| |
|
In
downtown Naga, just opposite Naga's tallest structure, the Holiday
Hotel, you will see a park situated between Peñafrancia Ave.
and Elias Angeles Street, and right in the middle of it the lofty
monument to Bikol's Quince Martires. Actually, Bikol's martyrs of
freedom number in the thousands but these fifteen have been specially
singled out as symbols of the rest because on January 4, 1897, just
five days after Dr. Rizal was executed, eleven of them were likewise
shot at Bagumbayan field in Manila. The others died for country
in exile or in prison.They
were avenged, however, at the Peñafrancia Fiesta, September
18, 1898 for corporals Elias Angeles and Felix Plazo convinced their
fellow members of the guardia civil not to allow the same fate to
befall them as had befallen the Daet patriots. So on the night of
the fiesta they attacked the Spanish officers' quarters, routed
them and then did battle with the rest of the Spanish community
who had established themselves in the convento of the historic San
Francisco Church (just opposite the Quince Martires monuments, its
old bell tower can still be seen). When word of this startling defeat
reached Partido, Legazpi, Sorsogon and Catanduanes, all Spanish
forces and governmental men withdraw to Iloilo. Sad
to say, in January 1900, the American imperialistic forces invaded
Camarines Sur and headed for Naga. However, Naga resident General
Ludovico Arejola, organized a large guerilla army and fought the
Americans at Agdangan, Baao. Afterwards he set up a camp in the
mountains of Minalabac and held out for a full year and two and
two months more, until rampant sickness forced the surrender of
himself and his men in a formal ceremony in Naga on March 31, 1901.
In late December 1941, Naga was again put under another foreign
power, Japan, but once again on May 1 and 2, 1942; the combined
guerilla forces of the province smashed their way into Naga. Their
main purpose in doing so was to liberate the 30 American prisoners
in the provincial jail. At the risk of their own lives and those
of their relatives and neighbors not only freed, but also sheltered
their former colonizers in the mountain. On
April 9, 1945, a large number of Major Juan Q. Miranda's guerillas
again attacked the Japanese forces in Naga. American planes also
heavily bombed the city. The American army arrived finally on April
27. Naga became a chartered city in 1948. On
the first decade of 1700's the first chapel to the Virgin Mary of
Peñafrancia was constructed just above the city and along
the banks of Naga River that is the avenue upon which the image
is triumphantly borne from downtown Naga on the afternoon of Peñafrancia
Saturday. This devotion is an authentic regional fiesta and the
population of the city more than doubles on those days as pilgrims
come from all over the six Bicol provinces as well as many from
Manila and other distant places to share in this great religious
experience and festival.Three
(3) of the most venerable institutions and structures in Naga are
clustered together along the upper part of Elias Angeles Street.
They are the Cathedral that begun in the year 1816, the Holy Rosary
Seminary and the Colegio de Sta. Isabel. Founded in 1793 as both
a college and a seminary, The Holy Rosary Seminary is one of the
oldest schools in the republic. It educated literally thousands
of the sons of all the leading families from as far north as Mauban,
Quezon, and as far south as Leyte. In 1925, the laymen’s department
was separated from the seminary and became the Camarines Sur Catholic
Academy, which in turn, in 1940 became the Ateneo de Naga. Naga
Parochial School took over the training of the elementary boys in
1948.
In 1868, the first normal school for women in the entire Orient
was established in Naga as the Colegio de Sta. Isabel. Each parish
in Bikol was required to send at least one pensionada to study there
that they might be trained to run the parochial school in their
own home place. The colegio’s present day population of more
than 5,000 shows the appreciation of the Bikol people for its century
of work for Bikol youth.The
University of Nueva Caceres, adjacent to Naga’s Centro, is
the first university in southern Luzon. Over 9,000 students are
being trained “non scholae ser vitae” in its halls.
Students come from as far south as Zamboanga to attend its law,
engineering, commerce, liberal arts courses. Its Bicol Museum is
the best in the entire Peninsula.
Naga has a multitude of other fine schools: Naga College Foundation,
Camarines Sur National High School, Bicol College of Arts and Trade,
Naga City Science High School, St. Joseph School, Hope Christian
School, Philippine Union College and many energetic business and
fashion academies.
(by
Luis General, Jr. and Fr. James J. O’brien, S.J. with updates
from CPDO) |
|