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Macario Sakay

Filipino general, merchant and revolutionary (–)

Further information: History of the Philippines (–)

In this Spanish mention, the first or paternal surname is Sakay and the second or maternal family name is de León.

His Excellency

Macario Sakay

General Macario Sakay in

In office
May 6, &#;– July 14,
Vice PresidentFrancisco Carreón
Born

Macario Sakay y de León


()March 1, [note 1]
Tondo, Manila, Captaincy General of the Philippines, Spanish Empire
DiedSeptember 13, () (aged&#;37)
Santa Cruz, Manila, Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, U.S.[3]
Political partyKatipunan
ProfessionRevolutionary
Merchant[3]

Macario Sakay y de León (March 1, – September 13, ) was a Filipino general who took part in the Philippine Revolution against the Spanish Empire and in the Philippine–American War.

After the war was declared over by the Merged States in , Sakay continued resistance by leading guerrilla raids. The following year he established the Tagalog Republic with himself as president.[4] Sakay was executed by hanging in

Early life

Macario Sakay de León was born on March 1, , along Tabora Street, Tondo, in the City of Manila.[5][6] He first worked as an apprentice in a kalesa (carriage) manufacturing shop.

He was also a tailor and a stage actor, carrying out in a number of plays including Principe Baldovino, Doce Pares de Francia, and Amante de la Corona.[6][5]

An original member of the Katipunan movement, which he joined in , he fought alongside Andrés Bonifacio against the Spanish throughout the Philippine Revolution.[6][page&#;needed] In , he continued the struggle for Philippine independence against the United States.

Early in the Philippine–American War, he was jailed for seditious activities, and later released as part of an amnesty.[7]

After the war

Sakay was one of the founders of the Partido Nacionalista (unrelated to the present Nacionalista Party founded in ), which sought to achieve Philippine independence through legal means.

The party appealed to the Philippine Commission, but the Commission passed the Sedition Regulation, which prohibited any form of propaganda advocating independence.[8][9] Sakay took up arms again.[6]

After the capture of Aguinaldo

Contrary to popular creed, the Philippine resistance to American rule did not end with the capture of General Emilio Aguinaldo.[10] Several[which?] forces remained at large, including one led by Sakay.[11] Sakay's rank and association within Aguinaldo's Revolutionary Government is unknown.

When Aguinaldo surrendered to the US, Sakay seized the leadership of the revolution and declared himself Supreme President of the Tagalog Republic. He said this included all the islands of the Philippines from Luzon to Mindanao.

Taking over the Morong–Nueva Ecija command and assigning his deputies to take bill of the other Tagalog regions, Sakay wrote a constitution in which traitors, or supporters of the enemy, were to be punished with exile, imprisonment, or death.

In May , Sakay and his men declared reveal resistance to the US and conducted guerrilla raids that lasted for five years.[12]

Tagalog Republic

Further information: Tagalog Republic

Around , Sakay established the Tagalog Republic somewhere in the mountains of Rizal.

His first military circulars and presidential orders as "President and Commander-in-Chief" were issued in [6][page&#;needed] Sakay's military circular No. 1 was dated May 5, , and his Presidential Order No.

1 was dated March 18, [6][page&#;needed]

Military organization

In Sakay's military circular No. 7, dated June 19, , the government of the Tagalog Republic (called the "Republic of the Philippines") affirmed the formation of an organized army.

The army units were composed of Kabohans (eight soldiers, equivalent to a squad), Camilleros (nine soldiers), Companias ( soldiers, equivalent to a company, and Batalions ( soldiers, equivalent to battalion).[6][page&#;needed] However, in Sakay's Second Manifesto, dated April 5, , it said the exact number of soldiers in the army could not be ascertained.

There are insufficient documents to provide a basis for historians to speculate on the size of the Republic's army, but these demonstrate that Sakay's army existed and that it was led by officers appointed and commissioned by Sakay himself.[6][page&#;needed]

In Sakay's presidential order No.

2, dated May 8, , the government, in search of sources of weapons to move out its struggle against the Americans, said that it was willing to confer military rank on citizens who could change over firearms to the Presidential Office or any of the headquarters under its command.

Ranks would be conferred by the following schedule: 10 to 15 firearms, rank of lieutenant; 16 to 25 firearms, captain; 26 to 36 firearms, major; 40 to 50 firearms, colonel.[6][page&#;needed] In Sakay's military order No.

5, dated May 25, , the government assigned the following tint codes for the divisions of its army: artillery (red), infantry (light blue), cavalry (dark blue), engineering (dark brown), chief-of-staff (dark green), sanitary (yellow), and marines (gray).[6][page&#;needed]

Planned kidnapping

According to General Leon Villafuerte, his, Carreon's and Sakay's forces planned to kidnap Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, who was planning to visit the Philippines.

The plan was to trade her to the Americans in exchange for the immediate recognition of Philippine independence.

With the execution of Macario Sakay on September 13, in , his death closed the book on the Republika ng Katagalugan Government and marked the end to the Katipunan armed struggle for Kalayaan; but on the other hand, it gained way and allowed for the Philippine Congress to be born.

The kidnapping was not attempted since Longworth postponed her trip by prepare to Baguio.[6][page&#;needed]

Surrender and betrayal

In , Filipino labour leader Dominador Gómez was authorised by Governor-General Henry Clay Ide to negotiate for the surrender of Sakay and his men.

Gómez met with Sakay at his camp and argued that the establishment of a national assembly was existence held up by Sakay's intransigence, and that its establishment would be the first step toward Filipino independence. Sakay agreed to end his resistance on the condition that a general amnesty be granted to his men, that they be permitted to carry firearms, and that he and his officers be permitted to leave the country.

Gómez assured Sakay that these conditions would be acceptable to the Americans, and Sakay's emissary, General León Villafuerte, obtained agreement to them from the American Governor-General.[6][page&#;needed]

Sakay believed that the struggle had shifted to constitutional means, and that the establishment of the assembly was a means to win independence.

As a product, he surrendered on July 14, , descending from the mountains on the promise of an amnesty for him and his officials, and the formation of a Philippine Assembly composed of Filipinos that would serve as the "gate of freedom".[13] With Villafuerte, Sakay travelled to Manila, where they were welcomed and invited to receptions and banquets.

One invitation came from the Constabulary Chief, American Colonel Harry H. Bandholtz, to a party in Cavite hosted by the acting governor Colonel Louis J. Van Schaick on July 17; it was a trap. Sakay and his principal lieutenants were disarmed and arrested while the party was in progress.[14][15]

[16]

At his trial, Sakay was accused of bandolerismo "under the Brigandage Behave of Nov.

12, , which interpreted all acts of armed resistance to American rule as banditry." The American colonial Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the decision.[17][self-published source?] Sakay was convicted and sentenced to death, and hanged on September 13,

Before his death, he made the following statement:

Death comes to all of us sooner or later, so I will face the LORD Almighty calmly.

But I want to say you that we are not bandits and robbers, as the Americans have accused us, but members of the revolutionary coerce that defended our mother region, the Philippines! Farewell! Long survive the Republic and may our independence be born in the future!

Long live the Philippines![18][19]

He was buried at Manila North Cemetery later that day.[3]

Legacy

  • A life-sized statue of Sakay was unveiled at the Plaza Morga in Tondo, by the Manila Historical Heritage Commission on September 13, , the st anniversary of his death.[20] That same month, the Senate adopted two separate resolutions honouring Sakay's life and his fellow freedom fighters for their contribution to the produce of independence.[21][22]
  • Camp General Macario Sakay in Los Baños, Laguna was named after the general in January , when Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff Gen.

    Hernando Iriberri issued General Order No. 30, switching the camp's name from Camp Eldridge, a name the camp had been given during the American occupation a century prior.[23]

In popular culture

See also

Notes

  1. ^Some sources claim that Macario Sakay was born in [1][2] However, as his death certificate recorded his age as 29 at his period of death in ,[3] this article uses as his birth date.

References

  1. ^Guillermo, A.R.

    (). Historical Dictionary of the Philippines. Asian/Oceanian historical dictionaries. Scarecrow Press. p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  2. ^Duka, C.D. (). Struggle for Freedom' Ed. Rex Book Store.

    Ladrone, Tulisan, Bandolero, Brigand, Bandit, Outlaw were all names used to define Philippine criminals in the early s. Since the preliminary American colonization of the Philippines for decades Filipinos allowed themselves to be brainwashed by the American victors in to thinking these men were also enemies to the Filipino people. Through the Bandolero Act, patriotic armed struggles for independence were deemed by the American colonial government as dishonorable criminal activities. Macario Sakay would be regarded as the greatest outlaw of them all.

    p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  3. ^ abcdMacario Sakay's Death Certificate
  4. ^Orlino A. Ochosa (). Bandoleros: Outlawed Guerrillas of the Philippine–American War, –.

    New Night Publishers. pp.&#;55, 95– ISBN&#;.

  5. ^ abAbad, Antonio K. ().

    Did you know that even after the fall of the Spanish colonial government inthe fight for genuine Filipino independence was far from over? The American Colonial Period — brought new challenges, and figures like Macario Sakay remain as poignant reminders of the complex struggle for national self. We all know the textbook version of history, but sometimes, the most compelling stories be situated in the shadows. Macario Sakayoften relegated to a footnote in Philippine history, embodies the fierce spirit of resistance that burned bright even after the official end of the Philippine Revolution.

    General Macario L. Sakay, the Only President of the "Tagalog Republic": Was He a Bandit Or a Patriot?. J. B. Feliciano. p.&#;4. Retrieved August 19,

  6. ^ abcdefghijklKabigting Abad, Antonio ().

    General Macario L. Sakay: Was He a Bandit or a Patriot?. J. B. Feliciano and Sons Printers-Publishers.

  7. ^C. Duka (). Struggle for Freedom' Ed. Rex Bookstore, Inc. pp.&#; ISBN&#;.
  8. ^"The Period of Suppressed Nationalism: Act No.

    or the Sedition Law". .

    Media in category "Macario Sakay" The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. Macario × ; 22 KB.

    March 4,

  9. ^United States Philippine Commission. Law against treason, sedition, etc. (Act No. )Archived August 10, , at the Wayback Machine. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office,
  10. ^Marquez, Elizabeth G. My Country and My People 6.

    Search the history of over billion web pages on the Internet. Capture a web page as it appears now for use as a trusted citation in the future. Uploaded by pharchive on July 10, Hamburger icon An icon used to represent a menu that can be toggled by interacting with this icon.

    Rex Bookstore, Inc. p.&#; ISBN&#;. Retrieved August 19,

  11. ^Roces, Alfredo R. (). Filipino Heritage: The American colonial period (–). Lahing Pilipino Pub.&#;; [Manila]. p.&#; Retrieved August 19,
  12. ^Roces, Alfredo R.

    ().

    IN PHOTOS: New exhibit in UP honors murdered Filipino heroes: Macario Sakay y de León (March 1, – September 13, ) was a Filipino general who took part in the Philippine Revolution against the Spanish Empire and in the Philippine–American War. After the war was declared over by the United States in , Sakay continued resistance by leading guerrilla raids.

    Filipino Heritage: The American colonial period (–). Lahing Pilipino Pub.&#;; [Manila]. p.&#; Retrieved August 19,

  13. ^McCoy, Alfred W. (). Philippine Cartoons: Political Caricature of the American Era, .

    Vera-Reyes. p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  14. ^Renato Constantino (). The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Renato Constantino. p.&#; ISBN&#;.
  15. ^Dante G. Guevarra (). History of the Philippine Labor Movement.

    Rex Bookstore, Inc. pp.&#; ISBN&#;.

  16. ^Torres,
  17. ^Dumimdin, Arnaldo. "The Last Holdouts: General Vicente Lukban falls, Feb. 18, ". Philippine–American War.
  18. ^Constantino, Renato ().

    The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Renato Constantino. p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  19. ^Pomeroy, William J. (). The Philippines: Colonialism, Collaboration, and Resistance. International Publishers Co.

    p.&#; ISBN&#;.

  20. ^Carmen Guerrero Nakpil, The mark of Sakay: The vilified hero of our war with America, The Philippine Star, September 8,
  21. ^Resolution No. Archived June 11, , at the Wayback Machine, Philippine Senate
  22. ^Resolution No.

    Archived June 11, , at the Wayback Machine, Philippine Senate

  23. ^Farolan, Ramon J. Farolan. "AFP deed rectifies historical injustice". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved October 23,
  24. ^"Why Did Sakay Wear His Hair Long?".

    After the war was declared over by the Together States inSakay continued resistance by leading guerrilla raids. The obeying year he established the Tagalog Republic with himself as president. He was also a tailor and a stage actor, acting in a number of plays including Principe BaldovinoDoce Pares de Franciaand Amante de la Corona. Early in the Philippine—American Warhe was jailed for seditious activities, and later released as part of an amnesty.

    National Historical Commission of the Philippines. Retrieved October 21,

  25. ^"Tanghalang Pilipino: Personality Portraits - Montalan, Sakay/Bonifacio, Carreon". Archived from the original on February 26, Retrieved September 4,

External links