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- While he admired America's progress and opportunities, he was critical of the lack of true liberty and civil rights, especially for blacks, Chinese, Japanese, and Native Americans. Rizal saw America as a land of freedom but only for white people.
www.slideshare.net/slideshow/rizal-in-america/16080301
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Jun 16, 2021 · G lobe-trotting national hero Jose Rizal did not appreciate being quarantined in San Francisco for six days by U.S. Customs and Immigration. He also witnessed discrimination and, consequently, did not get a good impression of America when he visited in April 28 to May 6, 1888.
Jul 21, 2021 · That was how Dr. George Aseniero, eminent Filipino historian and authority on Rizal, began his brilliant paper, “The Game of Great Powers: Rizal on Imperialism.” The Spanish-American War was not fought in Spain nor in the United States but in Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines.
Jan 12, 2024 · Following the revolution, Rizal was made a saint by many religious cults while the United States authorities seized on his non-violent stance and emphasized his views on Filipino nationalism rather than those of the more action-oriented Emilio Aguinaldo and Andrés Bonifacio.
While it is true that the early American colonial regime encouraged Rizal’s historiographical canonization, it is also true that Josd Rizal was deeply influenced by America, and that the American influence played a signhcant role in Rizal’s conceptualization of Filipino nationalism.
- Sharon Delmendo
Rizal, like the rest of the reformists in Spain, was for assimilation, and that, true to his bourgeois character, he repudiated the revolu-tion. This was certainly not how Rizal was seen by his contemporar-ies. For example, Galicano Apacible, Rizal's cousin and fellow-expatriate, writes:
Sep 17, 2024 · José Rizal, a revered Filipino nationalist and prolific writer, fearlessly fought for his country’s independence through his literary works that inspired a revolution against Spanish colonial rule.
Demonstrating a profound grasp of politics, Rizal conveyed both hopes and concerns for his people's future state. The analysis considers Rizal's reform proposals and assesses the accuracy of his prediction that foreigners could intervene if tensions rose.