True Version of the Philippine Revolution by Emilio Aguinaldo
page 6 of 56 (10%)
page 6 of 56 (10%)
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request of General Primo de Rivera these conditions were not insisted
on in the drawing up of the Treaty, the General contending that such concessions would subject the Spanish Government to severe criticism and even ridicule. General Primo de Rivera paid the first installment of $400,000 while the two Generals were hold as hostages in Biak-na-bató. We, the revolutionaries, discharged our obligation to surrender our arms, which were over 1,000 stand, as everybody knows, it having been published in the Manila newspapers. But the Captain General Primo de Rivera failed to fulfill the agreement as faithfully as we did. The other installments were never paid; the Friars were neither restricted in their acts of tyranny and oppression nor were any steps taken to expel them or secularize the religious Orders; the reforms demanded were not inaugurated, though the _Te Deum_ was sung. This failure of the Spanish authorities to abide by the terms of the Treaty caused me and my companions much unhappiness, which quickly changed to exasperation when I received a letter from Lieutenant-Colonel Don Miguel Primo de Rivera (nephew and private Secretary of the above-named General) informing me that I and my companions could never return to Manila. Was the procedure of this special representative of Spain just? CHAPTER III |
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