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Papa Isio

Dionisio Seguela Alternate name(s): Papa Isio Place of birth: Negros Occidental, PhilippinesPlace of death: Manila, PhilippinesMajor organizations: babaylanes

Dionisio Seguela or Dionisio Papa y Barlucia, more widely known as Papa Isio (Hiligaynon, Isio the Pope), was the leader of a group of babaylanes (shaman) who were, as conjectured by Modesto P. Sa-onoy, recruited from the remnants of the followers of Dios Buhawi upon the dissolution of his group under the poor leadership of Camartin de la Cruz during the years prior to the onset of the Philippine Revolution.[1]

Contents

Early life

Seguela was the son of migrants from Panay, either Antique or San Joaquin, Iloilo, who cleared a small piece of land in the forests of Himamaylan. In his younger years, Papa Isio witnessed the loss of their small landholding to the marauding sugar barons of Negros. His family then moved to Payao in Binalbagan. When his parents died, Seguela gathered coconut sap to make native coconut wine in order to make ends meet. He later reportedly worked for the family of Carlos Gemora in Ilog. By 1880, he was 34 years old and was working as a cattle herder in the farm of the Montilla family in Tinungan. It was here that Seguela had a scuffle with a spaniard and his opponent was wounded. Fearing reprisal from the Spanish authorities, Seguela fled to the mountains at the time that Dios Buhawi was leading his revolt. He may have joined this group as a means of avoiding the civil guards.[2]

Revolution

According to Sa-onoy, Seguela's nom de guerre, Papa Isio, was partly dictated by the religious thrust of his revolt against Spain and the Catholic religion it championed. The title "Papa" was a repudiation of the Pope's (Santo Papa) authority - which Seguela then appropriated upon himself. This particular group of babaylanes were organized by Seguela in 1896 in Himamaylan, Negros Occidental.[3]

Fusing religion with agrarian reform and nationalism, Papa Isio called for the removal of non-Malays from Negros and the division of the land among the natives. It is contended that Papa Isio responded to the Philippine Revolution which was began in August 1896 by Andrés Bonifacio. The group of babaylanes was said to have adopted "¡Viva Rizal!" (Spanish, "Long Live Rizal!"), "¡Viva Filipinas Libre" (Spanish, "Long Live a free Philippines!") and "Kamatayon sa Katsila" (Hiligaynon, "Death to Spaniards!") as their battle cries.[2]

While Filipino revolutionary General Miguel Malvar, widely acknowledged to be the last leader of the Philippine Revolution to surrender to the Americans, actually capitulated on April 16, 1902, Papa Isio gave up his struggle very much later - on August 6, 1907. Finally cornered by government forces, Papa Isio surrendered to an American officer, Lieutenant J. S. Mohler.[4] At first, he was sentenced to death, but the punishment was later mitigated to life imprisonment. Papa Isio died in the Old Bilibid Prison in Manila in 1911.[5]

In popular media

  • Filipino author Eric Gamalinda based his novel My Sad Republic loosely on the person of Papa Isio.[6]
  • The Kanlaon Theater and Dance Company, the student theater and dance group of Colegio San Agustin-Bacolod, staged Papa Isio... Tingog Sang Kadam-an (Hiligaynon, "Papa Isio, Voice of the Masses"), a musical based on the life of Papa Isio, during the Second National Theater Festival hosted by the Cultural Center of the Philippines in February, 1996.[7]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Calma, Ma. Cecilia C. and Concepcion, Diana R.: The Revolution in Negros., Raison D'Etre, University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos Research Planning and Development Office, Bacolod City, 1998
  2. ^ a b Modesto P. Sa-onoy (1992). Negros Occidental History. Today Printers and Publishers, 110-118. 
  3. ^ Cuesta, Angel Martinez, OAR: History of Negros., Historical Conservation Society, Manila, 1980
  4. ^ EP Dutton & Co.. "Jungle Patrol - Banditry", Bakbakan International, 2001. Retrieved on 2006-11-23
  5. ^ "Negros Revolution", www.cockatoo.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-23
  6. ^ Lumbera, Bienvenido L., The Country's Literary Produce for 2000, <http://www.ncca.gov.ph/about_cultarts/comarticles.php?artcl_Id=145>. Retrieved on 14 July 2007 
  7. ^ 2nd National Theater Festival, <http://www.msuiit.edu.ph/ipag/ntf.html>. Retrieved on 20 April 2008 


v • d • e  Philippine Revolution  Events Prelude: Gomburza · Tejeros Convention · Biyak-na-Bato Elections · Pact of Biak-na-Bato · Spanish-American War · Declaration of Independence · Malolos Congress · República Filipina · Katagalugan · Negros Revolution · Treaty of Paris · Philippine-American WarOrganizations Aglipayan Church · Katipunan · La Liga Filipina · La Solidaridad · Magdalo faction · Philippine Revolutionary ArmyObjects El Filibusterismo · Flags of the Philippine Revolution · Kartilya ng Katipunan · Lupang Hinirang · Mi último adiós · Noli Me Tangere · Flag of the Philippines · SpoliariumNotable people Gregorio Aglipay · Emilio Aguinaldo · Melchora Aquino · Juan Araneta · Andrés Bonifacio · Josephine Bracken · Dios Buhawi · Gregoria de Jesús · Gregorio del Pilar · Marcelo H. del Pilar · George Dewey · Papa Isio · Emilio Jacinto · León Kilat · Aniceto Lacson · Graciano López Jaena · Antonio Luna · Juan Luna · Apolinario Mabini · Miguel Malvar · Patricio Montojo · José Palma · Mariano Ponce · José Rizal · Macario Sakay · Gabriela Silang · Mariano Trias Categories: Philippine Revolution | Filipino religious leaders | Paramilitary Filipinos | People from Negros Occidental | 1911 deaths

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