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Dimasalang:
The Masonic Life of Dr. Jose Rizal
By Raymond S. Fajardo, 33º
Edited by Fred Lamar Pearson, Jr., 33º
Dr. Jose P.
Rizal, a Philippine national born on June 19, 1861, died before
a firing squad on December 30, 1896. Thus came to an inglorious
end the life of a remarkable man and Mason. Martyr, patriot, poet,
novelist, physician, Mason - he was all of these and more. In fact,
he squeezed into a very few years, 35, an incredible array of activities.
Dimasalang: The Masonic Life of Dr. Jose Rizal by Raymond S. Fajardo,
33º, hereafter appearing in edited form, is an excellent volume
which treats splendidly, a neglected facet of the remarkable life
of the George Washington of Philippine Independence.
I. Introduction
A majority
of the Filipino patriots who led their countrymen in their struggle
for emancipation against Spain in the last two decades of the nineteenth
century were members of the masonic fraternity. Among all of them,
however, only one deserved to be called an international mason -
Jose P. Rizal. Only he joined lodges in several countries and practiced
the rites of various masonic Grand Jurisdictions. [He received]
masonic degrees from lodges in Spain, Germany, France, and possibly
England; he attended lodge meetings in Hong Kong and was the first
to be elected Honorary Venerable Master of a lodge in the Philippines.
Furthermore, he was the only Filipino designated as the Grand Representative
of a Spanish Grand Orient to the Grand Orient of France and the
lodges in Germany.
Born to educated
and relatively well-to-do parents [June 19, 1861], he went to Manila
[1872], enrolling at the Ateneo Municipal where he obtained the
degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1877, and then at the University of
Santo Tomas where he [studied] philosophy, letters, and later, medicine
until 1882.
[Masonic] lodges,
[at the time] were very few and composed mostly of Spaniards. During
that early stage, members of Rizal's family were already closely
identified with the Fraternity. His uncle, the Most Excellent Jose
Alberto Alonzo, Knight Commander of the Spanish Orders of Isabel
the Catholic and of Carlos III, was in Spain in 1868 when the Revolution
led by masons deposed Queen Isabela II. He fraternized with the
mason Juan Prim, the general who led the revolt, and Francisco Pi
y Margall, the president of the short - lived Spanish republic.
It was in the house of Alberto where Rizal stayed [while attending
school] in Biñan.
[Rizal's] elder
brother [Paciano while a student] in Manila lived with Fr. Jose
Burgos and worked with him in the Comite de Reformadores. The Comite
had several masons on its rolls, some of whom were implicated in
the Cavite Revolt of 1872. Moreover, Fr. Burgos' sister was married
to Dr. Mariano Marti, a 33º mason who was the Grand Delegate
of the Soberano Oriente de España and who is credited with
having organized lodges in Manila, Ceba and Iloilo. Beyond peradventure,
Paciano met a number of Masons [on] the Comite de Reformadores and
[during] his association with Fr. Burgos.
The first documented
exposure of Rizal to masonry took place in 1882. May 3, 1882, he
started on his journey to Madrid. June 11, his ship docked at Naples,
[ where he saw] a multitude of posters set up by masons announcing
the death of Giuseppe Garibaldi, their Grand Master. Rizal wrote
about what he saw in a letter to his parents and brothers. That
letter marked the first time Rizal made a written mention of Masonry,
but not the last.
II. Rizal's
First Years As A Mason
Upon his arrival
in Spain, Rizal found it a country strongly influenced by Masonic
thought. The atmosphere of freedom had a profound impact on Rizal
who was then smarting from the abuses of the friars in his native
land, particularly the injustice inflicted upon his mother. When
he was only ten years of age, his mother was arrested on a trumped-up
charge and forced to walk from their residence in Calamba, to the
prison in Sta. Cruz, the capital of Laguna, a distance of over thirty
kilometers. She was later exonerated, but only after two-and-a half
years in jail.
Ferdinand Blumentritt,
Rizal's good friend, assessed the impact of free Spain upon him,
thus:
During his
sojourn in Spain he came upon a new world. The
horizons of his mind widened considerably, opening up to
him new ideas. He came from a country where the friars,
the bureaucrats, military officers, and the rest of the
Spaniards exercised absolute power. In Madrid, he saw the
exact opposite; freethinkers and atheists spoke freely and
disparagingly of his religion and his Church; the authority
of the State, he found out, was weak; he expected to see
liberals and clericals fighting each other, but he saw
quite the opposite
At the sight of all this, a feeling of
bitterness overwhelmed him when he compared the unlimited
freedom in the Mother country with the theocratic
absolutism in his own land.
[Rizal] soon
came under the influence of several outstanding masonic thinkers.
Miguel Morayta, a Grand Master, was his college professor who molded
his views of history, while the ex-president of Spain, the Catalan
Francisco Pi y Margall, who also became his friend, gave direction
to his political thoughts. Among the first Spaniards to advocate
emancipation of the Philippines were the masons Rafael Labra y Cardano
and Sovereign Grand Commander Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla. Small wonder,
therefore, that Rizal decided to apply for membership in Acasia
Lodge No. 9, a lodge in Madrid under the Gran Oriente de Espaòa,
at that time the principal and biggest Grand Orient in Spain. Upon
his initiation, Rizal chose Dimasalang as his symbolic name in Masonry.
Early on Rizal
and other Filipino expatriates realized that the enemy of reform
in the Philippines was not Spain or religion, but the friars. [Starting]
a patriotic propaganda for the improvement of conditions Rizal quickly
rose to the forefront of this movement. In 1884 he started writing
his famous novel, Noli Me Tangere, an incisive indictment of the
Philippine political and religious regime. [The same] year Rizal
spoke at a banquet [held] in honor of Juan Luna and Felix Resurrecion
Hidalgo, Filipino artists named first and second prize winners in
a painting contest held in Madrid. Rizal saluted Spain, but flayed
the friars in the Philippines. When copies of the newspapers carrying
his speech reached Manila, authorities branded him a subversive.
Completing
his studies in Madrid, Rizal left for France in July 1885 to specialize
in opthamology. He trained in Paris for four months, then he left
for Heidelberg, then considered the most advanced center of opthalmic
research in Europe. From there he moved to Wilhelmsfeld, Leipzig
and Berlin and met some of the most eminent men in Europe.
*
* *
This excerpt is from Heredom, the
transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society
Volume VII, Year 1998
©1998-2002, Scottish Rite Research Society
All Rights Reserved
Scottish Rite Research Society
1733 16th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20009-3103
202-232-3579 voice, 202-383-1847 fax
srrs@srmason-sj.org, www.srmason-sj.org
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