Jose Rizal’s 100-year-old  secret in Germany              By Michaela P. del Callar  09/26/2010
BERLIN  — Stored in a German museum’s metal cabinets and glass vaults with  controlled temperature for more than a century, Jose Rizal’s intricately  hand-woven Barong Tagalog and other cultural mementoes depict how he  once proudly showed off his small Southeast Asian nation’s cultural  heritage in mighty Europe.
Then a dreamy-eyed Filipino in his 20s,  Rizal had traveled to Germany in 1886 to further his studies in  Medicine, nurture his revolutionary zeal, and finish writing and publish  his epic novel, the Noli Me Tangere.
Rizal brought along  keepsakes that reminded him of home — a wood and brass betel nutcracker,  a rice stalk cutter, a beaded belt from Mindanao, a tawo-piece Muslim  ethnic garment, and a 19th century baro’t saya woven from piña and abaca  fiber. The cultural pieces in his bachelor’s pad in a quaint  residential building in Berlin’s upscale Stadtmitte district were  donated to the German city’s Ethnological Museum when he decided to  return to the Philippines.
Back home, he kept his romance with Europe and continued shipping and donating cultural artifacts to the Berlin museum a year.... MORE
Source:  The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100926hed3.html
29. Alam n'yo kaya na ngayon ang ika-115 na pagdiriwang ng pinakaunang 
labanan ng Himagsikan bago pa man ang pangkalahataang pag-aaklas? Ngayon 
unang lum...
14 years ago

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

1 comment
Also a SULPAKAN (lighter) Rizal himself invented
check my post and the link in it:
http://philippines-islands-lemuria.blogspot.com/2010/09/26-september.html
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