- Horacio de la Costa
Reverend Father Horacio de la Costa, S.J. was the first Filipino Provincial General of the
Society of Jesus in the Philippines, and a recognized authority in Philippine and Asian culture and history.A brilliant writer, scholar, and historian, Fr. de la Costa was born in Maúban,
Quezon onMay 9 ,1916 toJudge Sixto de la Costa and Emiliana Villamayor. Ordained a Jesuitpriest at the age of 30, he became, at age 55, the first Filipino provincial superior of this religious order, theSociety of Jesus .Training
De la Costa first attended the public elementary school in
Batangas before moving on to the Ateneo de Manila, where he distinguished himself for academic excellence and student leadership, particularly as awriter and, later, as editor of the "Guidon", the campus newspaper. After earning there hisBachelor of Arts degree,summa cum laude , in 1935, he entered theSociety of Jesus at the Sacred Heart Novitiate in Novaliches, where he completed his master’s degree. Afterward, he went back to the Ateneo to teachphilosophy andhistory for two years. During this time, he also worked as a writer and radio talent for the Chesteron Evidence Guild, more specifically, the "Commonwealth Hour", for which he created the character of Teban, the "calesa" diver, at the height of the controversy over the 1940divorce bill. The program evolved into "Kuwentong Kutsero", consisting of satirical tales dealing mostly with life inManila .War-time and post-war activities
During the war, the Japanese imprisoned him for two months in
Fort Santiago for his role in the resistance movement. He helped Rev. Fr. John F. Hurley, the Jesuits’ superior, in taking clothes and medicines to American and Filipino soldiers who had evaded capture by the Japanese or escaped from Japanese prison camps. For this, he was awarded the Medal for Freedom by theUnited States government in 1946. Early in 1946, he left for theUnited States to pursue further studies intheology atWoodstock College ,Maryland , where he was ordained apriest on March 24, 1946 by AmericanBishop John F. McNamara. He received his doctorate degree inhistory atHarvard University in 1951.Philippines
Back in the
Philippines , he served anew with the faculty of the Ateneo de Manila in 1953, later becoming its first Filipino college dean while teaching history at the same time. In 1958, he was made a consultant of the Philippine province of theSociety of Jesus and, in 1959, assumed the editorship of its scholarly publication, "Philippines Studies". Fr. de la Costa received a Smith-Mundt-Fuldright scholarship in 1960. In 1962, he became a research associate of theLondon School of Oriental and Africa Studies . During this period, he received honorary doctorates from the University of Santo Tomás, Tokyo’sSophia University , and Dumaguete’sSilliman University .On
December 8 ,1969 , he assumed office as provincial superior of the Philippine province of theSociety of Jesus . His election ended the long line of Spanish and American Jesuits who were elected to the said post in the Philippines.Authorship
De la Costa was the author of a number of books, particularly on Philippine
culture andhistory , which revealed his nationalistic bent, among which are:
*"The Jesuits in the Philippines, 1581-1768"
*"The Trial of Dr. Rizal", an edited translation of W.E. Retana’s transcription of the official Spanish documents
*"Recent Oriental History"
*"Readings in Philippines History"
*"The Background of Nationalism, and Other Essays"
*"Asia and the Philippines"He also contributed numerous articles on these subjects to various local and foreign scholarly publications, such as "Philippine Social Sciences and Humanities Review", "Bulletin of the Philippine Historical Association", "Hispanic American Historical Review", "Comment", "Science Review", "Theological Studies", and "Philippine Studies". The
Catholic Encyclopedia carries his article on thePhilippines .In 1965, he was presented the Republic Heritage Award by the then Philippine President
Diosdado Macapagal for his historical writings. In 1971 he became General Assistant and Consultant to the Jesuit Father General Arupe inRome .Fr. de le Costa was one of the founding members of the Philippine Academy of Science and Humanities, as well as the
International Association of Historians of Asia . He was also a member of the National Research Council of the Philippines, Philippine Bibliographical Society,Philippine Historical Association and the National Historical Society of theNational Historical Commission .Death
A few years before his death, he attended the general congregation of Jesuits from all over the world in
Rome . In need of a composition on "The Jesuits Today", the delegates entrusted its preparation to Fr. de la Costa. He worked on it by himself for three days. When he was finished, he returned to the congregation and read his draft. His composition was accepted exactly as he had written it.Fr. de la Costa died of
cancer onMarch 20 ,1977 at the age of 60. He was buried in the JesuitNovitiate Compound inNovaliches ,Quezon City .For his achievements in the Jesuit Philippine Province and the Jesuit congregation in general, the Loyola School of
Theology of theAteneo de Manila University was inaugurated while the Horacio de la Costa Hall in the same university was named, both in his honor.References
* [http://www.admu.edu.ph/central/archives/horace.htm Tribute]
* [http://www.geocities.com/sinupan/delacostahoracio.htm Accomplishments]
* [http://www.vcn.bc.ca/spcw/dcosta2.htm Nationalism in Spanish]
* [http://www.geocities.com/sinupan/delacostahoracio.htm Another biography]
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