Spanish and Filipino delegates to this year’s Tribuna España-Filipinas forum have agreed to embark on acoordinated “archiving program” of historical documents, especially those involving the
Spanish colonial period in the Philippines more than 400 years ago.
As the sixth edition of the annual multisectoral forum between
the two countries drew to a close on Wednesday, an official of the
Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport told the Inquirer that
some of the Spanish archives, once catalogued and translated, may even
help the Philippines in its claim to the disputed Scarborough (Panatag)
Shoal.
Luis Enseñat Calderon, director of the ministry’s Ibero-Archivos
Program, said Spanish historical archives contained documents and maps
on the Spanish colonization of the Philippines from the 16th to 19th
century.
Possible proof
“The archives may be important in this way to demonstrate that in
the 19th century, the Chinese did not control these group of islands,”
Calderon said, when asked how Spanish archives could help the
Philippines in its territorial dispute with China over the Scarborough
Shoal.
He quoted colonial Spanish officials in the 1800s, saying these
islands “were controlled, more or less, by the Philippines from Manila.”
While these documents are available at the National Historical
Archive of Spain, he said it is not yet accessible to the public because
his office is still digitizing the documents.
“But little by little, we can make progress and publish this on
the website,” he said, referring to Spanish archives website
www.pares.mcu.es.
Spanish Ambassador to the Philippines Jorge Domecq denied reports
he made a categorical statement about Spain turning over old maps to
the Philippines to help strengthen the country’s claim on Scarborough
Shoal.
“The majority of the maps are here in the Philippines in private
collections. We did an exhibition last year of all the important maps of
the Philippine geography from 1598 to 1898—four centuries—at the
Metropolitan Museum,” Domecq said.
“Those maps are also in Spain in our archives, which are open to experts from any place in the world,” he added.
Calderon said during the forum’s second day
that an “exchange program” of Spanish and Philippine archivists was
discussed, with one Filipino archivist going to Spain, and vice versa,
hopefully by the latter half of the year.
He also invited Filipino archivists to help catalogue Spanish archives.
Calderon said they are also working with
the National Archives of the Philippines to make digital copies for
Spain of colonial documents preserved in the country.
Calderon’s office uploads the Spanish archives catalogues at www.pares.mcu.es.
He said the website contains documents sent
by Spanish colonial officers in the Philippines to the King of Spain.
Some Philippine maps from the 16th to 19th centuries have been uploaded,
but some entries only contain descriptive references.
East Asian imperial point
“It contains information about the
Philippines [during the Spanish colonization], and expeditions from
Manila to Formosa, Siam, Moluccas, Ternate, Tidore. Manila was the
imperial point of Spain in East Asia. Formosa was part of the
Philippines. The Moluccas was part of the Philippines. Micronesia,
Marianas, Carolinas were part of the Philippine Islands. And all was
centralized in Manila and Spanish officers sent regular reports to the
King,” Calderon said.
The forum closed with the signing of a
memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the Department of Science and
Technology-Information and Communications Technology and the Spanish
State Secretariat for Telecommunications and the Information Society of
the Ministry of Industry, Energy and Tourism of the Kingdom of Spain.
The MOU was designed to encourage the
“exchanges of experiences and best practices” between the two countries
on information and communication technology.
Signing the MOU for the Philippines was
Elizabeth Buensuceso, assistant secretary of European Affairs of the
foreign affairs department and Domecq for Spain(Inquirer.net)
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento