La Indolencia de los
Filipinos
CHAPTER 1: ADMITTING THE EXISTENCE OF INDOLENCE
SUMMARY :
Rizal admits
that indolence does exist among the Filipinos, but it cannot be attributed to
the troubles and backwardness of the country; rather it is the effect of the
backwardness and troubles experienced by the country. Past writings on
indolence revolve only on either denying or affirming, and never studying its
causes in depth. One must study the causes of indolence, Rizal says, before
curing it. He therefore enumerates the causes of indolence and elaborates on
the circumstances that have led to it. The hot climate, he points out, is a
reasonable predisposition for indolence. Filipinos cannot be compared to
Europeans, who live in cold countries and who must exert much more effort at
work. An hour ' s work under the Philippine sun, he says, is equivalent to a
day ' s work in temperate regions.
CHAPTER 2 INDOLENCE OF CHRONIC ILLNESS
Rizal
says that an illness will worsen if the wrong treatment is given. The same
applies to indolence. People, however, should not lose hope in fighting
indolence. Even before the Spaniards arrived, Rizal argues, the early Filipinos
were already carrying out trade within provinces and with other neighboring
countries; they were also engaged in agriculture and mining; some natives even
spoke Spanish. All this disproves the notion that Filipinos are by nature
indolent. Rizal ends by asking what then would have caused Filipinos to forget
their past.
CHAPTER 3: WARS, INSURRECTIONS, EXPEDITIONS AND INVASION
SUMMARY:
Rizal
enumerates several reasons that may have caused the Filipinos ' cultural and
economic decadence. The frequent wars, insurrections, and invasions have
brought disorder to the communities. Chaos has been widespread, and destruction
rampant. Many Filipinos have also been sent abroad to fight wars for Spain or
for expeditions. As a result, the population has decreased in number. As forced
labor, many men have been sent to shipyards to construct vessels. Meanwhile,
natives who have had enough of abuse have gone to the mountains. As a result,
the farms have been neglected. The so-called indolence of Filipinos definitely
has deeply rooted causes.
CHAPTER 4: DEATH OF TRADE IN THE PHILIPPINES
SUMMARY:
Filipinos,
according to Rizal, are not responsible for their misfortunes, as they are not
their own masters. The Spanish government has not encouraged labor and trade,
which ceased after the government treated the country ' s neighboring trade
partners with great suspicion. Trade has declined, furthermore, because of
pirate attacks and the many restrictions imposed by the government, which gives
no aid for crops and farmers. This and the abuse suffered under encomenderos
have caused many to abandon the fields. Businesses are monopolized by many
government officials, red tape and bribery operate on a wide scale, rampant
gambling is tolerated by the government. This situation is compounded by the
Church ' s wrong doctrine which holds that the rich will not go to heaven, thus
engendering a wrong attitude toward work. There has also been discrimination in
education against natives. These are some of the main reasons that Rizal cites
as causing the deterioration of values among the Filipinos.
CHAPTER 5: LIMITED TRAINING AND EDUCATION
SUMMARY:
According to Rizal, all the causes of indolence can be reduced to two
factors. The first factor is the limited training and education Filipino
natives receive. Segregated from Spaniards, Filipinos don't have same
opportunities with the foreigners. They are taught to be inferior. The second
factor is the lack of a national sentiment of unity among them because
Filipinos think they are inferior, they submit to the foreign culture and do
everything to imitate it. The solution, according to Rizal, would be education
and liberty. They should equip the Filipinos with enough knowledge in building
a nation and leading the country towards progress.
REACTION:
REACTION:
Indeed, Filipinos has this indolence attitude if we shift
the focus to the social context. Why do Filipinos hardly follow simple traffic
rules? Why do we pursue on arguments even though we know that it isn't right?
Why can't we fall in line in buying our favorite food?
I guess this is what
Rizal is trying to address to all of us. In order to attain progress in our
country, it should start in simple things before focusing on the complex ones.
It made me realized that I too should be responsible of my own actions and make
sure that those actions will benefit not only me as an individual but the
Filipino citizens in general.
This essay should be our guide to lead the
country to its full progress and promote common good to our fellow countrymen.
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento