True Version of the Philippine Revolution by Emilio Aguinaldo
page 42 of 56 (75%)
page 42 of 56 (75%)
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enjoining toleration and overlooking of the abuses and atrocities
of the soldiery because the effect on the Commissioners would not be good it they found us at loggerheads with their nation's forces. But the abases of the Americans were now becoming intolerable. In the market-place at Arroceros they killed a woman and a little boy under the pretext that they were surprising a gambling den, thus causing the greatest indignation of a great concourse of people in that vicinity. My Adjutants, too, who hold passes permitting them to enter Manila with their uniform and sidearms, were molested by being repeatedly stopped by every patrol they met, it, being perfectly evident that, the intention was to irritate them by exposing them to public ridicule. While this sort of thing was going on as against our people the American Commanders and officers who visited our camp were treated with the utmost courtesy and consideration. In Lacoste Street an American guard shot and killed a boy seven years of age for taking a banana from a Chinaman. The searching of houses was carried on just as it was during the Spanish regime, while the American soldiers at the outposts often invaded our lines, thus irritating our sentries. It would make this book a very large volume if I continued to state seriatim the abuses and atrocities committed by the American soldiery in those days of general anxiety. It seemed as if the abuses were authorised or at least winked at in official quarters for the purpose of provoking an outbreak of |
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