“Isbo” in Ilocano means “urine.” Perhaps in Grade 5, in 1951 or some 70 years ago, in my hometown Asingan, Pangasinan, when we full-blooded Ilocano (FBI) boys were commonly urinating, the joke was, “Is Bonifacio a hero?” (Laughter)
Sorry to disappoint you, whoever you are, FBI or not, but
Andres Bonifacio is not much of the hero
that historian Teodoro A Agoncillo
portrayed him to be!
I knew that 24 years
ago yet. How did I remember all that? I bragged & blogged about it, 28
Dec 2007, “Inventing A Hero. Each Of Us Looking Through The Mirror Of Everyday[1]” (A Magazine Called Love, Blogspot.com). This is part of what I
wrote:
(book cover image[2] from amazon.com)
I final-edited the
book by Glenn May published in
1997 by New Day (Quezon City,
Philippines): Inventing A Hero.
The subtitle tells you enough of its contents: The Posthumous Re-Creation Of Andres Bonifacio. The author casts
doubts on much of the bits and pieces of information we know of Bonifacio, the
second most popular national hero of the Philippines, by questioning the
integrity of the sources, both persons and papers. The historian in Glenn May
makes a very good case in putting to doubt the historian in Teodoro Agoncillo in his account of
Bonifacio, his hero. Bonifacio was a hero, May says; one must not doubt… it;
but an erudite one? Bonifacio’s intellectual genius has not been established.
One must not think about it.
30 November 2021 is the 158th birthday of this
Filipino hero; he founded the society called Kataastaasan,
Kagalanggalangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan, or Katipunan, that which fought for and eventually
obtained the Philippines’ emancipation from Spain (but not from the United
States of America, which is another story). No doubt Bonifacio was a hero, but
we must deconstruct him from Agoncillo’s hero-making.
In my “Inventing A Hero” essay of 2007, I also said:
Rizal was a hero for
peace, Bonifacio was a hero for war. Peace for peace, war for peace. Rizal
stood for progress by way of reformation; Bonifacio stood for progress by way
of revolution. Do you advocate the Rizal hero or the Bonifacio hero? Will you
do a Rizal or a Bonifacio?
I’ll do neither. I
speak for myself – I wouldn’t think of dying for my country like Rizal did. And
I wouldn’t think of dying for my country like Bonifacio did either. In any
case, it’s too gory for me. I never liked the sight of blood, especially my
own.
Nonetheless, each of us can be a little hero. It’s simple –
and not so simple:
Love
more.
Give more.
Help more.
Contribute more.
Forgive more.
Be more considerate.
Be more gracious.
Be more gallant.
Be more kind.
Be more forgiving.
Each
one of us can be a little more heroic to our own family. A little more heroic to
our neighbors. A little more heroic to strangers. Then the world will turn into
a lovelier place because of more little heroes like us!@517
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