Summary

This document contains examples of political caricatures and editorial cartoons from the American Era in the Philippines. It features various cartoons depicting societal issues, political figures, and historical events, offering insights into social and political conditions of that time. The authors, Alfred McCoy and Alfredo Roces, provide context and analysis to the collected examples.

Full Transcript

2.9. Alfred McCoy and Alfredo Roces. Political Caricatures of the American Era (Editorial cartoons) A. Is the Police Force Bribed? (The Independent, June 09, 1917), p. 32. THIS CARTOON DEPICTS THE FIRST of Manila's periodic police scandals. In 1917 a mysterious informant name Ped...

2.9. Alfred McCoy and Alfredo Roces. Political Caricatures of the American Era (Editorial cartoons) A. Is the Police Force Bribed? (The Independent, June 09, 1917), p. 32. THIS CARTOON DEPICTS THE FIRST of Manila's periodic police scandals. In 1917 a mysterious informant name Pedro Chua wrote the Philippines Free Press alleging that senior police were accepting bribes from Chinese gambling houses in Binondo and Quiapo districts. Demonstrating the power of Manila's leading weekly newspaper, publication of Chua’s letter sparked allegations that led eventually to "the suicide of a police chief." After a series of sensational charges and counter charges, the Free Press finally withdrew its illegal allegations. Despite the free press retreat, Vicente Sotto's Independent insisted, in this editorial cartoon, that Chua charges were accurate. Such allegations of police corruption in gambling law enforcement were a constant theme in cartoons throughout the American period. Several times a year, cartoon showed the Manila Police protecting gambling clubs patronized the Filipino politicians , taking bribes from Chinese clubs or failing to break up the city's criminal gangs. The cartoonist, Fernando Amorsolo, gives the illustration his usual racist edge. While the corrupt Filipino policeman is sh own with normal features, the Chinese are caricatured as emaciated, leering creatures more rodent than human. Although Amorsolo was more extreme than most, cartoonists often showed Chinese corruptors or opium smugglers in a similarly racist manner. B. New Bird of Prey (The Independent, 17 january 1920), p. 34. As Manila’s population began to pilot upward during World War I, housing became scarce and rents escalated. Rising rent combined with high food prices to reduce the Manila working class in sudden poverty. Eventually the protests reached Malacanang Palace and Governor-General Francis B. Harrison made a tentative move towards reform. In a letter to the Director General of the Civil Service, the Governor denounced "the rapacious demands of the landlords" he suggested passage of a bill which set rents at 12 percent of assessed value of the property. Although the Independent's cartoon depicts Harrison as a hero, his suggested reform was hardly heroic. Despite the stern rhetoric, which obviously appealed to the paper's penchant for hyperbole, Harrison’s suggested reform was little more than a temporary palliative. A more fundamental reform would have required allocation of government revenues for public housing construction, something that liberal governor Harrison never considered. Although collected from all Filipinos, government taxes were used to rewards the Filipino elite for their loyalty, not to advance the mass. Lucrative government appointments went to educated children of the elite, and infrastructure development profited planters and merchants who used the highways and the waterfronts. With exception of public education, the mass had little access to any of the new government programs or services. Believers in the ideology of the free market, colonial American loath to intervene as food and rent speculators pushed the mass to the breaking point. In the end the marketplace resolved the food crisis when world market cereal prices crashed in the early 1920's. The cartoon's caption "New Bird of Prey" is an allusion to the most famous libel case in the history of Philippine journalism. In 1908 the nationalist weekly El Renacimiento published an editorial titled Aves de Rapina (Birds of Prey) which attacked the Philippines commission's secretary of the interior, Dean C. Worcester, for abusing his office to exploit the country. Worcester sued for libel and, two years later, won a judgment of P60,000 against El Renacimiento, a colossal sum that forced closure of the paper and sale of its assets. C. While the Priest Lives Alone in a Big Building (The Independent 1 May 1920), p. 35. Like many nationalist of his day, Vicente Sotto, the publisher of The Independent, never missed a chance to attack the Catholic Church. The editorial below this cartoon urged the government to confiscate the large priests’ residence attached to SantaCruz parish church. The people should not be made to share the painful congestion of Plaza Goiti and Plaza Santa Cruz while a single priest sit midst a sprawling residence. The question of Church property was a particularly sensitive one for nationalists In 1906 the Philippine Supreme Court had ruled that the Roman Catholic Church was the legal owner of all disputed properties, thus stripping the nationalistic Aglipayan Church of the parish churches it had occupied right after the revolution. Following this decision, the Aglipayan Church went into decline and nationalists remained embittered over the issue. The church originally acquired the land shown in this cartoon during the mid-19th century from Alejandro Roces, whose descendants became publishers of the Manila Times. While Sta. Cruz church parish still stands, the controversial parish house became a branch of Phil Trust, a church owned bank. D. Where The Mosquito Is King, Donde El Mosquito Es Rey (Free Press, 16 April 1921), p. 36. Built on a swamp and ringed with streams and ponds Manila is natural breeding ground for malarial mosquitos. During the 19th century, Spanish public health procedures were grossly inadequate to the imperatives of Manila's site, and the Americans found the city of cesspool of ill health when they occupied it in 1898. With their experience in tropical health gained in the Caribbean, Americans made major advances in epidemic disease control during the first decades of their rule. Through an arbitrary application of public health regulations, the Board of Health brought tropical disease -- malaria, smallpox, cholera and plague -- under control. During the cholera epidemic of 1902-04, for example, 4,386 people died in Manila, a mild toll compared to previous outbreaks in the late 19 th century. Subsequent outbreaks in 1905-06 were contained and by 1911 the disease had been eradicated. During the same period, construction of sewers and sanitary waterworks combined with an activist public health program made the conquest of malaria in Manila a colonial success story. The Board of Health distributed millions of doses of quinine and eliminated mosquito breeding grounds by filling up the standing water hole, such as the moats around Intramuros, or spraying them with petroleum. Houses near swampy sites were relocated and the low ground filled. By 1920, however, the Board of Health was resting on its laurels and the quality of mosquito control was slipping dangerously. Under Governor-General Francis B Harrison's "Filipinization" prrogram, the Board of Health had been turned over to Filipino civil servants who did not administer the public health programs with the same efficiency or arbitrary authority, with bitter irony, the Philippines Free Press editorial commented: "What ho! Manila, the Pearl of the Orient, the best governed city in the Far East,… The new found Garden of Eden …What’s happened to this city anyway? Aforetime a mosquito was almost as rare as the dodo …But now there are mosquitos everywhere. Their name is legion. Vampires they are, turning our former delectable and ambrosial nights into hells of torment and nightmares of unrest. What’s going to be done about it? How long is our municipal board going to emulate Rip Van Winkle...?” E. “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” “Libertad, Igualdad, Fraternidad” ((Philippines Free Press, Feb. 12, 1921), p. 41. The Philippine Assembly passed a law authorizing all legislators, active or retired, to bear firearms. The Manila press was outraged, but the legislators ignored the opposition and promulgated the law over the screams of protest. In its mocking editorial of February 1921 the Free Press commented: "Now, with our legislatorS and officialS able to strut around with a gun or two guns strapped about their manly waists, they will have to be respected. Now there will be no question as to who is running this show, no affront to their personal dignity, no danger of being threated just like ordinary people… "It matters not that of late the director of Constabulary has been urging greater and greater restrictions of the license to carry arms… All that matters…is that the official have a chance to show that he is somebody and must be respected." F. The Returning Student – El Estudiante Vuelve (Philippine Free Press, April 6, 1929), p. 99. When Manila emerged as the national center for university education during the 1920s, the annual March ritual of the city-wise student returning home to his village was played out in barrios across the archipelago. Although graduation and tertiary degree often allowed a villager to leave the barrio for a city civil service post, while still a student he had to return to the village for summer holidays. Having survived the shock of transition from country to city, he could now return home, urbane and smartly dressed, to reap the reward of administration and envy. The Free Press description of this annual ritual in 1929 captures something of its flavor: “These are the days of the returning student -- the days when he comes into his own. Behold him as he struts along Main Street of his little town or barrio, the cynosure of all eyes, the observed of all observers, a king In his own right, a sort of collegiate Caesar. The arbiter elegantiarum, also, he is. Does he not come from the great city, with all the latest there is in dress and fashion? His clothes are studied, his shoes are studied, his hat and how he wears it-- everything about him becomes the object of emulation and envy. Even his manner of walking, of carrying himself, are studied and aped. “Is it any wonder that, under the incense of such flattery, he feels himself a superior being, a conquering hero? Nor let us blame him. For after all the student, like the rest of us, is human, and all of us expand in an atmosphere of homage and hero-worship. Nor do student days and these joyful homecomings last for ever. All too soon comes the stern battle of life with its trials and sorrows and tribulations. So, carpe diem, and be joyful while we may.” G. Brothers Under The Skin – Hermanos En El Fondo (Philippines Free Press, June 18, 1938) p. 106. As social conflict and socialist ideology spread in Central Luzon during the 1930s the Free Press was forced to deal with social substance instead of bucolic trivia in its provincial reportage. Brothers Under the Skin urges Filipinos, in the name of Rizal whose birthday was following day, to end social conflict and deal with each other fairly. As the Depression worsened, Central Luzon peasants mounted strikes and demonstrations to win tenancy reforms. Refusing concessions, landlords in Pampanga, Tarlac, and Nueva Ecija provinces responded with goon squad repression. H. The Loyalty of the Filipinos (The Independent, 14 April 1917), p. 181. World War I sparked an outburst of pro-American loyalty among Filipinos and transformed Uncle Sam’s media image. The prewar cartoons of 1907-08 showed him as a satanic monster, drawn in Caucasian caricature with great nose, fanged teeth and crooked smile. These three cartoons from war and post war issues of the nationalist newspaper The Independent, by contrast, show him as a figure worthy of Filipino love and respect. The Loyalty of the Filipinos (below) was published on 14 April 1917, only ten days after the U.S Congress declared war on Germany and America entered the conflict. The artist Fernando Amorsolo draws a wise, handsome Uncle Sam leading little Juan, loyal and smiling, on the road to war. Accurately gauging America’s mood, House speaker Sergio Osmeña won unprecedented political concessions by suspending the independence campaign for the duration and offering the United States 25,000 troops, a destroyer and a submarine. Despite the country’s poverty, Osmeña orchestrated a nationwide loyalty drive which netted $20 million in U.S. war bond sales and $500.000 in Red Cross donations. I. The Latest—Lo Ultimo (Philippines Free Press, October 14, 1933) p. 217. Throughout 1933 the battle over acceptance or rejection of the Hare-Hawes-Cutting independence bill continued to divide Philippine politics. After Senator Osmeña and Speaker Roxas successfully lobbied the U.S. Congress for its passage in 1932, Senator Quezon, fearing loss of leadership if his two rivals returned home heroes, led the battle for rejection. When all three leaders returned from Washington in June 1933, the struggle for power began in earnest. In July Quezon’s faction ousted Manuel Roxas as House Speaker and installed loyalist Quintin Paredes. When the University of the Philippines’ President Rafael Palma and Arts Dean Maximo Kalaw supported Osmeña and the H-H-C Quezon slashed the university budget by one third. Both resigned and Quezon installed a protégé, Law Dean Jorge Bocobo, as president. When the Roces family’s Times Vanguardia-Taliba chain came out for Osmeña and the H-H-C Bill, Quezon raised ₱300,000 among his cronies to buy out Vicente Madrigal’s Debate-Mabuhay-Herald chain and install protégé Carlos P. Romulo as editor in chief…. Through ruthless reprisals against opponents, Quezon gradually broke the opposition. As in The Latest (above), the Philippine Legislature, now under his control, voted to reject the H-H-C Bill in October 1933. It could have been a fatal victory. For unless Quezon accomplished the near impossible and return from Washington with a better bill, he would be rejected by a people angry at being denied their independence. In November Quezon led a new mission to Washington and returned five months later with the same bill by a different name, just in time to crush his rivals in the June 1934 legislative elections. As hero of the independence battles, Quezon’s leadership for the rest of the decade was assured.

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