View Single Post
Old 7th February 2005, 04:16 PM   #40
LabanTayo
Member
 
LabanTayo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 177
Default

does the truth have to be published before it is accepted as the truth?
if my lolo (grandfather) told me that when he was in WWII as a guerilla and told me that the sword they used was called 'itak', then should i discount that from being the truth, since its not published.
we are here to discover our history by comparing pics and notes. but does verbal information not count? the only time i have seen the Panay sword, Binangon, refered to as such, is one of Kris Cutlery's old catalogues. does that count as published? does that make it the truth? or does the fact that everyone in Panay call their farm sword a Binangon, count as truth?
we have to account that most of the real filipino history is verbal, not written by the spanish or americans. there's a lot of published items that are incorrect in their facts.

a quote passed on to me by BSMstar, says it all:
"history is written by the winner"

is the winner always right?

Last edited by LabanTayo; 7th February 2005 at 06:06 PM.
LabanTayo is offline   Reply With Quote