I ft! I) E l> E ft! I) I: ft! C E IS 3 U -19 4 5 MOTOE li TERAMI-WADA 324.2593 T27 ATENEO 2014 t. DE MANILA UNIVERSITY 6891 PRESS ■/ ■ yr • .... SAKDALISTAS’ STRUGGLE FOR PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENCE, 1930—1945 Motoe Terami-Wada ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS SmOBL OTEAl COMMISSION OF THE PWP® ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bellarmine Hall, Katipunan Avenue Loyola Heights, Quezon City P.O. Box 154, 1099 Manila, Philippines Tel.: (632) 426-59-84 / Fax (632) 426-59-09 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ateneopress.org Copyright 2014 by Ateneo de Manila University and Motoe Terami-Wada Cover design by Faith Aldaba Book design by Paolo Tiausas All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the Publisher. The National Library of the Philippines CIP Data Recommended entry: Terami-Wada, Motoe Sakdalistas’ struggle for Philippine independence, 1930-1945 / Motoe Terami-Wada. — Quezon City : Ateneo de Manila University Press, c2014. p. ; cm. ISBN 978-971-550-679-3 1. Lapiang Sakdalista sa Pilipinas—History—Sources. 2. Philippines—History—1898-1946—Sources. 3. Philippines Politics and government—1935-1946. I. Title. DS685 959.903 2014 P320130739 CONTENTS Acknowledgments vii Prologue xiii Chapter 1 Introduction 1 Chapter 2 The Early Years of the Sakdalista 11 Movement, 1930-1933 Chapter 3 The Sakdalista Party and its 35 Activities, 1933-1935 Chapter 4 Sakdalista Activities and Another 67 Attempted Uprising, 1935-1936 Chapter 5 Sakdalista Activities and 89 Ramos in Japan, 1937-1938 Chapter 6 Ramos’s Return and 113 the Ganap Party, 1938-1941 Chapter 7 The Sakdalista Membership, 137 Ramos, and Sakdalism Chapter 8 Under The Japanese Occupation, 165 1942-1945 Chapter 9 The Trials of the “Collaborators” 199 and Aftermath Epilogue 209 Appendices 213 Chronological Table 222 Notes 229 Bibliography 318 Index 336 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS HP hough only vaguely, I knew of the Japanese military’s atrocities in JL China, especially in Nanjin, during the second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and in Southeast Asian regions (1942-1945.) When my daughter and I arrived in Manila in January 1973, shortly after President Marcos declared martial law, to follow my husband who was invited to teach at the University of the Philippines, I felt I should know more about the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. I tried reading as many books as I could on this subject whenever I found the time. When my knowledge of the local language became sufficient, I began enjoying watching movies and stage dramas. One of the performances by Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA) at Fort Santiago was about a martial law during the early American occupation of the Philippines circa 1900. The play was about an ordinary citizen named Juan de la Cruz who fought against the new conqueror and died, but another Juan de la Cruz picked up where the former left off. This play was obvi ously criticizing Marcos’ martial law and urging people to fight against it. At that time, people often drew an analogy between the oppressive Marcos vii viii Acknowledgments regime and the Japanese occupation period. I became interested in how the Filipinos expressed a critical attitude and resistance against the Japanese military occupation through indirect and non-violent means, just like in this PETA play. This inquiry led to a Master’s thesis, “Cultural Front in the Philippines: 1942-1945,” in 1985. My interest in the Japanese occupation continued. Now I became interested in those Filipinos who supported or collaborated with the Japanese when Japan was not a particularly popular country among Filipinos after forty some years of American occupation. As a colonized people, all the Filipinos had to pledge allegiance to the United States. In 1984, Dr. Setsuho Ikehata, then professor at Tokyo University of Foreign Languages and Cultures, invited me to join the three-year project, "Historical and Anthropological Study on the Philippine Folk Catholicism” funded by the Mitsubishi Foundation. For this project, I decided to look into the so-called Rizalista cults in and around Manila. In the meantime, Professor Shizuo Suzuki, then with the Center of Southeast Asian Studies of Kyoto University, who was researching the history of the Communist movement in the Philippines, asked me to attend the interviews he was conducting with Luis Taruc, one of the leaders of the Huks, an anti-Japanese guerrilla outfit during the Japanese occupation and the anti-government liberation army in the postwar era. Prof. Suzuki was particularly interested in the postwar alliance of the Communist party and the former Ganap party, considered to be a pro-Japanese group during the occupation. I found it interesting to see how Mr. Taruc’s group and the members of the Ganap forged, or tried to forge, an alliance. I do not remember exactly how the meeting took place, but a group of former Ganap/Makapili members (members, hereafter) gathered in a house in Alabang, Metro Manila, to meet with Mr. Taruc and the Japanese “guests,” Prof. Suzuki and me. The members seemed to be more inter ested in talking to us rather than to Mr. Taruc. When the meeting was almost over, one of them handed us a letter addressed to the Japanese government, asking for compensation for the service they rendered to the Japanese military during the occupation. Prof. Suzuki accepted the letter and promised to forward it to the Japanese Embassy in Manila, which he did a few days later. As we were leaving, an elderly man approached me and said that he was not interested in asking any compensation from anybody because his supporting the Japanese military was based on his conviction. He Acknowledgments ix assisted the Japanese because he believed the Philippines would become independent from the United States. I was intrigued by his words, and later on I paid him a visit to know more about his life and activities in the prewar and occupation time. His name was Mr. Jeremias Adia, and he was the secretary of the Ganap party during the Japanese occupation. In the first meeting at his residence in Cabuayo, Laguna, I discovered that he was the president of a Rizalista cult called “Iglesia Sagrada ng Lahi (The Church of the Sacred Race).” I could not help but thank this luck that I could study his church for Dr. Ikehata’s project and learn more about the members’ activities at the same time. From then on, my visit to Cabuyao and Silang, Cavite, where the church’s headquarters stood, became more regular and frequent. In the meantime, Mr. Adia took me to the site of the 1935 Sakdal Uprising and arranged meetings with other members. I still remember vividly my first meeting with those who gathered at Mr. Adia’s residence. Five or six men and a woman, most of them in their seventies, were seated in the living room. Some of them were barefooted, and their ankles were caked with half-dried mud. Obviously they were working in the rice field just before they came. The woman said to me, “So you are interested in our revolution” (sa aming rebolusyon). In many get-togethers to come, they always referred to the 1935 Uprising as the “revolution.” One of them showed me an undershirt that he wore when he joined the “revolution”; he wore it to invoke protection from the Higher Being. The sleeveless white shirt had Latin prayers and figures of angels and other symbols. These people tried to speak to me in some Japanese they had learned from the soldiers and related to me fond memories they had of some individual Japanese. They shared their excitement and expectations of achieving independence because independence meant better lives for them and their children. They also shared what they went through at the end of the occupation and right after the war: some family members were lynched by anti-Japanese guerrillas or villagers; they had hardly anything to eat in mountain hideouts at the end of the occupation where many died of starvation; some were imprisoned for a period of time and most of them had been treated like outcasts in their respective towns in the postwar era. They vehemently denied they were traitors to the country as the government and other Filipinos labeled them. Mr. Adia and others used to say that because I was Japanese, they felt very comfortable and relaxed x Acknowledgments talking to me freely what they had kept to themselves for a long time. Once a member asked me whether I knew of a good ophthalmologist in Manila. I gave him the name and address of a Filipino specialist I used to go to. He said, "No, no. Give me the name of a Japanese ophthalmologist. I do not trust the Filipino doctor. He might blind me.” Their mistrust and fear of other Filipinos were still very strong. In 1990, the Forum for the Survey of Records Concerning the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines was formed, led by Dr. Setsuho Ikehata and funded by the Toyota Foundation. I was fortunate to be invited to this forum which gave me an opportunity to develop the subject I had been pursuing. The fund made it possible for me to do research in archives and libraries, not only in Metro Manila but also in Washington D.C. and Tokyo. Finally my research took shape as a Ph. D. dissertation in 1992, entitled “Ang Kilusang Sakdal” (Sakdal Movement), and I submitted it to the History Department of the University of the Philippines. I was encour aged to publish it as a book, but the same year, my husband was assigned to work in New Delhi, India, and I followed him with three children. My book on Sakdal had to be put off during our four-year stay in India because I was busy, not only adjusting to a new life and learning about the fascinating culture of India but also playing the role expected of the wife of a representative of an international organization. We came back to Manila in 1996. We had barely unpacked what we had shipped from India when my husband announced that he wanted to retire early, in a year’s time, and live in Washington state where we had a summer house. I was devas tated because I thought he had at least ten years before his retirement. Leaving Manila was very difficult for me. I felt as if I were forced to leave my mother country, because after all, I lived there for more than twenty years and all my children had grown up, two of them being born in Manila. After settling in at our summer house, now our American residence, I had to face another difficult challenge. Within barely a year, my husband passed away from lung cancer. Perhaps he knew of his impending death, and that was the reason he wanted to retire earlier so that he could enjoy his retirement life of playing golf and fishing, which he did for a few months. Writing a book on Sakdal was not on my mind for some time until one day in 2003, Dr. Alfred McCoy of the University of Wisconsin encour aged me to do so. With his encouragement, I finally began organizing the dissertation into a book, but it has been a slow process. First of all, I had Acknowledgments xi to adjust emotionally to the new situation after losing someone so dear. Other adjustments included learning how to drive, to write check, and to pay bills, all of which my husband used to do. Now the book is finally here. It was impossible to reach this stage without the assistance of so many people: my family, friends, and colleagues. I would like to extend my deepest gratitude by citing their names below. First and foremost, I thank Jeremias Adia who not only spent many hours patiently answering my questions, but also helped me reach other members. Equally important support came from Setsuho Ikehata, who gave me impetus to conduct research by inviting me to various forums and sending me encouraging words. In the final stage of the manuscript, she also gave me valuable advice. In the beginning of my research work, Reynaldo Ileto, who was leaving for Australia, generously shared with me some material he had gathered for his own research. He also read my disser tation and gave me useful comments. I would like to thank the members of the Forum of the Japanese Occupation who inspired me and broadened my view: Shinzo Hayase, Yoshiko Nagano, Satoshi Nakano, Takefumi Terada, Hitoshi Nagai, Midori Kawashima, and Ricardo T. Jose. Ma. Terresa Guia Padilla and Loida Reyes, my research assistants, helped me with reading and cataloguing the Sakdal and Ganap weekly newspapers from 1932-39. Reading all available Sakdal/Ganap newspapers was a daunting task, and their assistance was invaluable. I would also like to thank Lydia Yu-Jose for reading my dissertation, commenting on it, and sharing some mate rials. Others who supplied me with or suggested Sakdal-related materials include Brian Fegan, Jim Richardson, and Florentino Rodao. My special thanks goes to Bernardita Churchill who obtained pertinent material at the National Archives in Washington D.C.; in addition, Daniel Doeppers supplied me with some Ganap issues which were not available at the Philippine National Library. When I began writing this book, I realized some materials and books were missing due to the numerous moves we made: from Manila to New Delhi and back; from Manila to Kobe, Japan; and from Kobe to Washington state. Within the state I moved one more time to my present home after my husband’s passing. It is a small town close to the Canadian border, with no university or academic institution nearby. Many friends and colleagues came to my rescue by supplying me with pertinent books and materials. Especially I thank Thomas Walsh, Shinzo Hayase, and Chizuko