IN DEFENSE OF BROTHER
FELIX Y. MANALO:
FELIX Y. MANALO:
“Did Brother Felix Y. Manalo Rape Rosita Trillanes?”
PEOPLE who maliciously wanted to paint a negative picture of a person will continuously throw allegations although they don't have concrete evidences. They will ignore facts because their intention is not to reveal the truth, but to imprint negative impression on the person they attack. Thus, it is not surprising that after their
allegations were proven false, they will invent more and more lies
against the person they are attacking.This is indeed what detractors are
doing against Brother Felix Y. Manalo and the Iglesia Ni Cristo.
Catholic Faith Defenders, ADD members and other INC detractors continuously spreading in the internet and other media the baseless accusation that Brother Felix Y. Manalo was allegedly "convicted of raping a woman named Rosita Trillanes." However, let us find out the truth about this allegation which INC detractors continuously throwing against Brother Felix Y. Manalo. What is the whole story behind this allegation?
Catholic Faith Defenders, ADD members and other INC detractors continuously spreading in the internet and other media the baseless accusation that Brother Felix Y. Manalo was allegedly "convicted of raping a woman named Rosita Trillanes." However, let us find out the truth about this allegation which INC detractors continuously throwing against Brother Felix Y. Manalo. What is the whole story behind this allegation?
LIBEL CASE AND NOT RAPE CASE
THE FACT: It was Brother Felix Y. Manalo who filed a case against those who accused him of raping women, and never a rape case was filed in the court against him.
In 1939, Reymundo Mansilungan, Cirilo Gonzales and Teodoro Briones were expelled from the Church. Mansilungan and Gonzales were former ministers and hold key positions in the Church. Bitter, they conspired to take vengeance against Brother Felix Y. Manalo. The three were expelled because of the anomalies they committed.
They convinced a former employee of the Central Office who was also an expelled member of the Church, Rosita Trillanes, to sign a letter stating that she was raped by Brother Felix Y. Manalo. The three promised her that the letter will only be shown to the members of the Church. This was how they will take vengeance against Brother Felix Y. Manalo for expelling them from the Church. (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952)
In 1939, Reymundo Mansilungan, Cirilo Gonzales and Teodoro Briones were expelled from the Church. Mansilungan and Gonzales were former ministers and hold key positions in the Church. Bitter, they conspired to take vengeance against Brother Felix Y. Manalo. The three were expelled because of the anomalies they committed.
They convinced a former employee of the Central Office who was also an expelled member of the Church, Rosita Trillanes, to sign a letter stating that she was raped by Brother Felix Y. Manalo. The three promised her that the letter will only be shown to the members of the Church. This was how they will take vengeance against Brother Felix Y. Manalo for expelling them from the Church. (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952)
Reymundo Mansilungan was the brother-in-law of Rosita’s
boyfriend. Mansilungan rushed the marriage of Rosita to his brother-in-law. Immediately
after the wedding, Mansilungan shown to Rosita the letter and asked her to sign
it, promising that it will only be shown to members of the Church. Rosita
signed the letter. (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952)
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: When they made the “letter” they were no longer
with the Iglesia Ni Cristo, they were already been expelled from the Church.
Thus, their “motive” in making such “letter” is really questionable. If
they were still members of the Church when that “letter” was made, or they were
not yet expelled from the Church, this “letter” may be found
credible. However, because the letter was made by those expelled from the
Church, that they lose not only their membership of the Church, but also their positions
and the “privileges” (Mansilungan was a former district supervising minister,
Gonzales was the former General Secretary of the Church, and Briones
was a former editor of the PASUGO, and Rosita was a former clerk in the Central
office), thus the credibility and truthfulness of the letter is truly
questionable.
The “letter” was indeed shown to
members of the Church, but no members of the Church believe them. They failed to gain support from any members because no one was convinced that the content
of the letter is true. The brethren knew the “background” of those who made the
letter. They knew that the real “motive” behind that “letter” was to make
vengeance against Brother Felix Y. Manalo for expelling them from the Church.
Gaining no supporters from members of the Church, the “letter” was published in a local newspaper in Pampanga named “Ing Cawal” (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952). Because of this, Brother Felix Y. Manalo filed a libel case against Rosita Trillanes, the editor of the local newspaper, Reymundo Mansilungan, Cirilo Gonzales and Teodoro Briones.
Gaining no supporters from members of the Church, the “letter” was published in a local newspaper in Pampanga named “Ing Cawal” (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952). Because of this, Brother Felix Y. Manalo filed a libel case against Rosita Trillanes, the editor of the local newspaper, Reymundo Mansilungan, Cirilo Gonzales and Teodoro Briones.
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: It was a libel case and not a rape case. It was
Brother Felix Y. Manalo who filed a libel case against Rosita Trillanes and
company, and not Rosita filling a rape case againt Brother Felix Y. Manalo.
Thus, what the INC detractors spreading in the internet and other media that Brother Felix Y. Manalo was charged of raping Rosita Trillanes is A BIG LIE.
Others asked why Brother Felix Y.
Manalo filed a libel case against Rosita, Mansilungan and others? Because they
were no longer members of the Church. Filing a libel case against them is the
legal, civil and proper thing to do. Brother Felix Y. Manalo did not
attack them from the pulpit, nor publish attacks against Trillanes and company. He did what is proper, to file a libel case against Trillanes and company.
THOSE CONVICTED WERE ROSITA
AND COMPANY
AND NOT BROTHER FELIX Y. MANALO
Eventually, the lower court decided in favor
of Brother Felix Y. Manalo. The Court convicted Trillanes, Mansilungan and others.
The decision of the lower court in favor of the Brother Felix Y. Manalo was
published in January of 1941 by a national newspaper, Taliba. (Trillanes’ Affidavit, 7 November 1952)
Although they knew the facts that
it was Brother Felix Y. Manalo who filed the case against Rosita
Trillanes and company, and eventually the court convicted Rosita, Mansilungan and others, however,
the INC detractors continue to spread and insist that it was Brother Felix Y.
Manalo who was charged and convicted by the court of law. A BIG LIE INDEED.
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: Brother Felix Y. Manalo was not convicted, not
even charged of any crime. For many times, the INC detractors were challenged to
show concrete evidences proving that Brother Felix Y. Manalo was
convicted of a crime, and they produce NONE. However, they continue
spreading these lies against Brother Felix Y. Manalo.
ON THE
DECISION OF THE
COURT OF APPEALS
COURT OF APPEALS
Afraid of being imprisoned,
Rosita and company filed an appeal. They asked the Court of Appeals to reverse
the decision of the lower court. The Court of Appeal did so and the decision
was published in Philippine Gazette (the official newspaper of the Philippine
government) on July of 1942.
What? July of 1942? Was that the
year when the Philippines was under the Japanese Imperial forces? Yes, it was!
The Pacific War of World War II started when the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor
on December of 1941. Then they invaded the Philippines which then was a colony
of the United States of America. The Japanese already occupied Manila and
established a Japanese regime on January of 1942. The January 1942 edition of
the Philippine Gazette published the Order No. 1 of the Japanese Military
Administration in the Philippines (a proclamation of the commander-in-chief of
the Japanese forces in the Philippines dated 23rd of January, 1942.
The following is the statement of the proclamation of the commander-in-chief of
the Imperial Japanese Forces in the Philippines regarding the judicial courts
and the judicial system in the Philippines:
ORDER No. 1
ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMISSIONS AND CREATION
OF SIX DEPARTMENTS
"…3. The
Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Japanese Forces shall exercise jurisdiction
over judicial courts.
"4. A
'Commissioner' for each department constituting the central organization shall
be appointed on [the Chairman's] recommendation by the Commander-in-Chief of
the Imperial Japanese Forces.
"As regards the
appointments of other important officials...you [the Chairman] shall have an
approval of the Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Japanese Forces.
"...COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF
OF THE IMPERIAL JAPANESE FORCES IN THE PHILIPPINES January 23d, 1942 (the 17th
year of Showa)."
Thus, during the Japanese occupation
of the Philippines, the judicial courts of the Philippines were under the
jurisdiction of the commander-in-chief of the Imperial Japanese Forces in the
Philippines.
What will happen to the
Filipinos, even to high ranking officials of the Philippine government
(including officials of the judicial system) if they will not follow the will
of the Japanese forces? The patriotic Jose Abad Santos, the chief Justice of
the Supreme Court of the Philippines then, was executed by the Japanese on May
2, 1942 (Aquino, 1985:215).
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: On JANUARY OF 1942, the Japanese
commander-in-chief declared that judicial courts in the Philippines
were under his jurisdiction. On
MAY OF 1942, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines,
Jose
Abad Santos, were executed by the Japanese. Then on JULY OF 1942, the
Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the lower court (Court of First
Instance of Manila) regarding
the libel case filed by Brother Felix Y. Manalo against Rosita Trillanes
and
company, and even went further in calling Brother Manalo “a man of low
morals.”
Brother
Manalo’s Conflict With The Japanese
The Japanese knew that to win the
war they must win the support of the Filipino people, and they want to
accomplish these through religion. Even before they came to the country, they
already made plans to use religions in the Philippine to win the heart of the
Filipinos. Thus, immediately after they occupied Manila, they attempted to
established a federation of churches in the Philippines so that they could easily
control all churches in the country and use them to win the support of the
Filipinos.
The Japanese want Brother Felix
Y. Manalo to lead this federation of churches they established. However,
Brother Felix Y. Manalo refused. Hence, he was arrested several times and
harassed by the Japanese. The Japanese even forced Brother Felix Y. Manalo to step down
as Executive Minister of the Iglesia Ni Cristo. But, they saw that members of the Iglesia Ni Cristo were truly loyal to Brother Felix Y. Manalo. So, executing him
will not do them any good, instead, this may further arose the hatred against
the Japanese. Thus, they made actions to destroy the integrity of the Brother
Felix Y. Manalo so members of the Iglesia Ni Cristo and even other people will
no longer support him. Consequently, they found out that there was a pending
libel case in the Court of Appeal that Brother Felix Y. Manalo filed against
Rosita Trillanes and company.
Coincidentally, on July of 1942,
this was what the Court of Appeals said against Brother Felix Y. Manalo:
"... the
Prosecution admits that there is reason to believe that the offended party,
Manalo, did commit immoral acts with some women members of the Iglesia."
And the Court of Appeals also said
these against Brother Felix Y. Manalo:
"And the
Solicitor concludes that he found out through proofs presented that Manalo is a
man "de baja moral" (man of low moral) and that he took advantage of
his position in the Iglesia to attack and sully the virtue of some of his
female followers."
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: This is a statement of the Court of Appeals
against Brother Felix Y. Manalo published on July of 1942, when the judicial
courts of the Philippines were under the jurisdiction of the commander-in-chief
of the Imperial Japanese Forces in the Philippines, two months after the
Japanese executed the Chief Justice of the Philippines for not following their
will, and after Brother Felix Y. Manalo had a conflict against the Japanese.
THE JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS AND
DECISIONS BY THE
PHILIPPINE JUDICIAL COURTS DURING THE JAPANESE
OCCUPATION WERE QUESTIONED
PHILIPPINE JUDICIAL COURTS DURING THE JAPANESE
OCCUPATION WERE QUESTIONED
The validity and credibility of the judicial proceedings and decisions of the Philippine judicial courts under the Japanese regime were questioned.One of the basis in questioning the validity of the judicial proceedings and decisions of the judicial courts during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines was the proclamation of General Douglas McArthur dated October 23, 1944, a few days after the historic landing in Leyte. McArthur’s proclamation declared that:
“…3. That all laws,
regulations and processes of any other government in the Philippines than that
of the said Commonwealth are null and void and without legal effect in areas of
the Philippines free of enemy occupation and control.” (GR L-5, 17 September
1945)
What further add insult to injury
was when the Commonwealth government was re-established in 1945, President
Osmena issued the Executive Order no. 37 which provides that:
“… (1) that the Court
of Appeals created and established under Commonwealth Act No. 3 as amended, be
abolished, as it is hereby abolished," and "(2) that all cases which
have heretofore been duly appealed to the Court of Appeals shall be transmitted
to the Supreme Court for final decision. . . ."
The decision of the Supreme Court
of the Philippines on 17 September 1945 (Co Kim Chan vs Valdez Tan Keh),
established only the validity of the judicial proceedings during the Japanese
occupation of the Philippines, but the “credibility” is still in question.
Dissenting, Justice J. Hilado stated the following:
“The courts created
here by the Japanese government had to look for the source of their supposed
authority to the orders of the Japanese Military Commander in chief and the so-called
Constitution of the "Republic of the Philippines," which had been
adopted in a manner which would shock the conscience of democratic peoples, and
which was designed to supplant the Constitution which had been duly adopted by
the Filipino people in a Constitutional Convention of their duly elected
Constitutional Delegates. And it was decreed that the Commander in chief of the
Imperial Japanese Forces "shall exercise jurisdiction over judicial
courts." (Vol. 1, p. 7, Official Journal of the Japanese Military
Administration, cited on pp. 2, 3, of the order of the respondent judge
complained of and marked Exhibit H of the petition for mandamus.) How can our
present courts legitimately recognize any efficacy in the proceedings of such
an exotic judicial system, wherein the Commander in Chief of the Imperial
Japanese Forces possessed the highest judicial jurisdiction?” (GR L-5, 17
September 1945)
Justice Hilado clearly points out
that during the Japanese occupation of the Philippine “the Commander in Chief
of the Imperial Japanese Forces possessed the highest judicial jurisdiction.
Regarding the credibility and integrity of the judicial processes of the
Japanese-sponsored judicial courts, this is what he said:
And yet, I am firmly
of opinion that whoever was the "judge" of the Japanese sponsored
Court of First Instance of Manila who presided over the said court when the
proceedings and processes in the dispute were had, in acting by virtue of the
supposed authority which he was supposed to have received from that government,
did so with no more legal power than if he had acted as a mere lawyer applying
the same laws to the case. If duplication of work or effort, or even if
confussion, should be alleged to possibly arise from a declaration of nullity
or judicial proceedings had before those Japanese-sponsored courts, it should
suffice to answer that the party so complaining in voluntarily resorting to
such courts should be prepared to assume the consequences of his voluntary act.
On the other hand, his convenience should not be allowed to visit upon the
majority of the inhabitants of this country, the dire consequences of a
sweeping and wholesale validation of judicial proceedings in those courts. Let
us set forth a few considerations apropos of this assertion. It is a fact of
general knowledge that during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines, the
overwhelming majority of our people and other resident inhabitants were
literally afraid to go any place where there were Japanese sentries, soldiers
or even civilians, and that these sentries were posted at the entrance into
cities and towns and at government offices; that the feared Japanese "M.
P.'s" or Kempeitai's" were a constant terror to them; and lastly,
that the greater number who lived or had evacuated to places for from the
Japanese, were found precisely in the cities and towns where the courts were
located; and as a consequence, the great majority of the people were very
strongly adverse to traveling any considerable distance from their homes and were,
one might say, in constant hiding. Add to these circumstances, the fact of the
practical absence of transportation facilities and the no less important fact
of the economic structure having been so dislocated as to have impoverished the
many in exchange for the enrichment of the few — and we shall have a fair
picture of the practical difficulties which the ordinary litigant would in
those days have encountered in defending his rights against anyone of the
favored few who would bring him to court. It should be easy to realize how hard
it was for instances, to procure the attendance of witnesses, principally
because of the fact that most of them were in hiding or, at least, afraid to
enter the cities and towns, and also because of then generally difficult and
abnormal conditions prevailing. Under such conditions, cases or denial of a
party's day in court expected. Such denial might arise from many a cause. It
might be party's fear to appear before the court because in doing so, he would
have had to get near the feared Japanese. It might be because he did not
recognize any legal authority in that court, or it might be his down-right
repugnance of the hated enemy. And I dare say that among such people would be
found more than seventeen million Filipinos. These are but a few of countless
cause. So that if some form of validation of such judicial proceedings were to
be attempted, all necessary safeguards should be provided to avoid that in any
particular case the validation should violate any litigant's constitutional
right to his day in court, within the full meaning of the phrase, or any other
constitutional or statutory right of his. More people, I am afraid, would be
prejudiced than would be benefited by a wholesale validation of said
proceedings.” (GR L-5, 17 September 1945)
Pioneer ministers narrated that Brother
Felix Y. Manalo never attended any court hearings during that period. Thus, they
were all surprised when the Court of Appeal already has a decision on the libel
case he filed against Rosita Trillanes and company and it was even published on
the Philippine Gazette on July, 1942. Thus, although the decision of the Court
of Appeal reversing the decision of the lower court and even calling Brother
Felix Y. Manalo a “man of low morals” was published and circulated nationwide,
it had no any impact on the members and non-members alike. People of that time
believe that the lower court’s decision in favor with Brother Felix Y. Manalo
is more credible that the decision of the Japanese-sponsored Court of Appeal
reversing the lower court’s decision and calling Brother Manalo a “man of low
morals.”
BROTHER FELIX Y. MANALO DID
NOT MADE
ANY APPEAL TO THE SUPREME
COURT
Even after the Japanese
occupation, Brother Felix Y. Manalo did not made any appeal to the Supreme
Court. When he was asked why, he compassionately answered, “I pity Rosita. The
truth is, she was only used by those who want to destroy the Church. Let us not
allow it that she go to prison. Besides, no one believes in their lies.” True,
no one joined this group that made the “letter” that they made Rosita signed.
Rosita herself narrated that
after the war, when the Philippine Republic was re-established, she was deeply
worried that Brother Felix Y. Manalo made an appeal to the Supreme Court and
afterwards be convicted and imprisoned. She waited if Brother Manalo will make
an appeal to the Supreme Court. After a while, she learned what Brother Manalo
said why he did not bring the libel case against her to the Supreme court. Upon
knowing it, she cried.
PLEASE TAKE NOTE: During that time, the Iglesia Ni Cristo was only
a small religious organization having congregations only in Luzon. The Church
was just starting to establish missions in Southern Philippines. The Iglesia Ni
Cristo then was not as large, influential and powerful as today.
(1) The
“letter” signed by Rosita stated that Brother Felix Y. Manalo raped and abused
many woman. However, when the “letter” was published and made known to the
public, no “other victims” emerged.
(2) When the Japanese harassed and persecuted
Brother Felix Y. Manalo, that the Japanese even asked Brother Manalo to step
down as Executive Minister of the Iglesia Ni Cristo, still no “other victims”
emerged.
(3) When
the Japanese-sponsored Court of Appeals decided against Brother Felix Y. Manalo
and even went further in calling Brother Felix Y. Manalo as a “man of low
morals,” still, no “other victims” emerged. And that’s very surprising. The
decision of the Court of Appeal said that Brother Manalo abused and raped many
woman, but no other witnesses, no “other victims” emerged.
ROSITA AND HER FAMILY
WENT BACK TO THE FOLD
Rosita further narrated that
after learning what Brother Felix Y. Manalo said about why he did not brought
the case to the Supreme Court, she and her family wanted to go Brother Manalo
and asked for forgiveness. But they were to ashamed to do it.
After a few years, in 1952, with
her husband, they managed to gain some strength to go to Brother Felix Y.
Manalo and ask for forgiveness. She said, when Brother Felix appeared in the
office, she could not raised her face and look at Brother Manalo straight in
the eyes. Then she burst in tears. Then Brother Manalo said to him, “The Bible
taught us to forgive others as how God forgive us.” Rosita and her husband
embraced Brother Manalo.
Rosita further said that she was
not asked to make an affidavit, she voluntarily asked a lawyer to help her make
an affidavit of retraction. Rosita’s retraction was dated November 7, 1952.
Thus, after more than a decade,
she retracted and went back to the fold with her family. Rosita became a
deaconess and died an active member of the Iglesia Ni Cristo.
PLEASE TAKE NOTE:
(1) From
1942-1952, the Iglesia Ni Cristo established additional 18 ecclesiastical
districts nationwide; her membership tripled; and have already build large
concrete houses of worship. So, the “letter” signed by Rosita Trillanes did not
made any impact against the spread of the Church. Thus, it is wrong to say that
the Church did everything they could to make Rosita retract the “letter” she
signed. If the Church continued to grow and spread nationwide, so the
“letter” signed by Rosita has no any impact against the expansion of the Church, thus, the Church doesn’t need Rosita’s retraction.
(2) It
is
also wrong to say that the Church did everything to make Rosita retract
because the “letter” might came out of the public. The “letter” already came out of the public. It was published in a local newspaper in 1939;
the
libel case was a headline in 1941 in a national newspaper; and the
Official
Gazette published in 1942 the decision of the Court of Appeal against
Brother
Felix Y. Manalo. But why the Church continued to grow despite of this
"letter"? Because many people of that time were not convinced that the
"letter" was true.
(3) If
Rosita was really raped by Brother Felix Y. Manalo, would she and her family
(especially her husband) will come back to the Church where the leader "raped"
her (his wife in the case of his husband, and their mother in the case of her
children)?
Did Rosita Trillanes went back to
the fold because she was given privileges like being a deaconess? And others
asked why she was made a deaconess if she was an usurper? Rosita was made a
deaconess not immediately after she went back to the fold but in the 1960s, or
more than a decade after she went back to the Church, after many years that she
has proven that she already changed her ways.
THE CATHOLIC
DEFENDERS IN 1950s
Not knowing that Rosita Trillanes
already went back to the fold and even made an affidavit retracting the “letter”
she signed in 1939, many Catholic publications published “Rosita’s 1939 letter.”
They even titled their headlines, “Angel or Maniac,” “Ganid sa Laman,” “A Rapist
Sugo,” and others. They thought that they already found a “smoking gun” against
Brother Felix Y. Manalo. However, their “gun” backfired against them. Tney were
surprised when they learned that Rosita and her family were again members of
the Iglesia Ni Cristo and that she already made an affidavit retracting the “letter”
that she signed in 1939. Thus, the Catholic Faith Defenders failed in their attempt to halt the progress of the Church using Rosita Trillanes' "letter."
THIS ISSUE TODAY
Today, INC detractors using again
this issue and spreading this “lies” to destroy the Iglesia Ni Cristo, but as
how the group of Mansilungan in 1939 failed, the Japanese in 1942 failed, the
Catholic Defenders in 1950s failed, surely, the groups recycling this issue today will also fail. This is
what the Bible tells us about them:
“A false witness will
not go unpunished, and he who utters lies will perish. (Proverbs 19:9 RSV)
THE IGLESIA NI CRISTO
facebook.com/TheIglesiaNiCristo *** theiglesianicristo.blogspot.com
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