Photo by Alren Jerome Beronio, the second photo published on facebook.
The US Embassy Manila and the Diocese of Borongan are
working for the retrieval of the Balangiga bells and hoping that it will follow
the footstep of the San Pedro bell.
SHORT HISTORY
On September 28, 1901 during the Philippine-American
War, Filipino guerrillas in Balangiga ambushed American troops,
killing 48 members of the US 9th Infantry. The incident triggered the infamous
American retaliation against the Samar populace and guerrillas.
ABOUT THE BALANGIGA
MASSACRE
An incident in 1901 in the town of the same name during the Philippine–American
War. It initially referred to the killing of about 48 members of the US 9th
Infantry by the townspeople allegedly augmented by guerrillas in the
town of Balangiga on Samar Island during an attack on
September 28 of that year. In the 1960s Filipino nationalists applied it to the
retaliatory measures taken on the island. This incident was described as the United
States Army's worst defeat since the Battle of the Little Bighorn in
1876 Filipinos regard the attack as one of their bravest acts in the war.
There has been much heated discussion regarding the number
of Filipino casualties, for which there are no reliable documentary records.
Gen. Jacob H. Smith, who ordered the killing of every male over ten years
old during the retaliatory campaign, was subject to court-martial for
"conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline".
Reprimanded but not formally punished, Smith was forced into retirement from
the service because of his conduct.
The attack and the subsequent retaliation remains one of the
longest-running and most controversial issues between the Philippines and the
United States. Conflicting records from American and Filipino historians have
confused the issue. Demands for the return of the bells of the church at
Balangiga, taken by the Americans as war booty and collectively known
as the Balangiga bells, remain an outstanding issue of contention related
to the war. One church bell remains in the possession of the 9th Infantry
Regiment at their base in Camp Red Cloud, South Korea, while two
others are on a former base of the 11th Infantry Regiment at F.E.
Warren Air Force Base in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
According to some nationalist Filipino historians, the true
"Balangiga massacre" was the subsequent American retaliation against
the Samar population and guerrillas. Interpretations and retelling of the
Balangiga incidents, the Samar pacification campaign and the
Philippine–American War have been heavily influenced by the writings of
Filipino left-wing polemicist RenatoConstantino and also Filipino Marxist
historian Teodoro Agoncillo, both strongly anti-American.
From (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balangiga_massacre)
Supplemental news from Alren Jerome Beronio/
Sinirangannewsinfo.blogspot.com
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