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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vicente Lava
Vicente Gregorio B. Lava Sr. - c. 1917
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Philippines
In office
February 6, 1942 – September 1944
Preceded byGuillermo Capadocia
Succeeded byTriumvirate leadership[a]
Personal details
Born
Vicente Gregorio Lava

December 24, 1894
Bulakan, Captaincy General of the Philippines, Spanish East Indies
DiedSeptember 16, 1947(1947-09-16) (aged 52)
Manila, Philippines
Cause of deathHeart disease
Political partyCommunist Party of the Philippines (from 1938)
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Alliance
SpouseRuth Propper
Children2
Parents
  • Adeodato Lava
  • Maria Baltazar
Relatives
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Chemist
  • Scientist
  • Professor
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service
United States Army
Years of service1918
UnitChemical Warfare Division

Vicente Gregorio Baltazar Lava Sr. (December 24, 1894 – September 16, 1947)[1][2][3] was a Filipino chemist who supported efforts towards economic independence for the Philippines and later became a leader in the communist resistance against the Japanese occupation of the Philippines.

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Transcription

Early life and education

Vicente Gregorio Baltazar Lava Sr. was born on December 24, 1894, in Bulakan, Philippines, at the end of the Spanish colonial period. He was the eldest child of Adeodato and Maria (Baltazar) Lava.[1][2][3] Four years after he was born, the Spanish were driven out of the Philippines, followed by the American suppression of an independence movement in 1901 and the beginning of American neocolonialism in the islands.[4]

From 1912 to 1916, Lava studied chemistry at the University of the Philippines.[3]

Lava moved to the United States to pursue higher education in 1917, enrolling at the University of California, Berkeley. After a brief stint in 1918 in the US Army, where he served in the chemical warfare division, he enrolled at Columbia University, where he earned his MS in 1920 and Ph.D. in 1923 in chemistry.[1][3] While in New York he met his wife, Ruth Propper.[1][2][3]

He returned to the Philippines with Ruth in 1923, where he worked for two years as a chemist in the Bureau of Science.[3] In 1925, Lava became a professor at the University of the Philippines at Los Baños, where, in his interest in promoting local Philippine industry, which he believed was neglected as a result of the American Payne-Aldritch Tariff Act,[5] he began research on a process of extracting oil and other fuels from coconuts.[6][7] During this time he and Ruth had two children: Frances (1924–2011) and Vicente "Buddy" Jr. (1926–2006).[2]

In 1929, Lava returned to the United States, where he worked at Oberlin College in Ohio on a Grasselli research fellowship, conducting studies on Vitamin B.[1] In 1931, he became a research fellow at New York University, where he resumed and completed his work on coconuts. It was during this period that he was first introduced to communist ideas.[3]

Pre-World War II

With his work on the coconut completed, Lava returned to the Philippines in 1934, where he worked as a consulting chemist at Consolidated Mines Inc. in Manila. During this period, he became a member of various academic societies, including the American Chemical Society, the National Research Council of the Philippines, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[3]

In 1937, he again went to the United States to secure a patent for his coconut process. After successfully patenting it, he returned to the Philippines and set up a pilot plant in 1938.[1][3][8] He also discovered other processes to create coconut milk and flour, and experimented with other native products.[7] It was around this time that Vicente Lava joined the Communist Party of the Philippines.[1]

The 1930s in the Philippines was a time when agricultural workers and laborers were starting to organize and strike against economic injustices.[1][7] The Socialist Party, led by Luis Taruc and Pedro Abad Santos, was established in 1929, and the Communist Party, led by Crisanto Evangelista, was founded in 1930. The two parties merged into one Communist Party in 1938.[1] According to Lava in an unpublished article submitted to Pacific Affairs entitled The Democratic Movement in the Philippines, "together, the merged parties [had] acquired considerable influence among the peasantry of central and southern Luzon and among the workers of Manila and other cities."[5] After the merger, Lava organized the League For the Defense of Democracy, and was elected a member of the central committee.[3]

During World War II, Health Problems, and Death

In December 1941, as the Japanese struck Pearl Harbor, a simultaneous strike occurred at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. That month, the Communist Party, with the help of Lava, prepared a 12-point memorandum urging national unity and resistance against the Japanese, and pledging loyalty to the Philippines and United States.[3][7] In February 1942, the leaders of the Communist Party were taken during a Japanese invasion, leaving Vicente Lava as the new general secretary.[3] One month later, in March, the Hukbalahap, an anti-Japanese guerilla force was formed in central Luzon, with Lava as one of its designers.[4][7]

A few months prior to the outbreak of the war, the Japanese offered Lava a sum of 1 million for his patented coconut process, but he refused to sell it, believing that it should only be used to advance Philippine industry.[1][3][7] In July 1942, the Japanese raided the Lava family home in Bulakan in an attempt to obtain his coconut oil process, as the fuel created by this process could be used in the manufacture of explosives.[3][9]

In 1943, the headquarters of the Hukbalahap in Luzon was raided, and Lava returned to Manila to reorganize the movement from a distance. His proposals were rejected, and he was demoted in the party organization.[3] In 1944, he worked on the organization of a new political party, the Democratic Alliance, and in 1946, he ran for senator for this party, but did not win the election.[1][3] Beginning in 1944, Lava's health deteriorated. After the war, although he hoped to obtain equipment for his coconut process in the United States, he died of heart disease in Manila on September 16, 1947.[1][3]

Notes

  1. ^ Composed of Pedro Castro, Jorge Frianeza and Primitivo Arrogante.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Dalisay Jr., Jose (1999). The Lavas. Anvil Publishing, Inc. ISBN 971-27-0821-7.
  2. ^ a b c d Partridge, Craig (2016). Juda Löbl Popper of Ostrovec-Lhotka, Bohemia & His Family. East Lansing, Michigan: Privately Printed. p. 393.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Letter written by Frances Lava (1948). CIA. Index found at http://www.archives.gov/files/iwg/declassified-records/rg-65-fbi/names-index.pdf
  4. ^ a b The Philippines reader : a history of colonialism, neocolonialism, dictatorship, and resistance. Schirmer, Daniel B., Shalom, Stephen Rosskamm, 1948-. South End Press. 1987. ISBN 0896082768. OCLC 14214735.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ a b Lava, Vicente (date unknown). “The Democratic Movement in the Philippines.” Submitted to Pacific Affairs.
  6. ^ Lava, Vicente (1939). "Some Solutions to the Problems of the Philippine Coconut Industry". The Philippine Social Science Review.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Taruc, Luis (1953). Born of the people. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0837166691.
  8. ^ Lava, Vicente (1937) "Oil Recovery." United States patent no. 2101371. http://www.freepatentsonline.com/2101371.html
  9. ^ Lava, Jesus (2002). Memoirs of a Communist. Anvil Publishing, Inc. ISBN 971-27-1292-3.
This page was last edited on 6 October 2023, at 10:23
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