Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
kay Rizal ng kaniyang ina, ang tungkol sa gamugamo ang nag-iwan ng alaalang
hindi makatkat sa kanyang isipan. Sa murang edad ang naitanim ang pagiging
martir ng batang gamugamo na hindi inalintana ang kamatayan masunod
lamang ang pangarap na makita ang liwanag.
on a night when her mother was teaching him how to reada book entitled El Amigos
de los Nios.(ang kaibigan ng mga bata)His mother grew impatient of his poor
reading and lack of focusand always straying his eyes on the flame of the lamp and
thecheerful moths surrounding it. Knowing his interest to stories hismother decided
to stop teaching him and instead read him aninteresting story
From the story of the moth and the flame, he realized thesweetness of dying in
search of the light. Rizal came to realizethat one has to sacrifice and to suffer the
consequences of onesaction for the attainment of a goal.
injustices was thearrest and the imprisonment of his mother due to the
allegedcomplicity in the attempted murder of his uncles wife
GOMBURZA is an acronym denoting the surnames of the priests Mariano Gomez,
Jos Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora, three Filipino priests who were executed on 17
February 1872 at Luneta Park in Bagumbayan, Philippines by Spanish colonial
authorities on charges of subversion arising from the 1872 Cavite mutiny. The
martyrdom of the three priests apparently helped to inspire the organization of the
Propaganda Movement, which aimed to seek reforms and inform Spain of the
abuses of its colonial government. Of the three priests, the first to be executed was
Mariano Gomez, who was born in Santa Cruz, Manila on August 2, 1799. He studied
at the University of Santo Tomas, and served as parish priest in Bacoor, Cavite,
where he was well-loved by his parishioners. The oldest of the three martyrs, he
was calm and resigned to his fate. It is said that as he walked to the scaffold his
eyeglasses fell, and his famous last words are often quoted: "Let us go where the
leaves never move without the will of God."Jacinto Zamora, who was next in line to
be executed, was born in Pandacan on August 14, 1835. At the time of his death
he was working for a doctorate in canon law at the University of Santo Tomas. In
1860 he headed a small student protest which resulted in his being confined to his
quarters for two months. However, that bit of juvenile subversion did not affect his
serving in parishes in Marikina, Pasig, and Lipa. He was later connected with the
Manila Cathedral, where he served as an examiner for new priests. Jose Burgos was
the last victim that morning. He had just turned 35 when he died, having been
born on February 9, 1837 in Vigan, Ilocos Sur. He was the most distinguished
among the three, having earned two doctorates one in theology and another in
canon law. He was a prolific writer (although some of the writings attributed to him