JessicaRulestheUniverse.com

Personal blog of Jessica Zafra, author of The Collected Stories and the Twisted series
Subscribe

Archive for the ‘History’

Nakiki-culture, or Why are we having Thanksgiving dinner in Manila?

November 24, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Food, History 9 Comments →

Us: Why are people having Thanksgiving dinner in Manila?* Did their ancestors arrive on the Mayflower? Did they give the natives smallpox blankets? (That came later though)

Noel: Hahahaha! Because if the Mayflower never arrived, we would never have been colonized. And we would never have discovered Hollywood.

Us: So we celebrate the colonization of our colonizer?

Noel: Mismo! We are that grateful.

Us: Nakiki-colonize, nakiki-genocide…

Noel: That’s it! We’re always nakiki-something.

Us: Nakiki-culture!

Noel: Kurak! In films, nakiki-edgy. In music, nakiki-hip-hop.

Us: We have a theory.

* Unless they are American or grew up in America or didn’t get the memo about Philippine independence or working for American companies so they get the day off or running restaurants patronized by Americans.

Our national hero wrote a lot of books…for a nation that doesn’t read him.

November 07, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Art, History, Places 8 Comments →

Although we had the world’s most useless portable GPS (places of interest: Shopwise, Jollibee…) our trip from Makati to Pinto Art Museum in Antipolo took just half an hour in the light holiday traffic. After a good lunch at the Pinto Cafe (run by Bizu, have the evil chocolate souffle), we visited the permanent collections and then the Ciento Cincuenta exhibition celebrating the 150th birthday of our national hero, Jose Rizal.

We especially liked this piece by Leo Abaya: Di kailangang madaling maupos ang kandilang maliwanag ang apoy (The candle with the bright flame need not burn out quickly). Yes it’s a candle the height of a short man, with a bowler on top.


Sculpture by Daniel de la Cruz

Mixed media thingummy by Mark Justiniani

The humidity was off the charts so we fled into the car (air-conditioning) before we dissolved completely. As long as we were in Antipolo we decided to look for suman. We drove around town for half an hour but did not spot a single suman vendor. However we found lots of chicken-to-go stands and siopawan, and what we could only assume was a gay bar near the capitol. As the gay bar was still closed at 2.30 pm, we had ice cream instead. The McDonald’s in Antipolo is the nicest we’ve ever been in, much nicer than the ones in Makati.

We got back just in time for Ambeth’s talk on Rizal: History and Re-presentation. Ambeth gives the most fascinating lectures—he ropes you in with historical chismis and trivia, and before you know it you’re poring through the archives to satisfy your curiosity. (In a previous Rizal talk I had learned that Andres Bonifacio, the action man, was a stick figure while Jose Rizal, the nerd, was quite fit from doing weights.)


Ambeth opened his talk with photos of Rizal monuments, including this arresting tableau in Catbalogan: naked men hoisting a bust of the national hero.

We learned, among other things, that there are many fake photographs of Rizal’s execution at Bagumbayan. To check if the photo is authentic, look for the dog Isagani, mascot of the firing squad. Bagumbayan used to be killing fields during the Spanish colonial regime—on Sundays crowds gathered to watch executions. If you woke up late you could still drop by after lunch: the corpses were on view till 2pm.

Ambeth showed us archival photos of criminals being garroted. He quoted Teodoro Agoncillo’s statement that Philippine history really begins in 1872 with the execution by garrote of the priests Gomez, Burgos and Zamora. Before that there was only Spanish history. Ambeth noted that when Gomburza were executed Rizal was a child of 11 and Bonifacio, Mabini, Jacinto, Aguinaldo, Luna, del Pilar were all below the age of 10.

Gomez, Burgos and Zamora were buried in Paco Cemetery. At one point cemetery management had attempted to build a ladies’ lavatory on top of their graves.


After the Spanish era Bagumbayan the killing fields became Luneta/Rizal Park. A town in Germany presented the Philippines with a drinking fountain from which Rizal had drunk. It’s in Luneta to this day, but nobody knows what it is.

Rizal’s mortal remains are in the crypt under the Rizal monument—all except one of his vertebrae, which is in a reliquary at Fort Santiago. Rizal family tradition holds that it was chipped by a bullet from the firing squad. A DNA test would determine if it really is Rizal and not, say, a lechon.

There are many pictures of Rizal’s mom Teodora Alonzo with his skull. In fact there are many pictures of Jose Rizal, who always knew he would be famous. There are only two of his brother Paciano: one in his casket when he could hardly protest, and one in front of what appears to be a table but is really the ass of a 200-pound aunt diverting his attention from the camera.

Ambeth also talked about the competition to design the Rizal monument. It was won by a Swiss sculptor named Kissling, who had also designed a monument for William Tell, whose legend Rizal had translated into Tagalog. Rizal also translated five of Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tales, including Ang pangit na sisiw ng pato.

The manuscript of El Filibusterismo was stolen from the National Archives in the 1960s and held hostage for Php500,000. This was bargained down to Php5,000. The thief was the janitor, who claimed that he’d read Rizal’s manuscript with tears in his eyes. Probably because he could not read Spanish.

If the Noli and Fili manuscripts fell out of the sky and landed on our lap we could not read them. Thanks to knee-jerk nationalism we never learned Spanish and are effectively cut off from the work of our national hero.

Long weekend to-do list

November 05, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Art, Books, History, Movies, Places, Television 9 Comments →

1. Watch three seasons of Breaking Bad.

Said to be the best American TV series since The Wire. Just finished the first season. It’s not as Shakespeare as The Wire and not as ambitious, but we love a very black comedy. Funnily enough it is referred to as a drama. Breaking Bad is about a man who only starts living when he finds out he is dying. Why are the best TV series about drugs? The hero of this one is a man who cooks shabu. We watch him go from a good law-abiding citizen to a…he’s not quite bad yet, but we can see where he’s headed. This series has given us a new respect for the periodic table.

2. Read The Known World by Edward P. Jones, who is coming to Manila next week. The Pulitzer-winning novelist will give talks at several schools. He will also be a panelist at the Manila International Literary Festival of the Unfortunate Acronym.

3. Buy the wine for the 5th anniversary party on Thursday November 10.

So now you have a real reason to go.

4. Watch Michael Fassbender as Rochester in Jane Eyre.

We never cared for Jane Eyre, but if anyone can make us it is he.

5. Pick up the Reading Group copies of The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes, which arrived yesterday.

6. View the group exhibition Ciento Cincuenta at Pinto Art Museum in Antipolo.

7. Attend Ambeth Ocampo’s talk on Jose Rizal on Sunday, 3pm at Pinto Art Museum.

When it happened

September 11, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: History, Places 7 Comments →

We’ve been keeping a journal since we were 12. Mercifully the earliest notebooks have been lost, but the ones from age 16 onwards are around to remind us of how stupid we used to be (Not that we can claim any great improvement since then). Journals help us make sense of our lives. Life does not unspool like a movie with a clear narrative, it happens in bewildering chunks that have no apparent connection to each other until you recount them to yourself.

It is exactly ten years today since two commercial airplanes were hijacked and crashed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York. We remember trying and failing to process the sight of the planes slamming into the towers, the towers crumbling, the ash shrouding lower Manhattan. It was the end of that world as we knew it.

Just before impact we were carrying on with our daily lives. Noel and Bess were having a drink at Flute, a bar that no longer exists. Jon was skipping chemistry class. I had woken up ravenous from jet lag, eaten a big Chinese dinner, and was withdrawing cash from an ATM in Greenhills.

The next minute everything changed.


Small, tough, precise: History as netsuke

August 28, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Art, Books, History 2 Comments →

My column in the Star today.

Photos from the author’s website, www.edmunddewaal.com.

Netsuke are Japanese ornaments no bigger than a matchbox, finely detailed, light but tough, carved in wood and ivory. Their subjects are wide-ranging and unexpected. Animals, of course: a brindled wolf, a ruffled dragon leaning on a rock, a stag scratching its ear with a hind leg. People caught in mid-movement: two acrobats tumbling, a cooper making a barrel, a woman bathing in a tub. Still objects: a medlar fruit ripe to the point of deliquescence, a bundle of kindling tied with a rope. So much care and effort invested on a very small thing that will be used as a toggle on a cloth bag, or suspended from the sash of a kimono. They are so easily lost, left in the pocket of a jacket that gets sent to the dry-cleaners, thrown away with a crumpled receipt. These objects, so losable, are all that remain of a vast fortune.

But this is not one of those tales of bygone eras and lost glamour. What could’ve been another foray into the nostalgia industry was averted when the netsuke fell into the hands of a potter. For who would understand more fully how things are made, handled and handed on than someone who makes things?
(more…)

Jose Rizal, international nerd

June 11, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: History, Places No Comments →

Last month in London I was visiting the British Library when I recalled a historical factoid: Jose Rizal had hung out there.

Not sure it was the same building though; this one looks new.
(more…)