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  1. Back the crowd while the artillery group stood on alert to prevent any attempt to rescue Rizal. His brother Paciano who had joined the Revolution forces was said to have discouraged groups who might Want to save Rizal since thay would not be able to match Spanish Firepower. The captain in charge of the execution instructed Rizal

  2. Dec 25, 2012 · 11 December: In his prison cell, Rizal was read the charges against him: “principal organizer and the living soul of the Filipino insurrection, the founder of societies, periodicals and books dedicated to fomenting and propagating the ideas of rebellion.”

  3. The Katipunan, which had been organized on the eve of Rizal's deportation but had done little since, took on new life through the zeal and ability of Emilio Jacinto, a young student whose patriotic mother, a nurse (midwife) was sister of a Liga Filipina and Masonic leader later shot.

  4. Four days after the civic organization's foundation, Jose Rizal was arrested by the Spanish authorities on four grounds: 1. for publishing anti-Catholic and anti-friar books and articles; 2. for having in possession a bundle of handbills, the Pobres Frailes, in which advocacies were in violation of the Spanish orders;

  5. Jun 13, 2013 · Firm in his aim to fulfill his mission in Cuba, Rizal accordingly refused to be rescued by Katipunan’s envoys. Rizal arrived in Manila on August 6, 1896, a day after the mail boat ‘Isla de Luzon’ had left for Spain, and so he had to stay in Manila until the next steamer arrived.

  6. Rizal and the Katipuan: On June 21, 1896. Dr. Pio Valenzuela, Bonifacio’s emissary, visited Rizal in Dapitan and informed him of the plan of the Katipunan to launch a revolution. Rizal objected to Bonifacio’s bold project stating that such would be a veritable suicide.

  7. The “original” document of Rizal’s “retraction” was found in the archdiocesan archives in 1935, 39 years after having disappeared the day Rizal was shot.