Jose Rizal s Wife

Jose Rizal s Wife

who is the wife of jose rizal

Daftar Isi

1. who is the wife of jose rizal


Jose Rizal's wife is Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken.

2. Who is Jose rizal wife?​


Answer:

Josephine Braken

Explanation:

Hope it helps

Answer:

Josephine Bracken.

#CarryONLearning


3. who is the wife of jose rizal?​


Answer:

ang asawa ni Jose Rizal ay si Josephine Bracken (Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken)

Explanation:


4. A. Critical Thinking 1. Lope's father allowed Jose Rizal to perform the eye operation on his wife. Why do you think so? 2. While not directly stated in the selection, can we say that Jose Rizal preferred peace over violence? Cite an incident in the selection to support this statement.​


1. It's possible that Lope's father relied on Jose Rizal's medical knowledge and reputation when he agreed to operate on his wife's eye. Rizal was renowned as an accomplished ophthalmologist in addition to being a writer and nationalist. Due to the scarcity or high cost of medical care in their area, Lope's father might have felt as though he had no other choices.

2. Yes, we can say that Jose Rizal preferred peace over violence based on the incident where he refused to join the Katipunan, a revolutionary group fighting for Philippine independence through armed struggle. Rizal believed that violence was not the solution to the country's problems and that the Filipinos should instead strive for reforms and education. He even wrote a letter to the leader of the Katipunan, urging him to abandon the plan for armed rebellion. This shows that Rizal believed in peaceful means of achieving social change.


5. man in dapitan lopes father allowed jose rizal to perform the eye operation on his wife why do you think so​


Answer:

because Dr. Jose Rizal was a real ophthalmologist.

Explanation:


6. if you were to choose, would you consider to be jose rizal's wife? why?​


Answer:

yes

Explanation:

because he is the hero in the world.


7. if you were the wife of Rizal what will you do for the last moment?​


Answer:

say what I want to say

Explanation:

because in the last time of a person you must say the word of thing that is related to him/her because life isn't forever love them if they are yet here and love them as long as you can love them


8. Why do you think Rizal addressed Josephine as "My dear and unhappy wife".?​


Answer:

cause his the hero of our country his suffer his life to save us

Explanation:

that all and i thank u


9. Read the following statements and tell whether they express truth or falsity. Write FACT or BLUFF in your study notebook.________________________5. Lope and his father were thankful to Jose Rizal. 6. He taught the boys Spanish language. 7. Lope's father entrusted his wife to Jose Rizal. 8. Lope admired Jose Rizal. 9. Kindness is difficult to repay. 10. Love for the country is like loving your parents.nonsense report​


1.FACT

2.FACT

3.FACT

4.FACT

5.BLUFF

6.FACT

7.FACT

8.FACT

9.FACT

10.FACT

#Altruistic

Answer:

5. Fact

6. Bluff


7. Fact

8. Bluff

9. Fact

10.Fact

Explanation:


10. what sacrifices that Josephine make as a wife of jose Rizal​


Answer:

DI KOPO ALAM sorry po pasensiya na


11. Why do you think Rizal addressed Josephine as "My dear and unhappy wife".?​​


Answer:

“To my dear and unhappy wife Josephine”

December 30th, 1896

- José Rizal

Notice how Rizal almost misspelled the name Josephine when he almost wrote “f”. He was used to the Spanish “Josefina”, but he realized it and wrote “Josephine” with an “f” trying to look like a “p”.

What is most crucial, of course, is that Rizal called Josephine his “wife”. May kasalan daw bang nangyari? This is the evidence staring us in the face! Look, Rizal certainly understood what the word wife meant. Hindi naman mangmang si Rizal sa wikang Ingles para magkamali sya sa kahulugan ng salitang “wife”.


12. who was the first wife of Dr. Jose Rizal?


The first and Only Wife of rizal is Josephine Braken .

Question :

Who was the first wife of Dr. Jose Rizal?

Answer :

Josephine Braken


13. Lope’s father allowed Jose Rizal to perform the eye operation on his wife. Why do you think so?


Answer:

so his wife's eye will be fixed/ heal.

Explanation:

i hope it help

carry on learning


14. Why do you think Rizal addressed Josephine as “My Dear and unhappy wife”?​


Answer:

D ko den alam sagot jan

Explanation:

pasensya na


15. Why do you think Rizal addressed Josephine as "My dear and unhappy wife"?


Answer:dahil naging kataling puso ito ni rizal

Explanation


16. What is the Name of Jose Rizal's Wife?​


Answer:

Josephine Bracken

Explanation:

Josephine Bracken ( Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken ) is the wife of Jose Rizal.


17. Who is the wife of Dr. Jose Rizal​


Explanation:

Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken

Answer:

Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken (October 3, 1876 – March 15, 1902) was the common-law wife of Philippine national hero José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan in the province of Zamboanga del Norte in the southern Philippines.

Hope this helps you answer your question


18. jose do you accept maria as your lawful wife​


Answer:

yes i do

Explanation:

:)


19. a.) What was Rizal's final giftto his wife?​


A few hours before his execution, they embraced for the last time and he gave her a souvenir—a religious book with his dedication, “To my dear unhappy wife, Josephine.”

20. what is the full name of jose rizal's wife?​


Answer:

Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken

Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken (October 3, 1876 – March 15, 1902) was the common-law wife of Philippine national hero José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan in the province of Zamboanga del Norte in the southern Philippines.

#hope it helps

MARIE JOSEPHINE LEOPOLDINE BRACKEN


21. what is the name of the wife of Dr. Jose Rizal??


Answer:

wala syang wife ehh pero sabi nila madami syang chic

Answer:

josephine Bracken

Explanation:

hope it helo po


22. Why Josephine wife of Rizal give prematurely birth? ​


Explanation:

Marie Josephine Leopoldine Bracken (October 3, 1876 – March 15, 1902) was the common-law wife of Philippine national hero José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan in the province of Zamboanga del Norte in the southern Philippines.[2][3][4] In the early morning hours of December 30, 1896, the day of his execution by firing squad, the couple were married in Fort Santiago, the place of his incarceration, following his reconciliation with the Catholic Church. The marriage is disputed by some sectors because no records were found regarding the union, discounting the unusual events of that day, even if it was attested by Josephine herself and the officiating priest.


23. "You are my wife and comrade" by jose maria sison,what is the main idea of the poem?​


Answer:

As founding chairman of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), Sison was a very hot item on the military list even before martial law was declared in 1972. He would be captured by the military in 1977, imprisoned and subjected to a long ordeal of physical and psychological torture.

Behind bars

Prison was surely an unforgettable experience for Sison, and this is reflected in the title of the book itself as well as many of the poems in it.

In the 30-stanza “Fragments of a Nightmare,” which is written from a first-person perspective, the persona talks of being made by “demons” into a punching bag, of being threatened with death or more inhuman treatment, even of being cajoled into running “for an assembly/Of demons.” The persona does not identify himself and the poem has been the subject of dispute in certain literary circles, but one thing is clear: the “I” speaking in “Fragments of a Nightmare” is none other than Sison himself, as may be gleaned from the book The Philippine Revolution: The Leader’s View as well as Grace B. Salita’s interview with him last year for her masteral thesis at De La Salle University. The “demons” are his tormentors and others he considers the enemies of the Filipino people.

The author’s wife, Julieta de Lima, was captured with him in 1977, but for years they were kept in separate cells. In “You are My Wife and Comrade,” Sison speaks of the anguish from this experience thus:

You are my wife and comrade.

It is harsh that we are kept apart

By a bloodthirsty enemy with many snares.

We care for each other’s welfare.

The wishes of the tyrant are so evil.

He seeks the betrayal of our souls

By torture and the threat of murder

And the wasting away of our youthful vigor.

His cruel minions are gleeful

That we suffer in stifling cubicles.

They are driven by usurped power

And like dogs carry out orders.

But despair Sison does not here. There is determined defiance in the following stanzas:

But even in our forced separation

We remain one in our fierce devotion

To the noble cause of the revolution.

Firmly the struggle we must carry on.

Our chief tormentor on the throne

Will someday be overthrown

For the seed has been sown

And the future is well-known.

(The poem was written in 1978. Eight years later, the Marcos dictatorship would be ousted through a popular uprising.)

The theme of prison serving to strengthen character instead of breaking it is a favorite of Sison. This is the theme behind his poems “A Furnace” and “In the Dark Depths.”

‘Tis a seething furnace

For tempering steel

And purifying gold,

‘Tis a comforting metaphor.

This is what Sison says of his cell in “A Furnace.”

“In the Dark Depths” he describes his fellow political prisoners’ life thus:

The enemy wants to bury us

In the dark depths of prison

But shining gold is mined

From the dark depths of the earth

And the radiant pearl is dived

From the dark depths of the ocean.

We suffer but we endure

And draw up gold and pearl

From depths of character

Formed so long in struggle.

In “Chemistry of Tears,” Sison goes beyond the prison imagery. He tackles the theme of injustice breeding revolutionary armed struggle, with touches of science:

Tears have too long been

the food of the meek.

But hunger has become

anger so fierce,

Turning the tears of the meek

into nitroglycerine

To explode the vile system

of terror and greed.

Such is the chemistry of tears

catalyzed by iniquity.

If “Chemistry of Tears” contains allusions to chemistry and physics, the images in “From the Philippines to Vietnam: Birds of Prey”- written in 1967 at the height of the U.S. war against Vietnam – are biological:

Curse the birds of prey

That drop their iron eggs

Wantonly

That crush the fields

Viciously

Sowing hunger

Hatching death

Ripping the breast

Of our dear brotherland.

Vietnam! Vietnam!

Every bomb on your breasts

Is a blow on our hearts.

The crags of terror

Are in Mactan, Clark Field

Sangley Point and manywheres;

The nests of evil here

Comfort the black birds

That torture you.

Isabelo de los Reyes

But science is not the only field from which Sison draws allusions. He apparently shares the interest of fellow Ilocano and scholar-activist Isabelo de los Reyes in folklore, as shown in the poem “Angalo, O Angalo!” about a giant hero of Ilocano legend whom he describes as a “Timeless foe of the oppressor.”

Leafing through Sa Loob at Labas ng Piitan, one may notice that the poems written from 1962 onward – are more direct in their language than those created in 1958-1962 – the ones lifted from Brothers and Other Poems (“By Cokkis Lilly Woundis,” “Carnival,” “The Imperial Game,” “The Massacre,” “These Scavengers,” “Brothers,” “The Dark Spears of the Hours Point High,” and “Hawk of Gold”) – although by no means are they less poetic.

Explanation:


24. Reason why rizal called Josephine unhappy wife?​


Answer:

she was his dear wife. A few hours before his execution, they embraced for the last time and he gave her a souvenir—a religious book with his dedication, “To my dear unhappy wife, Josephine.”


25. Who is the wife of jose santiago?


Answer:

Edna he met while playing for Kansans City


26. Why Jose Rizal addresses Josephine as "My dear unhappy wife"?


Answer:

because of the gravity of the earth


27. why it is Josephine Bracken become the wife of Rizal among his women.​


Explanation:

no po naging babae lang ni rizal


28. the fater intrusted his wife's health to rizal


Answer:

Of course not! Since you are the father/husband, it is your sole responsibility to keep your family safe and provide for their needs. With that in mind, even though you are far away, I believe you will try your best to make ways and means for it. Being far away doesn't give you the option to let other men look after your wife/family. Letting others take over your family will lead to misunderstanding of roles in the family which might lead to a broken family. The decision to leave to work far from your family is a very hard sacrifice a father should take, but it doesn't mean that another guy should take care of your family who was left. I believe couples should work out every decision they make for the benefit of their children.


29. Who was accused as an accomplice of Jose alberto of trying to poison his wife? ​


Teodora
Later Jose's wife and an officer of the Guardia Civil (presumably the same one who was refused hgorse fodder) then accused Jose Alberto and Teodora of trying to poison Jose Alberto's wife. Teodora was named as an accomplice

Answer:

Teodora

Explanation:

Later Jose's wife and an officer of the Guardia Civil (presumably the same one who was refused hgorse fodder) then accused Jose Alberto and Teodora of trying to poison Jose Alberto's wife. Teodora was named as an accomplice


30. What I Know Pre-test Fact or Blue Directions Read the following statements and tell whether they express truth ar talsity. Write FACT or BLUFF in your paper. 1. Jose Rizal is our national hero. 2 He knew only one language. 3. He was exiled in Dapitan 4. He did not help Lope's mother to regain her eyesight 5 Lape and his father were thankful to Jose Rizal He taught the boys Spanish language 7 Lope's father entrusted his wife to Jose Rizal 8. Lope admired Jose Rizal 8. Kindness is difficult to repay 10 Love for the country is like loving your parents.​


Answer:

1.FACT

2.BLUFF

3.FACT

4.BLUFF

5.FACT

6.FACT

7.FACT

8.FACT

9.FACT

Explanation:

1.The reformist writer Jose Rizal, today generally considered the greatest Filipino hero and often given as the Philippine national hero, has never been explicitly proclaimed as the (or even a) national hero by the Philippine government.

2.Rizal was fluent in twenty-two languages (Hebrew, Filipino, Ilokano, Bisayan, Subanon, Chinese, Latin, Spanish, Greek, English, French, German, Arabic, Malay, Sanskrit, Dutch, Japanese, Catalan, Italian, Portuguese, Swedish and Russian) and had a knack for switching from one language to another when he was writing.

3.Rizal lived in exile in far-away Dapitan, a remote town in Mindanao which was under the missionary jurisdiction of the Jesuits, from 1892 to 1896. This four-year inter regnum in his life was tediously unexciting, but was abundantly fruitful with varied achievements.

4.He could not explain to them that he studied medicine and especially, ophthalmology, to cure his mother's cataract problem, which threatened to make her completely blind. ... Rizal successfully removed the cataract of his mother, his first surgical operation.

5.No explanation.

6.No explanation.

7.No explanation.

8.No explanation.

9.No explanation.

NOTE:correct me if im wrong...just commentシ︎


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