Cebu ‘poverty capital of the Philippines’

(Conclusion of a series on Iloilo)

As the Spanish empire surrendered Manila to the US invasion on Dec. 24, 1898, Iloilo waned as the “Queen City of the South.” In his book “A Queen Dies Slowly: The Rise and Decline of Iloilo City,” the American historian Alfred W. McCoy writes ruefully about the demise of the crown jewel of Spain’s possessions in the Philippines. He defends Iloilo’s status as the “Queen City of the South” against the assault of people who claim that with Iloilo’s economic decline, its crown as the second city after Manila in Hispanic Philippines had now passed to Cebu City. He argues that it was the “Queen”—the symbolic name of Iloilo—that was eroded by Cebu’s challenge, but it has not lost its title as the “Queen City of the South.”

In his effort to illuminate the distinctions between the cities of Cebu and Iloilo, McCoy stops short of saying, “The Queen is dead, long live the Queen!” Meanwhile, the rivalry between the two cities continued to fester after the end of Spanish rule.

The contentious debate between the respective supporters of Iloilo and Cebu over Iloilo’s status as the preeminent second city after Manila intensified after Gov. Diego de los Rios abandoned Manila and surrendered the sovereignty of Spain’s last colony to the triumphant revolutionary army of Iloilo.

In that debate, the newspaper Ilonggo Weekly has weighed in with articles emphasizing the “pivotal role” played by Iloilo in the formation of the Philippines as a nation and its independence. It asserted that the Philippine flag bears witness to Iloilo as the “Queen City of the South.” It pointed out that on the proclamation of the independence of the Philippine Republic on June 12, 1898, the first Filipino flag unfurled on that occasion contained the three principal islands of the archipelago—Luzon, Mindanao and Panay.

“Astonishingly, of all the clusters of islands, only Panay is mentioned and the only city there was Iloilo,” an article stated, adding that for Mindanao, “Davao has no city and interestingly, any of the three stars would not represent Cebu.” It’s compelling evidence that one of the three stars in the flag depicts Iloilo—the “Queen City of the South”—where “nationalism emanates from powerful and illustrious families and the Ilonggo Nation.”

On Dec. 13, 1898, Gen. E. S. Otis sent a cablegram to Washington forwarding a request of Iloilo businessmen “appreciating the desirability of securing possession of this city, the second of the Philippines in importance.”

In the debate over which between Iloilo and Cebu was the most important second city of the islands during the Spanish colonial period, the Ilonggo Weekly argues that historical material showed why Iloilo “is irrevocably possessing… the ‘Eternal Title’ as the ‘Queen City of the South’ in modern times.”

The paper cites “important things to ponder that prove Iloilo has got what it takes,” such as:

• While admittedly large, Cebu island “actually suffers from much reduced land area for agricultural development.” It has no room for agriculture.

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