The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 06 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 289 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 06 of 55.

The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 06 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 289 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 06 of 55.

The reason for calling the islands Western Filipinas. The name Filipinas Islands was given them in honor of his name.  The natives were wont to make captives and slaves with great readiness in illegal warfare, and for very slight causes.  This God remedied with the coming of our Spaniards.  It was usual for a man, with forty or fifty associates, or servants, to attack a village of poor people suddenly, when totally unprepared for such an assault, and, capturing them all, to make them slaves, without other cause or right; these they would keep as slaves for life, or sell them in other islands.  And should one loan one or two baskets of rice to another, of the value of one real, stipulating that it should be returned within ten days, should the debtor fail to pay it on the day set, on the next day he had to pay double, and the debt continued to double from day to day, until it grew so large that the debtor was forced to become a slave in order to pay it.  The Catholic Majesty, the king our sovereign, has ordered all those enslaved by this and similar means to be freed; but this just order has not been obeyed entirely, for those who should execute it have some interest therein.

All these islands were pagan and idolatrous.  They now contain many thousands of baptized persons, upon whom our Lord has had great mercy, sending them the remedy for their souls in so good season; for, had the Spaniards delayed a few years more, all the natives would now be Moors, for already some of that sect in the island of Burneo had gone to these islands to preach their faith, and already many were not far from the worship of the false prophet Mahoma.  But his perfidious memory was extirpated easily by the holy gospel of Christ.  In all these islands they worshiped the sun, moon, and other secondary causes, certain images of men and women called in their tongue Maganitos, feasts to whom—­very sumptuous and abounding in great ceremonies and superstitions—­were called Magaduras.  Among all of these idols they held one, by name Batala, in most veneration.  This reverence they held as a tradition; but they knew not why he was greater than the others, or why he merited more esteem.  In certain adjacent islands, called the Illocos, they worshiped the devil, offering him many sacrifices in payment and gratitude for the quantities of gold that he gave them.  Now, by the goodness of God, and by the great industry of the Augustinian fathers—­the first to go to those districts, and who have toiled and lived in a praiseworthy manner—­and by the Franciscan fathers, who went thither ten years after, all these islands, or the majority of them, have received baptism, and are enrolled under the banner of Jesus Christ.  Those yet outside the faith are so rather for lack of religious instruction and preachers, than by any repugnance of their own.  Last year the Jesuit fathers went thither, and they helped in the work with their wonted labor and zeal.  Now many more religious are going, very learned and apostolic men, of the Dominican order, who will work in that vineyard of the Lord with as great earnestness as they display wherever they go.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 06 of 55 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.