San Juan de Dios Church
San Rafael Church | |
---|---|
San Juan de Dios Parish Church | |
The facade of San Juan de Dios church in San Rafael, Bulacan Bulacan | |
San Rafael Church Republic of the Philippines | |
14°57′30″N 120°57′47″E / 14.958422°N 120.963135°ECoordinates: 14°57′30″N 120°57′47″E / 14.958422°N 120.963135°E | |
Location | Poblacion, San Rafael, Bulacan |
Country | Philippines |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
History | |
Consecrated | 1750 |
Architecture | |
Status | Parish church |
Functional status | Active |
Architectural type | Church building |
Style | Partido Baroque |
Administration | |
Archdiocese | Manila |
Diocese | Malolos |
Clergy | |
Archbishop | Luis Antonio Tagle |
Bishop(s) | Jose Oliveros |
San Juan de Dios Parish Church, also San Rafael Church, is a 19th-century Roman Catholic church situated in Brgy. Poblacion, in San Rafael, Bulacan, Philippines. Its titular patron is St. John of God; Saint Raphael, archangel, is the secondary patron saint. It is in this church that the Battle of San Rafael took place, wherein hundreds of retreating Filipino soldiers and civilians lost their lives during a battle with the Spanish on November 30, 1896. A historical marker by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines was installed in front of the church in 1997 to commemorate the massacre of an estimated 800 Filipinos.
History
The town of San Rafael had its humble beginning as part of the Hacienda de Buenavista under the San Juan de Dios brothers. Though belonging to that religious group, the place was however administered by the Augustinian friars who established the mission in 1750.[1] The date of the construction of the present stone church is debatable although some sources indicate that the convent was built in 1863, which can be assumed to be the time when the church was also being erected. Fray Antonio Piernavieja, OSA who served as parish priest from 1868 to 1873 and from 1875 to 1877 finished the convent.[2]
Battle of San Rafael
The church is the site of the Battle of San Rafael, a battle fought between Filipino revolutionaries under the leadership of General Anacleto “Matanglawin” Enriquez against the Spanish army headed by Commandant Lopez Arteaga.[3] On their way from the town of Paombong, Bulacan to the mountain ranges of Bulacan, General Isidoro Torres of Malolos decided to divide the troop of Katipuneros into two: one group under his supervision while the other under the guidance of General Enriquez and his brother Colonel Vicente Enriquez. The group of General Enriquez was supposedly heading to the town of Baliuag, Bulacan but decided to stay instead in San Rafael, believing it to be a strategic site. Unknowingly, a Spanish troop from Manila heading towards San Rafael, prepared to silence the 20,000 Filipino insurgents. The battle started at around 7 a.m. on November 30, 1896. The Spanish forces were so strong that General Enriquez ordered a retreat to the church of San Rafael. Sometime in the middle of the battle, some of the Filipino troops including Colonel Enriquez were separated from the rest of the group and headed to the town of Bigaa (now Balagtas). At around noon, the Spanish army forced the church doors open and murdered the Filipino revolutionaries seeking shelter in the church. It is estimated that 800 people were killed in the battle, most of whom were children, women and other locals. The number of casualties was so immense that it was believed that blood spilled in the church reached ankle-deep.[1] The gobernadorcillo of San Rafael ordered a mass grave to be made near the church.[4] It is believed that the Battle of San Rafael inspired the young general Gregorio Del Pilar (a close friend of General Anacleto Enriquez) to join the revolution against Spain.[3]
Sisa, Basilio and Crispin in San Rafael
Residents of San Rafael believe that national hero Jose Rizal was inspired to create the characters Sisa, Basilio and Crispin (in his work Noli Me Tángere) by a real-life story in San Rafael. Recalling the story from Rizal’s novel, the two brothers were serving as bell-ringers in the church to help their mother by earning money. On one occasion, the sacristan mayor accused Crispin of stealing an amount of money. Crispin was punished by the sacristan mayor and the town cure, Padre Salvi, and was believed to have died inside the church premises. As proof of the local legend, locals point to a blood-stained wall off the side of the convent in a small room where supposedly the young “Crispin” was tortured to death.
Other local residents of San Rafael, Bulacan ponders some evidences that the town of San Rafael was the town of San Diego in Rizal's novel. They said that the name of Crisostomo Ibarra's father in the novel, "Rafael"came from the town original name San Rafael. Aside from that, there's a place in San Rafael "Pasong Intsik" or "Chinese Pass" were the early Chinese merchants of San Rafael resided. In the novel, Rizal told that Rafael's body was formerly buried in the San Diego cemetery before it was exhumed and thrown to the river.[5][6]
Architecture
The San Juan de Dios Church is a classic example of Partido Baroque architecture in the Philippines. The style, popular from the early to mid-19th century, boasts of a curved façade as opposed to the flat ones typically found in other Baroque churches in the country. The church façade has two openings: a main portal now partially covered with a concrete portico and a semi-circular arch window in the center of the second level which provides light to the choir loft. The window is flanked by pairs of Tuscan-inspired columns extending up to the pediment and capped off by finials. The pediment has a niche in the center with an image of a saint. To the right of the church is the three-level octagonal belfry, the second and third levels of which are later additions to the earlier first level.[2]
Features
San Juan de Dios Parish Museum
The second level of the convent has been converted into a museum housing different historical artifacts and religious items. The Museo San Rafael was officially opened on September 29, 2006 during the feast of San Rafael, coinciding with the 256th founding anniversary of the town. Besides the main hall of the convent, three rooms now house different exhibits. The first room, named Museo ng Bayan (Museum of the Town) houses different Spanish-era items common to old San Rafael like an old rice mill, traditional clothes and house furniture. Located between the convent and the church is a small room containing a painting in memory of the characters Basilio and Crispin from Jose Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere.[5] A life-size statue of Jose Rizal can also be found inside the room. Farther inside the room, the deep crevice between the stone walls is said to be a well. In the next room, called Museo ng Simbahan (Museum of the Church) are collections of religious items including old stampitas and record books of the parish, a scaled replica of the church retablo, old santos, heavily-embroidered vestments and an old episcopal chair. The third room, named Museo ng mga Anghel (Museum of the Angels) is an exhibit of different artworks of angels in recognition of the town’s other patron saint, Archangel Raphael. The town has held the annual Angel festival every 29 September since 2002.[7]
Image Gallery
- Evangelist painting at intersection of the nave and transept
- Details of the silver altarpiece
- Inside San Juan de Dios Church
- Old clothes displayed at Museo San Rafael
- Inside Museo San Rafael
- Room dedicated to Basilio and Cripsin (of Noli Me Tangere)*
- Room between church and convent
- Old church records
- Episcopal chair
- Life size images of the Last Supper
- Side of the San Juan de Dios Church viewed from the belfry
- Details of one of the Stations of the Cross reliefs
- San Juan de Dios Church facade
- Campana Mayor now located on the church patio
References
- 1 2 Official Website of the Provincial Government of Bulacan. http://bulacan.gov.ph/sanrafael/history.php. Retrieved May 24, 2014. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - 1 2 Galende, Pedro (1996). Angels in Stone: Architecture of Augustinian Churches in the Philippines. San Agustin Museum. ISBN 978-9719157106.
- 1 2 Almario [ed.], Virgilio (2002). Bulacan: Lalawigan ng Bayani at Bulaklak. Pamanang Bulacan Foundation, Inc. ISBN 971-92469-0-1.
- ↑ Official Website of the Municipal Government of San Rafael. sanrafael.gov.ph http://sanrafael.gov.ph/about-us/history/. Retrieved May 24, 2014. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - 1 2 Zamora, F. "Sisa, Crispin and Basilio lived here, say Bulacan townsfolk. According to food historian, Milagros Enriquez, there's a woman named "Narcisa Crisostomo" in the town who believed to be from Hagonoy, Bulacan but married on a certain Juan Crisostomo in San Rafael (lived near in the church) and considered to be the mother of two sacristans on he said church (Basilio and Crispin) and afterwards, became insane because of the cruelties of the church's sacristan mayor.". inquirer.net. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
- ↑ Taruc, Jay. "Ang simbahan ng San Rafael: An I-Witness Documentary". gmanetwork.com. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
- ↑ Official Website of the Municipal Government of San Rafael. "San Rafael Festivals". sanrafael.gov.ph. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint John of God Church (San Rafael, Bulacan). |
Bibliography
- Bulacan: Lalawigan ng bayani at bulaklak. (2002). Almario, V. S. [ed.]. Pamanang Bulacan Foundation, Inc. ISBN 971-92469-0-1.
- Cabigas, E. (2008) Visita iglesia: The old churches of bulacan (part 2 of 2). Retrieved from http://simbahan.net/2008/03/17/visita-iglesia-the-old-churches-of-bulacan-part-2-of-2/
- Galende, P. (1996). Angels in stone: Architecture of augustinian churches in the philippines. ISBN 978-9719157106.
- Official Website of the Municipal Government of San Rafael. Retrieved from http://sanrafael.gov.ph
- Official Website of the Provincial Government of Bulacan. Retrieved from http://bulacan.gov.ph
- Taruc, J. (2014). Ang simbahan ng san rafael: An I witness documentary. Retrieved from http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/360871/publicaffairs/iwitness/ang-simbahan-ng-san-rafael-an-i-witness-documentary-by-jay-taruc
- Zamora, F. (2007). Sisa, crispin, basilio lived here, say bulacan townsfolk. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved from http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20071230-109474/Sisa_Crispin_Basilio_lived_here_say_Bulacan_townsfolk