Japanese Occupation in the Philippines

Post on 09-Feb-2016

297 views 2 download

Tags:

description

Japanese Regime.A timeline of what happened during the Japanese Occupation in the Philippines during world war II, The Hukbalahaps, etc.Based on slideshare.net

Transcript of Japanese Occupation in the Philippines

Japanese Regime

During World War II• December 8, 1941 – Japan invaded the

PhilippinesPampangaNichols FieldsManilaLingayen Gulf

• December 25, 1941 – Gen. Douglas MacArthur declared Manila as an Open City. (on the advice of Commonwealth President Manuel L. Quezon to avoid its destruction.)

• January 2, 1942 – Japanese occupied Manila.

• April 9, 1942 – US and Filipino defendants in Bataan surrendered to the Japanese.

• By then, MacArthur escaped to Corregidor. (“I Shall Return”)

• 76,000 captured soldiers were forced to embark on the “Death March” to a prison camp more than 100 kilometers north.

• 10,000 prisoners died due to hunger, exhaustion and thirst.

The “Huks”• An organization called Hukbo ng Bayan

Laban sa mga Hapon or HUKBALAHAP then later called "The Huks" during the whole period between 1945 and 1952.

Luis Taruc was the leader

Castro Alejandrino was his right hand

And the members was simply called “huks”.

• Farmers of Pampanga banded together ad created local bridges for their Protection (Taruc, Feleo, Alejandrino)

• In February 1942 in Cabiao, Nueva Ecija the farmers held a meeting upon agreeing to fight the Japanese as a unified Guerilla Army.

The Philippine Executive Commission

Established on January 23, 1942

Philippine Executive Commission

• Chairperson: Jorge Vargas

• Department Heads: Interior: Benigno Aquino Sr.Finance: Antonio delas Alas Justice: Jose P. LaurelEducation, Health, and Public

Welfare: Claro Recto

• Chief Justice of the Supreme Court: Jose Yulo

• New Constitution

Was meant to be effect only temporarily, while the Philippines still in chaos

Noticeably lacked a bill of rights

Contained 12 articles lifted from 1935 constitution that fitted the wishes of the Japanese

The Second Republic

The Second Republic • September 20, 1943 – KALIBAPI held a

party convention.Election of 54 members of National

Assembly

∞Assembly was made by 108 members of but half of this number was compose of incumbent governors and city mayors.

∞President: Jose P. Laurel

∞Vice- President: Benigno Aquino Sr. Ramon Anancena

Jose P. Laurel

Benigno Aquino Sr.

• Inaguration:

October 14, 1943

On the front steps of the Legislative Building in Manila; Philippine flag was hoisted as the national anthem was played.

• On the other hand,

Japanese started using propaganda to gain trust and confidence of Filipinos who refused to cooperate with them

Giant posters were hung with slogans as “the Philippines belong to the Filipinos”

Newspapers, media, movies, and others publicized the same idea

Promoting Japanese propaganda was one of the main objectives of the KALIBAPI, but the Japanese failed to gain the trust of the Filipinos.

Return of General MacArthur

• October 20, 1944; Leyte

• Gen. MacArthur: “I have Returned”

• October 23-26, 1944Americans engaged Japanese forces

in the Battle of Leyte GulfAlmost destroyed the entire Japanese

fleetSignaled the beginning of Philippine

liberation from the Japanese

• Mid- DecemberAmerican reached Mindoro Japanese secured other areas

• January 9, 1945US Liberation forces successfully

docked at Lingayen GulfLt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita,

supreme commander of the Japanese troops in MNL, mobilized his kamikazes but they failed to stop the Americans

• December 8, 1944President Laurel and his cabinet

moved to Baguio upon orders of Yamashita

Japanese forces retreated to Yamashita line a jungle battlefield stretching along the Sierra Madre Mountains from Antipolo, Rizal to Appari Cagayan

• It took 3 weeks of intense fighting before Japanese finally surrendered on February 23, 1945

• Gen. MacArthur continued to liberate other parts of the country

• Proclaim general freedom from the Japanese on July 4, 1945

Reference:• http://www.philippine-history.org/japanese-

occupation.htm• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hukbalahap