30/12/2022
Rizal Day was first instituted with a decree by President Emilio Aguinaldo issued December 20, 1898, and celebrated December 30, 1898, as a national day of mourning for Rizal in Malolos and all victims of the Spanish colonial rule of the Philippines. Daet, Camarines Norte was the first town to follow the decree, building a monument designed by Lt. Col. Antonio Sanz, led by Sanz and Lt. Col. Ildefonso Alegre, and financed by the townsfolk of Camarines Norte and the rest of the Bicol Region. Finished in February 1899, the three-tiered stone pylon inscribing Rizal's novels Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo, and Morga, for Antonio de Morga, author of Sucesos de las islas Filipinas, a book about the early days of the Spanish colonization in the Philippines.
With the victory of the Americans against the Spaniards in the Spanish–American War, the Americans took control of the Philippines. To demonstrate that they were more pro-Filipino than the Spaniards, the American Governor-General William Howard Taft 1901 named Rizal a Philippine national hero. A year later, on February 1, 1902, the Philippine Commission enacted Act No. 345, which made December 30 a public holiday.
To underscore the solemnity of the event, President Elpidio Quirino signed Republic Act No. 229 into law on June 9, 1948, which prohibits cockfighting, horse racing and jai-alai every December 30. The law also requires that flags across the country remain at half-staff throughout the day.
Credits
Photo: National Today
Data/Info: Wikipedia