Philippines The Friarocracy
Interior view of St. Augustine's Church, Manila, dating from
the late sixteenth century
Courtesy Robert L. Worden
The power of religious orders remained one of the great
constants, over the centuries, of Spanish colonial rule. Even in
the late nineteenth century, the friars of the Augustinian,
Dominican, and Franciscan orders conducted many of the executive
and control functions of government on the local level. They were
responsible for education and health measures, kept the census
and tax records, reported on the character and behavior of
individual villagers, supervised the selection of local police
and town officers, and were responsible for maintaining public
morals and reporting incidences of sedition to the authorities.
Contrary to the principles of the church, they allegedly used
information gained in confession to pinpoint troublemakers. Given
the minuscule number of Spanish living outside the capital even
in the nineteenth century, the friars were regarded as indispensable instruments of Spanish rule that contemporary critics
labeled a "friarocracy" (frialocracia).
Controversies over visitation and secularization were
persistent themes in Philippine church history. Visitation
involved the authority of the bishops of the church hierarchy to
inspect and discipline the religious orders, a principle laid
down in church law and practiced in most of the Catholic world.
The friars were successful in resisting the efforts of the
archbishop of Manila to impose visitation; consequently, they
operated without formal supervision except that of their own
provincials or regional superiors. Secularization meant the
replacement of the friars, who came exclusively from Spain, with
Filipino priests ordained by the local bishop. This movement,
again, was successfully resisted, as friars through the centuries
kept up the argument, often couched in crude racial terms, that
Filipino priests were too poorly qualified to take on parish
duties. Although church policy dictated that parishes of
countries converted to Christianity be relinquished by the
religious orders to indigenous diocesan priests, in 1870 only 181
out of 792 parishes in the islands had Filipino priests. The
national and racial dimensions of secularization meant that the
issue became linked with broader demands for political reform.
The economic position of the orders was secured by their
extensive landholdings, which generally had been donated to them
for the support of their churches, schools, and other
establishments. Given the general lack of interest on the part of
Spanish colonials--clustered in Manila and dependent on the
galleon trade--in developing agriculture, the religious orders
had become by the eighteenth century the largest landholders in
the islands, with their estates concentrated in the Central Luzon
region. Land rents--paid often by Chinese mestizo
inquilinos, who planted cash crops for export--provided
them with the sort of income that enabled many friars to live
like princes in palatial establishments.
Central to the friars' dominant position was their monopoly
of education at all levels and thus their control over cultural
and intellectual life. In 1863 the Spanish government decreed
that a system of free public primary education be established in
the islands, which could have been interpreted as a threat to
this monopoly. By 1867 there were 593 primary schools enrolling
138,990 students; by 1877 the numbers had grown to 1,608 schools
and 177,113 students; and in 1898 there were 2,150 schools and
over 200,000 students out of a total population of approximately
6 million. The friars, however, were given the responsibility of
supervising the system both on the local and the national levels.
The Jesuits were given control of the teacher-training colleges.
Except for the Jesuits, the religious orders were strongly
opposed to the teaching of modern foreign languages, including
Spanish, and scientific and technical subjects to the
indios (literally, Indians; the Spanish term for
Filipinos). In 1898 the University of Santo Tomás taught
essentially the same courses that it did in 1611, when it was
founded by the Dominicans, twenty-one years before Galileo was
brought before the Inquisition for publishing the idea that the
earth revolved around the sun.
The friarocracy seems to have had more than its share of
personal irregularities, and the priestly vow of chastity often
was honored in the breach. In the eyes of educated Filipino
priests and laymen, however, most inexcusable was the friars'
open attitude of contempt toward the people. By the late
nineteenth century, their attitude was one of blatant racism. In
the words of one friar, responding to the challenge of the
ilustrados, "the only liberty the Indians want is the
liberty of savages. Leave them to their cock-fighting and their
indolence, and they will thank you more than if you load them
down with old and new rights."
Apolinario de la Cruz, a
Tagalog (see Glossary)
who led the
1839-41 Cofradía de San José revolt, embodied the religious
aspirations and disappointments of the Filipinos. A pious
individual who sought to enter a religious order, he made
repeated applications that were turned down by the racially
conscious friars, and he was left with no alternative but to
become a humble lay brother performing menial tasks at a
charitable institution in Manila. While serving in that capacity,
he started the cofradía (confraternity or brotherhood), a
society to promote Roman Catholic devotion among Filipinos. From
1839 to 1840, Brother Apolinario sent representatives to his
native Tayabas, south of Laguna de Bay, to recruit members, and
the movement rapidly spread as cells were established throughout
the southern Tagalog area. Originally, it was apparently neither
anti-Spanish nor nativist in religious orientation, although
native elements were prevalent among its provincial followers.
Yet its emphasis on secrecy, the strong bond of loyalty its
members felt for Brother Apolinario, and, above all, the fact
that it barred Spanish and mestizos from membership aroused the
suspicions of the authorities. The cofradía was banned by
the authorities in 1840.
In the autumn of 1841 Brother Apolinario left Manila and
gathered his followers, then numbering several thousands armed
with rifles and bolos (heavy, single-bladed knives), at
bases in the villages around the town of Tayabas; as a spiritual
leader, he preached that God would deliver the Tagalog people
from slavery. Although the rebel force, aided by Negrito hill
tribesmen, was able to defeat a detachment led by the provincial
governor in late October, a much larger Spanish force composed of
soldiers from Pampanga Province--the elite of the Philippine
military establishment and traditional enemies of the
Tagalogs--took the cofradía camp at Alitao after a great
slaughter on November 1, 1841.
The insurrection effectively ended with the betrayal and
capture of Brother Apolinario. He was executed on November 5,
1841. Survivors of the movement became remontados (those
who go back into the mountains), leaving their villages to live
on the slopes of the volcanic Mount San Cristobal and Mount
Banahao, within sight of Alitao. These mountains, where no friar
ventured, became folk religious centers, places of pilgrimage for
lowland peasants, and the birthplace of religious communities
known as
colorums (see Glossary).
Data as of June 1991
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