The Gallery V inside the National Museum (Manila, Philippines) and Fort Santiago (Intramuros, Manila). These places feature some of the Jose Rizal's legacy.
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This photo represents the significant events in Jose Rizal's life in chronological order. You can see this upon entering the Rizal Shrine in Fort Santiago.
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Dr. Jose Rizal in Spain together with his Filipino friends like Marcelo H. del Pilar (Photo taken in Rizal Shrine)
“You will remember that, walking on the Pascode Recoletos … I told you: "Watch out, for some fine day we shall wake up quarrelling without knowing why." You laughed at my witticism and so did I … that occurred to me without reason as a vague presentment.”– Marcelo H. Del Pilar’s letter to Jose Rizal (July 20, 1892)
Rizal first met Marcelo H. Del Pilar and Mariano Ponce when he (Rizal) visited his compatriots in Madrid and Barcelona on December 1888. Rizal promised to actively help in the fight for reforms.
Our national hero finished his two novels in Europe (the Noli Me Tangere at El Filibusterismo)
One of the reasons he went back home is to cure his mother's eye ailment.
Jose Rizal and Josephine Bracken in Dapitan.The time when he was exiled there. (Photo taken in National Museum)
When Dr. Jose Rizal was exiled in Dapitan, Zamboanga, he made use of his artistic talent to create a piece that would symbolize the martyrdom and the exploitation of the Indios by the colonizers (Mother's Revenge, can be seen in Philippine's National Museum)
He was detained in Fort Santiago before his trial. This photo was taken in Rizal Shrine at his prison cell.
The trial of Jose Rizal in Cuartel de España.
He was executed in Bagumbayan (now Luneta) as a result of his trial on December 30, 1896 and officially dead at 7:03 AM (Photo taken in Rizal Shrine, Fort Santiago)
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