RC - 1st Home Coming and 2nd Leaving
RC - 1st Home Coming and 2nd Leaving
(1887-1888)
Rizal’s plans of coming back home
• As early as 1884, Rizal wanted to go back to the Philippines for the following reasons:
1. Financial difficulties in Calamba
2. Dissatisfaction with his studies in Madrid
3. Desire to prove that there is no reason to fear going home.
4. His belief that the Spanish regime will not punish the innocent.
Rizal was determined to come back to the Philippines for the following reasons:
1. To operate his mother’s eyes
2. To serve his people who had long been oppressed by Spanish tyrants.
3. To find out for himself how the Noli Me Tangere and his other writings were affecting Filipinos and
Spaniards.
4. To inquire why Leonor Rivera remained silent.
Arrival in Manila
• Rizal left Rome by train to Marseilles, a French port and boarded Djemnah, the same steamer that
brought him to Europe five years ago.
• There were more than 50 passengers: 4 Englishmen, 2 Germans, 3 Chinese, 2 Japanese, 40
Frenchmen, and 1 Filipino (Rizal)
• When the ship reached Aden, the weather became rough and some of Rizal’s book got wet.
• In Saigon (Ho Chi Minh), Vietnam – he transferred to another steamer, Haiphong, that brought him to
Manila.
Happy Homecoming
• When Rizal arrived in Calamba, rumors spread that he was a:
German spy
An agent of Otto Von Bismarck – the liberator of Germany.
A Protestant
A Mason
A soul halfway to damnation
• Paciano – did not leave him during the first days after arrival to protect him from any enemy assault.
• Don Francisco – did not permit him to go out alone
In Calamba
• Rizal established a medical clinic.
• Doña Teodora – was Rizal’s first patient
• Rizal treated her eyes but could not perform any surgical operation because her cataracts were not yet
ripe.
• He painted several beautiful landscapes in Calamba.
• He translated German poems of Von Wildernath in Tagalog.
• Doctor Uliman – Rizal was called this name because he came from Germany.
He earned P900 in a few months and P5,000 before he left the Philippines.
• Gymnasium – was opened by Rizal for the young people
Friars Reaction
• Rizal’s exposure to the deplorable condition angered the friars.
• The friars exerted pressure to Malacañang to eliminate Rizal.
• They asked Gov. Gen. Terrero to deport Rizal but the latter refused for there is lack of charges against
Rizal in court.
• Anonymous threats in Rizal’s life alarmed his parents, siblings, Andrade his bodyguard, friends, and
even Terrero, thus they all advised him to leave the country.
Himno Al Trabajo
• A poem for Lipa – shortly before Rizal left in 1888, he was asked by a friend to write a poem in
commemoration of the town’s cityhood.
• Himno Al Trabajo (Hymn To Labor) – title of the poem dedicated to the industrious people of Lipa.
Farewell Philippines
• On February 3, 1888 Rizal left his country with a heavy heart.
• But this is for his own good and the safety of his family and friends.
• Hounded by powerful enemies, Rizal was forced to leave his country for the second time in 1888.
• He was 27 years old, a practicing physician, and a recognized man of letters.
Hong Kong
• A British colony
• Rizal stayed in Victoria Hotel
• According to Rizal in his letter to Blumentritt, is a small, but very clean city.
• Many Portuguese, Hindus, English, Chinese and Jews.
• There are some Filipinos exiled in Marianas Islands since 1872, they were former financiers and rich
but now poor, gentle and timid.
• He met Jose Maria Basa, Balbino Mauricio, and Manuel Yriarte (son of the alcalde mayor in Calamba)
• Jose Sainz de Varanda – A Spaniard and former secretary of Governor-General Terrero shadowed
Rizal’s movement in Hong Kong.
– It is believed that he was commissioned by the Spanish authorities to spy on Rizal.
Rizal in Japan
• The Land of the Cherry Blossoms
• Rizal left Hong Kong on board of the Oceanic, an American steamer on his way to Japan.
• He arrived in Yokohama, Japan and stayed for one day in Grand Hotel.
Rizal in Tokyo
• After spending a day in Yokohama, Rizal went to Tokyo and stayed in Tokyo Hotel for five days.
• Juan Perez Caballero – secretary of the Spanish legation visited him in the hotel inviting him to stay in
the Spanish legation.
• Knowing that it is a plot to monitor him, Rizal accepted the offer for the following reasons:
– He could economize his living expenses
– He had nothing to hide from the prying eyes of the Spanish authorities.
– He and Caballero became good friends.
Rickshaw
• a popular mode of transportation which he did not like in Japan.
O-Sei-San
• Was more than Rizal’s girlfriend for she was his guide, interpreter and tutor.
• She improved his knowledge of the Japanese language.
• She eases the pain left by Leonor Rivera.
• Rizal fell greatly in-love with O-Sei-San that he was tempted to leave the Philippines and settle down in
Japan.
• He was offered a job in the Spanish Legation
• Paciano – wrote to him reminding him of his duty and why he left the Philippines in the first place.
• Rizal left Japan via the ship Belgic, an English steamer in Yokohama bound for United States.
• It ended 45 days of his unforgettable stay in Japan and his relationship with O-Sei-San.
Rizal in USA
• Via the steamer Belgic, Rizal arrived in San Francisco, USA on April 28, 1888.
• Cholera
– Raging epidemic in the Far East according to the Americans
– All passengers are quarantined for safety
– Rizal was surprised because there is no outbreak of the disease in the Far East, thus he joined
other passengers in protest.
• 643 Chinese coolies boarded the ship
– the coolies from China were displacing white laborers in railroad construction camp.
• But Rizal was questioning how come 700 bolts of silk were unloaded without fumigation.
• After a week Rizal together with other first class passengers were permitted to land. But the Japanese
and the Chinese and passengers belonging to the second and thirds class remained aboard.
• Rizal stayed in Palace Hotel (then a first class hotel) in San Francisco
– He stayed there for two days
• Grover Cleveland was the president when Rizal visited the United States
• Leland Stanford – the founder and benefactor of the Stanford University was then a senator
representing California.