La Solidaridad, newspaper, based in Barcelona and later Madrid, that espoused the relatively liberal views of the Filipino Propaganda Movement, which sought reform in the Spanish colony of the Philippines. The group was made up of a coalition of Filipino exiles and university students who had matriculated at European universities. The first issue of the biweekly newspaper was published in 1889 and La Solidaridad remained a major public arm of the movement until its final issue in 1895. The paper sought to put political pressure on the Spanish government, and, though not initially revolutionary, it helped spawn a united front for Filipino independence.
The Spanish colonial period in the Philippines began in 1521 when Ferdinand Magellan claimed the islands as a Spanish possession. For centuries Spanish dominance was exerted mostly through the aegis of the Roman Catholic Church and the Augustinian, Dominican, and Franciscan friars who controlled most aspects of Filipino public life and were the largest landowners outside Manila. Through a mix of structural racism and administrative negligence, the Spanish constructed a massive gap in access to basic amenities that existed not only between the Spanish colonists and Filipinos but also between the rich and poor Filipinos themselves. A clear indicator of the colonial caste system was the lack of Spanish-language education for most Filipinos, which denied them access to the levers of power. By the middle of the 19th century, less than one-fifth of Filipino students could speak and write Castilian Spanish. However, the sons of wealthy Filipinos were sent to be educated or live abroad in Europe, mostly in Spain. It was these affluent expatriates, known as Ilustrados (Spanish: “enlightened ones”), who founded the Propaganda Movement, and later, La Solidaridad.
Having originated more as a politico-cultural movement than as a strictly political one, the Propaganda Movement relied heavily on the literacy of its audience, whom it reached out to with publications such as La Solidaridad. Led by physician and novelist José Rizal, who studied in Manila and at the University of Madrid, the Propagandists advocated in writing for religious, economic, and cultural reforms in the Philippines. They agitated for change from the inside and did not necessarily want to be free from association with Spain. Nevertheless, their proud claims of Filipino identity would be echoed by a burgeoning nationalism at home. An editorial in the first issue of La Solidaridad read, in part:
With regard to the Philippines, since she needs the most help, not being represented in the Cortes, we shall pay particular attention to the defense of her democratic rights, the accomplishment of which is our patriotic duty.
The Propagandists’ desire for assimilation and not independence would result in a break between them and more revolution-minded political figures back home. Some historians ascribe the Propaganda Movement’s lack of revolutionary ambition to its members’ wish to protect their class-based privilege.
Graciano Lopez Jaena, La Solidaridad’s first editor, oversaw the newspaper’s publication for a little over a year. He was succeeded by Marcelo del Pilar in late 1889. The first issues of La Soli, as the Propagandists called it, advocated for the inclusion of Filipinos in the Spanish government. It also sought an end to the government’s practice of exiling reformers from the Philippines. Later issues of the newspaper had more ambitious aims. They called for the removal of Spanish friars and their replacement by Filipino priests as well as for the designation of the Philippines as a province of Spain, which would essentially guarantee more rights to its citizens. The colonial government did not grant any of these demands.
La Solidaridad was buoyed in no small part by the concurrent reform efforts of Rizal, who was one of the paper’s most frequent and potent contributors. He was wildly popular, and his writings were widely circulated in both Spain and the Philippines. Threatened by the power of his influence, the Spanish government sought to undermine him. In 1892, near the height of La Solidaridad’s popularity, Rizal returned to the Philippines and founded the reform-minded society Liga Filipina (Philippine League). Soon after this, Rizal was arrested and deported to a remote island of the Philippines. Without his involvement, La Solidaridad lost its funding and it went out of business in November 1895. A year later, its editors, del Pilar and Lopez Jaena, died in poverty in Barcelona. Rizal would be executed the same year, a martyr to the cause of Filipino independence from Spain, which would be achieved in 1898.