For more than 300 years, colonial Spain subjugated the country using violent means to impose its will on a submissive native population. As a consequence, thousands died of starvation and sheer exhaustion in the construction of their stone edifices, like the churches, convents and ayuntamientos, and many more were traumatized by the experience. But in 1896, there emerged a consciousness of nationhood which became the seed of the revolution. In 1898, the Spaniards were on the brink of defeat.
In the island province of Cebu, participation came late. But nevertheless the Cebuanos were able to organize themselves into a cohesive revolutionary force led by a man who was popularly known by his nom de guerre as 'Leon Kilat.'
This book is a detailed account of that uprising that involved thousands of natives who rose to the occasion in the battle for freedom and independence. The book also mentions the names of these individual heroes so that their living descendants can celebrate their memory in the altar of history.