Home Rule in Luzon
From Harpers Weekly, by
William Bengough
Manila.
August 1, 1899.
General Lawton as been dividing his time for the last few months between
fighting and chasing Filipino insurgents, and in the intervals of war
gently teaching Filipino non-combatants that the United States really
means to give them their freedom.
This effort to convince the frightened natives that the
Americans have not come to devour them meets at first with suspicion and
hesitation. They cannot quite understand that peculiar combination
-- Americano. They are surprised to find that the terrible, bearded,
recking fighters, who drive everything before them, eating Mauser fire
apparently, when finished with their day's work of carnage stop to play
with the native babies, and actually pay good money for the fruit and eggs
they need -- money worth often ten times what the startled native has ever
received for such commodities before. Thus, when General Lawton
calls together the leading citizens of a town, after he has fought through
it probably with terrifying results, the leading citizens assemble because
they have no choice, and with troubled minds they listen to the American
doctrines of fraternity, equality and liberty.
When, after a great amount of energetic eloquence from the
interpreter (who a short while ago was an insurgent himself), they begin
to grasp at the idea, they are shown how to elect their president and his
advisors, and these proud personages are then thoroughly schooled in the
proclamation issued by the Peace Commission presided over by Mr. Schurman.
They are told to get to work and to put their town in order, to levy and
collect their own taxes, and to spend the money for their own public
works. Schools are opened, and most important of all, classes are
begun in English, and so with no formality the new life of the Filipinos
begins.
The illustration shows
the beginning of home rule in Las Piñas. This little town only six
miles from Manila, on the south shore of the bay, from which the rebels
have only recently been driven out.
General Grant's brigade is stationed along through the
towns adjoining Las Piñas, and he was an interested attendant on the day
when General Lawton arrived with Mr. Dean C. Worcester, who represents the
commission at these gatherings. The local Filipino priest
acted as host, and the meeting was held in the old church building.
The President and his advisors were elderly Filipinos,
hard handed fishermen and mechanics, their earnest furrowed faces intent
on the business in hand; and although in their simple native dress, shirt
hanging in Chinese fashion, and with bare feet, they felt the dignity of
their new position, and proudly sat to be sketched, and then proved their
schooling by signing the likenesses in queer crabbed Spanish letters.
Already the effect of the generous treatment is being
seen. Instead of finding a deserted town after the insurgents are
driven out, the non-combatants now stay and trust the Americans.