"The Dinner" A Reflection Paper: in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements in The Subject GE1804 Rizal's Life and Works
"The Dinner" A Reflection Paper: in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements in The Subject GE1804 Rizal's Life and Works
"The Dinner" A Reflection Paper: in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements in The Subject GE1804 Rizal's Life and Works
“THE DINNER”
A REFLECTION PAPER
To be Submitted to
Submitted by
Everyone makes their way to the dinner table to find a seat. Padre Damaso and Sibyla offer each
other the head seat at the far end of the table, pretending kindness. Ibarra shares stories of his travels
overseas, revealing that he has visited several countries and has mastered a variety of languages and
cultures. When Ibarra is offered the meatiest section of the tinola, he knows the feast was made in his
honor (A well-known Filipino dish). This enrages Padre Damaso even more, and the padre begins to
mock Ibarra with arrogant and harsh remarks. Ibarra merely maintains his temper. Ibarra rises up to
depart after a time. Kapitan Tiago stops him and tells him that the love of his life, Maria Clara, would be
arriving shortly. Ibarra, on the other hand, departs, promising to return the next day. Padre Damaso's
remarks to Ibarra reveal the Spaniards' disapproval with teaching Filipino youths outside of the country in
Father Sibyla and Father Dámaso, the containing the chicken's most unappealing parts.
about his education in Europe. He claims that he "and despite the passage of time, it means
has been absent for seven years and that he has nothing to him." I appreciate his reminding me
never heard news from the Philippines of the times when he came to our house and
throughout that period. "I still have no idea how frequently graced my father's table with his
or when my father passed away!" "he declares. presence." Ibarra then declares that he must
The visitors quickly shift the conversation to depart. He lifts his glass and declares, "I offer
something else, finally asking him "what left the you Spain and the Philippines!" before exiting.
biggest effect" on him while he was gone. He "Everyone does what they are told. The
reminds them that "a people's success or lieutenant, on the other hand, drinks but does not
Despite his want to inform Father would return the next day before departing for
Dámaso that he must have already had too much San Diego. In his absence, the dinner attendees
to drink, Ibarra maintains his cool in reaction to discuss Ibarra's controversial encounter with
his impolite statement. Instead, he tells the other Father Dámaso. A foreign young man with
dinner guests that he isn't bothered by the friar's blond hair chastises Filipinos like Ibarra for
words since he has known him for a long time showing an unwillingness to be reprimanded by
and the two enjoy a lighthearted relationship that their priests. Similarly, a class-conscious woman
allows them to say such things. "This is how dad named Doña Victorina criticizes the lieutenant
behind his back for frowning the entire night. He also dismisses education in general, framing
Later that evening, the young blond man writes it as something that's not worth going out of
about the party in his journal: “In the current one's way to obtain. Dámaso attacks Ibarra's
state of things, not allowing [Filipinos] to leave hard work while also disparaging the ways by
the country—or even teaching them to read— which Ibarra has gained the respect of his
"freedoms," given that, as a powerful Spanish and repression of the Filipino people, notably
friar in a colonized land, he's uninterested in through the friars. Rizal's works were
legislative. Rizal exposes the friars' predatory powerful than the Governor-judgments,
tendencies and how they used Catholicism to General's social concerns, injustice, and the
make Filipinos complacent. Rizal contends that Philippines as a backward country. The issues in
the friars and the government failed to provide the novel continue to impact our society and our
Filipinos with the education they required to country, and we must study and read Noli Me
advocate for themselves. While the Filipino Tangere. The novel's prominent conflicts, such
elite, including Ibarra, Don Filipo, and others, as corruption, injustice, poverty, and abuse,
fight for their political rights on a local level, continue to be an issue to this day.
Furthermore, the most egregious and never-to- 33: Freedom of Thought." LitCharts. LitCharts
be-forgotten misuse of authority in order to LLC, 9 Nov 2017. Web. 23 Nov 2020.
the Philippines during Spanish colonialism, such Tangere and El Filibusterismo alongside
Filipino American Fiction" (2016).