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040 _erda
100 _aConstantino, Renato
_934646
245 0 _aVeneration without understanding /
_cRenato Constantino
264 _a[Place of publication not identified :
_bdistributed by Erehwon,
_c[1969].
300 _a21 pages
_c22 cm.
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
338 _avolume
_2rdacarrier
500 _a Cover title. Third National Rizal lecture, Dec. 30, 1969
520 _aIn the histories of many nations, the national revolution represents a peak of achievement to which the minds of men return time and again in reverence and for a renewal of faith in freedom. For the national revolution is invariably the one period in a nation's history when the people were most united, most involved, and most decisively active in the fight for freedom. It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that almost always the leader of that revolution becomes the principal hero of his people. There is Washington for the United States, Lenin for the Soviet Union, Bolivar for Latin America, Sun YatSen, then Mao TseTung for China and Ho Chi Minh for Vietnam. The unity between the venerated mass action and the honored single individual enhances the influence of both. --Front page of the book.
942 _cFIL
999 _c91469
_d91469