Lupang Hinirang (Filipino Version)
Bayang magiliw,
Perlas ng Silanganan.
Alab ng puso
Sa dibdib mo’y buhay.
Lupang hinirang,
Duyan ka ng magiting,
Sa manlulupig
Di ka pasisiil.
Sa dagat at bundok,
Sa simoy at sa langit mong bughaw,
May dilag ang tula
At awit sa paglayang minamahal.
Ang kislap ng watawat mo’y
Tagumpay na nagniningning;
Ang bituin at araw niya,
Kailan pa ma’y di magdidilim.
Lupa ng araw,
ng luwalhati’t pagsinta,
Buhay ay langit sa piling mo;
Aming ligaya,
na pag may mang-aapi,
Ang mamatay nang dahil sa iyo.
(From Camilo Osias: Educator and Statesman by Eduardo Bananal, Manlapaz Publishing Co., 1974)
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The Philippine National Anthem (English Version)
Land of the Morning,
Child of the sun returning,
With fervor burning,
Thee do our souls adore.
Land dear and holy,
Cradle of noble heroes,
Ne’er shall invaders
Trample thy sacred shore.
Ever within thy skies
and through thy clouds
And o’er thy hills and sea
Do we behold the radiance,
feel the throb,Of glorious liberty.
Thy banner, dear to all our hearts,
Its sun and stars alight,
O, never shall its shining field
Be dimmed by tyrant’s might!
Beautiful land of love,
O land of light,
In thine embrace ‘tis rapture to lie,
But it is glory ever, when thou art wronged,
For us, thy sons, to suffer and die.
(Translated from the Spanish by Camilo Osias and M.A.L. Lane; taken from Camilo Osias, Manlapaz Publishing Co., 1971)
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Himno Nacional Filipino (Spanish Version)
Tierra adorada,
hija del sol de Oriente,
su fuego ardienteen
ti latiendo esta.
Tierra de amores,
del heroismo cuna,
los invasores
no te hollaran jamas.
En tu azul cielo,
en tus auras,
en tus montes y en tu mare
splende y late el poema
de tu amada libertad.
Tu pabellon que en las lides
la victoria ilumino,
no vera nunca apagados
sus estrellas ni su sol.
Tierra de dichas, de sol y de amores
en tu regazo dulce es vivir;
es una gloria para tus hijos,
cuando te ofenden, por ti morir.
(From Jose Palma’s Melancolicas: Coleccion de Poesias, Libreria Manila Filatelica, 1912)
The Philippine National Anthem
June 1898: In preparation for the Proclamation of Independence, Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo asks musician Julian Felipe to compose a march befitting the occasion. Felipe’s composition, titled “Marcha Nacional Filipina,” is approved by Aguinaldo and other revolutionary leaders. On June 12, after the reading of the Proclamation, the band of San Francisco de Malabon plays the march as the Philippine flag is hoisted.
September 3, 1899: La Independencia, a newspaper where poet Jose Palma is a staff member, publishes the score of Felipe’s march with a Palma poem, titled “Filipinas,” for lyrics. The march thus becomes a Felipe-Palma composition.
The 1920s: Palma’s lyrics are translated into English by educator Camilo Osias and M.A.L. Lane.
May 1956: President Ramon Magsaysay proclaims the Filipino translation of the lyrics by Ildefonso Santos and Julian Cruz Balmaceda, which appeared in the 1940s, as the official Filipino version.
Above are the three versions of the National Anthem.
Source: http://www.filipinaslibrary.org.ph/filipiniana/nationalanthem.asp
MISSION: To foster FILIPINO NATIONALISM. "Shake the foundations." Seek knowledge/understand/think critically about roots of socioeconomic-political predicaments in our homeland; educate ourselves, expose lies/hidden truths and fight IGNORANCE of our true history. Learn from: our nationalist heroes/intellectuals/Asian neighbors/other nations;therefrom to plan/decide/act for the "common good" of the native [Malay/indio] Filipino majority. THIS BLOG IS NOT FOR PROFIT.
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
Lupang Hinirang - National Anthem
FILIPINO NATIONALISM -is the bottom line;sine-qua-non for the common good of the native (Malay/Indio)Filipino majority. Nationalism must precede any plan/action in dealing with globalization.
EDUCATION- being educated is beyond just being schooled towards a profession or practical vocation; we need the Humanities/liberal arts to develop/apply CRITICAL ANALYSIS/THINKING to understand, identify, plan, act & safeguard the needed fundamental and/or systemic changes towards economic/political progress, social justice, and social transformation.
GOVERNMENT - its raison d'etre is to lead/serve the native majority, foster nationalism via its institutions, ensure the masses are critically literate to have real democracy.
FREEDOM & DISSENT - free thought is necessarily aggressive and critical; we protect the freedom to discover truth; we encourage dissent, not for sentimental reasons, but because we cannot live without it. PATRIOTISM is NOT: " My country, right or wrong;" but " if right, to be kept right; if wrong, to be set right!"
RELIGION/BELIEFS: No Deus ex Machina. No established religion. Humanism/Existentialism.
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1 comment :
hope you also have a japanese version of this song
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