The unanswered question is: Was there any retraction? A bitter dispute has been waged from 1896 to the present day over this highly controversial question. Professor Padilla of the University of the Philippines states the position of many and perhaps most educated Filipinos in this succinct way:
"Briefly then the picture presented before us 
    is that of Dr. Rizal, the man, the scientist, and rationalist, who wrote 
    vigorously against the Catholic Church, and who ridiculed the idea of hell. 
    A few hours before his execution, when threatened with eternal damnation, he 
    became suddenly 'distributed' and cried like a child, 'No, no, I would not 
    be condemned.' Assured by Father Balaguer that he would certainly go to hell 
    if he did not retract and return to the Catholic Church, the fear became 
    greater, his reason capitulated to faith, and he exclaimed: 'Well Father, I 
    promise that the remainder of my lifetime I will employ asking God for the 
    grace of faith'. Whereupon he signed a retraction in which he disowned all 
    that he ever said and wrote against the church, and abominated Masonry. . . 
    This picture is too much for one's credulity. Too many of the supposed facts 
    brought out in the way of evidence, when pieced together, do not seem to fit 
    psychologically into the picture."
Let us examine the proofs on both sides of the 
    question.
As first hand evidence for the retraction we 
    now have four sworn statements: Fathers Balaguer and Visa swore that they 
    saw the retraction signed. Father Pio Pi swore that he received it from 
    Father Balaguer in the Ateneo, and a Colonel if the Infantry, R. 
    Sominguez, swore on May 30, 1918, that he had seen Rizal kneel at the altar 
    of the Fort Chapel and read the retraction "with voice clear and serene." 
    Dominguez then quoted the retraction without a single error, twenty-two 
    years after the event! He certainly copied this retraction, for he could not 
    have remembered it, which fact, as Pascual insists, leaves one in doubt as 
    to how much more he copied. Many of his sentences are exact duplicates of 
    other records. 
Another affidavit is often presented as 
    circumstantial evidence. The Fiscal, Don Gaspar Castaño, visited Rizal 
    between nine and ten the evening before the execution, and tells us that as 
    he departed, Rizal "with jovial courtesy expressed his regret that he could 
    not ask me to come again. . ." I said, 'Rizal, you passionately love your 
    mother and your country, both of which are Catholic. Do not cause them the 
    great pain of dying outside the true religion.' He answered in a tone of 
    great solemnity, looking toward the altar, using this phrase which I well 
    remember, 'Mr. Fiscal, you may be sure I will not close the doors of 
    eternity.' 
The most important evidence is the retraction 
    itself, which was found on May 18, 1935, by Father Manuel Garcia. It had 
    been wrapped up with retractions made by other men of the same period. In 
    the same package was a prayer book ending with "Acts of Faith, Hope, and 
    Charity", under which appears the signature of José Rizal. These "Acts" 
    cover the doctrines of the church much more fully than does the retraction. 
    If the retraction and the signature are found to be genuine, then the fact 
    of the retraction will be settled, though Father Balaguer's story will 
    remain incredible.
Let us now consider the evidence against the 
    retraction. Several exceedingly stupid blunders were made if the retraction 
    is authentic, so stupid that they seem to point to fraud. Rizal's relatives 
    were promised that the retraction would be read to them in Paco church, but 
    they never heard it. That caused doubt. The newspapers published different 
    versions. That caused doubt.
Then came the well-nigh incredible report that 
    it had been lost! Nobody could believe it! After four years of effort to 
    convert Rizal had been crowned with success, after the orders had all prayed 
    with penances and mortification, the retraction, the most precious document 
    the church possessed in the Philippines, ought to have been guarded as 
    nothing else. Yet it had disappeared! Father Balaguer swears under oath (in 
    1917) that he took it to the Ateneo before Rizal was led out to be shot, and 
    that Father Pio Pi carried it to the Palace of Archbishop Nozaleda, 
    entrusting it to Secretary Gonzalez Feijoo, who deposited it in the chest 
    for reserved papers. There all trace of it was lost. Father Pio Pi said they 
    looked for it and could not find it. That caused doubt.
For thirty-nine years, millions of Filipinos, 
    whether Catholic or not, denied that such a paper existed. Then the 
    retraction was found in the very files where it had formerly been sought in 
    vain. That fact caused doubt. Why had it been missing thirty-nine years? 
    Asked the incredulous Filipinos.
The Archbishop permitted Ricardo R. Pascual, 
    Ph.D. to examine the retraction, and give him a good photostat of it. Pascual wrote a devastating book called "Rizal Beyond the Grave" in which he 
    seems to show by minute measurements that the retraction diverges from the 
    style of Rizal's other writings of that period, and he concludes that the 
    paper was a forgery. Pascual points out that both signatures of the 
    "witnesses" were signed by the same man, and they do indeed look alike. 
    Pascual's book caused doubt. Until world experts on handwriting give their 
    judgment, suspicion will continue. Perhaps even with such scientific 
    judgment, people would believe or doubt the document according to their 
    prejudices, for it is difficult to be dispassionate.

Unfortunately for the historian there was more 
    blundering, which has led many writers into uncertainty, concerning the 
    marriage of Rizal. Father Balaguer swears that he married José and Josephine 
    about fifteen minutes before the time for the execution. But the marriage 
    record could not be found in the Manila Cathedral nor in the Registry of 
    Fort Santiago where it ought to have been place. This raised doubt. Rizal's 
    sister Lucia, who went with Josephine to the chapel that morning, saw a 
    priest in vestments, but said she did not see the ceremony. One fact 
    supports the marriage statement. Rizal wrote in a copy of The Imitation 
    of Christ, by Thomas á Kempis, these words: "To my dear and unhappy 
    wife, Dec. 30, 1896."
The obvious answer might be that Rizal had 
    regarded Josephine as his wife since they first held hands in 
 Dapitan a year 
    and a half before, -- but in no letter now available did he call her "wife" 
    before this time. Or the writing may be forged.
The strongest circumstantial evidence for the 
    wedding comes from Rizal's sister Maria. When she went to say farewell the 
    last night, José said to her:
"Maria, I am going to marry Josephine. I know 
    you all oppose it, especially you, yourself. But I want to give Josephine a 
    name. Besides you know the verse in the Bible, 'The sins of the fathers 
    shall be visited upon the children to the third and forth generation.' I do 
    not want them to persecute you or her for what I have done." 
There were three more blunders, which produced 
    doubts. Rizal was not buried where persons in good ecclesiastical standing 
    are buried in Paco Cemetery, but "in unconsecrated ground" between the outer 
    and inner wall where Father Burgos had been buried after his execution. This raises doubt. Then he was not buried in a coffin or box of any kind. 
    This raises doubt.

Burial Record.  Note page 
    number, although with a December date.
The record of his ecclesiastical burial is not 
    on the page (147) where persons who died in December, 1896, were recorded, 
    but on page 204, where persons buried ten months later, in September, 
    1897, were recorded. His name seems to have been written ten months after 
    he was buried. This raised doubt. Pascual's theory is that they buried Rizal 
    as an unrepentant criminal, and then had to frame a case later to fit the 
    retraction.
Was there ever such blundering with important 
    circumstantial evidence?
Doubt has also been raised by the fact that 
    neither the Archbishop nor the Jesuits asked for pardon or mitigation of the 
    sentence. Only his family begged for mercy.
The strongest argument was the character of 
    Rizal. It was but a few months before that he had rejected Father Sanchez' 
    offer of a professorship, a hundred thousand pesos, and an estate if he 
    would retract; and he had declared that he could not be bought for half the 
    Philippines.
That sounds like Rizal, as every one of his 
    old friends will testify. He was not only incorruptible, but very angry at 
    the least suggestion that he might be bribed. That character speaks so loud 
    against the retraction that all of Rizal's old friends believe he could not 
    have written it. They look at the writing and say, "Yes, that is his 
    handwriting, but then Mariano Ponce and Antonio Lopez and many others could 
    write exactly like Rizal. A good forgery is meant to deceive."
The question, "Did Rizal retract?" rests upon 
    the genuineness, or otherwise, of the supposed retraction. The Archbishop 
    should settle this question, or at least attempt to settle it, by permitting 
    the document to be submitted to the greatest handwriting experts in the 
    world, preferably to several of them working independently. He should permit 
    the paper and ink to be subjected to the best tests of modern science. Since 
    Father Balaguer has told us an incredible story, nothing is certain.
The most painstaking analysis which has thus 
    far been made is that of Pascual, and he pronounces the document to be a 
    forgery. Under these circumstances the Church must shoulder the burden of 
    proof that it is not. Everybody, it would seem, would like to have this 
    question settled convincingly. 

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