The Legacy of Ignorantism
By Dr. T. H. Pardo de Tavera
Woe unto you, lawyers! for ye have taken away the key of knowledge; ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered—Luke 11:52.
I have the honor to appear before you accepting with great pleasure an invitation which the Assistant Director, Mr. Osias, kindly extended to me. Having left the choice of the subject to my discretion, I deemed it worth while to speak on the Lay Education which has been in operation in our public schools since the implantation of the new régime which rules the destiny of the Filipino people. I am going to confine myself to facts, and shall speak as frankly and as faithfully as the case requires, altho in so doing I may hurt the feelings of some.
For some time in our society there has been a growing concern against immorality, against vice, against idleness; in short against those which can rightly be called social ills. Such a tendency is certainly good and satisfying; a sign of a notable social progress altho for the majority it is a cause of alarm and regret because of the seeming increase of such ills. Is there a positive increase of immorality? Is there real cause for alarm because of a moral retrogression of our society?
After having asked myself these questions and after having considered the bases for the public clamor and for the excited opinion before the sight of growing vice and immorality, I can say that this tendency of public opinion is satisfying—a sign of betterment, of progress of general morals. In other words, it is not immorality which is growing. Rather, it is the moral consciousness which is gaining ground in individual consciences, thus forming a public opinion which formerly did not exist , completely awake to existing social evils and which are combatted. Not that social morals has been decadent. On the contrary, a moral consciousness has been rapidly formed in our society, a consciousness which formerly was found only among an inconsiderable minority, and which resulted in the new movement against vice and immorality.
T. H. Pardo de Tavera
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The Legacy of Ignorantism
Satisfying Movement
Public Opinion in Favor of Hygiene
Anti-Cockpit Campaign
Our Enemies
The Work of Calumny and Hatred
Hell Threat
Machiavelic Accusation
Colossal Transformation
A Dominican School in Formosa
Were We To Use the Same Procedure
The Education of the Filipino People under Religious Direction
Recognition of a Dominican
The Filipino People
The Filipino Spaniards
Literature for the Filipinos
Substitution of “Unseen Powers”
“Ensalmos”
Magic Invocations
Great Incentive to Crime
Another Notable Case
An Economical Diversion
The Infernal Power
Another Miracle
Silliness of Some Saints
He Who Asks Shall Receive
Reminders of Cannibalism
Second Christ
Promises of the Virgin
Superstition and Crime
Lack of Will
The Ire of God
Lack of Logic
The Height of Absurdity
Immorality of the Novenas
The Lamentable Error of the Bishop of Cebu
Failure of the Missionaries
Disastrous Results
The Public School
Table of Contents
Colophon
Availability
Encoding
Revision History
External References
Corrections