Monday, February 14, 2011

Life of Josephine Bracken

A Glimpse into the Life of Josephine Bracken

Called by Dr. Jose Rizal as his “dulce extranjera,” Josephine Bracken lived a short and largely sad life.  Bracken was the daughter of Irish parents, James Bracken  and Elizabeth MacBride.  Her father was a corporal in the British Army.  Her siblings consisting of one brother and three sisters were born in different places where her father was stationed.  Josephine was born in Hong Kong in 1876 where her mother died.  Her father was unable to support his children and was forced to give Josephine up for adoption.

Josephine lived with the family of George Taufer, a former machinist from New York.  Around 1893, Mr. Taufer started to have trouble with his eyes.  Many doctors were consulted but his condition only got worse.  Around that time Filipinos living in Hong Kong already knew him.  A Filipino resident, Julio Llorente said that Jose Rizal was an eye specialist and could cure his eyes.  On February 5, 1895, Taufer, Josephine and a lady companion from Macau named Francesca Spencer arrived in Manila looking for Rizal.  At that time Josephine was 18 years old.  The attraction between Rizal, the lonely exile, and the young woman blossomed into a relationship.

It was not a smooth one because Rizal’s sisters who were in Dapitan to make life more comfortable for their brother suspected Josephine to be a spy of the Spaniards.  Nevertheless, Rizal loved Josephine and affectionately called her Josefina.  Being a mason, Rizal and Josephine could not get married.  Josephine bore him a stillborn child, a son who would have been named Peter by Josephine or Francisco, by Rizal’s sisters, in honor of their father. Rizal the grieving father, buried his son near the gazebo of his estate where he worked as a doctor.  Just before he left for Cuba in 1896 Rizal burned down the gazebo.

Josephine and Rizal reunited for the last time at the latter’s cell in Fort Santiago on December 30, 1896.  The couple were married in Catholic rites by Fr. Victor Balaguer two hours before Rizal’s execution at Bagumbayan.  After his execution Josephine, accompanied by Paciano and Trinidad Rizal entered rebel territory in Cavite.  They were received by Andres Bonifacio who received from the Rizals a copy of the hero’s last poem which would be known as the Mi Ultimo Adios.

Josephine stayed with the Katipuneros until May 1897.  Around February Josephine wrote a short recollection of her life from her birth up to her marriage with Rizal.  It showed her sad experiences after the death of her mother, and as an adopted daughter who had problems with Mr. Taufer’s wives.  Taufer had married twice after the death of his first wife.  After the part she wrote after the death of Rizal, Josephine cryptically ended her narration: “Good bye Father I am dead.”

Josephine did not die after writing her recollections.  After the insurgent stronghold at San Francisco de Malabon fell to the Spaniards on April 6, 1897 she was moved to Naic and on to Maragondon the following month.  While escaping from the Spanish army she walked barefooted or was carried by a carabao.  She reached Laguna where Venancio Cueto, a Katipunan leader sneaked her into Manila and from there Josephine sailed back to Hong Kong.

Josephine remarried in Hong Kong to another Filipino named Vicente Abad on December 15, 1898.  They had a daughter named Dolores.  While in Hong Kong, Josephine contracted tuberculosis.  She died on March 15, 1902 and was buried at the Happy Valley Cemetery.  Her grave remains unknown today since the cemetery has been converted into a racetrack.

Sometime in 1961, the Jose Rizal National Centennial Commission published Rizal’s letters to his friends and relatives.  Included among these letters was one made by Josephine in 1897 which was a brief description of her life:

Discription (sic) of My Life
22nd February 1897 Monday

My mother is a native of Ireland and was married to my father on the 3rd of May 1868 in Belfast, Ireland.  My father’s name is James Bracken and my mother’s maiden name was Elizabeth Jane MacBride.  We were five brothers and sisters, Charles, Agness, Nelly, Francis and myself Josephine.  Charles was born on the 10th of April 1869.  Agness was born in Malta on the 14th May 1873. Francis was born on the 2nd of June 1875 and died on the 1st April 1875.

Nelly was born at Gibraltar on the 21st July 1871 and I was born in Hong Kong at the Victoria Barracks on the 9th of August 1876.  My father is a corporal and detachment schoolmaster of a detachment at Pembroke Camp.  My mother died on the 2ndof September 1876 after giving birth to me.  After the loss of my beloved mother I was then removed to the care of a (illegible) laborer untill (sic) her burial.  As my father is a military (sic) he could not attend to all of us especially for me being so very small he gave me to a famailly (sic) to be adopted.  The kind and benevolent couple Mr. and Mrs. Taufer took very good care of me until I was seven years old.  Unfortunately at that age was when my adopted mother died.

This is when I was seven years of age, 1882

Mrs. Taufer died on the 8th of October 1882 with a heart disease.  A year after Mr. Taufer took to another wife, then my troubles commenced little by little.  On the 13th July 1889 we took a trip to Japan on account of Mrs. Taufer’s illness.  We stayed in Japan (for) three months; but her health did not recover we returned back to Hong Kong.  We arrived in Hong Kong on the 24th of November 1889.  But Mrs. Taufer got worse and died on the 26th April 1890.

This is when I was fifteen years of age 1890

On the 12th November 1891 Mr. Taufer took to a third wife which (sic) was a torment to me.  On the 12th December I left Mr. Taufer’s house and went to the Italian convent because I could not anymore attend to her troubles.  I stayed in the convent two months when Mr. Taufer came begging me to go home because his wife was starving him.  As I could not bear him complaining.  I went back on the 3rd February 1892 to take care of his house.  On the 14th September I had trouble again with Mrs. Taufer and hunted (?) her out of the house.  In 1893 Mr. Taufer got very ill and had sore eyes, as he hired several doctors but none could do him any good.

This was when I was eighteen years of age

On the 5th of September we went to Manila for the purpose of seeing Dr. Jose Rizal.  Unfortunately Dr. Rizal was not in Manila but up (in) the provinces.  We stayed in Manila for six months and then we went up to Dr. Rizal’s place.  We arrived in Dapitan that is the name of the province on the 14th of March 1894 in the morning at 7 ‘o clock.  We stayed there a week before Dr. Rizal operated on his eyes.  After a week’s time Mr. Taufer could see a little.  On the 22nd of February Dr. Rizal asked Mr. Taufer if he had any objection if he marry me.  But Mr. Taufer objected it, as I had affection towards Mr. Rizal.  I intended to marry him.

I accompanied Mr. Taufer back to Manila and returned to Dapitan in the next steamer.  By that time Dr. Rizal prepared everything for our marriage.  When everything was prepared I heard from a Spaniard that when we are married they would separate me from my husband.  I thought it over and told Dr. Rizal that it is better for us to waite (sic) until he gets his freedom.  Anyhow I stayed with him for one year and we lived very very happy.  Thank God I had a very peaceful life as if I were a child on (illegible)  mother(‘s) knee.  I cannot complain of his care.  (Illegible) but id did not last very long.  My happiness lasted only 20  months when my sorrows commenced again.

This is when I was nineteen years of age. 1895

On the 20th of July 1896, Dr. Rizal left Dapitan for Cuba as a doctor in the army.  But unfortunately they (the Spanish authorities) brought him back again and shot him on the 30th December 1896.  Before his execution he married me at 5 o’ clock in the morning.

This is when I am twenty years of age. 1896
Josephine Bracken de Rizal.  A widow.
Good bye Father I am dead.

Other Writings About  Josephine Bracken;

Many inaccuracies and rumours relating to her have persisted and been added to ever since she first stepped onto the stage of history. Most of these have been promulgated on the scantiest of evidence, or indeed in the absence of any evidence whatsoever, and unfortunately in some cases by personages who perhaps should have known better. For example, it was reported that at a conference on Jose Rizal in the 1990s, a prominent Filipino politician stated that Josephine had been a bar girl in Hong Kong, prior to her involvement with Rizal. To the best of my knowledge there is no evidence that supports the validity of that statement - it appears to have simply been based on erroneous details in a contemporary Spanish newspaper report of Rizal's execution - yet it was given an importance by virtue of the prestige of the speaker. Also, the respected historian Austin Coates claimed in his 1968 biography of Rizal that Josephine was illegitimate and of mixed race. This was based mainly on an interpretation of one particular primary source - that had some details overwritten thereby making it suspect - and in opposition to a wealth of other such sources that disprove his declaration.


The intention is to give a basic outline of the life story of Josephine Bracken. A comprehensive biography could run to 200 pages or more, so for reasons of length and other constraints it will unfortunately be necessary to condense or omit some aspects of her story in this website. I ask of anyone who believes that anything is incorrect, to respond using the comment facility. Then, should it be necessary, it can be amended. I ask that any information that is offered is factually based rather than opinion or rumour. The final two sections provide conclusive proof - based on original documentary sources uncovered by this writer - that Josephine Bracken was fully Irish and legitimate.

It is my hope that this website will give a better and wider understanding and an appreciation of the historic role played by Josephine Bracken than has been the case up to now; and that it can be enjoyed despite my somewhat inelegant writing style.

The Story of Josephine Bracken

Section 1. Unrecognised

For a country that is ever eager to acclaim the exploits of people of Irish origin or descent in foreign lands, it is remarkable that the story of Josephine Bracken is little known here, even among historians. For example The Encyclopaedia of Ireland contains no reference to her thought it does list Che Guevara who, it appears, had a female ancestor who emigrated from Ireland to South America in the 18th century, making him perhaps 1/16th Irish. That widely inclusive publication, The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, contains no reference to her either. She has however a listing in Wikipedia, the Internet encyclopaedia, which unfortunately contains a number of factual errors.

Although she never set foot in Ireland - unlike Guevara - Josephine Bracken was fully Irish and earned a place in the history of the Philippines through her intimate connection with Jose Rizal, the man regarded as responsible for inspiring the natives to successful revolution against their Spanish colonizers in the late 19th century.

An ordinary woman from a somewhat obscure background, for the first eighteen years of her life there was nothing to suggest that before her 21st birthday Josephine Bracken would have historic distinction thrust upon her. Following that, she returned to relative obscurity and died aged just 25.

Section 2. Origins

Josephine was born in Hong Kong in 1876 to an Irish couple, James Bracken and his wife Elizabeth. Bracken, a native of Co. Offaly - formerly King's County - in Ireland, was a soldier in the British garrison there, serving in the 28th Regiment of Foot. Army records show that when he enlisted, aged 18 in 1858, his place of birth was recorded as 'in the Parish of Gallen near the Town of Ferbane in the County of King’s'. When his marriage - to Elizabeth Jane McBride in St. Patrick's Church, Donegall St, Belfast in 1868 - was officially registered, his father, Michael, is listed as a baker residing at Eglish - or possibly Aglish. Both these villages are quite close to the town of Birr in Ireland where the 28th Regiment was based when Bracken enlisted. (Somewhat puzzlingly there are two versions of their marriage record - giving different versions of some of Elizabeth's details - at the Ulster Historical Society in Belfast. In one, dated 30th April, she is listed as living at North Queen St, with her father named as Charles. In the other, dated 4th May, she is recorded as a servant living at Lancaster St, while her father, Thomas, is described as a sailor. The earlier version is consistent with the church record, while the later version is consistent with the record at the the Registries of Marriages in Dublin and Belfast.)

About four months after their wedding, Bracken’s regiment was posted to Gibraltar, while Elizabeth remained in Ireland staying, it appears, at what was probably her home place - Island Magee, Co. Antrim - where she gave birth to the couple’s first child, Charles, in April 1869. Shortly afterwards, along with the child, she rejoined her husband at Gibraltar where she gave birth to a daughter, Nelly, in 1871. The following year the regiment was posted to Malta and there the couple had two more children: a daughter, Agnes, born in 1873, and a son, Francis, born in 1875 who survived just three months. The regiment’s next posting was to Hong Kong and it was there that their fifth and final child, Josephine, was born on 9th August 1876. (About seven weeks later she was baptised and christened 'Leopoldine'. However when her birth was officially registered about two weeks after that, she was recorded as 'Josephine'.) As both her parents were Irish, Josephine too would have been officially classed as ‘Irish’, or more accurately, ‘British’, as all of Ireland was then a part of the United Kingdom.

A month after Josephine’s birth, her mother Elizabeth Bracken died and was buried in the Military Graveyard at the Happy Valley Cemetery. Today, a small stone inscribed with a number marks her grave. Subsequently the baby Josephine was given for adoption to her godparents, a married couple, George Taufer, believed to have been of German-American origins and his wife, Leopoldine Marie Magedo, a Macao-Portuguese.

In January 1878 James Bracken left Hong Kong for his regiment’s next posting at Singapore. It is not clear whether his other children remained with him for the remainder of his term of duty. In 1880 for his discharge, he was in Britain. Army records show that when Charles, aged 14, joined his father's old regiment in 1883, James was living at 11 North Strand Road in Dublin. Death records for Ireland show that an Ellen (Nelly) Jane Bracken died on 4th November 1886 aged 15 and is buried in an unmarked grave in Glasnevin Cemetery. Her address is listed as 16 Amiens St - North Strand Road is a continuation of Amiens St - with her father recorded as James Bracken. Thom's Dublin Street Directory for the years 1887-9, connect James Bracken with that building - a boarding house - either as a tenant or owner. In early 1890 he was living a short distance away at 19 Tyrone St Upper (today called Railway St). On 30th August 1904 when James' eldest child (and Josephine's brother) Charles was married in the Roman Catholic Church of St Paul on Arran Quay in Dublin, James is listed as a railway clerk; while Charles' residence is given as Shorncliffe Military Barracks (Folkestone, England). Like his father, Charles appears to have served two consecutive 11-year terms in the army. Whether James was actually still alive at the time of Charles' wedding is uncertain; there is no listing for him in either the 1901 or 1911 Census of Ireland; neither is he listed in the Registry of Deaths. It is possible that he emigrated sometime after 1890, but that seems unlikely. The Census of Population of Ireland taken on 2nd April 1911 shows that Charles Bracken (41) was living with his wife Bridget, nee Kennedy (29) and their two surviving children, James (6) and Francis (3) at 22 Harold Road. It appears that the older boy was named after his paternal grandfather, while, when the younger son was baptised he was perhaps named in honour of Charles' baby brother who had died in Malta some 32 years earlier. Over the next five years the couple had two further sons but do not appear to have ever given birth to a daughter. Those census records for Ireland do not appear to have any listing for James Bracken's other child, Agnes. There are a number of possible reasons for this e.g. she could have been living abroad; she may not have been recorded; she might have married resulting in her acquiring a different surname; or she might not have survived.

Stone marking the grave of Elizabeth Bracken

Section 3. Early Life

Details of Josephine’s early life are sketchy and this section is based to some extent on a document whose authenticity is disputed.

Her adoptive father, George Taufer, worked as an engineer in charge of the steam-powered fire engine run by the Hong Kong Fire Insurance Company. He retired in 1882 and invested his savings in properties from which he drew rents. When she was about seven, Josephine attended at a school founded in 1860 by Italian nuns, the Canossian Sisters. Around this time her adoptive mother died and about a year later Taufer remarried. His second wife died in 1890 and he remarried again in late 1891. The then 15-year-old Josephine and her new stepmother did not get along and as a result she left home for a few months staying at the Canossian Convent. During this period Taufer became dissatisfied with the treatment he was receiving from his latest wife. It appears that over the years he had become more and more dependent on Josephine for his care and to administer his affairs. He pleaded with her to return and shortly after she did, Josephine banished her stepmother from the home and, it seems, from their lives.

About 1893 Taufer began to lose his sight. Desperate for a cure he came to hear about Jose Rizal, the one person who could possibly help him. Rizal had practised as an ophthalmic surgeon in Hong Kong for a short period but had left there to visit his homeland, the Philippines, in June 1892. On learning this, Taufer proceeded to sell his properties, paid off his debts, and in late 1894 along with Josephine and his natural daughter Sarah, set out to find him. In Manila they heard that he was in the town of Dapitan on the southern island of Mindanao. Sarah, having formed a relationship with an English expatriate in Manila, choose to remain there. Josephine and her adoptive father continued the search and by about January of 1895 they arrived at Dapitan and met Rizal who was living nearby at a place called Talisay.

Within a short period Rizal concluded that Taufer’s condition could not to be cured. By then although practically blind, Taufer nevertheless became aware of the close relationship that was developing between Josephine and the young doctor. Frightened that he was about to lose the one person who would take care of him, he sized a razor threatening to cut his throat, and had to be restrained by Rizal. Later Taufer decided to return to Hong Kong, and accompanied by Josephine as far as Manila, she then went back to Rizal at Talisay. (George Taufer died in 1897 and is believed to be buried in the Catholic Cemetery, Happy Valley.)

At the early stages of their relationship it is doubtful if Josephine fully understood and appreciated the perilous position of her lover. Even if she did it would probably have made no difference. However over the next two years she would certainly find out.

Section 4. Jose Rizal and the Spanish Philippines

Jose Rizal, the son of relatively affluent and well-educated native Filipino parents, was born near Manila in 1861. At that time the Philippines had been a colony of Spain for an almost unbroken period of nearly 300 years. From the earliest times the Spanish colonizers were accompanied by their clergy who set out to convert the natives to Roman Catholicism and in this they were largely successful. Over time the principal religious orders - Dominican, Franciscan and Augustinian friars recruited exclusively from Spain - became in effect the ruling authorities, achieving a power and influence over the lives of the natives that was practically absolute and far from benign. And with power came corruption, e.g. they amassed personal wealth; expropriated common land; exploited native women to father children; they conspired to determine who would hold the civic positions of town mayor etc.; prevented the native clergy from having their own parishes; controlled education; and prevented the adoption of a common language in the archipelago. They used the power of the confessional to gather intelligence and any dissent or criticism of themselves or the colonial power was not allowed to develop, with anyone they considered a threat being ruthlessly neutralised, if necessary by death sentence.

As a child Rizal saw many instances of friar abuse. But aged just ten, one event in particular - when as a result of a petty dispute with a cousin-in-law, his mother at the instigation of the friars spent two and a half years in jail - helped to set him on his life’s course. In consequence, and while still a student, he began to formulate ideas that might lead to the Philippines achieving an element of self-rule.

Shortly before his 21st birthday he went to Spain to continue his studies. There he soon became the principal spokesman and inspiration for a political movement composed of fellow expatriate Filipinos that sought by peaceful means to achieve reforms from Spain for their homeland. Among many accomplishments his most significant achievement during this period in Europe was to write Noli Me Tangere, a novel that ridiculed the friars and depicted how they were keeping the native people poor and ignorant. When it reached the Philippines it had the effect of awakening the people to their true plight, giving them the courage to come together and confront friar abuses.

In 1887 he returned to his country and practised as a doctor and ophthalmic surgeon for about five months. The friars, incensed by the reaction to his novel, sought to have it banned and Rizal tried for treason. Concerned that his life was in danger he decided to return to Europe. (In contrast to the route of his first journey to Europe, Rizal choose to travel via Hong Kong, Japan, across the Pacific Ocean to the western United States, then overland to New York, and from there to Liverpool in England on the steamship 'City of Rome'. On the transatlantic voyage, apparently the ship berthed for a few hours at Queenstown - today named Cobh - in Ireland on 23rd May 1888, see: - http://www.joserizal.ph/tr31.html. Asuming this is correct then it can be stated that while Josephine Bracken never set foot in Ireland it is extremely likely that Jose Rizal did. Perhaps his travel dairies definitively confirms this?) While in Europe for a second occasion, Rizal, by now convinced that the Philippines would not be granted reforms by peaceful means, produced a sequel novel, El Filibusterismo, the subject of which was revolution.

In late 1891 he moved to Hong Kong and practised as an ophthalmic surgeon. The following year, on a visit to the Philippines, he was arrested. While the friars wanted him dead, instead the Governor General had him exiled to the town of Dapitan on the southern island of Mindanao and, though obliged to remain there he was nevertheless allowed the freedom to involve himself in activities such as farming, teaching, engineering, scientific work and in his profession of doctor and ophthalmic surgeon. Although he had become a freemason when in Europe, Rizal never abandoned his faith and during his time in exile attended regularly at Sunday mass. The Dapitan clergy continually attempted to persuade him to retract his criticisms of Church conduct, but it came to nothing; Rizal was not for turning.

Then about early 1895, two and a half years into his exile, the 18-year-old Josephine Bracken came into his life

Rizal Statue at the Plaza, Dapitan City

Section 5. At Talisay

What caused Rizal to fall for Josephine has been the subject of much speculation ever since. It is fair to describe her as an ordinary woman, not very well educated, from a relatively common background. In contrast Rizal came from a solid middle class, highly educated family. As well as being a doctor, a surgeon and a novelist, he was among other things, an accomplished poet, artist and polyglot; he has, with good reason, been described as a genius. For Josephine’s part it is easy to see the attraction. It seems her life with her aged adoptive father had become increasingly difficult; it would have been natural for her to try to make a life of her own. For Rizal’s part, it is claimed that he had come to believe that he would never be allowed to leave his place of exile; despondent and with his defences down he became involved with a person that, had his circumstances been normal, he would not have been attracted to. But it is generally agreed too, that it was from a motive of protection that drew him to her

While there had been a few other women in his past, Josephine alone was the one he sought to marry. However as the friars had prevented the introduction of civil marriage to the Philippines, Rizal was obliged to apply to the Church for permission; but as this would only be granted if he retracted his Church criticisms the couple decided instead to live as common law partners.

Josephine’s life at Talisay involved domestic work and assisting Rizal, whom she referred to as "Joe", in his medical work and with the school he had established. In a letter to his family (he had eight sisters and an older brother) he wrote ‘What she does for me, how she obeys me and attends to me, would not have been done to me by a Filipina’. In an earlier letter informing them of the relationship, he described her as ‘more or less an orphan alone in the world’ and ‘a person whom I esteem and greatly appreciate and would not wish to see exposed and abandoned’. He requested his mother to extend hospitality and treat her as a daughter. On those occasions when Josephine visited his family in Manila, some treated her courteously. However others were less accommodating for a number of reasons: - they felt she was not a suitable partner for Rizal; they were concerned at the scandal of their unmarried state; and, most importantly, they were suspicious that she was spying on behalf of the friars.

Around early March of 1896, in an event of great sadness for the couple, Josephine gave birth prematurely to a stillborn son. (Some reports date the event to late 1895 and/or that the baby was born alive but survived only a short time.)

Woodcut of Josephine Bracken by Jose Rizal

Section 6. Sentence of Death

When he was about to be exiled to Dapitan, Rizal had accepted a stipulation that he would not attempt to escape or involve himself in political activities. He had kept his word; but inspired by his writings and earlier speeches, a group known as the Katipunan (meaning 'association' in Tagalog) had formed with the intention of winning independence through violent revolt. While by then convinced that revolution was the only option to achieve independence, Rizal communicated his opposition, as he believed it could not succeed, principally through lack of arms. However in August 1896 revolution broke out and shortly afterwards at a rigged trial in Manila, he was found guilty of being involved and sentenced to death.

The day before his execution, Rizal made his farewells to members of his family in his prison cell. In a last letter to them he concluded 'Have pity on poor Josephine', and in Mi Ultimo Adios his final and greatest poem, he immortalised her in words translated as follows, ‘Farewell, sweet tender foreigner, my friend, my felicity’.

Section 7. Aftermath of Controversy

On the eve of his execution, following the visit by his family members, Josephine too visited Rizal in his cell. One version of events has it that about an hour before his execution on 30th December 1896, Josephine again visited Rizal in the sole presence of a priest. Immediately following his death the Church authorities proclaimed that at that meeting, Rizal had retracted his criticisms and was allowed to marry her. Whatever the truth of this there is no doubt that it suited Church purposes. The revolution had not succeeded but neither had the revolutionaries been defeated; a Rizal retraction might deal a significant blow to their morale.

In the Philippines ever since, it remains an issue of controversy as to whether a retraction and marriage took place. Josephine herself always claimed that they had married. Adding strength to her claim is the last gift she received from Rizal – his copy of the book Imitation of Christ by Thomas-a-Kempis. On the cover he wrote in English 'To my dear and unhappy wife, Josephine. December 30th 1896. Jose Rizal'. However most historians conclude that Rizal, though facing death and concerned for Josephine's sake to regularise their relationship, was nevertheless not someone to retract, and so they were never married. (With opinion polarised on this issue, remarkably no one seems to have considered the possibility that Rizal did not retract but was nonetheless allowed to marry. With the Church authorities having firmly set their face against a marriage in the absence of a retraction, this outcome would have represented their second best option in that they could emphatically assert that as the couple were allowed to marry, therefore a retraction must have occurred.) Although it is extremely unlikely that this matter will ever be definitively concluded, however among the general population in the Philippines today, Josephine Bracken is often referred to as "Jose Rizal's wife" and that she was "Irish".

A result of Rizal's execution was that the revolution gathered pace. In January 1897 Josephine joined the insurgents and there are reports of her taking part in battles and killing a Spanish soldier. However in May that year she returned to Hong Kong.

Section 8. Later Life (MUST READ PART)

Shortly after the defeat of the Spanish fleet by the United States Navy in Manila Bay, the revolutionaries declared the independence of the Philippines on 12th June 1898. One of the first acts of the new government was to proclaim the date of Rizal’s execution as a public holiday. While this has been maintained ever since, the prospect of the country staying independent was short lived, as the United States in a particularly bloody campaign took power. It would be almost fifty years before independence was finally achieved.

In Hong Kong in December 1898 Josephine married Vicente Abad, a Filipino of Spanish decent. The following year she and her husband moved to the Philippines. Around that time they had a baby daughter, Dolores, affectionately called "Dolly" by Josephine. It was recently revealed that this child was most probably adopted by the couple. (Dolores Abad died in Manila in 1987.) They had no other children. During her second period in the Philippines, Josephine lived a quiet life, shunning the limelight. Relations with Rizal’s family, strained at the best of times, sundered completely shortly after his execution when - asserting she was his widow - she unsuccessfully tried to acquire some of his possessions.

In early 1902 suffering from milliary tuberculosis, she returned to Hong Kong where, aged 25, she died on the night of 14th/15th March. (Her death certificate states 14th March.) The authorities, concerned that her condition was infectious, had her buried next morning in the Happy Valley Cemetery. Her husband, Vicente Abad, arrived there as the grave was being closed. He himself died the following year without having an opportunity to indicate to other family members, her exact final resting place.

Josephine and Vicente Abad's wedding picture

Official copy of death record of Josephine Bracken
Section 9. Place in History

Anyone visiting the Philippines today can’t help but notice the many memorials to Jose Rizal. It is no exaggeration to say that every town has its Rizal Street, its Rizal school and Rizal statue. Banks, film theatres, restaurants etc. are named after him. His profile is featured on the basic unit of currency, the Peso coin. He is commemorated more widely and exclusively than the other nationalist heroes. With countless biographies and other writings, he has been described as the most documented Asian of the 19th century.

And Josephine has not been forgotten. At the Rizal Monument in Manila are a series of bronze-works depicting scenes from his life. One shows her assisting as he performs an eye operation; another depicts their leave-taking in the death cell; in Dapitan City a street bears her name, as does another street in the vast sprawl of Manila. In school history books, her role is described and in the many films on Rizal’s life, her part is played. A proposed feature film of her own life, for which the Philippine Film Development Foundation sought funding in the early 1990’s - with Winona Ryder suggested to play Josephine - never got to production. However in the year of the centenary of her death, 2002, her first full biography, written by her great-grandson Macario Ofilada, was published. (One of the many Rizal biographers, the late Sir Austin Coates, is reported to have compiled a Josephine biography but decided not to publish as he felt her story was so sad and pathetic. However he may have had a different reason not to publish, as will be seen later. )

Section 10. A Parallel Controversy

In this article, for reasons of length, it has been necessary to condense some details and omit others. However, it would be incomplete not to describe another controversy that has dogged Josephine Bracken’s identity. As stated earlier, in the Philippines she is often referred to as "Jose Rizal’s wife" and as "Irish". However among those there who have studied her life, alongside the ongoing controversy as to whether the couple were ever married, is another controversy about her true origins.

Within a few years of his execution, like a trickle that would soon become a flood, biographies of Jose Rizal began to be published. Whereas many of the essential details regarding Rizal’s life were easily accessible and verifiable, Josephine’s origins, as well as her character, became the stuff of rumours (with some of them particularly base). At an early stage there were claims that she was of mixed race i.e. Eurasian. One of Rizal’s early biographers, the American Austin Craig, in a book published in 1909 speculated that Josephine had an Indian mother. That particular theory probably arose from the knowledge that James Bracken had served with his regiment in India for a period in the 1860’s. However when Craig published his major Rizal biography (Lineage, Life and Labors of Jose Rizal) in 1913 it contained the results of research on Josephine’s origins that he had conducted in Hong Kong. Included in the book was a reproduction of a baptismal certificate dated 2nd October 1876. Signed, it appears, by the priest who had performed her baptism five days earlier, it clearly stated that Josephine’s parents were the Irish couple, James Bracken and his wife Elizabeth. (And Craig went further in a later publication when he emphatically dismissed those more base rumours and excoriated those who had originated them.)

Then, in 1968 a Rizal biography - Rizal: Philippine Nationalist and Martyr - was published which rekindled the issue of her true origins. The writer, the late Sir Austin Coates, was at that time employed in the British administration in Hong Kong. (He and Austin Craig remain the only major historians to carry out research in Hong Kong into Josephine’s background. Of the many Rizal biographies, those by both he and Craig are deservedly rated as being among the most outstanding. However as regards those sections on Josephine Bracken, Austin Coates’ book should perhaps carry a health warning that reads - Hypotheses presented as facts.)

Coates’ big discovery was the entry for Josephine in the Baptismal Register kept at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Hong Kong. Dated 27th September 1876 it clearly shows that when originally completed, Josephine was described as 'Anglo Chinese' and 'illegitimate', and, although her father is named as James Bracken, her mother is listed as not known. (The entries are a mixture of Latin and Italian as the diocesan clergy were provided from Italy.)

In contrast, the details of her origins that were entered at the Registry of Births, disagree substantially with those of the ecclesiastical record. Dated 12th October 1876 and signed by James Bracken as her father, the official birth-registration document shows her mother as 'Elizabeth Jane Bracken formerly McBride'. (Both documents are in accord that Josephine’s date-of-birth was 9th August 1876.)

In his book Coates was resolute in his evaluation of these two contradictory records. For him, the Baptismal Register entry represented the truth. His explanation for the dissimilar details entered at the Registry of Births was: - that Bracken had fathered Josephine with an unknown Chinese woman and wished to conceal not just the fact she was illegitimate, but more importantly that she was Eurasian which carried a significant stigma in the Hong Kong of those times; so, Coates claimed, Bracken had her falsely registered as his child with his recently deceased wife.

But the baptismal entry contained another twist. It is not known when but sometime after it was originally completed, it was overwritten to read 'Anglo' and 'legitimate'. However Coates was again emphatic as to when and why this had occurred, stating (in reference to her marriage to Vicente Abad in December 1898) that 'in Josephine’s life seen as a whole the only date when there was any necessity for this <span>interference</span> with the records is 1898' - the implication being that the changes were done on behalf of Josephine, in order to conceal her true origins when she was about to marry Vicente Abad in the same church in which she had been baptised.

Why Coates decided, with such certainty, on this interpretation of the differing facets of the two documents is puzzling. There is lots of other evidence, both circumstantial and direct, regarding Josephine’s origins, to which he had access and it’s reasonable to conclude he must have been aware, that at the least would urge caution.

Among historians, academics and commentators in the Philippines, the task of investigating and determining Josephine Bracken’s origins has been left to outsiders - almost solely to Austin Coates in relatively recent times. Consequently practically all of them completely and emphatically accept Coates’ interpretation. The few who disagree have not produced any evidence that disproves it. However this writer recently uncovered information, in documents from that period, that both discredits the original baptismal register entry as a reliable source, and also establishes that Josephine Bracken was both legitimate and fully Irish.


Baptismal certificate for Josephine Bracken reproduced in 'Lineage, Life and Labors of Jose Rizal' by Austin Craig, published 1913

Section 11. Reasons for Caution

The first point where Coates’ interpretation raises doubts, is in accepting that any British Army private soldier, in the Hong Kong of those times, would have taken the trouble to falsely register and find adoptive parents for his illegitimate Eurasian child. It seems far more likely that he would have ‘done a runner’ leaving the woman ‘holding the baby’. A more obvious explanation for Bracken’s action - in finding adoptive parents for the child - is the fact that his wife had recently died and he himself, with three other small children, was not in a position to care for such a tiny infant. And surely too, if the child was indeed born to a Chinese woman, the natural mother would have wanted to keep her baby herself.
The next point of doubt is Coates assertion that James Bracken had Josephine falsely registered as his wife’s child in order to conceal the fact that she was Eurasian. Surely Bracken would have been aware that this was ultimately futile; the evidence would be clear to all, particularly as the child grew older. And surely too, if his motive was deception, Bracken would have acted consistently by supplying the same set of false details to the baptising priest that, Coates claimed, he supplied to the Birth Registry.

Then there is the fact that Elizabeth Bracken died just one month after Josephine’s birth. It raises the possibility that she may have recently given birth; a high death rate as a result of childbirth was a feature of those times, even more so in a place like Hong Kong. Elizabeth Bracken’s death certificate does not confirm this, simply stating that her death was due to ‘Acute Hepatitis’. However that does not rule out the possibility that she had lived with the condition for some time and that it became exacerbated as a result of a difficult pregnancy and/or childbirth. (At his own request, James Bracken reverted from the rank of corporal to private, four months before Josephine’s birth. Was this perhaps to allow him to spend more time caring for a pregnant wife who may also have been in poor health?)

The fact that some of the details originally entered in the baptismal register were later changed, might be expected to raise more doubts; mistakes happen and it seems reasonable that if discovered, an effort would be made to correct them. Lending strength to the possibility that this is what actually occurred is the reproduction of a baptismal certificate for Josephine, published in Austin Craig’s 1913 biography of Jose Rizal - Lineage, Life and Labors of Jose Rizal. Dated 2nd October 1876 - five days after her baptism - and signed (it appears) by the baptising priest, it named her parents as the Irish couple, James Bracken and his wife. This strongly indicates that the baptismal entry was corrected within days. (It is not known where this certificate is now. Perhaps Craig bequeathed it with his other papers to some institution or university?) Coates’ interpretation of why and when the changes were carried out is unconvincing for two reasons: - Firstly ecclesiastical records are usually well guarded and there is generally a reluctance to make changes without good reason. And secondly the Roman Catholic clergy in Hong Kong in 1898 would probably have been aware of Josephine’s role along with Rizal in opposition to their fellow clergy in the Philippines, and would have been unlikely therefore to do her any favours. A related point is, if Josephine was in fact Eurasian, then why didn’t the friars in the Philippines notice it and then use it to malign in their campaign against Jose Rizal. On both counts, there is no evidence that they did. And surely Rizal, who most probably was well aware of the differing facial characteristics of Europeans and Eurasians, would have noticed this too; but there is no evidence of that either.
Josephine Bracken, from a drawing attributed to Jose Rizal but provenance disputed

Section 12. Discription Of My Life

Perhaps the single most important item that would urge caution, is a hand-written document titled Discription Of My Life (the misspelling is in the original document) which emerged some time after Josephine’s death. Also referred to as The Josephine Autobiography, it contains, among other things, details of James Bracken’s and Elizabeth McBride’s backgrounds and marriage; the birthdays of their four children born prior to Josephine; the date of death of the youngest of these; Josephine’s date of birth; the date of Elizabeth’s death; and, details of Josephine’s adoptive parents.

It is widely believed that this document was compiled and written by someone other than Josephine and therefore is a forgery. Nevertheless, the information contained in it concerning James Bracken’s family has been established (particularly by Austin Coates) to be more or less correct.

Whether forged or not, it is reasonable to conclude that the source for these details was Josephine herself and that they must have originated with her father. It appears that James Bracken - who left Hong Kong when she was just 17 months old - left this information with her adoptive father, to be passed on to her when she was older. Accepting this was what happened, it is consistent with what would be expected to be done by the father of a legitimate child, rather than an illegitimate one. (Some have claimed that throughout her life, Josephine held a longing to be reunited with her Irish soldier father, just like that of the eponymous hero of Rudyard Kipling's novel Kim.)

Section 13. Cherchez la Femme

The details outlined above represent circumstantial evidence only. They do not provide definitive proof regarding Josephine Bracken’s true origins. But, at the very least, they raise doubts as to how Coates could be so certain in his very definite interpretation. However, when considered with information uncovered by this writer, there can be no doubt that Coates got it wrong; and that Josephine Bracken was actually fully Irish and legitimate.
Before coming to that information, it is necessary to examine some of the circumstances relating to her birth. The first point to appreciate is, that if Josephine was born following (or close to) a full pregnancy term - generally agreed to be about 9 calendar months/40 weeks - then her mother, <span>whoever she was</span>, would have become pregnant in early to mid-November 1875.



There is no dispute or doubt as to whom Josephine’s father was; all the evidence confirms that he was the Irishman, James Bracken. (In disputes where the identity of a parent is in question, it is practically always that of the father. Perhaps uniquely, in Josephine's case it is the identity of her mother that is in doubt.) So, if Coates’ interpretation - that Josephine was Bracken’s child with an unknown Chinese woman of Hong Kong - is to be credible, then Bracken would have had to have been in the colony in early November 1875, or not very much later.

Records for Bracken’s regiment, the 28th Regiment of Foot, show that they departed from their previous station, Malta, for Hong Kong on the troopship Himalaya on 18th December 1875. The log of the ship - kept at the National Archives at Richmond in London - is consistent with the regimental records, giving their date of disembarkation at Hong Kong as 1st February 1876. As Josephine was born on the 9th August that year, Coates interpretation relies therefore on an acceptance that she was conceived and survived a pregnancy term of 27 weeks and one day, <span>at the very most</span>; but more realistically less than that as it seems extremely unlikely that Bracken could have formed a relationship with a Chinese woman that resulted in her becoming pregnant on his first days in the colony. But even if so, it's hardly credible that such a premature baby would have survived in the Hong Kong of those times. Even today, a baby born after a term of 27 weeks, or less, has a poor chance of survival even with expert medical attention.

As an illustration of just how poor, consider the fact that when abortion legislation was introduced in the United Kingdom in 1967 it allowed for a termination at up to 28 weeks, as it was accepted that such an immature foetus could not survive outside the womb. (Mainly as a result of advances in medical science, this was changed to 24 weeks in 1990.)

It is therefore logical to conclude that the entry for Josephine in the Baptismal Register - even ignoring the fact that it was later overwritten - is not a reliable source because it contains an inherent contradiction. If, as that document states, Josephine is the daughter of James Bracken and was born on the 9th August 1876, then she could not have been Anglo Chinese - as described - because it was impossible that she was conceived and born to a Chinese woman of Hong Kong, within a period of just fractionally greater than 27 weeks, at the very most.

(Although Austin Coates does not appear to have ever publicised the information that James Bracken was in Hong Kong for only fractionally longer than six months prior to Josephine's birth, it is extremely unlikely that he was unaware of this because he is known to have researched widely and thoroughly, even visiting the Ferbane area of Co Offaly, Ireland, in an attempt to find details of James Bracken origins. Perhaps the reason he did not publish his Josephine biography was not because he felt her story was "so sad and pathetic" as reported, but rather because the information on James Bracken's date of arrival at Hong Kong, if included, would have totally undermined his claim that she was of mixed race and illegitimate, resulting in a significant diminution in his reputation as a historian.)

Section 14. Reclaiming Josephine Bracken as Irish

So, as this therefore rules out the possibility that Josephine was born to a Chinese woman, who then was her mother? The answer is obvious, and hardly surprising.

Elizabeth Bracken gave birth to her forth child, Francis, in early June 1875 in Malta, where her husband's regiment was then stationed. The death records in Malta show that this baby died on 1st September that year. In those times, most babies were breast-fed and this would usually continue into their second year. It is well established that a lactating woman has a higher level of protection from becoming pregnant. However after lactation ceases that protection also ceases. It is reasonable to conclude in Elizabeth’s case that following the death of her baby Francis, lactation ceased soon afterwards, and, consistent with the pattern of her earlier pregnancies it is probable that she again became pregnant on or about mid-November with the baby due to be born the following August.

So, as there is no evidence that rules out the possibility that Elizabeth could have been Josephine’s mother (e.g. it has not been shown that Elizabeth was pregnant with some other child during that particular period); and, as there is definitive evidence that excludes the possibility that Josephine’s mother was a Chinese woman of Hong Kong; and, as there is no evidence that she was the child of some other woman; and, as the entry for Josephine at the Registry of Births is coherent, stating that her mother was Elizabeth Bracken; it is therefore reasonable to conclude that James Bracken’s Irish wife, Elizabeth, must have been Josephine’s mother.

And so it is established that Josephine Bracken, a little known but nevertheless intriguing and tragic historical figure, was both legitimate and fully Irish.

Further reading: -

Austin Craig: Lineage Life and Labors of Jose Rizal, Philippine Education Company.
Can be downloaded from the internet at : -
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/6867/6867-h/6867-h.htm#d0e3347
Austin Coates: Rizal: Philippine Nationalist and Martyr, Oxford University Press.
Leon Ma Guerrero: The First Filipino, Guerrero Publishing.
Macario Ofilada: Errante Golondrina, The Life and Times of Josephine Bracken, New Day Publishers.
Ambeth R. Ocampo: Rizal Without the Overcoat, Anvil Publishing, Inc.


[Concluded 1st February 2009 except for any necessary amendments, corrections, updates, etc.
N.B. A change in the posting date – above at top – will indicate there has been a change within the contents.]

Friday, February 11, 2011

The Boy Scouts

The part of my Blog article about Boy Scouts Postage Stamp

Breaking their promise: The Jamboree tragedy of ’63
August 2, 2010, 9:16am http://www.mb.com.ph/

The 24 heroes of the Philippine Boy Scouts contigent who all died in a plane crash while on their way to the 11th World Scout Jamboree on July 28, 1963. by Juan De Ortega painting.
One Hundred Years of Scouting August 1 2007

One Hundred Years of Scouting August 1 2007
One Hundred Years of Scouting

The 24 heroes of the Philippine Boy Scouts contigent who all died in a plane crash while on their way to the 11th World Scout Jamboree on July 28, 1963.

Rain was coming down hard, and most of the Boy Scouts had preferred to stay in the comfort of their rooms, when Chito sat down to write on a postcard. He did not know that it was to be his last message:

Dearest Pa, Ma, Brothers, Sister and Everybody:
We arrived in Bangkok at 10:25 PM (Manila Time) safe and in good condition. We departed Hong Kong at 8:45 p.m. (Manila Time). I already sent to Pati a postcard. Please pray for me. Thank you. Love, Kisses and prayers,
Chito

From Bangkok, Chito and his fellow Scouts boarded a flight bound for Bombay, India. It was their last flight on earth.
Men, fishing on the sea off the town of Madh, heard the loud explosion. Morning arrived only to bring the start of search operations.

“They are so young to die.”

Throughout the country, news of the disaster spread like wild fire. Shock reigned among relatives, friends, the Boy Scouts of the Philippines and the entire country. Everybody hoped and prayed, but in vain. Misfortune carried the day. Everywhere, newspapers confirmed the great tragedy: The entire contingent to the 11th World Scout Jamboree died in a plane crash.

That was July 28, 1963.

“He is not dead,” one mother wailed, “He promised to return. He cannot be dead.”
The Scout broke his promise: he did not return alive.
At the BSP National Headquarters, a prayer vigil was held as calls, telegrams, and cable messages in a massive display of sympathy poured in.

Luminaries of many countries, such as the head of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Paul VI, the President of the Republic of India, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, the President of Indonesia, Sukarno, offered their condolences.
Expressing the bereavement of an entire nation, President Diosdado Macapagal said:

“The Boy Scouts died in the line of duty. Their noble death shall inspire the youth and the nation.”
Amid the sadness and suffering, the Filipinos determined to fulfill their duty to participate in the historical gathering in Europe. On the third of August 1963, Scouts Nicasio Fernandez, Guillermo Flores and Louis Santiago left Manila as a token delegation to the Greek Jamboree. The following day, the frigate Kripan of the Indian Navy steamed to the site of the crash in the Arabian Sea off the coast of Madh. Indian Consul General to the Philippines K.M. Modi and Commander J.D. Cooper of the Indian Navy laid a giant wreath on the waters to honor the dead.

In Europe, in the historic plains of Marathon, at the very site of the great international event, the Chief Scout of Greece, Crown Prince Constantinos, formally opened the Eleventh World Scout Jamboree amidst the 14,000 delegates from 85 nations of the world-minus the 24 heroes from the little country in the far corner of Southeast Asia.

The Philippine Flag Republic of the Philippines and Boys Scout's Seal was still broth out ans called in the Parade of delegates in the opening of the event to remember the scout's and all members boys and girls scouts, committee members ans people from the bleachers take a minute of silence ans bow whale the Philippine Flag and Scout Seal is on parade after The Flag of the Republic of the Philippines stood at half-staff at the Sub-Camp called Antiochis, where the Filipino boys would have stayed had they made it alive to the great gathering. Fifty-mile winds struck at Marathon, knocking tents down, spraying sand and dust everywhere, sweeping and destroying many fixtures. Nature herself was crying and sending a somber atmosphere in sympathy at the ill fate which befell the noble Scouts of the Philippines contingent.

While the Scouts of the world — minus their Filipino brothers — came together in the ancient country of Greece, Masses and necrological services were being offered in the Philippines. At the Rizal Memorial Stadium, Fernando E. V. Sison, president of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines, spoke to the parents and kin of the 24 Scouts and Scouters:

“My Friends, it is not given to man to bring the dead back to life. But perhaps it would be wrong or amiss for me to say here that in more than just a symbolic way, these Scouters and Scouts are not dead. They live, and shall continue to live in our midst. Their spirit of honor, of loyalty to God and country, their allegiance to the Scout Law of helping people at all times, this spirit of honor did not perish in the Arabian Sea; this spirit of honor came back to us with these mortal remains. And this spirit has entered into thousands of young hearts who look forward to their Scouting days of yesterday.”

A grieving Antonio C. Delgado, father of Scout Jose Antonio Delgado, responded on behalf of the parents and relatives of the fallen Scouts and Scouters:

“For this is the other side of the coin of grief. The glory. The honor. The triumph. … In the forefront of these boys’ minds were always held as shining goals the noble ideals of the Scout Oath: ‘honor…duty…God…country! These boys kept their honor; and they kept the faith; and they gave their all for their country… and I am sure they kept themselves in the friendship of God.”

A time too grieve

After the tragedy, the parents and relatives of the departed continued to meet and exchange stories of their young boys. Their meetings led to the formation of the 11th World Jamboree Memorial Foundation. Memorial and markers were put up. The Ala-Ala Mausoleum was erected at Manila’s North Cemetery. Streets in Quezon City were renamed in honor of the Scouts. The fallen Scouts and Scouters were each conferred a special Gold Medal of Honor. At the center of Tomas Morato rose the monument of the 24 Scouts as a tribute to fallen heroes. Monuments of Scouts were also built in schools they attended like in Letran, San Sebastian and others.

Two years later, in 1965, the Maharashtra State Association of the Bharat Scouts and Guides set up a memorial tablet in honor of the twenty-four. In July 4, the tablet was unveiled by Srimati Lakshmi Mazumdar, National Commissioner of the
Bharat Scouts and Guides.

The tablet reads:
“In memory of the twenty-four Boy Scouts & Scouters of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines who perished in an airplane crash over the turbulent waters of the Arabian Sea near Bombay before dawn of Sunday, July 28th 1963 on their way to the 11th Boy Scouts World Jamboree in Marathon, Greece.”

Many years later, in 1988, President Corazon C. Aquino, Chief Scout of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines, declared the 28th of July of every year as Scout Memorial Day from the Presidential Decree No 341

Today, years after that Black Sunday, the 24 Scouts and Scouters are not just streets, monuments or markers but are still symbols of Scouts who live by their promise to fulfill their duties. They remain as shining example of young people embedded with the values and virtues worth emulating by all.

They may have never sung the Jamboree song for the world to hear, but they are now singing with the Great Scoutmaster because they have never died. Scouts never die…they just hike to heaven.

The BSP marked on July 28th the 47th anniversary of the incident. Mass and flowers were offered in different places. In Manila, Scouts trooped to North Cemetery for the event while in Quezon City, flowers were offered at the monument at the center of Tomas Morato where the monument of the heroes are now built.

Official Logo
picture

One Hundred Years of Scouting 2007

One hundred years ago, Lord Baden-Powell ran his experimental camp on Brownsea Island on the South Coast of England, for 20 boys from different social backgrounds. Today, Scouting is a million times bigger and involves girls and boys, women and men from every origin, religion and culture, and nearly every country in the world.

In 2007 we celebrate our 100th anniversary. We will celebrate the achievements of the past 100 years, we will celebrate Scouting today and we will celebrate the commitment that Scouts worldwide undertake to make a difference in their communities. Most importantly, we will look ahead to a second century of Scouting.

Centenary Logo. The central element of this logo shows the relationship between our traditional fleur-de-lys logo and the dove of peace, with peace rising with the sun into a bright future. The numbers 100 and 2007 are prominent, as well as the World Emblem.

One World One Promise. The theme responds to young people's aspirations and is based on the Movement's mission and educational values. It is unifying and universal. As Scouts we will all make our Promise to do our best to work together and build a society based on the greater justice and solidarity. We make a commitment to play an active role in creating a better world, irrespective of our origin gender, culture or religion.

Our Promise compels us to help to improve the world. As Baden-Powell said, "Leave this world a little better than we found it."

Three fingers Scout Sign and the flag. The Scout Sign is made by raising your right hand to shoulder height, palm to the front, thumb resting on the nail of the little finger, and the other fingers upright, pointing upwards. The three fingers remind a Scout of the three parts of the Scout Promise and Law: Duty to God, duty to other and duty to self. The Scout Sign is given at the making of the Promise, or as greeting.

Design and Information

7p   Scout Sign and Flag  -  Singles  (50,000)<
7p   Scouting Centenary Logo  -  Singles  (50,000)
7p x 4 Souvenir Sheet of Four (two se-tenant pairs)  -  (8,000)

Printing process: Litho Offset.  Amstar Company, Inc.
Perforation: . 14
Information: 50 stamps per sheet  (10 x 5); Souvenir Sheets of 4
Designer & Layout Artist:  Richard Allen Baron
Graphic Designer:  Nicasio de Leon
Design Coordinator:  Noel B. Sabandal