempt the uprising by arresting hundreds of people and
jailing them under charges of treason - some of those swept up were genuinely
involved in the movement, but many were not.
Among those arrested was Jose Rizal, who was on a ship in Manila Bay
waiting to ship out for service as a military doctor in Cuba (this was part of
his plea bargain with the Spanish government, in exchange for his release from
prison in Mindanao). Bonifacio and two friends dressed up like sailors and made
their way onto the ship and tried to convince Rizal to escape with them, but he
refused; he was later put on trial in a Spanish kangaroo court and executed.
Bonifacio kicked off the revolt by leading thousands of his followers
to tear up their community tax certificates or cedulas. This signaled
their refusal to pay any more taxes to the Spanish colonial regime. Bonifacio
named himself President and commander-in-chief of the Philippines revolutionary
government, declaring the nation's independence from Spain on August 23. He
issued a manifesto, dated August 28, 1896, calling for "all towns
to rise simultaneously and attack Manila," and sent generals to lead the
rebel forces in this offensive.
Attack on
San Juan del Monte:
Andres Bonifacio himself led an attack on the town of San Juan del
Monte, intent on capturing Manila's metro water station and the powder magazine
from the Spanish garrison. Although they were vastly outnumbered, the Spanish
troops inside managed to hold off Bonifacio's forces until reinforcements
arrived.
Bonifacio was forced to withdraw to Marikina, Montalban, and San
Mateo; his group suffered heavy casualties. Elsewhere, other Katipunan groups
attacked Spanish troops all around Manila. By early September, the revolution
was spreading across the country.
Fighting
Intensifies:
As Spain pulled all its resources back to defend the capital at
Manila, rebel groups in other areas began to sweep up the token Spanish
resistance left behind. The group in Cavite (a peninsula south of the capital,
jutting into Manila Bay), had the greatest success in driving the Spanish out.
Cavite's rebels were led by an upper-class politician called Emilio Aguinaldo.
By October of 1896, Aguinaldo's forces held most of the peninsula.
Bonifacio led a separate faction from Morong, about 35 miles (56
kilometers) to the east of Manila. A third group under Mariano Llanera was
based in Bulacan, north of the capital. Bonifacio appointed generals to
establish bases in the mountains all over Luzon island.
Despite his earlier military reverses, Bonifacio personally led an
attack on Marikina, Montalban, and San Mateo. Although he initially succeeded
in driving the Spanish out of those towns, they soon recaptured the cities,
nearly killing Bonifacio when a bullet went through his collar.
Rivalry
with Aguinaldo:
Aguinaldo's faction in Cavite was in competition with a second rebel
group headed by an uncle of Gregoria de Jesus, Bonifacio's wife. As a more
successful military leader and a member of a much wealthier, more influential
family, Emilio Aguinaldo felt justified in for his own rebel government in
opposition to Bonifacio's. On March 22, 1897, Aguinaldo rigged an election at
the rebels' Tejeros Convention to show that he was the proper president of the
revolutionary government.
To Bonifacio's shame, he not only lost the presidency to Aguinaldo,
but was appointed to the lowly post of Secretary of the Interior. When this
appointment was announced, however, delegate Daniel Tirona objected on the
grounds that Bonifacio did not have a law degree (or any university diploma,
for that matter). Incensed, the fiery rebel leader demanded an apology from
Tirona. Instead, Daniel Tirona turned to leave the hall; Bonifacio pulled out a
gun and tried to shoot him down, but General Artemio Ricarte y Garcia tackled
the former president and saved Tirona's life.
.
Sham Trial
and Execution:
After Emilio Aguinaldo "won" the rigged election at Tejeros,
Andres Bonifacio refused to recognize the new rebel government. Aguinaldo sent
a group to arrest Bonifacio; the opposition leader did not realize that they
were there with ill intent, and allowed them into his camp. They shot down his
brother Ciriaco, seriously beat his brother Procopio, and some reports say that
they also raped his young wife Gregoria.
Aguinaldo had Bonifacio and Procopio tried for treason and sedition.
After a one-day sham trial, in which the defense lawyer averred their guilt
rather than defending them, both Bonifacios were convicted and sentenced to
death.
Aguinaldo commuted the death sentence on May 8, but then reinstated
it. On May 10, 1897, both Procopio and Andres Bonifacio likely were shot dead
by a firing squad on Nagpatong Mountain. Some accounts say that Andres was too
weak to stand, due to untreated battle wounds, and was actually hacked to death
in his stretcher instead. Andres was just 34 years old.
Andres
Bonifacio's Legacy:
As the first self-declared President of the independent Philippines,
as well as the first leader of the Philippine Revolution, Andres Bonifacio is a
crucial figure in that nation's history. However, his exact legacy is the
subject of dispute among Filipino scholars and citizens.
Jose Rizal is the most widely recognized "national hero of the
Philippines," although he advocated a more pacifist approach of reforming
Spanish colonial rule rather than overthrowing it by force. Aguinaldo is
generally cited as the first president of the Philippines, even though
Bonifacio took on that title before Aguinaldo did. Some historians feel that
Bonifacio has gotten short shrift, and should be set beside Rizal on the
national pedestal.
Andres Bonifacio has been honored with a national holiday on his
birthday, however, just like Rizal. November 30
is Bonifacio Day in the Philippines.
Based on the article Andres Bonifacio of the Philippines By Kallie Szczepanski, About.com Guide
Sources:
Bonifacio, Andres. The Writings and Trial of Andres Bonifacio,
Manila: University of the Philippines, 1963.
Constantino, Letizia. The Philippines: A Past Revisited, Manila:
Tala Publishing Services, 1975.
Ileta, Reynaldo Clemena. Filipinos and their Revolution: Event,
Discourse, and Historiography, Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1998.
This correct some points in Philippine history regarding the death of the hero.
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