PHILIPPINE SOCIETY AND REVOLUTION Amado Guerrero Originally Published in Mimeograph by the Revolutionary School of Mao Tsetung Thought 1970 TABLE OF CONTENTS AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................... 1 CHAPTER ONE .......................................................................................................... 2 A REVIEW OF PHILIPPINE HISTORY .......................................................................
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Movement were called propagandists or reformists. They worked inside and outside the Philippines. Their objectives were to seek: ▪ Recognition of the Philippines as a province of Spain ▪ Equal status for both Filipinos and Spaniards ▪ Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes ▪ Secularization of Philippine parishes. ▪ Recognition of human rights The Propaganda Movement never asked for Philippine independence because its members believed that once Spain realized the pitiful state
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Karima Burns Revolution Paper Reading about the Philippine and South African revolutions in 1989 Democratic Revolutions at the Cold War’s End gave me a lot of insight that I hadn’t had previously. There were some key similarities that I’m going to examine. Including the dictator regime’s they were revolting against‚ the unique organizations that helped them to be successful‚ and how one was peaceful in a way that the other one truly was not. Though I think it is important to mention that
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smoking‚ drinking‚ gambling‚ and other vices. For them‚ the faults of some young people frame the general picture of today’s youth. When Rizal wrote A la Juventud Filipina‚ it was already the 314th of the 333-year Spanish colonization of the Philippines (1565-1898) – already the
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Edsa revolution mean? We always celebrate it every month of February‚ the celebration might mean different to other people who experienced the time when Philippines is still under the Martial Law and to younger Filipinos who didn’t knew what happened those time. Like me‚ as a student‚ i just learned about EDSA on our History class‚ i learned that yellow ribbons meant for us Filipinos. The EDSA revolution changed the life and united all the Filipino‚ but we don’t need EDSA revolution for us
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Mi Ultimo Adios message to the FILIPINO PEOPLE Mi Ultimo Adios message to the YOUTH Top of Form Now‚ as a youth; the Filipino nation had not been able to reproduce a son who could hold a candle to the standard of heroism‚ intellectuality and morality which he had raised. There had been a plethora of great personages‚ warriors‚ intellectuals and martyrs all‚ who had cropped up before‚ during‚ and after Rizal. Yet for all their luminescence‚ these heroes have always scrambled for
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Green Revolution refers to a series of research‚ development‚ and technology transfer initiatives‚ occurring between the 1940s and the late 1970s‚ that increased agriculture production worldwide‚ particularly in the developing world‚ beginning most markedly in the late 1960s.[1] The initiatives‚ led byNorman Borlaug‚ the "Father of the Green Revolution" credited with saving over a billion people from starvation‚ involved the development of high-yielding varieties of cereal grains‚ expansion of irrigation
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SPANISH COLONIAL PERIOD TO PHILIPPINE REVOLUTION Aims of Spanish Colonization • God – propagation of Catholic Christianity • Gold – desire for economic wealth • Glory – to be the greatest empire in the world THE SPANISH COLONIAL SYSTEM Spain Retains the Philippines Despite Economic Loss • As a colony‚ the Philippines was a financial burden to the Spanish treasury. The Philippines as Crown Colony • In the sense that she belonged to the Spanish King. THE SPANISH COLONIAL SYSTEM The Council
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the Philippines of the 19th century that came consequently as a result of more than two centuries of Spanish rule[1] and as an immediate outcome of the Filipino Propaganda Movement (mostly in Europe) from 1872 to 1892. It served as the backbone of the first nationalist revolution inAsia‚ the Philippine Revolution of 1896.[2] ------------------------------------------------- The Creole Age (1780s-1872) The term "Filipino" in its earliest sense referred to Spaniards born in the Philippines or Insulares (Creoles)
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Giles Mark A. Arguilla PS 202 (Notes on ‘Pasyon and Revolution: Popular Movements in the Philippines‚ 1840- 1910’ by Reynaldo Clemeña Ileto‚ 1979) Sources of Data: History‚ Biography‚ Folk Songs‚ Poems and Religious Traditions (Prayers & Confessions) A “History From Below”-- the Little Tradition and Great Tradition Discourses (pp. 1- 27) A constant framework of interpretation: the Evolutionary Framework (which) places premium on the ideas and activities
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