Francis Superal Sontillano
"Francis"
PSHS Batch 1972 (1st year)
Birth: May 5, 1955
Place of Birth: Sta. Barbara, Iloilo
Death: December 4, 1970
Place of Death: FEATI University Manila
Bantayog ng mga Bayani Francis Sontillano write-up
Francis Superal Sontillano died at 15, a young martyr in the fight against injustice during the time of Ferdinand Marcos.
Born on May 5, 1955, Sontillano came from humble origins in Santa Barbara, Iloilo where he grew up. He was the eldest of three children, who was valedictorian of of the Santa Barbara Elementary School in 1968. His academic record earned him a scholarship at the prestigious government-funded Philippine Science High School in Manila.
Fighting for Students Rights
At Pisay, as the school was called, Sontillano wrote poetry for the school organ called Lagablab, played basketball, and eventually was drawn to social activism. He joined discussion groups, and helped mobilize students in social actions geared to helping farmers, workers, and the urban poor.
He became close to Bantayog martyr Ronald Jan Quimpo and their schoolmate, Marie Hilao, the sister of the first known female martial law martyr, Liliosa Hilao.
They were young men and women at the forefront of the fight against institutional injustice. On campus, they struggled against the lack of clean water fountains and functioning bathrooms. They challenged the school administration to improve conditions at the school.
Taking On a Corrupt Government
Even they took the fight off-campus, as they saw connections between conditions at Pisay with the corruption under Ferdinand Marcos. Sontillano eventually became a respected member of the Malayang Kilusan ng mga Kabataan, or MKK.
By 1970, marching to denounce corruption and political abuse under Marcos became routine for the young activists of Pisay, including Sontillano. In fact, during one march, on December 4, 1970, he was so in a hurry to join a demonstration that he neglected to wear shoes, and ended up joining the protest in rubber slippers.
The Philippine Science High School contingent joined other students from the University Belt in Manila. The marched, chanting slogans and urging other young people to join. Then, when they reached Feati University, something happened.
Death of Young Sontillano
There was an explosion which one witness described as like “a thick plank of wood smashing itself onto my nape and back.” The students dispersed, run for safety — except Francis Sontillano, who had collapsed on the street, bloodied and his head shattered. A security guard had thrown a pillbox at the student demonstrators. He was later charged and sentenced to life in prison.
Francis Sontillano, the teenager from Iloilo, became one of the first martyrs of the fight against Marcos. Two years later, after martial law was declared, other young people from Pisay and other schools followed his example in joining the fight against the regime.
In September 2011, more than 40 years after Sontillano’s death, the Philippine Science High School honored twenty-one Marcos-era martyrs, including Francis. The ceremony served as an opportunity to discuss with millennial students the brutality of the Marcos regime and the young Filipinos who waged the fight to end it.
One millennial used social media to join Sontillano, his niece Lexley Maree Villasis. With the help of her mother who is Francis’ younger sister, Siena Sontillano, the 11-year-old created a Facebook page in honor ofthe teenager who joined the fight against tyranny.
"Perhaps the most moving story of a student martyr was that of Francis Sontillano, a 15-year-old high school student activist from the Philippine Science High School (PSHS). On 4 December, 1970, Sontillano and his friends from PSHS, who were members of the Malayang Kilusan ng Kabataan (MKK), joined a students' march of about 5,000 rallyists to protest the unjustified nonreadmission of about 800 students in various local colleges and universities. The number of dismissed and expelled student activists was increasing as university and school administrators wanted to prevent them from causing further trouble in their schools. As the marchers passed the FEATI building near the MacArthur Bridge, a big round object exploded on Sontillano's head....
... He died on the spot, in his rubber slippers, since in his haste to join the rally he forgot to put on his school shoes. Though it was unclear where the pillbox came from or who threw it, Sontillano's death emboldened the student activists even more, as they responded with a new battle cry: "Renew the fight for academic freedom! Prosecute the fascist puppet-murderers mercilessly and undauntedly! Remember Francis Sontillano!" (Graphic, 23 December 1970, 4-5, 45).
- excerpt from Down from the Hill: Ateneo de Manila in the First Ten Years Under Martial Law, 1972-1982
by Cristina Jayme Montiel
Remember Francis Sontillano Facebook Page
This Facebook page was lovingly initiated by Lexley Maree Sontillano, his niece. She continues to maintain it with the help of Elson David Sontillano (his brother) and Siena Therese Sontillano (his sister).
Please visit and "like" this page. It contains more photos of Francis and the pre-Martial Law era.
Other links
Case file G.R. No. L-33606 May 16, 1983 in LawPhil.Net
Remember Francis Sontillano Tumbler account
Note
The contents of this page are based on information available in the public domain. For corrections or inclusion of additional material, kindly contact the volunteer organizers via pagpugay.pahingalay@gmail.com.
Photos
from Lexley Maree Sontillano
(via Remember Francis Sontillano Facebook Page)
"This shot of Uncle Francis was taken some time before that security guard threw that pillbox at his head
about 40 years ago. He died when he was just 15."
from Jun Verzola (via Facebook album post):
Our artist group made this protest T-shirt either in mid to late December 1970 after Francis was killed on Dec. 4, or in January 1971 before the people's strike vs oil price hike and the Diliman commune. The slogan reads, "Ipagpatuloy ang simulain ni Ka Francis Sontillano!"
(Onward with the cause of Ka Francis Sontillano!)
photos of demonstrations for Francis Sontillano and
attendance of students in his wake
scanned from the PSHS 1971-B yearbook