History, asked by jner314, 3 months ago

in the period of activism, campus news papers were writtento show the protest. they held pens and wrote on placard in red paint the equvalent of he word MALIBAKA
(to dare!)

Answers

Answered by rajivkumarranjan400
57

Answer:

The once aristocratic writers developed an awareness for society. They held pens and wrote on placards in red paint the equivalent of the word MAKIBAKA. They attacked the ills of society and politics. Any establishment became the symbol of the ills that had to be changed.

Answered by ZareenaTabassum
1

"Maria Lorena Barros" created the MAKIBAKA , a militant women's movement, soon before even the martial law was declared.

When Law was proclaimed, she fled undercover, was subsequently apprehended, and became a high-level political detainee.

  • Previously aristocratic authors gained a social consciousness. They carried pens and scribbled the phrase MAKIBAKA in red paint on posters.
  • They targeted societal and political issues. Any business had become a representation of the problems that needed to be addressed.
  • "Makibaka" was the war cry of the Philippines' anti-fascist dictatorship struggle there in 1970s and 1980s.
  • It is equivalent to "Fight! Do not be scared!" With the emergence of fascism and assaults on freedom and independence underneath the Duterte government, this demand has resurfaced for Filipinos to defend human rights, liberty, and independence.
  • Makibaka! stresses the importance of human connections in moments of unification and strife in sparking and establishing new kinds of liberating action.

SPJ2

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