8 JUNE
1900 - Gen. Pio del Pilar, a controversial officer of the First Philippine Republic, is taken prisoner at Guadalupe, Rizal by imperialist United States forces during the bloody and protracted Filipino-American War (1899-1914); born in Makati, Rizal in 1865 to Isaac Isidro y del Pilar and Antonia Castaneda,
Pio del Pilar will infamously go down in history for betraying two
iconic Katipunan figures--Supreme President Andres Bonifacio y de Castro and Gen.
Artemio Ricarte y Garcia; during the Philippine Revolution against
Spain, Pio del Pilar was a signatory to the 1897 Naik Military Agreement that declared several Filipino revolutionaries (referring to but not naming the camp of Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy) as having committed treason against the nation and the revolution
by trying to forge a peace pact with the enemy Spanish colonial
forces; he will soon switched to Aguinaldo's side, even advising
that revolutionary President Bonifacio be executed following the Supremo's kangaroo court
martial; the general will later also betray Gen. Ricarte's attempt to reunite Filipino military generals and rekindle the fire of the Philippine Revolution, this time against the Bald Eagle invaders; he will initially refuse to swear allegiance to the enemy American flag and will be exiled along with
Ricarte, Apolinario Mabini and other leaders of the Aguinaldo's
Philippine Republic in 1901 but will relent and ultimately swear
allegiance to the enemy imperialist American flag, renouncing all forms of revolution in the country; Pio del Pilar will also be involved in the sudden disappearance of his custodial responsibility, Feliciano Jocson,
a Katipunan organizer who disapproved of Aguinaldo's Biak-na-Bato
truce with the Spaniards and plotted to attack Manila before being arrested and turned over to del Pilar but soon disappearing [read: salvaged].
Photo credit:
http://www.freewebs.com/philippineamericanwar/combatinmanilasuburbs.htm
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