Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day

Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day (Spanish: Día de la Amistad Hispano-Filipina Filipino: Araw ng Pagkakaibigang Pilipino-Espanyol) celebrates the strong links between the Republic of the Philippines and the Kingdom of Spain every June 30. It commemorates the day when General Emilio Aguinaldo, president of the First Philippine Republic, issued a decree requiring the last Spanish soldiers who had been besieged for almost a year inside Baler's church be treated not as enemies and prisoners of war, but as friends. It also ordered that they receive the necessary permission for their return to Spain.

right España y Filipinas, 1886 oil on canvas painting by Juan Luna

Senator Edgardo Angara, the Friendship Day's main sponsor, described this occasion as, "a glorious day for both countries because the Siege of Baler brought heroes and victory for both parties."[1] Today, it symbolizes the great friendship between both countries.

Background edit

The Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day Bill was passed on July 22, 2002, and Republic Act No. 9187 was approved on February 5, 2003—both as means to strengthen the relationship between two nations that share history, values and traditions.

Republic Act No. 9187 states:

June 30 is a day when President Emilio Aguinaldo commended the besieged Spanish soldiers in the Church of Baler for their loyalty and gallantry. To mark this momentous occasion, there is a need to declare said day a national holiday to remember the act of benevolence which has paved the way in bridging better relations between Philippines and Spain.

The 30th of June of each year is hereby declared as Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day to commemorate the cultural and historical ties, friendship and cooperation between the Philippines and Spain. It is hereby declared as a national special working holiday and a special non-working holiday in Aurora Province.[2]

Siege of Baler edit

Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day relates to Siege of Baler. A group of Spanish soldiers garrisoned inside the town church in Baler, Aurora and defended the Spanish flag from July 1, 1898, to June 2, 1899—without knowing that Spain had already give its principal colony in Asia independence on December 10, 1898, by signing of the Treaty of Paris.

Heroism and stubbornness let the 33 soldiers, commanded by Captain Enrique de las Morenas y Fossí and Lieutenant Saturnino Martín y Cerezo, not only to survive, but to earn the respect of the revolutionary army of the Malolos Republic, whose safe return to Spain was ordered by General Emilio Aguinaldo. This group of soldiers came to be known as Los últimos de Filipinas (The last ones of the Philippines).

The Siege of Baler was led by Revolutionary Colonel Simon Ocampo Tecson of San Miguel, Bulacan, the field commanding officer - List of Filipino Generals in the Philippine Revolution of 1896 and the Filipino-American War of 1899.

Celebration in the Philippines edit

Bilateral relations between the Kingdom of Spain and the Republic of the Philippines had been steadily improving since the formal establishment of Sovereign Tagalog Nation in 1896, Republic of Biak-na-Bato in 1897, Cantonal Republic of Negros in 1898 and Malolos Republic and Republic of Zamboanga in 1899. The Republic of the Philippines and the Kingdom of Spain have renewed their 1947 Treaty of Friendship, expanding it to a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in the year 2000.[3] On June 30, 2003, the first celebration of Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day took place in the Philippine town of Baler, Aurora Province, with Senator Edgardo Angara as host. Guests for this first event were, among others, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (one of the directors of Philippine Academy of the Spanish Language) and the head of Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional (Spanish International Cooperation Agency), Dr. Rafael Rodríguez-Ponga Salamanca, the special representative for this occasion, who read an official message from H.M. the King of Spain. It is also celebrated yearly in the town of San Miguel, Bulacan in the house of Simon Tecson - Tecson House. It is the same house where the first Philippine Constitution was ratified with Emilio Aguinaldo.

Since 2003, this celebration has acquired more and more relevance and has kept growing in terms of the amount of activities and projects, which have been organised in different locations:

YEAR CELEBRATION HOST OTHER VENUES THEME
2003
1st
Region IIIBaler Region III – Malolos Amistad Duradera (Enduring Friendship)
2004
2nd
Region III – Malolos Amistad Duradera
2005
3rd
Region VIIloilo City Amistad Duradera
2006
4th
Region IXZamboanga City Amistad Duradera
2007
5th
Region III – Baler Region IVigan, Region VIIBohol, Region IX – Zamboanga City, and NCRManila[4] Amistad Duradera: Mga Larangan ng Pagtatagpo[4]
2008
6th
Region III – Baler[5] Amistad Duradera
2009
7th
Region III – Baler[6] Amistad Duradera
2010
8th
Region III – Baler[7]
2011
9th
Region III – Baler[8] Manila galleon

Celebration in Spain edit

Since 2006, Philippine–Spanish Friendship Day has been simultaneously celebrated and organised in different locations of Spain such as Madrid, Barcelona, Palencia and Almonte in Huelva.[9] In Madrid, several institutions such as the Philippine Embassy and the Asociación Cultural Galeón de Manila celebrate this Friendship Day since 2009.

Today, many titles of nobility were named after Philippine areas. These were created for Spaniards with the exception of the Mayorazgo de Mariquina which was created for the Tuasons. Among them are:

Also, many Filipinos held Spanish titles by marriage such as:

  • Victoria Gonzalez y Quirino, granddaughter of former Philippine President Elpidio Quirino was married to Manuel Alvarez de Toledo, 5th Duke of Zaragoza. Her daughters with the Duke, Victoria, Maria and Lucia, also hold titles.
  • Isabela Gonzalez y Ferrer viuda de Ynchausti, was Marchioness of Viademonte and matriarch of the once powerful and entrepreneurial Ynchausti clan.
  • Isabel Preysler descended from the Marquesses of Altamira and the Marquesses of Las Salinas. She is the mother of Enrique Iglesias and who was once Marchioness of Griñón. Her daughter, Tamara Isabel Falco y Presyler, succeeded her father to inherit the title of Marquess of Griñón.
  • Sylvia Landahl y Hagedorn was married to Alvaro Moreno, the 8th Count of Los Andes and 13th Marquess of La Eliseda.[10]
  • Margarita Zobel de Ayala was Countess of Peracamps (her husband Antonio Melian descended from General Juan Van Halen of Barcelona and was owner of El Hogar Filipino and its headquarters in Binondo/ Santa Cruz Manila area). Her direct descendant is the current count, now based in Peru, Pedro Melian y Ugarte.

There are Filipinos who are descended or are related to noble families in Spain such as:

  • Don Pedro Govantes was a politician just like his uncle, the Prime Minister of Spain Marcelo de Azcárraga y Palmero of Cuba and Escolta, Manila, whose very own mother Maria Versosa Palmero Lizarrabal of Albay was related to the Count of Lizarraga. Calle Azcarraga also known as Paseo de Azcarraga was once the name of Quiapo's major thoroughfare, Claro M. Recto Boulevard. His wife's family, the Fesser-Diago, owned all the sugar rail lines around Havana (El Ferrocaril de la Bahia de la Habana / Las Lineas de La Regla y Matanzas)), and stored more than a third of Cuba's legendary sugar (Almacenes de Azucar de La Habana), plus lots of azucareras and a gigantic bank, Banco y Casa de Seguros de Fesser. Their daughter, Margarita de Trenor, was the first Marqchioness of Turia, a title still held by his direct descendant, Don Tomas Trenor, of Valencia, the present Marquess. A son of Prime Minister Azcarraga, Carlos, was active in Spanish politics. Both the Govantes and Azcarraga families descended from Maria Versosa Palmero Lizarrabal of Albay. Another relative, Felipe Maria de Govantes, was a writer and historian like Don Pedro.
  • A Zobel descendant, Jaime Juan Urquijo y Zobel de Ayala, is a grandson of Juan Urquijo Chacon and related to the Marquess of Urquijo. The Urquijo family once owned Banco Urquijo and held high positions in Tabacalera.
  • The immensely patriotic, military and entrepreneurial Pardo de Tavera family was perhaps the most powerful Filipino-Spanish family as their ancestor Juan Pardo de Tavera was Inquisitor General of Spain and the right hand of his Majesty King Philip II of Spain himself. They were descended from Guiomar Pardo de Tavera, the Marchioness of Malagón and Countess of El Alcazar de Toledo, titles now held by the Dukes of Medinaceli, because the Loinaz-Pardo de Taveras, while senior in the line of succession, refused to succeed as they did not want to lose their Filipino citizenship being very prominent supporters of the Philippine Revolution almost 150 years ago, before the Philippines and Spain enacted dual citizenship treaties that are enforced today.

The current Queen of Spain Letizia's maternal grandmother Enriqueta Rodriguez Figarredo's father was born in the Philippines, and while being of unmixed Spanish extraction, is also considered a Filipino for having been born in Manila during the time when the term Filipino referred exclusively to Spaniards born in the archipelago; hence, insulares.

YEAR CELEBRATION HOST
2006
1st
Castile and LeónPalencia[11]

Celebration in other countries edit

YEAR CITY AND COUNTRY
2003 Tel Aviv, Israel[12]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Baler recuerda a los 'últimos de Filipinas' en Día Amistad Hispano-filipina" [Baler remembers the "Last ones of the Philippines" in Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day] (in Spanish). Spain: Terra Noticias (noticias.terra.es). June 30, 2007. Archived from the original on October 7, 2011. Retrieved July 20, 2010.
  2. ^ Congress of the Philippines (2003). "Republic Act No. 9187: An Act declaring June 30 of the year as Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day, appropriating funds therefor and for other purposes" (PDF). Metro Manila, Philippines. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 4, 2011. Retrieved July 17, 2010.
  3. ^ Rómulo, Alberto (June 30, 2005). "Remarks of the Honorable Alberto G. Rómulo, Secretary of Foreign Affairs, on the occasion of the Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day". Baler, Philippines: Department of Foreign Affairs (dfa.gov.ph). Archived from the original on July 17, 2005. Retrieved July 20, 2010. The Philippines and Spain have renewed their 1947 Treaty of Friendship, expanding it to a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation in the year 2000.
  4. ^ a b Lapus, Jesli (June 19, 2007). "Department of Education Memorandum No. 243, s. 2007: Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day" (PDF). Philippines: Department of Education (deped.gov.ph). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 8, 2012. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  5. ^ "Baler Hosts 6th Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day". Manila, Philippines: Senate of the Philippines 14th Congress (senate.gov.ph). June 30, 2008. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  6. ^ Lee, M.a Glaiza (August 29, 2009). "Courage and honor in the face of adversaries". Manila, Philippines: Manila Bulletin. Archived from the original on February 26, 2010. Retrieved July 22, 2010.
  7. ^ "Philippine Spanish Friendship Day". National Historical Commission of the Philippines. June 24, 2010. Retrieved November 24, 2011.
  8. ^ "9th Philippine Spanish Friendship Day Successfully Held in Baler". Senate of the Philippines. June 30, 2011. Retrieved November 24, 2011.
  9. ^ Angara, Edgardo (June 24, 2010). "On the celebration of the 8th Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day". Manila, Philippines: Senate of the Philippines 14th Congress (senate.gov.ph). Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2010. and in Spain in Madrid, Barcelona, Palencia, Almonte in Huelva
  10. ^ "Álvaro Moreno de Arteaga". geneanet.org. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
  11. ^ Angara, Edgardo (July 2, 2006). "Of friends and allies". Manila, Philippines: Manila Bulletin (mb.com.ph). Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved July 22, 2010.
  12. ^ "Snapshots". Philippines: Inquirer Global Nation (globalnation.inquirer.net). August 11, 2003. Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved July 22, 2010. Overseas Filipino workers celebrate Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day in Tel Aviv, Israel.

External links edit

Activities edit

Photos edit

Others edit