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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgement
Subject Matter
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
Reaction
Proaction
Preface
Readings in Philippine history may have an import of a “ Pahiwatig “ a sign
that applies to something which provides objective evidence that the event
History sends signs through its writers words or organized documents. These
of a document are 2.) The access of the reader to such original document in
order to understand its real content and context with bearing on culture and
tradition in the past which may help in the present guest for truth towards
national destiny.
which consists of three branches : the executive headed by the president, the
legislative by the congress and the judiciary by the supreme court. Government
of a state is important and necessary because : 1.) it mountains peace and order ;
2.) it promotes and dispenses social justice ; 3.) it ensures socioeconomic culture
and a political development ; 4.) it safe guards the state sovereignty and 5.) it
Sovereignty is the full right and power of a governing body over itself, without
some polity.
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Acknowledgement
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CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
A sound grasp of history is fundamental when seeking to understand the
us about past struggles, and can help shed light on current events. Indeed, by
may be able to gain knowledge about what course of action to pursue in the
present.
People are often surprised when the look back in history: more often than not
they find that the battles they are fighting today have been fought by
history books will reveal that the struggle against social inequality in all of its
This also applies to the problems that people have sought to address such as
the inequalities that come with capitalism and this is where the study of history
can reveal long-term trends. For example, some of the more insidious effects of
living within a capitalist social system are that surface appearances can be
these exploitative relations are rendered visible and consequently, their very
History also allows us to understand the present through the past, as it places
our struggles and problems into a wider historical context. This shows us that
history is a dynamic force that builds on the past to create the future in positive
(and often negative) ways. Many contemporary social movements have been
It is the common people that make history: they are the driving force of history.
Churchill may have been important in the Second World War, but the common
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CHAPTER 2
The Rarely Told Story of Pre-Colonial Philippines
The Philippines were ruled by Western powers - first the Spanish and later the
United States, for some 350 years. Except for a few religious minorities, the
Philippines has also become thoroughly Christianized and boasts of being the
only country in Southeast Asia with a Christian majority. This leaves few traces of
its pre-colonial history, in which the culture of the archipelago was influenced
In 2018, evidence was found suggesting that early humans may have reached
the islands as far back as 700,000 years ago. Skeletal remains of an extinct
The bones show evidence of having been cut with stone tools. Stone tools were
also found adjacent to the bones. This is a definite indication that a tool-using
expelled into the open ocean by a typhoon, that happened to wash up on the
island. Nonetheless, it is still a remarkable find that humans may have been
present in the Philippines for almost a million years because they were
previously believed to have only inhabited the islands within the last 100,000
years.
about 50,000 BP. By the 2nd Millennium BC, agriculture and sedentary living
had been introduced to the archipelago and at least some of the indigenous
inhabitants of the islands were living in settled villages, making pottery, and
cultivating rice.
Religion has often been an important part of defining the identity of the
inhabitants of the Philippines. Before the arrival of foreign religions from the
West, such as Christianity and Islam, the predominant religious system in the
The ancient inhabitants of the Philippines, as well as some modern Filipinos who
still practice the old religion, believed that gods and spirits guarded natural
Every village or town had shamans and priests who were believed to wield
power over the supernatural world. While foreign religions largely replaced
indigenous animism, many elements of the old religion were carried over into
the new.
The first foreign religions to make a mark on the archipelago may have been
Buddhism and Hinduism. Around 900 AD, several of the island polities were
vassal states of the Empire of Srivijaya. Srivijaya was a city-state on the island of
Sumatra and a center of Buddhist learning that flourished roughly from 700 to
1100 AD
It is possible that Buddhist missionaries may have gone out from this center to
bring their faith to the islands of the Philippines. Although there are no
influence from the use of a lunar calendar that developed in an originally Hindu
By the 14th century AD, Islam had spread to islands of Mindanao and Sulu. Not
long afterwards, powerful sultanates grew on these islands and Islam became
entrenched so strongly that areas on these islands still remain Islamic today, in
the otherwise Christian Philippines. But it is unclear how Islam first spread to the
Philippines.
It has been suggested that it might have been spread by merchants from
Indonesia and India. It has also been proposed that some Filipino rulers
partners in Southeast Asia. Others have suggested that Sufi scholars and other
Islam had a significant influence on the culture of the Philippines. The Islamic
polities that developed on the southern islands were centralized and influential.
It is possible that, had the Spanish not arrived, it would not have been long
These alien religions did not, however, completely replace indigenous traditions.
Indigenous Muslims were able to incorporate their native beliefs and practices
into Islam just as easily as indigenous Christians have done with Catholic
Christianity.
Legacy
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The islands of the Philippines have a varied and diverse human history possibly
going back 700,000 years and involving multiple cultures and even species
The culture of the Philippines has been influenced by many civilizations, such as
China, India, and Srivijaya. It has also been influenced by many religious
their cultural individuality into their adopted faith and made it their own. This
pattern will likely continue as the people of the Philippines continue to fuse all
islands and had regular trade contact with Southeast Asia and China.
long distance trade goods and plunder from war raids to both their elite and
Writing was also prevalent in the Philippines during this time. The scripts used
on the islands were influenced by writing systems from India and Indonesia.
Unfortunately, very few texts survive from that period, although there is one
This plate bears what appears to be an official inscription written in a script used
across Maritime Southeast Asia at the time. This script was ultimately derived
from an Indian script. It also references a date using a lunar calendar that was
common across Southeast Asia. The Laguna Copperplate demonstrates that the
islands were not isolated and suggests that they had significant contact with the
rest of Southeast Asia as early as the 10th century AD, if not earlier.
CHAPTER 3
Spanish colonialism in The Philippines Portugese explorer Ferdinand Magellan
successfully led the European expedition to Philippines in the service of the King
Pigafetta's Primo Viaggio Intorno El Mondo (First Voyage Around the World),
Magellan solemnly planted a cross on the summit of a hill overlooking the sea
and claimed for the king of Spain possession of the islands he had seen, naming
powers however didn’t begin in earnest until 1564. After Magellan's voyage,
Four expeditions were sent: Loaisa (1525), Cabot (1526), Saavedra (1527),
Villalobos (1542), and Legazpi (1564) by Spain. The Legazpi expedition was the
Mexico across the Pacific by Andrés de Urdaneta. This discovery started the
Manila galleon trade1 , which lasted two and a half centuries. In 1570, Martín de
of Maynila (now Manila). Legazpi then made Maynila the capital of the
Philippines and simplified its spelling to Manila. His expedition also renamed
Luzon Nueva Castilla. Legazpi became the country's first governor-general. The
archipelago was Spain's outpost in the orient and Manila became the capital of
the entire Spanish East Indies. The colony was administered through the
Viceroyalty of New Spain (now Mexico) until 1821 when Mexico achieved
independence from Spain. After 1821, the colony was governed directly from
Spain.
Spain had three objectives in its policy toward the Philippines, its only colony in
Asia: to acquire a share in the spice trade, to develop contacts with China and
Japan in order to further Christian missionary efforts there, and to convert the
Filipinos to Christianity. Only the third objective was eventually realized, though
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not completely because of the active resistance of both the Muslims in the
south and the Igorot, the upland tribal peoples in the north. Philip II, king of
avoid a repetition of 1 Galleon refers to Spanish ships which were used for
warfare and later for trade. 2 Luzon is the largest and most populous island of
islands was accomplished with relatively little bloodshed, partly because most of
the population (except the Muslims) offered little armed resistance initially.
Spanish authorities, one of the most incredible acts of heinous torture took
place in the Fortress of Sebastian Intra Mores in Manila where there was a
dungeon known as the Black Hole. The prison had only two small apertures,
one three feet square in the ceiling, the other a little gated hole in the floor
through which the sea could be seen washing underneath. The Spanish
authorities used to confine state prisoners in the hole to the brimful without
food and water and just sufficient air to prevent them from dying immediately.
During most of the Spanish colonial period, the Philippine economy depended
on the Galleon Trade which was inaugurated in 1565 between Manila and
Acapulco, Mexico. Trade between Spain and the Philippines was via the Pacific
Ocean to Mexico (Manila to Acapulco), and then across the Caribbean Sea and
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Atlantic Ocean to Spain (Veracruz to Cádiz). Manila became the most important
center of trade in Asia between the 17th and 18th centuries. All sorts of products
from China, Japan, Brunei, the Moluccas and even India were sent to Manila to
be sold for silver 8-real coins3 which came aboard the galleons (Spanish ships)
from Acapulco (city in Mexico). These goods, including silk, porcelain, spices,
lacquer ware and textile products were then sent to Acapulco and from there to
other parts of New Spain, Peru and Europe. The European population in the
depended on the Galleon Trade for a living. In the later years of the 18th century,
GovernorGeneral Basco introduced economic reforms that gave the colony its
first significant internal source income from the production of tobacco and
other agricultural exports. In this later period, agriculture was finally opened to
the European population, which before was reserved only for the natives.
During Spain’s 333 year rule in the Philippines, the colonists had to fight off the
Chinese pirates (who lay siege to Manila, the most famous of which was
Moros from western Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago also raided the coastal
Christian areas of Luzon and the Visayas and occasionally 3 Silver 8-real coin
was the silver coin minted by the Spanish empire after 1598. captured men and
began with declarations of war. On May 1, 1898, the Spanish navy was decisively
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defeated in the Battle of Manila Bay by the Asiatic Squadron of the U.S. Navy
led by Commodore George Dewey aboard the USS Olympia. Thereafter Spain
The Filipino movement against Spanish authorities had both violent and
non-violent proponents. Jose Rizal was the most prominent face of the
The Philippines under Spain. Jose Rizal was a man of incredible intellectual
power, with amazing artistic talent as well. He excelled at anything that he put
traveled to Spain to complete his medical degree. While in Europe, José Rizal
who wanted reform. He also wrote his first novel, Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me
Not/The Social Cancer), a work that detailed the dark aspects of Spain's colonial
rule in the Philippines, with particular focus on the role of Catholic friars. The
book was banned in the Philippines, though copies were smuggled in. Rizal
returned to the Philippines in 1892. Although the reform society he founded, the
Liga Filipino (Philippine League), supported non-violent action, Rizal was still
had no ties to the group, and disapproved of its violent methods, Rizal was
arrested shortly thereafter. After a show trial, Rizal was convicted of sedition and
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sentenced to death by firing squad. Rizal's public execution was carried out in
Manila on December 30, 1896, when he was 35 years old. His execution created
Philippines from self exile in Hong Kong aboard an American naval ship and on
May 24 took command of Filipino forces. Filipino forces had liberated much of
the country from the Spanish. On June 12, 1898 Aguinaldo issued the Philippine
established the First Philippine Republic. Filipino forces then laid siege to Manila,
as had American forces. The Americans entered into a pact with the Spanish
The Battle of Manila took place on August 13 and Americans took control of the
city. In the Treaty of Paris (1898) ending the Spanish–American War, the Spanish
agreed to sell the Philippines to the United States for $20 million which was
subsequently narrowly ratified by the U.S. Senate. With this action, Spanish rule
Philippines remained unchanged till 1946, as the void left by Spain was
immediately filled with the U.S.A. The Philippines was illegally ceded to the
United States at the Treaty of Paris for US$20 million, together with Cuba and
Puerto Rico. A Filipino-American War broke out as the United States attempted
to establish control over the islands. The war lasted for more than 10 years,
resulting in the death of more than 600,000 Filipinos. The little-known war has
been described by historians as the "first Vietnam", where US troops first used
natives.
The United States established an economic system giving the colonizers full
rights to the country's resources. The Spanish feudal system was not dismantled;
in fact, through the system of land registration that favored the upper Filipino
manage the economic and political system of the country. The U.S. also
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reinforced elitism and a colonial mentality that persists to this day, mixed with
the Spanish feudal patron-client relationship. Eventually after the second world
war, where Filipino forced fought alongside U.S.A to thwart the Japanese force,
Philippine independence came on July 4, 1946, with the signing of the Treaty of
Manila between the governments of the United States and the Philippines. The
treaty provided for the recognition of the independence of the Republic of the
Islands.
CHAPTER 4
Japanese Occupation of the Philippines
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Pampanga was first attacked and also Nichols Field outside Manila was attacked,
then on December 22, The Japanese forces landed at the Lingayen Gulf and
States. The joint American and Filipino soldiers in Bataan finally surrendered on
The 76,000 captured soldiers were forced to embark on the infamous "Death
March" to a prison camp more than 100 kilometers north. An estimated 10,000
The Huks
In the midst of fear and chaos, some farmers of Pampanga banded together
and created local brigades for their protection. Luis Taruc, Juan Feleo, Castro
1942 in Cabiao, Nueva Ecija. In that meeting, they agreed to fight the Japanese
as a unified guerrilla army. Another meeting was held the following month,
where in representatives from Tarlac, Pampanga and Nueva Ecija threshed out
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various details regarding their organization, which they agreed to call "Hukbo
Leader of the group, with Alejandrino as his right hand man. The members were
the Filipino officials in Manila were told to enter into agreements and
compromises with the Japanese to mitigate the sufferings of the people under
the iron-clad rule of the Japanese. On January 23, 1942 the Philippine Executive
las Alas, finance; Jose P. Laurel, justice; Claro M. Recto, education, health, and
public welfare; and Quintin Paredes, public works and communication; Jose
The following month, an election was held for members of The Preparatory
up a constitution for a free Philippines. Jose Laurel became its head. Against the
will of the PCPI delegates the new Constitution was finalized on July 10, 1943.
Two months later it was ratified by the KALIBAPI, which was the only political
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party allowed to exist at that time. KALIBAPI is the acronym for "Kapisanan sa
articles lifted from the 1935 constitution that fitted the wishes of the Japanese. It
was meant to be in effect only temporarily, while the Philippines still in chaos.
After the war, a new constitution would again be drafted for the new Philippine
Republic.
the National Assembly. The Assembly was actually made up of 108 members;
but half of this number was composed of incumbent governors and city mayors.
Jose P. Laurel was elected as president of the second republic (the first
republic was Aguinldo's Malolos Republic) and both Benigno Aquino Sr. &
October 14 1943 on the front steps of the legislative building in Manila. The
Philippine flag was hoisted as the national anthem was played. Meanwhile, the
of Filipinos who refused to cooperate with them. They hung giant posters and
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distribute their materials that contains such slogans as "the Philippines belong
to the Filipinos." they also used newspapers, movies, and others to publicize the
same idea. Promoting Japanese propaganda was one of the main objectives of
the KALIBAPI, but still Japanese failed to gain the trust of the Filipinos.
From Australia, Allied forces slowly advanced toward the Philippines, bombing
barely a month later, on October 20, 1944, the Americans landed triumphantly
in Leyte. Once a shore, General Douglas MacArthur said; "I have Returned."
Sergio Osmeña was Part of MacArthur’s group. He had taken over Manuel L.
Quezon as president after the latter past way at Saranac Lake, New York on
August 1944. From October 23 to October 26, 1944 the Americans engaged
Japanese forces in the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Consider as the biggest naval battle
in World History, this historic encounter almost destroyed the entire Japanese
fleet and rendered in incapable of further attack. The US victory in the battle of
Leyte Gulf is said to have signaled the beginning of Philippine liberation from
the Japanese.
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meanwhile, secured other area where their thought other American units would
January 9, 1945. The news alarmed the Japanese. Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita,
(Japanese suicide pilots); but they failed to stop Americans. The Japanese also
On December 8, 1944, President Laurel and his cabinet moved to Baguio upon
orders of Yamashita, who is also known as the tiger of Malaya. The Japanese
The Japanese in Manila would not give up easily. In fact, it took 3 weeks of
intense fighting before they finally surrendered on February 23. Gen. MacArthur
continued to liberate other parts of the country. And finally proclaim general
CHAPTER 5
The United States exercised formal colonial rule over the Philippines, its largest
overseas colony, between 1899 and 1946. American economic and strategic
interests in Asia and the Pacific were increasing in the late 1890s in the wake of
failed to remove Spanish colonial rule. The leaders of the revolution were exiled
to Hong Kong. When the United States invaded Cuba and Puerto Rico in 1898
to shore up its hegemony in the Caribbean, the U.S. Pacific Squadron was sent
to the Philippines to advance U.S. power in the region, and it easily defeated the
Spanish navy. Filipino revolutionaries hoped the United States would recognize
and assist it. Although American commanders and diplomats helped return
they sought to use him and they avoided recognition of the independent
In August 1898 U.S. forces occupied Manila and denied the Republic’s troops
entry into the city. That fall, Spain and the United States negotiated the
Philippines’ status at Paris without Filipino consultation. The U.S. Senate and the
American public debated the Treaty of Paris, which granted the United States
“ sovereignty ” over the Philippine Islands for $20 million. The discussion
Philippine-American War erupted. The U.S. Senate narrowly passed the Treaty
of Paris, and the U.S. military enforced its provisions over the next three years
property, the “reconcentration” of rural populations, and the torture and killing
collaboration of Filipino elites at its core. The colonial state was inaugurated
Federalista Party under influential Manila-based elites. The party developed into
“Americanization” and, initially, U.S. statehood for the Philippines. When the
voices and organizations that consolidated by 1907 into the Nationalista Party,
whose members were younger than those of the Federalista Party and rooted in
the provinces. When the Federalista Party alienated its American patrons and its
for the Nationalista Party, which over the remainder of the colonial period
American Soldiers in the Philippines, 1899. American soldiers ftre their rifles
from behind a makeshift barricade at the West Beach Outpost in San Roque
War.
1907 for a Philippine Assembly to serve under the commission as the lower
house of a legislature. The 3 percent of the country’s population that was given
the right to vote swept the Nationalistas to power. The Nationalistas clashed
with U.S. proconsuls over jurisdiction and policy priorities, although both sides
Democratic Party dominance in the United States between 1912 and 1920
executive power. When Democrats passed the Jones Act in 1916, which replaced
the commission with a Philippine senate and committed the United States to
“eventual independence” for the Philippines, Quezon claimed credit for these
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translated them into greater power. During the 1920s, Quezon dominated the
commonwealth in the years prior to the 1941 Japanese invasion of the Philippine
constructed where the ambitions and fears of the Filipino elite connected with
the American imperial need for collaborators, had successfully preserved the
extractive industries like mining. American capital had initially regarded the
American trade with the Philippine Islands was initially inhibited by reciprocity
treaties that preserved Spanish trade rights. When these rights ended, U.S.
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inexpensive raw materials and markets for finished goods, whereas sugar and
competition. The Payne-Aldrich Tariff of 1909 established ”free trade,” with the
exception of rice, and set yearly quota limits for Philippine exports to the United
States.
American trade with the Philippine Islands, which had grown since the war,
boomed after 1909, and during the decades that followed, the United States
percent by 1934. These goods included farm machinery, cigarettes, meat and
dairy products, and cotton cloth. The Philippines sold 26 percent of its total
exports to the United States in 1899, and 84 percent in 1934. Most of these
feared economic and political dependence on the United States, as well as the
be characterized by rising tariffs and the exclusion of Philippine goods from the
United States in cultural terms. In the Philippines, the colonial state introduced a
secular, free public school system that emphasized the English language
English and used it to their own purposes. Filipinos also reworked forms and
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literature. In addition, this period saw the development of popular and literary
regions and peoples into the ”nation” by arguing for their rights to administer
Christian Filipinos.
colonialism. Beginning in the 1920s, mass Filipino labor migration to Hawaii and
the American West would alter both region’s culture and demography, bridging
the Philippine and U.S. cultural and social worlds. At the same time, official
Americans more generally to the notion that overseas empire was compatible
CHAPTER 6
Proclamation of Martial Law:
under Martial Law. The declaration issued under Proclamation 1081 suspended
the civil rights and imposed military authority in the country. Marcos defended
the declaration stressing the need for extra powers to quell the rising wave of
intended to eradicate the roots of rebellion and promote a rapid trend for
Martial Law emphasizing the need for control over civil disobedience that
displays lawlessness. Marcos explained citing the provisions from the Philippine
the Constitution and protect the welfare of the Filipino people from the
dangerous threats posed by Muslim rebel groups and Christian vigilantes that
places national security at risk during the time. Marcos explained that
martial law was not a military takeover but was then the only option to resolve
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the country’s dilemma on rebellion that stages national chaos threatening the
peace and order of the country. The emergency rule, according to Marcos’s
plan, was to lead the country into what he calls a “New Society”.
Martial law refers to the replacement of civil rule by military rule. This may be
civilians, and the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. The
writ of habeas corpus, which in Latin refers to “having the body”, is a citizen’s
expedite justice.
protect the safety of the Filipino people. In cases of lawless violence, invasion,
and rebellion, he may suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus or
declare martial law in any part of the nation. To declare martial law is thus a
legal course of action the Chief Executive may take. Such a power is granted
unto the President for cases where it becomes truly necessary, when the people’
s lives are being threatened and these powers facilitate the process of securing
their safety.
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However, given the immense power that martial law can give the President, the
wrong hands, the declaration of martial law and the suspension of the writ of
habeas corpus open up the real possibility of the abuse of civil rights. The
protecting against such abuses. By limiting the terms under which martial law
may be called for, implemented, and extended, they are mandated to prevent
the President from using his powers for anything other than the good of the
Filipino people.
Marcos used several events to justify martial law. Threat to the country ’s
of the Philippines (CPP) in 1968. Supporters of CPP’s military arm, the New
People’s Army, also grew in numbers in Tarlac and other parts of the country.
The alleged attempt to the life of then Minister of Defense Juan Ponce
Enrile gave Marcos a window to declare Martial Law. Marcos announced the
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emergency rule the day after the shooting incident. Marcos also declared
insurgency in the south caused by the clash between Muslims and Christians,
defending their ancestral land against the control of Christians who migrated in
the area. The minority group organized the Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF) in Malaysia and pushed for the autonomy of Mindanao from the
national government.
The move was initially supported by most Filipinos and was viewed by some
Martial law ceased the clash between the executive and legislative branches of
Marcos imposed the need for self-sacrifice for the attainment of national
welfare. His reforms targeted his rivals within the elite depriving them of their
power and patronage but did not affect their supporters (US Library of
The army and the Philippine Constabulary seized weapons and disbanded
(Proclamation 1081 and Martial Law). Marcos took control of the legislature and
closed the Philippine Congress (Proclamation 1081 and Martial Law). Numerous
media outfits were either closed down or operated under tight control
(Proclamation 1081 and Martial Law). Marcos also allegedly funnelled millions of
economic positions to channel resources to him. Experts call this the “crony
capitalism.”
triggered the decline of support on Marcos’ plans. More and more Filipinos
took arms to dislodge the regime. Urban poor communities in the country’s
and were soon conducting protest masses and prayer rallies. These efforts
hold an election in 1978 and 1981 in an aim to stabilize the country’s chaotic
condition. Marcos, in both events, won the election; however, his extended term
against his regime. Social unrest reached its height after former Senator
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Benigno Aquino was murdered. The incident sent thousands of Filipinos to the
streets calling for Marcos’ removal from post. Turning again to his electoral
strategy, Marcos held a snap election in 1986 but what he hoped will satisfy the
masses only increased their determination to end his rule that seated
CHAPTER 7
The Philippines was praised worldwide in 1986, when the so-called bloodless
revolution erupted, called EDSA People Power’s Revolution. February 25, 1986
marked a significant national event that has been engraved in the hearts and
minds of every Filipino. This part of Philippine history gives us a strong sense of
pride especially that other nations had attempted to emulate what we have
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shown the world of the true power of democracy. The true empowerment of
rosaries strengthened by faith were the only weapons that the Filipinos used to
recover their freedom from President Ferdinand Marcos’s iron hands. The
peaceful demonstration was held on that fateful day. It was a day that gathered
all Filipinos in unity with courage and faith to prevail democracy in the country.
It was the power of the people, who assembled in EDSA, that restored the
The revolution was a result of the long oppressed freedom and the life
like human rights violation since the tyrannical Martial Law Proclamation in
1972.
In the years that followed Martial Law started the suppressive and abusive
the government, individuals and companies alike were subdued. The Filipinos
reached the height of their patience when former Senator Benigno "Ninoy"
Aquino, Sr. was shot and killed at the airport in August 21, 1983, upon his return
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to the Philippines from exile in the United States. Aquino’s death marked the
Cojuangco-Aquino showed the Filipinos and the world the strength and
courage to claim back the democracy that Ferdinand Marcos arrested for his
death further intensified the contained resentment of the Filipinos. In the efforts
to win back his popularity among the people, Marcos held a snap presidential
election in February 7, 1986, where he was confronted with a strong and potent
opposition, Corazon Aquino. It was the most corrupt and deceitful election held
in the Philippine history. There was an evident trace of electoral fraud as the
tally of votes were declared with discrepancy between the official count by the
Movement for Free Elections). Such blatant corruption in that election was the
The demonstration started to break in the cry for democracy and the demand
to oust Marcos from his seat at Malacañang Palace. The revolt commenced
when Marcos' Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and the Armed
support from the government and called upon the resignation of then
Aguinaldo and had their troops ready to combat against possible armed attack
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Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin along with the priests and nuns called for the
support of all Filipinos who believed in democracy. Radyo Veritas aired the
peacefully with the intervention of faith. Nuns kneeled in front of tanks with
With the power of prayers, the armed marine troops under the command of
Marcos withdrew from the site. Celebrities expressed their support putting up a
presentation to showcase the injustices and the anomalies carried out by the
Court Associate Justice Claudio Teehankee at Club Filipino located in San Juan.
Aquino was proclaimed as the 11th President of the Republic of the Philippines.
She was the first lady president of the country. People rejoiced over their victory
proving the success of the EDSA People ’ s Power Revolution, the historic
People Power in the efforts to oust then President Joseph Estrada, it was not as
CHAPTER 8
The Philippines is a republic with a presidential form of government wherein
power is equally divided among its three branches: executive, legislative, and
judicial. The government seeks to act in the best interests of its citizens through
The Legislative branch is authorized to make laws, alter, and repeal them
through the power vested in the Philippine Congress. This institution is divided
appointments, and has the authority to declare war. This branch includes
Congress (the Senate and House of Representatives) and several agencies that
The party-list representatives shall constitute twenty per cent of the total
number of representatives including those under the party list. For three
consecutive terms after the ratification of this Constitution, one-half of the seats
selection or election from the labor, peasant, urban poor, indigenous cultural
communities, women, youth, and such other sectors as may be provided by law,
The Executive branch is composed of the President and the Vice President who
are elected by direct popular vote and serve a term of six years. The
The President leads the country. He or she is the head of state, leader of the
The Vice President supports the President. If the President is unable to serve,
the Vice President becomes President. He or she also serves a six-year term.
Cabinet members serve as advisors to the President. They include the Vice
Appointments.
The Judicial branch holds the power to settle controversies involving rights that
not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
The judicial branch interprets the meaning of laws, applies laws to individual
cases, and decides if laws violate the Constitution. The judicial power shall be
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vested in one Supreme Court and in such lower courts as may be established by
law.
Historians believe the Philippines dates back to the Paleolithic age. Based on
the archeological artifacts recovered, Filipino society and culture were fairly
relations early on with China, Indo-China, Malaysia, India, and the Arab
countries. Chinese silk, porcelain, jars, gold, ivory, and beads were traded for
wax, bird's nest, teakwood, rattan, pearls, precious stones, and other marine
Ferdinand Magellan came to the Philippines on March 16, 1521 and claimed the
Manila in 1571. Spain introduced changes in the political, social, and cultural life
of the people. One of these is Christianity. In 1896, the Filipinos staged the first
nationalistic revolution in Asia against the Spaniards. The 1896 Revolution was
death by musketry of Dr. Jose Rizal, who led the reform movement, fueled the
fires of revolution.
On June 12, 1898, leaders of the revolution declared the country's sovereign
state and proclaimed the first Republic of the Philippines, the first constitutional
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democracy in Asia. Meanwhile, Spain declared war against the United States
over Cuba and was defeated. As an offshoot, the Philippines was ceded to
Under American rule, agriculture, commerce, and trade developed. Among the
public education.
At the outbreak of the Second World War, Japan occupied the country. In 1945,
independence in 1946.
The Republic of the Philippines was proclaimed on July 4, 1946, with Manuel
brought about by the war was started. In 1972, Martial Law was declared by
deterioration during the Martial Law Years resulted in the historic "People
Executive, the Legislative, and the Judiciary. This was the type of government
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assembly.
On June 30, 1992, Fidel V. Ramos became the 12th President of the Philippine
Republic. President Ramos, a hero of the 1986 EDSA uprising, anchored his
uprising called "People Power 2", unseated then President Joseph Ejercito
example.
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