Juan Dela | Cruz History

Thus, the history of Juan dela Cruz is not found in a single birth certificate or grave. It is written in every protest placard, every overseas remittance slip, every whispered prayer before a typhoon, every child’s first lesson in baybayin script. He is the hero without a monument, the nation without a name.

The Philippine Revolution (1896–1898) against Spain was followed by the Philippine-American War (1899–1902). Juan dela Cruz faced a new colonizer. American troops used water torture, scorched-earth campaigns, and concentration zones. Over 200,000 Filipino civilians died. Yet Juan learned English, embraced baseball, and began dreaming of self-rule. The Jones Law (1916) promised eventual independence, but it would take until 1946—interrupted by Japanese occupation during World War II—for the Philippine flag to fly alone. juan dela cruz history

The Marcos dictatorship (1972–1986) redefined Juan dela Cruz once more. Under Martial Law, the "Juan dela Cruz" ID became a mandatory national identification card—ironically stripping the everyman of his anonymity. Activists, students, and journalists were jailed or killed. Yet Juan fought back. The assassination of Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr. in 1983 sparked mass protests. In February 1986, millions of Juan dela Cruzes—wearing yellow ribbons, praying the rosary, blocking tanks with their bodies—toppled a dictator in the People Power Revolution. That revolution was not led by generals or politicians, but by nuns, housewives, vendors, and students. It was the purest expression of the everyman’s power. Thus, the history of Juan dela Cruz is

Today, Juan dela Cruz is a jeepney driver in Manila navigating traffic and inflation; an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) in Dubai or Hong Kong, sending remittances home; a farmer in Mindanao facing drought and land grabs; a nurse in London or New York, praised as a pandemic hero but underpaid. His history is one of survival through bayanihan (communal unity) and pakikisama (getting along). He has been colonized, occupied, and governed by corrupt elites, yet he remains—still barefoot in the comics, but wearing modern shoes in reality. Over 200,000 Filipino civilians died

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