Unit 3 - Lesson 4 Assessment
Unit 3 - Lesson 4 Assessment
Narciso Cabanilla
BSCE II-4
UNIT 3 – Lesson 4: Assessment
1. Who are the personages mentioned and what is their relationship with each
other?
Main personage on the case of Hacienda de Calamba were the tenants. August
of year 1889, after they boycotted the May canon collection, the hacienda formally
asked the court for their eviction. Almost sixty tenants were sued by Friar Gabriel
Fernandez, administrator of the said hacienda, before the Court of the Justice of the
Peace. The list of receivables shown to the governor general during his November visit
at the hacienda appeared that the tenants paid nothing. This alarmed the governor
general for it displayed civil disobedience.
Three things worried the Calambeños about the case. First, Don Procopio
Pabalan, Justice of the Peace, confessed that he cannot go against the interests of the
Dominican fathers, because he was a servant of the former syndic. Then, majority of the
tenants have no money to defray the costs of litigation. Lastly, word spread that if the
tenants lose the case, they will be expelled, and their warehouses, sugar mills and
everything built on the ground will be demolished. Moreover, the case of Don Francisco
Rizal y Mercado, father of Jose Rizal, was a representative case.
The petitioner was represented by Don Vicente Ilagan who, upon request of the
respondents, presented his power of attorney to prosecute the case. The respondents,
on the other hand, were represented by Don Paciano Rizal y Mercado, a law undergrad
but able solicitor. Preliminary hearings were made on 26 November 1889 and 6
December 1889. The trial was conducted on 7 January 1890 where both parties
asserted and proved their respective claims. Petitioners claimed that the contract of
tenancy held by the respondents had already expired and that respondents failed to pay
a part of the annual rent amounting to 472.21 pesos due on the year 1889 (Donesa,
2012).
2. Why was this document written? Provide evidence from the document.
The Estate of the reverend Father Dominicans is not situated in the locality of
Calamba but in fact constitutes the whole town, the Reverend Fathers believing that the
boundaries set up by them for the last years should be the limits of the Estate. On the
north, the part of the lake until the Island of Calamba; on the south, until the Bigo
Bridge, Olango, Santol, Mount Sungay. On the east, until Los Banos in Bacong,
comprising almost one half of Mount Maquiling; on the west, until Cabuyao and Santa
Rosa, having an area of at least 700 quinones (a quinon is 2.8 hectares) of clean
cleared lands. These informations were stated on the undersigned Gobernadorcillo and
principales of the town in compliance with the preceding order.
Hence, if by products are to be understood everything that the land produces -
have increased for the Estate sand diminished remarkably for the tenants, not only in
former years but also recently, in the last three, as the enclosed account proves. Such a
statement needs to be explained. For instance, wild forests which are given to the
tenants for a low rent at the beginning, according as the tenants clear and clean them,
invest large capital in them, according as the fortune of the farmer becomes involved in
them, the contract is arbitrarily altered by the Estate, the rent rises enormously, there
being a case when 45 pesos became 900 in a few years through an annual force
imposition.
From all the evidence mentioned, one reason why Jose Rizal has written the
document was because his family was one of the evictees of the Hacienda de Calamba,
Rizal himself was an eminent propagandist. His earnestness, personal discipline, and
determination to win reforms for the Philippines were admired not only by his colleagues
but also by liberal Spaniards. Thus, though helpless in a faraway land, he was not alone
in his struggle to help the Calambeños and his family seeking justice before the
Supreme Court in Madrid. With him were his co-propagandists who did not only
espoused the Calambeños’ cause but also used the incident as a propaganda battle cry
to win reforms for the Philippines.
3. What can you tell about life in the Hacienda de Calamba during the time the
document was written.
The injustices and hypocrisy deprived and brutalized the Calambeños. The
Philippines was struggling including its people. This is even the social condition, the life,
the beliefs, the hopes, and desires. Despite of these, Rizal helped the people unmask
the hypocrisy and ease their griefs because he never stops fighting for the
independence of the Philippines (Ello, n.d.). He has always been this patriotic to his
beloved country.
The life during the time the document was written was in total chaos. The events
spurred a more passionate propaganda staged by the ilustrados in Spain. Since the
implementation of these decrees was defied, the friars then asked and were granted
assistance of the governor general which deployed troops to Calamba to effect mass
evictions. Hence, Dominicans were able to successfully fight for their rightful ownership
over the subject lands in the courts of first level. They were likewise successful in
obtaining eviction decrees.
Moreover, the agrarian dispute that occurred between 1887 and 1891 at the
Hacienda de San Juan Bautista in the province of Laguna was the loudest expression of
peasant discontent in this far Spanish colony. The hacienda included the territory of
what is now Calamba, and the dispute involved, among others, the respected Rizal
family. On the other hand, the Hacienda, for many years, yielded more than enough for
the tenants. The tenants were able to erect houses of strong materials and their children
were able to study in elite schools in Manila and Europe (Donesa, 2012).