RIZALS STATUETTE OF THE SACRED
HEART
While a student at the Ateneo Municipal in
Intramuros, Jose Rizal made a small statue of the Sacred Heart, about
nine inches in height. He carved the statuette in batikuling wood with a penknife, at the
request of his professor,
Father José Lleonard, S.J. While preparing to return to Spain, Father Lleonard intended
to take this statuette with
him, but the houseboy helping him pack, forgot to place it in his trunk. Consequently, the
statuette was left behind,
and it was taken by Rizal's fellow students. This was placed on a shelf above the door of
their study hall, where it
remained for twenty years.
In August 1887, Rizal returned from Europe and he stayed in the Philippines till early
1888. Now a liberal in
matters political as well as religious, he visited with his Jesuit friends at the Ateneo.
On his way out, the Jesuit
porter showed him the same statuette. Rizal replied: "Other times, Brother, other
times; I no longer believe in such
things."
In December 1896, after Rizal was sentenced to death by the Military Tribunal which had
tried him for treason, he
asked for some Jesuit priests to come and visit him. Father Miguel Saderra Mata, S.J.,
Rector of the Ateneo
Municipal, together with Father Luis Viza, S.J. went in haste to Fort Santiago, to the
cell in which Rizal was
imprisoned. They were greeted warmly by Rizal.
Rizal then asked them if the statue of the Sacred Heart, which he had carved as a boy, was
still at the Ateneo.
Father Viza, in reply, took the statuette out of the pocket of his soutane. He had guessed
rightly. Rizal would
remember it at the hour of his death. Rizal took it from him, kissed it in his hands, and
placed it on the table where
he would soon write the Ultimo Adiós.
The statuette remained in the cell where Rizal prayed and confessed, attended Mass, and
received Holy
Communion.
The following day, 30 December, just before leaving his cell for Bagumbayan, Rizal
reverently held the statuette to
his lips for the last time. With his two hands holding this close to his heart, he moved
slowly to give this back to the
Jesuits, who were with him to his last day. |