Amado Vera Hernandez (September 13, 1903 – March 24, 1970), was a Filipino writer and labor leader who was known for his criticism of social injustices in the Philippines and was later imprisoned for his involvement in the communist movement. He was the central figure in a landmark legal case that took 13 years to settle.

He was born in Tondo, Manila, to parents Juan Hernandez from Hagonoy, Bulacan and Clara Vera of Baliuag, Bulacan.

But his most significant activities after the war involved organizing labor unions across the country through the labor federation Congress of Labor Organizations (CLO). Influenced by the philosophy of Marx he advocated revolution as a means of change. On May 5, 1947, he led the biggest labor strike to hit Manila at that time. The following year, he became president of the CLO and led another massive labor demonstration in May 1948. on the suspicion that he was among the leaders of the rebellion.

Imprisonment

Though the authorities could not find evidence to charge him; For six months, he was transferred from one military camp to another and it took nearly a year before he was indicted on a charge of rebellion with murder, arson and robbery - a complex crime unheard of in Philippine legal history.

The case stirred the interest of civil rights activists in the Philippines and Hernandez was assisted at various times by legal luminaries like Senator Claro M. Recto, former President José P. Laurel and Claudio Teehankee, who would later become Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. But he remained in prison while his appeal was pending.

It was while he was imprisoned that he wrote his most notable works. He wrote Isang Dipang Langit (A Stretch of Heaven), which later won a Republic Cultural Heritage Award, and Bayang Malaya (Free Nation), which later won a Balagtas Award. Also written in prison was his masterpiece Luha ng Buwaya (Tears of the Crocodile). Portions of his novel Mga Ibong Mandaragit (Birds of Prey) was also written while he was at the New Bilibid Prison. He also edited the prison's newspaper Muntinglupa Courier.

After five years of imprisonment, the Supreme Court allowed Hernandez to post bail on June 20, 1956. He then resumed his journalistic career and wrote a column for the Tagalog tabloid Taliba. He would later be conferred awards in prestigious literary contests, like the Commonwealth Literary Contest (twice), Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards (four times) and journalism awards given by the National Press Club of the Philippines (four times).

On May 30, 1964, the Supreme Court acquitted Hernandez The University of the Philippines posthumously conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Humanities honoris causa on March 14, 1972. The Ateneo de Manila University awarded him its first Tanglaw ng Lahi award. He was posthumously honored as National Artist for Literature in 1973. Together with poet José García Villa, Hernández was the first to receive the title in literature.

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File:AmadoV.Hernandezjf1213.JPG|Amado V. Hernandez Monument-Memorial (Tondo, Manila)

File:Historical marker for Amado Hernandez y Vera in Tondo, Manila.jpg|NHI Marker (in front of Santo Niño de Tondo Parish)

File:AmadoV.Hernandezjf1216.JPG|Sculpture of Hernandez

File:AmadoV.Hernandezjf1217.JPG|Facade

File:Honorata_de_la_Rama-Amado_Hernandez_mausoleum_CNE_07.jpg|Hernandez's & de la Rama's graves at their mausoleum (Manila North Cemetery)

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Works

Novels

His socio-political novels were based on his experiences as a guerrilla, as a labour leader and as a political detainee.

  • Mga Ibong Mandaragit (Birds of Prey),1969.
  • Luha Ng Buwaya (Crocodile's Tears), - this poem is carved on his marble headstone April 22, 1952
  • Si Jose Corazon de Jesus at ang Ating Panulaan (Jose Corazon de Jesus and Our Poetry)

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| 1958 || 1958 Palanca Awards || One-Act Play in Filipino || Muntinlupa ||

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| 1959|| 1959 Palanca Awards || One-Act Play in Filipino|| Hagdan sa Bahaghari ||

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| 1962|| Republic Cultural Heritage Award || || Isang Dipang Langit ||

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References

Sources

  • National Historical Institute, Filipinos in History 5 vols. (Manila: National Historical Institute, 1995)
  • Amado V. Hernandez