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The Church under attack, May 5, 

1956

Philippine Free Press

THE CHURCH UNDER ATTACK

May 5, 1956

There is a new outburst of anti-clericalism as Catholic politicians denounce the Catholic


hierarchy’s opposition to the bill requiring Filipino students to read the two controversial novels
of Rizal.
By Teodoro M. Locsin
Staff Member
NOT for a long time has the Catholic Church, or, at any rate, the Catholic hierarchy in the
Philippines, been subjected to such attacks as it has for the last two weeks. Archbishops,
accustomed to having high government officials kiss the ring of their office, were mocked and
ridiculed, were called enemies of freedom, to great applause. Catholic political leaders led the
attack….
Did the hierarchy expect the attacks when it issued the pastoral letter objecting to the Senate bill
which would make the two novels of Rizal required reading in all public schools—novels the
hierarchy considered impious and heretical? If it did, and went ahead just the same and registered
its objection, it could only be because of an overriding concern for the safety of the Faith; to read
Rizal is to endanger it. A temporary embarrassment is nothing in the light of eternity; the Church
is 2,000 years old; it will still be standing when the supporters of the bill are no longer around.
The Senate, as it is presently composed, will not prevail against it. Thus, perhaps, wen the
thought of the churchmen. It was a calculated risk.
It was all very surprising. A month ago, one could not have imagined a Filipino politician
speaking in any but the most respectful terms of the prelates of the Church; he would have
considered it political suicide to express himself critically of them. Now all caution seems to
have been thrown to the wind. Anything goes. There is a new freedom, or, to put it another way,
license.
The Church has grown in power and influence since the days immediately following the
Revolution. Then every other Filipino leader seemed to be the critic if not the enemy of the
Church. Many had lost their faith; even among those who retained it, there were not a few who
were, in some degree, anti-clerical. The women were pious but the men were something else.
During Mass, when the priest turned around to deliver a sermon, the men would walk out of the
church; when the priest was done, they would come back. “Do what I say, but don’t do what I
do,” the men would say, referring to the man of God.

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In time, many Filipino leaders returned to the Church, abjuring Masonry as in the case of the late
President Quezon; they became quite devout. It no longer seemed queer to be a priest or to listen
to one. The Church grew in prestige. When a Protestant, Camilo Osias, made known his
intention to run for president, he was told he couldn’t win; he was not a Catholic. He could be a
senator; he was. He could never be president. He must face the facts of political life. When he
wouldn’t, and bolted to the other side, he couldn’t even get elected as senator.
If Ramon Magsaysay is president of the Philippines today, it is due not a little to the help of the
Church. The hierarchy, reluctantly coming to the conclusion that the perpetuation of the Quirino
administration through electoral fraud and terrorism would eventually drive the people into
Communism, urged the faithful to keep the elections free. Free elections would mean the defeat
of the Quirino administration. The Church couldn’t help that. The elections were free, and there
was a new administration.

Never had the Church seemed such a power in Philippine politics! A maker of presidents, it
suddenly seemed. At any rate, a maker of senators it proved itself two years later, when
Francisco Rodrigo ran as a candidate of the Catholic Church—to be precise, the people were
made to believe he was the candidate of the Church; with no political experience whatsoever, he
polled more votes than many veteran politicians.
The Church had become a great, perhaps the greatest, political factor in the Philippines. Catholic
action had taken on a political color. This was, Catholics felt, as it should be. It is impossible to
separate politics from religion, or the practice of religion. Human life is a unity, not a series of
separate compartments. A good Catholic not only goes to the right church but votes for the right
people.
Then came the Senate bill making Rizal’s novels required reading in all schools and the pastoral
letter opposing the bill. Bishops and archbishops were suddenly being called unpatriotic, worse
than the country’s former Spanish oppressors. The political climate had suddenly changed.
So stormy was the atmosphere that Senator Rodrigo proposed running for cover; let the debate
on the bill be held behind closed doors, he said.
Let the hearings remains public, said Sen. Lorenzo Tañada, as good a Catholic as Rodrigo.
(Rodrigo had left Tañada’s Citizens Party without even a letter of resignation to run for senator
on the administration’s ticket.) Closed-door sessions would imply that the Filipino people were
not yet prepared for democratic processes, Tañada said.
Another senator, Quintin Paredes, observed that when Rodrigo pleaded for national unity, all he
really wanted was for everybody to do his will. According to Rodrigo, Paredes went on, there
would be unity only if the bill was not passed, and no unity if it was.
“How can we instill unity when you, who advocate it, insist on enforcing your will?” asked
Paredes?
“Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s,” Rodrigo said.
“Then why not give Rizal what is Rizal’s and God what is God’s?” demanded another senator,
Domocao Alonto of Mindanao. The Moro senator disclosed that Rizal’s books were the Bible of

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the Indonesians during their struggle for independence. He attacked Filipinos who proclaimed
Rizal as “their national hero” but seemed to “despise what he had written.”
Rodrigo hinted that “ulterior political motives” were behind the filing of the Rizal bill…
“They say that this bill was filed not really for the sake of Rizal, but for the sake of political
expediency. They say that this bill was filed to create cleavage and confusion in the ranks of our
Catholics in order to nip in the bud the growing political unity of Catholic citizens.
“I even heard some people say that the real purpose of this bill is to put President Magsaysay in a
very tight spot. If this bill, they say, passes Congress, and if the present controversy spreads and
increases, then when this bill reaches the President for his signature, he will be placed between
the two horns of a dilemma, where he will suffer politically either way.
“If he approves the bill, then he antagonizes a big Catholic voting sector; if he vetoes the bill,
then he alienates the sympathy and the votes of those who zealously favor the bill. And if he
does not act on the bill and just allows it to become a law, then he loses even more, for he will be
accused of moral timidity.”
Mayor Arsenio H. Lacson of Manila spoke up, denouncing those who opposed the Rizal bill as
“enemies that threaten the very foundations of our freedom.” This “new breed of Filipinos”
would, on the one hand, deny to the state the right to prescribe the books to be read in school, on
the other hand, dictate to the state what books should not be read by the people….
“These are colonial-minded people who, fronting for their alien masters, would shackle the
minds of our youth with the fetters of artificial prejudice, of artificial ignorance, and of artificial
imbecility…The evils that Rizal denounced exist very much to this day, though it may be in a
modified form, and those countrymen of his who set such a high premium on their animal
comfort are very much alive and with us today, together with their alien masters still as bigoted
and intolerant as of old.”
Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo attacked Filipino Catholic priests for being still, according to him, “under
the yoke of the old Spanish friars, against whom the Filipinos of 1896 had risen in arms for their
tyrannies.” The government should assert the constitutional separation of church and state. The
revolutionary general recalled how Rizal’s Noli was banned by the Spanish authorities who had
kept Filipinos subject for more than 300 years under “the guise of Christianity.” The influence of
the Spanish friars was still here, according to Aguinaldo, “despite our blood spilled on the
battlefields.”
While the Philippine Public School Teachers Association, with a membership of 70,000, came
out in favor of the Rizal bill, a spokesman of the Cavite chapter of the Philippine Veterans
Legion announced that the chapter had unanimously approved a manifesto calling “un-Filipino
and morally repulsive” any opposition to the bill. The spokesman, a Catholic, said he would stop
going to church on Sundays until the bill was approved.
In the House of Representatives, Rep. Pedro Lopez of Cebu told the story of the Filipino struggle
for national independence….Filipinism asserted itself for the first time in Mactan Island,
according to him. There Lapulapu, “refusing to yield to alien imposition, slew Magellan, thus
repelling Spanish aggression.” That turned out to be “the first, the only, and the last successful
defense put up by our people throughout our history against foreign invasion and domination….”

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The congressman then hit the men of the Church:
“Nowhere in the world except here have alien educators garbed in their ecclesiastical habits had
the temerity to act as our back-seat drivers or kibitzers and publicly tell a congressional
committee what books our youth in school should not read.”
In the Senate, Sen. Claro M. Recto accused the Catholic hierarchy of being more intolerant than
the Spanish friars whom Rizal had attacked…
“It was natural for the Spanish friars to retaliate against Rizal because he had been unmerciless in
his charges against some of them. But I can’t understand why Filipino bishops…are now
condemning his books. Without Rizal’s books, perhaps there would not be any Filipino bishop
today.”
Those who oppose the Rizal bill, Recto said, “would blot out Rizal from our memory.”
Instead of being grateful to Rizal for helping in their exaltation, they call him and his books
impious, and heretical.
When Senator Rodrigo asked Recto to point out where in the pastoral letter the Catholic
hierarchy had directly called Rizal or his books impious and heretical, Recto read the portions of
the letter accusing Rizal of having attacked various dogmas and practices of the Church. To
attack the dogmas and practices of the Church is to be impious and heretical; the letter says that
Rizal had attacked the dogmas and practices of the Church; that is the same as calling him
impious and heretical, Recto said.
Rodrigo insisted it was not the same.
“If you describe a person as constantly telling falsehoods, is that not calling him a liar?” asked
Recto. “If you call a boy the son of a woman by a man not her husband, there is no need to say
that the child is an ‘s.o.b.’”
Recto went on:
“The tragedy of Rizal is that even after his death he is being mercilessly persecuted.”
When Rodrigo said that it was not necessary to have read the novels of Rizal in order to venerate
him, that Rizal would still be a hero even if he had not written his books, Recto quickly tore that
argument to pieces. For what would Rodrigo honor Rizal if he had no written the Noli and the
Fili? When Rodrigo said, “For the suffering he had endured,” Recto pointed out that if Rizal had
not written the two books, the Spaniards would not have made him suffer; they would not have
shot him. He would not be the national hero of the Philippines.
When Rodrigo said that the Church ban on Rizal’s books was not absolute, that a Catholic could
always obtain permission to read them if the Church was satisfied that it would not shake his
faith, Recto asked, sardonically, how the Church would go about processing the applications of
millions of Filipinos to read the novels of Rizal.
Rodrigo must have found Recto a difficult if not impossible man to debate with; again and again,
Recto would not permit Rodrigo to complete a thought, to finish a sentence; again and again
Rodrigo had to plead for the elementary right to speak; Recto kept butting in. Never once,
however, did Rodrigo lose his patience. If he lost the argument, and that would seem to have
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been the verdict of the gallery which kept cheering Recto, he won the sympathy of many who
listened to the debate on the radio. He might have engaged in sophistry, as Recto accused him of
doing, but he was a gentleman every inch of the way.
Then Sen. Decoroso Rosales spoke up for those who would not make Rizal’s novels compulsory
reading in school. Those in favor of the Rizal bill would make those opposed to it appear as
unpatriotic, said the brother of an archbishop. This is unjust.
During the Japanese occupation, the senator recalled, he and others now opposing the Rizal bill
fought the enemy. Archbishop Rufino Santos, who is against the bill, was imprisoned for 10
months in Fort Santiago by the Japanese. Meanwhile, some Filipinos collaborated with the
Japanese. Now collaborators would brand as anti-Filipino. Archbishop Santos, Rosales and
others for opposing their measure. Only these collaborators, it would seem, love their country.
They have the monopoly on patriotism.
There was no answer to this, although it might have been pointed out that not all those favoring
the bill collaborated with the Japanese; there are patriots, too, behind the measure—patriots in
Rosales’s sense of the word. They fought the Japanese; they would make Filipino students read
Rizal. They fought the Japanese and now they are fighting the Church.
Rosales warned that rather than make students read Rizal’s novels, Catholic schools throughout
the country, numbering more than 600, would close.
Recto expressed scepticism.
“They are making too much profit which they can ill-afford to give up,” said the Batangueño.
Not for a long time has the Catholic Church, or the Catholic hierarchy in the Philippines, been
subjected to such an attack. There was an anti-clerical tradition among Filipino leaders early in
the century; many considered themselves Catholics but had no use for priests. A footnote in the
Derbyshire translation of Noli Me Tangere tells us of a Fray Antonio Piernavieja, O.S.A., who
was taken prisoner by the insurgents of Cavite and made “bishop” of their camp. “Having taken
advantage of his position to collect and forward to the Spanish authorities in Manila information
concerning the insurgents’ preparations and plans, he was tied out in an open field and left to
perish of hunger and thirst under the tropical sun.” Filipino leaders became Masons; an
“independent” church was founded. Eventually, many returned to the Church. Anti-clericalism
seemed to have died out—unlike in Italy where millions of Catholics don’t listen to priests, vote
Communist. Now, here are Catholic Filipinos speaking out against the bishops and archbishops
of the Church.
The Church could have been devious. It could have pretended to make students in its school read
Rizal, but quietly prevented them from doing it. Instead, it chose to be “straightforward.” It will
not make students read the books of one it considers impious and heretical, though he is the
national hero. It just won’t. The result: a crisis, not only of conscience for individual Catholics,
but a political one for the Church.
But should anyone, after all, be made to read a book no matter how detestable he may think it to
be? How could he think it detestable before reading it?

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