| FANHS and NaFFAA Officers Continue to Distort Even American History, as They Show Total Incompetence on Filipino-American-Spanish History |
|
|
|
| Sections - History | |||
| Written by Bobby Reyes | |||
| Thursday, 29 September 2011 20:06 | |||
|
By Lolo Bobby M. Reyes S erious students of history are laughing at the continued exercise of plain stupidity and/or criminal ignorance by some supposed pillars of the community who belong to the Filipino-American National Historical Society (FANHS) and/or the National Federation of Filipino-American Associations (NaFFAA). These FANHS-NaFFAA people continue to distort historical data in their illogical, if not simple-minded, quest to attribute “historical feats” to the Filipino people. It was the venerable historian, Hector Santos of Los Angeles, California, who actually inspired this writer to launch a crusade in 1997 to expose the historical hoaxes, half-truths and/or outright lies being perpetrated by the FANHS hierarch of self-proclaimed historical “gurus” and their allies like my best friend in the Bay Area, Atty. Rodel Rodis. I have dubbed as “Hoaxbalahaps” Mr. Rodis and his FANHS-NaFFAA colleagues. This was after I resigned from the Philippine History Group of Los Angeles – after a disagreement with Mr. Santos – and joined the FANHS and then left in disgust the FANHS after several of its officers refused to explain to my satisfaction the questions raised by Mr. Santos over some dubious claims of the FANHS. Eventually, the PHGLA membership invited me back and I returned to it like a prodigal son. The use of “Hoaxbalahaps” has nothing to do with the “Hukbong Laban sa Hapon (Hukbalaha),” the famed Filipino freedom fighters during World War II. I said in several articles that I coined it in 1998 after my literary mentor, Poet-pundit Fred Burce Bunao (now deceased), asked if the (bogus) claim that a Filipino was a cofounder of the City of Los Angeles was actually started by NaFFAA cofounder (and now immediate past national chairman) Greg Macabenta. Mr. Bunao asked me, “Hoax na naman ba yan ni ‘Lagareng Hapon’?” Because almost all Filipino-American writers and media practitioners call Mr. Macabenta by his moniker, “Lagareng Hapon.” And so I was able to coin “Hoaxbalahap” by combining Hoax with “Lagareng Hapon.”
Today’s Filipino Americans are starved for recognition and will jump at any opportunity to find anything they can claim as historic . . . Filipinos have taken this claim-to-fame penchant a step farther into triviality when some reportedly convinced a historical group in Illinois more than half a century ago to install a plaque in a Chicago railway station because José Rizal passed through as he crossed the United States on his way to Europe. – Hector Santos, the PHGLA cofounder and chairman Did Philippine indios really land in Morro Bay? T he FANHS and the NaFFAA make it appear that Filipinos under the flag of “The first European to explore the coast as far north as the Russian River was the Portuguese João Rodrigues Cabrilho, in 1542, sailing for the Spanish Empire. Some 37 years later, the English explorer Francis Drake also explored and claimed an undefined portion of the Here is what Mr. Bunao and I called the “Tall Tale” column of Atty. Rodel Rodis. Telltale Signs/ FIRST FILIPINOS TO SET by Rodel Rodis A lmost a century after Christopher Columbus stumbled upon the In fact, de Unamuno’s historic voyage has been largely ignored by historians and is only commemorated by the Filipino American community and only because de Unamuno reported in his ship’s log that his crew was composed of “Luzon Indios”.
Atty. Rodis conveniently omitted the fact that the voyage commanded by De Unamuno carried also Japanese and Chinese passengers and crew members. This fact destroys the FANHS’ and the NaFFAA’s arguments that Filipinos were the first Asians to set foot in This historical fact was revealed in Henry R. Wagner’s Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America in the Sixteenth Century which was published by the California Historical Society in The Spanish interest in finding Over the next 20 years, Urdaneta’s route was used by more Spanish vessels- mostly In 1585, Archbishop of Mexico Pedro Moya de Contreras dispatched Spanish Captain Francisco Gali to proceed to Manila from Acapulco and, on his return voyage, “to reconnoiter down the coast” in hopes of finding the land that Urdaneta and others reported sighting. Archbishop Contreras also instructed Gali not to stop by The De Unamuno’s crew on his return trip to The church authorities in Despite repeated warnings, de Unamuno disregarded the instructions of the Acapulco Archbishop and the The Portuguese authorities saw direct Spanish trade with But de Unamuno and his men were able to elude capture and managed to connect with two Franciscan priests who wanted to return to With his new ship loaded with Chinese goods purchased with the funds provided by the En route to De Unamuno dispatched his Luzon Indios to act as his scouts as he explored the new land. Two days later, on October 20, his crew encountered natives who attacked them. In the battle that ensued, a Spanish soldier and a Luzon Indio were killed, before de Unamuno's crew was able to safely return to their ship. On October 21, de Unamuno decided to leave and continue on to After researching navigational maps of On On (This article, in its original form, first appeared in the Op-Ed page of the San Francisco Chronicle on E ditor’s Notes: Here are the citations that back up the contention by the chairman of the Philippine History Group, Hector Santos, and his fellow members that the supposed landing made by the so-called Luzones Indios might not have even occurred in what is now http://www.bibingka.com/sst/esperanza/morrobay.htm http://www.bibingka.com/sst/esperanza/indios.htm http://www.bibingka.com/sst/esperanza/chars.htm
Newer news items:
Older news items:
|