Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Pilgrim's Prayers*


Prayer for Travelers

O Almighty and merciful God, You have entrusted Your angels to guide and protect us. Command them to be our constant companions, from the moment we set out until our safe return. Cloak us with their invisible protection, keeping us free from dangers such as collisions, fire, explosions, falls, and injuries. Preserve us from all harm, especially from sin, and lead us safely to our heavenly home. We ask this through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.




Pilgrim's Prayer through the Blessed Virgin Mary

O Virgin Mary, Help of Christians, we dedicate ourselves to your service. We offer you our minds, hearts, and bodies, and we promise to work always for the glory of God and the salvation of souls. Protect the young, aid the elderly, save sinners, and console the dying. You are our hope, Mary, Mother of Mercy and Gate of Heaven. Intercede with your Son for us, that we may be filled with selfless charity and deep faith. Ask Jesus for those things we cannot obtain through our own efforts, and assist us in our present need. May we always seek the Father’s will in our lives. We ask this, dear Spouse of the Spirit, so that we may come to your Son in grace. Amen.




Saint Anthony, Guide of Pilgrims

Dear St. Anthony, we are all pilgrims on the journey of life. We came from God, and we are returning to Him. The Creator who formed us will welcome us at the end of our journey. The Lord Jesus is preparing a place for all His brothers and sisters. St. Anthony, Guide of Pilgrims, direct my steps along the straight path. Protect me until I reach my heavenly home. Assist me in all my needs and difficulties, especially (mention your specific intention). Amen.

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Dividing the Philippines

c/o http://manila-photos.blogspot.com/
The Philippines has been greatly influenced by Christianity. The first religious groups that arrived to evangelize the Philippines were the following:
1.     The Augustinians in 1565
2.     The Franciscans in 1578
3.     The Jesuits in 1581
4.     The Dominicans in 1587
5.     The Augustinian Recollects in 1606

Being the first in the country, the Augustinians, who arrived with with Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, had the entire archipelago as their mission territory. But after the arrival of the other missionaries, the islands were divided among the five orders in 1595.

The Augustinians had the prime choice and were given charge of the Tagalog provinces, Pampanga, Ilocos and Cebu and Panay.

The Franciscans took Camarines and the rest of Bicolandia, while the Dominicans worked in Cagayan, Pangasinan, parts of Bataan, Isabela, Babuyanes and Batanes.

The Jesuits in Samar and Leyte and the Recollects who were last got the outlying conquered territories of Zambales, Palawan, Calamianes, and parts of Mindanao.

This division of mission territory remained from until the end of the Spanish period in 1898, except for the Jesuits who were expelled in the 18th century. 

Picture
The Philippines is under the Spanish Empire.
Generally, Luzon was divided into seven provinces for administrative purposes. Cagayan, Pangasinan, and parts of Bataan went to the Dominicans, while Laguna and Camarines went to the Franciscans. Parts of what are now Rizal, Cavite and Laguna went to the Jesuits. Finally, the Augustinians had Ilocos, Pampanga and Taal-Balayan.

The Visayan islands were first divided between the Augustinians and the Jesuits, and later the Recollects after their arrival. Mindanao went to the Jesuits, and again the Recollects later on.

The City of Manila and the Port of Cavite were considered free zones, so the religious orders each maintained a house and a church in these areas. Also, the Augustinians, Jesuits, and Recollects had houses and churches in Cebu City and its immediate surrounding area.

With these specific mission territories, each order was able to concentrate on learning not more than four native languages. In learning the language, the missionaries were not only able to preach the Gospel in the native tongue, but also write grammar books and dictionaries that preserved these native languages.   


Sources:
De la Costa, Horacio. 1967. The Jesuits in the Philippines 1581-1768.
Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.

Phelan, John Leddy. 1959. The Hispanization of the Philippines
.

Photos:
[first photo]The statues at the rear of the old San Ignacio Church ruins in Intramuros represent the first five religious orders to arrive in the Philippines. 
[below] The Philippines Map
Picture

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Santo Domingo Church in QC




The Church of Santo Domingo in Quezon City was my home for less than eight years as a student-brother. Every ordination that I have witnessed in this Church brought tears of joy to my eyes. There had been times when I used to walk at the center aisle after dinner, imagining that one day my dream will be fulfilled. And that happened on November 30, 2007, my ordination to the priesthood. Every Filipino Dominican holds this Church dear to his heart as a sacred place of formation and ministry. A glimpse of history will make us appreciate more the mother house of the Order of the Preachers in the Philippines.


The Ceiling and Cupola of Santo Domingo Church 

NATURE OF THE MISSIONARY PROVINCE 
The Spanish Dominican Province did not have a specific territory in spite of its name. It was uniquely a missionary Province for the evangelization not only of the Philippines but also of the other countries of the Far East. While the other Provinces had several convents as their basic nucleus headed by their respective priors, the Provincia del Santisimo Rosario de Filipinas had only one convent, the Convento de Sto. Domingo in Manila under an elective prior.



Bishop Domingo de Salazar, OP 

THE ORIGINAL CHURCH 
On August 6, 1587, some Dominican Fathers started the construction of a wooden Church along the marshy and mosquito-infested land in the south bank of the Pasig River. The first Bishop of Manila, the Most Rev. Domingo de Salazar, OP (†1594) bought this property from a certain Spanish gentleman named Don Gaspar de Isla for tres sientos pesos (P300.00). He donated another tres mil pesos (P3,000.00) for the building of the first Church. As a general rule, Spanish Dominicans dedicated the first house to their Founder and Patriarch, St. Dominic, whenever they started a new mission. 


The 4th Sto. Domingo which was destroyed by an earthquake.

THE FATE OF THE CHURCHES AND THE FAITH OF THE PEOPLE
Unfortunately, the original Church lasted only for over a year. In 1589, its ceiling suddenly collapsed. The second Church was made out of stone but was devastated by a great fire on April 30, 1603. The third Church did not stand the strong earthquake of Nov. 30, 1610 either. Out of the ruins, the fourth temple of stone arose. As a preventive measure against earthquakes, it had a wooden vault and three aisles. But after 250 years, the greatest earthquake in Philippine history occurred on June 3, 1863 that destroyed the Church along with 249 buildings and a dozen other Churches. The Church crumbled and yet, in the midst of the catastrophe, the image of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary survived all these destructions.


The Gothic 5th Sto. Domingo

The hopes of the faithful took shape in 1867 when Don Felix Roxas presented a plan for a new Church worthy of the Lady of the Holy Rosary. It was Gothic in style and was meant to be a mixture of beauty of form and massiveness of construction. But no architectural design adapted for the geological conditions of the country would ever stand the wrath of war. The Church was bombarded on December 27, 1941 during the Second World War. The image of Our Lady of the Rosary survived as it was taken to a safety vault of the convento shortly after the outbreak of the Pacific war, and was recovered in the evening of December 30, 1941 after the debris had been laboriously cleared. As Fr. Pablo Fernandez, OP recounted in his sworn statement:


The Ruins of the Gothic Church after the bombing.

“On December 27, 1941, I was in the library of San Juan de Letran College. At 2:00 o’clock I heard a great explosion caused by a bomb that undauntedly had fallen in a nearby place. Judging from the commotion and noise, I calculated the place must be Saint Dominic Convent and I was not wrong in my calculation. Sometime later, several men, who came from the Intendencia Building, told us that Saint Dominic’s Church had been bombed. One of these men was wounded and another was awfully stained with blood although he was not hurt.”


Paintings of the Evangelists by Llamas

THE SIXTH SHRINE
After the war, Dominican authorities searched again for a fitting home for the Queen of the Rosary. Our Lady’s devotees expressed their love to her with their generous support. In October 1952, the cornerstone of the proposed sixth Church was laid by the Most Rev. Peregrin de la Fuente, OP, Prelate of Batanes-Babuyanes in its new site in Quezon City. This one is a structure totally different from previous ones in Intramuros. It was built not on the same spot where it used to stand up time and again, but in a place some seven kilometers from the old site. On October 10, 1954, on the occasion of the Church’s inaugural blessing, the Archdiocesan Marian Congress of Manila made the year’s La Naval procession its concluding act.


Stained glasses by Galo

The Congress proclaimed Sto. Domingo Church in Quezon City the National Shrine of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in the Philippines and the procession’s highlight was the translation of the venerated image from the chapel of the University of Sto. Tomas to its new shrine. The Most Reverend Rufino J. Cardinal Santos presided over the rites, assisted by notable persons of the Order of Preachers, the Philippine hierarchy and government officials. The Church was put under the care of Fr. Pedro Tejero, OP, the new convent’s prior.


Story of La Naval by Monti

THE EXTERIOR
The sixth Church is bigger in dimension than the last one in Intramuros. Despite its width of thirty (30) meters extending to fifty (50) at the transept, accommodating a standing capacity of 7,200 persons; there was no column at the center for support, and not a few considered this a feat in construction engineering pioneered by Mr. Alberto Guevarra.


Basrelief of St. Dominic by Monti

It followed the architectural style of Spanish colonial moderne as envisaged by Don Jose Zaragoza; the facade was decorated with pre-cast carvings showing an episode of La Naval de Manila at the belfry’s lower portion, crafted by Professor Francesco Monti, sculpture-mentor at the University of Santo Tomás’ Fine Arts Department. 

THE INTERIOR 
The interior of the Church had its own artwork as soul-stirring as it is majestic. Below the cupola were murals painted by Mr. Carlos “Botong” Francisco depicting different episodes in the life of St. Dominic and pre-fabricated sculptures of the Biblical figures of the four evangelists done by Professor Monti, above which were paintings of the evangelists in vivid brown tones crafted by Mr. Antonio Garcia Llamas. 

The Interior

Wherever one stays inside, stained glass windows painted by Mr. Galo Ocampo meet the eye. They portray the fifteen (15) mysteries of the rosary, Dominican holy men and women, and some highlights of the battle of La Naval.

THE BEGINNINGS OF THE NEW SHRINE 
When the Virgin was transferred in 1954, the construction work of the church was ongoing.



La Naval side altar

For this reason, the community Fathers deemed necessary to transfer the image to an improvised chapel, in the Sala de las Cofradias (Guild’s Hall), at the entrance of the interior cloister of the convent. That was the venue where the community gathered together to pray the Divine Office, the rosary and celebrate the morning masses. Large numbers of faithful came to this chapel to see the miraculous image closely and enjoy her sweet and merciful look.

When the construction was finally completed and the altar of the Virgin had been covered with marble brought from Italy, the image was transferred to its throne, located then at the right side looking towards the main altar. On the left side altar there was the beautiful and inspiring carving of the Cristo del Santo Entierro, a very popular confraternity in the church of Intramuros.

At this stage, the apostolate and pastoral activities started being organized. The schedule of masses was established, both on weekdays and on Sundays and Holydays of obligation.


The Cupola

The attendance to those Eucharistic celebrations was truly massive from the very beginning. The confessional boxes were approached by a large number of penitents coming from all over the Archipelago. The Third Order and the Confraternity of the Holy Rosary were re-established. Also the Holy Name Society, with its national headquarters. Another confraternity that was revived with powerful vitality was the one of the Santo Entierro y Virgen de la Soledad: Former members returned to the bosom of the Confraternity, which held annually with great solemnity of the Santo Entierro on Good Friday. It can be said that the apostolic activities of the church were, from the very beginning, intense and spearheaded for a promising future.


Photo by Estan Cabigas, official La Naval photographer

REFLECTION
The Church is now more than half a century old. Only time will tell if this sixth shrine will be the one that would claim the title as the perpetual and final home of La Naval and her Order of Preachers. Fires, Earthquakes and War never hindered the faith of the devotees. Like the proverbial phoenix, Santo Domingo Church always rises from its ashes.

STO. DOMINGO CHURCH TRIVIA



The Corridor of Sto. Domingo 

1. The first Sto.Domingo Church was made of wood, nipa and cogon grass. From the 16th century up to the present, there have been six constructions of the same church. The sixth Sto.Domingo Church in Quezon City is the largest and the only construction outside Intramuros. 

2. Sto. Domingo Church occupies a lot of four hectares, bounded by Quezon Avenue (front), Sto. Domingo Street (left side), Biak-na-Bato street (right side), and Pi y Margal (rear). It is 1.8 miles from the University of Sto. Tomas in Manila. 

3. Sto. Domingo Church is 58 meters in length; 30 meters in width at the entrance, increasing to 50 meters at the transept; and 44 meters in height. There are two lateral naves, each with a 5-meter width. 

4. Compared to the old (5th) neo-Gothic Church in Intramuros, Sto. Domingo Church in Quezon City is 13 ft longer; 18 feet wider; and 28 ft. higher. 

5. In spite of its width, there is no column at the center for support, a feat of the construction engineer. 

6. Sto. Domingo Church is the tallest of all churches in the Philippines. 

7. The total floor area of the church is 3,400 sq. meters with 7,200 person standing capacity. Actually, its sitting capacity is good for 2,000 persons. 

8. There are five aisles at the central nave and two more aisles at the transept, making a total of seven aisles. 

9. The architectural style utilized in the construct\ion of Sto. Domingo Church is called Spanish Colonial Moderne. 

10. There are three main doors across which murals are engraved. The murals depict the devotion to the Lady of the Most Holy Rosary in the Philippines. On the sides, there are 13 doors. 

11. All in all, there are 15 huge stained-glass windows. Five on the right side show the five joyful mysteries; seven on the left side illustrates five sorrowful mysteries and two glorious mysteries, and the three in the façade depict the three other glorious mysteries. These stained-glass windows were done by Galo Ocampo. 

12. Eight smaller windows (3 meters wide by 9 meters long) are above the copula. These windows have colored murals showing the important incidents in the life of St. Dominic. The murals were painted by Carlos Francisco. 

13. On the corners of the copula are the figures of the four evangelists. The pre-fab ornaments used in these figures were prepared by noted sculptor Monti. 

14. Another series of windows have the pictures of the leading saints of the Order of Preachers., like St. Vicente Liem de la Paz, Dominican martyrs of Indo-China, Japan and China. 

15. The Sto. Domingo Church has natural ventilation. Its white plywood ceilings are perforated so that the warm air escapes through these louvers placed between double roofings, and fresh air comes in through the wide doors to replace it. 

16. Contrasted against the white ceilings are the colored tiles from Belgium and Spain. 

17. Inside the Church, there are 2,000 forty watt fluorescent lamps which is not visible. The device used is indirect lighting system. 

18. The dome is illuminated by 1,000 watt floodlight. Neon lights at the cove above the altar brighten the place during mass. 

19. All lights are operated by the switches in the sacristy which were regarded as high-tech during the 1950’s. 

20. When any bulb gets out of order, it can be changed without the use of a ladder. One has to repair it by climbing to the ceiling which was purposely constructed to meet such eventualities. 

21. At night, the huge cross atop the main door and the smaller crosses on its sides are lighted, illuminating brightly the church façade. 

22. There are 4 bells which are not functioning. They were made from the bells of the old Sto. Domingo Church that were melted and refashioned for the purpose. The original bells were made in the Philippines during the 19th century. 

23. The altar of the Sto. Domingo Church in QC is simpler than the old sto. Domingo Church. There are only the mosaic, the altar table, the tabernacle and chandeliers. 

24. The church has three altars characterized by utmost simplicity. Right altar has a niche for the Lady of the Most Holy Rosary; the center altar has a huge mosaic of St. Dominic and the left altar has the shrine of St, Martin de Porres. The Church is both the National Shrines of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary and St. Martin. 

25. In front of the two side altars are elevated rostrums for the priests. Passage to the right rostrum is through a helicoidal steel stairway behind a hollow column. The left rostrum is reached through a convent passageway. 

26. The huge mosaic of St. Dominic, central altarpiece, (at the lower part of the 44 feet tower) has a surface pattern made of natural color stones imported from Italy. 

27. A master clock used to echoes forth Westminster chimes every quarter hour. It was electrically operated. These chimes were used to be heard within the radius of 2 miles because of the 4 trumpet type loudspeaker attached to the tower. 

28. Sto. Domingo Church is designed by architect Jose Zaragoza. Its construction is done by Engr. Alberto Guevarra of the Philippine Builders, Inc. 

Outline of Sto. Domingo by Fr. Louie Coronel, OP

Sources:
ADUARTE, Diego, OP, “History of the Dominican Province of the Holy Rosary (Manila, 1640) in the Philippine Islands: 1493-1803. Vol XXX eds. Emma Blair and James Alexander Robertson.

Boletin Eclesiastico de Filipinas Vol LXXX, No. 845 (November-December 2004)

Unpublished Notes on Santo Domingo Church, PDCIS Library.


Friday, December 1, 2017

The Mysteries behind the Alberto Ancestral Mansion in Biñan


When I was ordained priest in December 2007, many people would ask “Kanino kaya s’yang anak?” (Whose son might he be?). On my primera misa cantada (first sung mass), I met many distant relatives whom I never knew before. They say that many generations ago, the paternal side of my family, migrated from Guagua, Pampanga to Bulacan, my home province. Furthermore, they say that I am the only priest and religious from both sides of the family. And from then on, many have begun to trace my roots. That’s why, I am not surprised to know that until now, the roots of our national hero, Jose Rizal, matter for many Filipinos especially historians. It must’ve been an honor if one can trace one's roots and find out that Rizal is a distant relative! But would it be a disgrace to know that his family is not that perfect?

JOSÉ RIZAL'S ROOT

José Rizal himself described his maternal grandfather, Don Lorenzo Alberto Alonso, in a letter to his friend Ferdinand Blumentritt. He said that he was a deputy for the Philippines in the [Spanish] Cortes (Court), and that he was educated in Europe and spoke German, English, Spanish and French. He was honored as a Knight of the Order of Isabel la Catolica. And he generously aided the Dominican mission in Indo-China.

According to researches, he was married to a 12 y/o girl from Vigan named Paula Florentino but they never had a child. Ten years after, Brigida Querubin came into picture in Lorenzo's life. He was not married to Brigida making all her children with Lorenzo illegitimate.

Lorenzo and Brigida had 5 children, namely: Narcisa, Gregorio, Teodora (José Rizal's mother), Manuel and the youngest, José, to whom José Rizal was named after (and whose blood relation to the other siblings is in question).
Doña Teodora Alonso

The Rizals of Calamba are related to the Albertos of Biñan. Biographers agree that there is a blood relationship between the two families. However, they disagree on the exact nature of such relationship. José Alberto was argued to be either a brother or a half-brother of Teodora Alonso.
Don José Alberto
THE HOUSE IN BIÑAN

The wealthy maternal grandparents of José Rizal, Lorenzo and Brigida, had a mansion in Biñan. The two-storey ancestral home was built in the 1800's with a floor area of approximately 600 square meters. 


As a pre-novice in Calamba City in 1999, I have been to Biñan for countless times. I might have passed by the “Alberto Ancestral House” without even knowing its importance in history. The photo above shows Biñan in the 1950's. The Alberto House with the enclosed courtyard can be seen in the lower right, in front of the plaza (town square), at the very heart of the población (town center). 

The children of Lorenzo and Brigida grew up in this bahay na bato (stone house) which the descendants of José Alberto refuted. They say that Teodora Alonso did not stay in that house since José Alberto was just his half-brother. They did so in order to justify that the house has no connection with José Rizal. 

When José Rizal studied in Biñan at age 9, he did not even stay in this bahay na bato but in his aunt's. This shows that there might had been a tension with the family of Rizal and his uncle José Alberto.

Below is a documentary on this issue:

THEORIES ON THE INCIDENCES THAT HAPPENED INSIDE THE ALBERTO ANCESTRAL HOUSE
The following theories are based on the "i-Witness" documentary entitled "Ang Lihim ng Pamilya ni Rizal" (The Secret of Rizal's Family) which was aired in the Philippines on 31 January 2011 over GMA-7. The documentary was well-researched and balanced. It is, however, thought-provoking and leaves the mystery unresolved.

Theory 1: Teodora Formoso's unfaithfulness
José Alberto was married to Teodora Formoso. It is said that she had been unfaithful to José especially when he was out of the country. She had an affair with an officer of the civil guards. Upon knowing what had happened, José Alberto imprisoned Teodora Formoso inside their mansion.

Teodora Alonso came to the aid of her hurting brother, the bunso (youngest) in the family, even against the will of her husband, Francisco Mercado.

Theory 2: Teodora Alonso attempted to poison Teodora Formoso
One time, Teodora Alonso with her eldest, Saturnina, brought snacks for Teodora Formoso. Immediately, Teodora Formoso put the food on the floor and called her dog to eat it. The dog died instantly and she accused her sister-in-law of attempted murder. She suffered two years in jail as a consequence. A descendant of Teodora Alonso believed that this was a frame-up. For what reason? Let's see the third theory.

Theory 3: José Alberto had an affair with Saturnina
It is believed that José Alonso had a love child with her niece Saturnina. Soledad, the youngest child of Teodora Alonso and Francisco Mercado might had not been really their daughter but the daughter of Saturnina and José Alberto.

It was evident that Soledad was the prettiest according to eyewitnesses and different from her other siblings. It is important to note that José Alberto was a mestizo; and that Teodora and Saturnina once left their house and returned after some time with a baby that Teodora claimed her own. Would this be a reason for Teodora Formoso to frame up José Rizal's mother?

Theory 4: José Alberto is an illegitimate child but assumed to be legitimate
A theory has been presented by a cultural heritage advocate in the documentary above about the legitimacy of José Alberto. Prof. Santa Maria theorized that the children of Lorenzo and Brigida might had talked about the succession of the family's wealth after the death of their father, Lorenzo. José Alberto might have had stood as the legal heir, though he is their true blood brother, and as a consequence disowned his mother Brigida for the sake of the family. If this theory is plausible, then it would appear that Teodora Alonso, her other siblings and her own family were illegitimate (as claimed by the descendants of José Alberto).

Furthermore, José Rizal's writings in the Rizal section of the Ateneo de Manila University Library stated that Teodora Alonso and José Alberto really came from one set of parents.

EPILOGUE
Every family has its secrets, even the Rizals of Calamba, among the most important families in Philippine history. In the year that he died, 1896, José Rizal made his family tree. Interestingly, he left out the branches leading to his mother Teodora Alonso. Was he trying to hide something? Or are we just over-rationalizing a simple unfinished work?

The Alberto Ancestral House has been a mute witness to these mysteries. José Rizal's family might have a story of unfaithfulness, betrayal, children out of wedlock, incest, conspiracy, family quarrels, and attempted murder. Certainly, these have been shocking stories in the late 19th century and even today. But only the persons involved knew what really happened aside from the Almighty God. Unfortunately, they have all departed from our world.

Did Teodora Alonso try to poison her sister-in-law? Or did the latter frame up the former because of personal issue? Did Rizal’s sister, Saturnina, have an affair with her uncle? Was José Alberto really a half-brother of Teodora Alonso or not? Many speculations and opinions may arise but the truth is kept locked in the past.

A descendant of the Alonso clan said in an interview: "You don't have to come from a perfect family to become a hero." Come to think of it, does it matter if José Rizal’s family had a troublesome past? Will that make him less of a hero? I personally don’t think so. He was loved and protected by a family who inspired and influenced him. These theories, true or not, cannot reduce José Rizal from hero to zero.

Sources:

i-Witness, GMA Channel 7 News and Public Affairs

"Secrets locked in Alberto house about Rizal’s mother" by Ambeth Ocampo, Philippine Daily Inquirer, 06/13/2010

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