12 OCTOBER
|
Jose Abad Santos |
1911 - Future Filipino Chief Justice under colonial American Occupation and World War II martyr Jose B. Abad Santos
passes the Bar exams, enabling him to be promoted as court
interpreter and, later, assistant attorney, government bank counsel, a
technical adviser to the first Parliamentary Independence mission to
the colonial master, United States; Justice undersecretary; Justice
Secretary; and Philippine Bar Association head before becoming High
Court Chief Justice; Abad Santos, a pensionado sent by imperialist
Americans to study in California, United States, chose to be executed
rather than cooperate with the Japanese during World War II because he
could not bear to "live in shame" as a traitor to the Bald Eagle nation and the Philippines
1886 - Filipino patriot and polymath Jose Mercado Rizal sends his brother Paciano a Tagalog translation of the Swiss legend Wilhelm Tell,
the story of a folk hero and expert marksman who assassinates the
tyrannical Gessler; in the same letter, Rizal writes about his wish to
introduce a slight modification of Tagalog orthography and, as well, mentions how much it would cost to print Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me Not), his novel critical of the frailocracy and the Spanish colonial administration.
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