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PRESS RELEASE

 

Research Visit of Fr. Rene Javellana, SJ to the Czech Republic on the History of Czech Jesuits and Travelers Kamel, Klein, and Haenke to the Philippines

 

Prague -- Fr. Rene Javellana, SJ, art historian and Associate Professor of the Fine Arts Department of the Ateneo de Manila University and Jesuit Archivist, travelled to the Czech Republic in late April for his exploratory research on the history of the Czech Jesuits and travelers to the Philippines.  In a report to the Department of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Ambassador Vic Lecaros said that Fr. Javellana specifically looked into the work of Georg Kamel, SJ (1661-1706), Paul Klein, SJ (1652-1777) and Tadeo Haenke (1761-1817).

Under the patronage of the National Museum of the Philippines for its project in constructing the new Museum of Natural History, which is expected to include exhibits related to the Czechs, Fr. Javellana’s visit received the full support and cooperation of the Philippine Embassy in Prague, the Czech Embassy in Manila and the Philippine Consulate-General in Brno, Czech Republic.

Fr. Javellana had just come from the British Museum Archives in London, United Kingdom and the University of Leuven in Beligum where he saw the original work of Kamel, a Jesuit missionary in the Philippines in the late 17th century and who was the first to document Philippine flora and fauna.

His trip to the Czech Republic included visits and meetings with the Directors of the Ibero-American Department of the Charles University to discuss academic cooperation, the Haenke Collection at the Czech National Museum to see the works of Tadeo Haenke, a Czech geographer and explorer who collected thousands of plants from the Philippines during the Malaspina expedition and whose collection was acquired by the Czech National Museum in 1821.

 

Fr. Javellana also visited the city of Litomerice to see the Rizaliana collection and to join the Rizal Heritage Trail prepared by the Philippine Embassy.  He also met with Mayor Vladislav Chlupac, who is a member of the Knights of Rizal.

 

Throughout his stay, Fr. Javellana was assisted by Embassy First Secretary and Consul Juan E. Dayang, Jr.  and Honorary Consul General Bretislav Skacel.  They went to the Research Library in Olomouc to see the original 1744 Philippine map of Spanish Jesuit Pedro Murillo Velarde and Paul Klein’s book Remedios Faciles (Simple Remedies for Various Diseases). Also referred to as Pablo Clain, he wrote an early draft of a Tagalog dictionary.  In the afternoon, the delegation visited the Tomas Bat’a University Zlin and the Bat’a Museum.

 

They likewise visited the Moravian Archives in Brno which has the baptismal registry of Kamel and the Spilberk Castle to see the Baroque Pharmacy at the Museum.

 

At the conclusion of his itinerary in the Czech Republic, Fr. Javellana then flew to Rome to explore the Roman Jesuit Archives and to see Kamel’s hand-written final vows as a Jesuit.

 

The Philippine Embassy will continue its cooperation with the Czech Embassy in Manila to coordinate joint cultural and historic projects to further deepen Philippine-Czech relations and to promote enhanced cooperation with historic, cultural, and educational institutions in the Czech Republic and their counterparts in the Philippines. END

 

 Father Javellana1

 

Visit to  the  Olomouc Research Library

(L-R: Consul Juan E. Dayang, Jr. Director Jitka Holásková, Fr. Rene Javellana)

 

 

1744 Map 

 

 

1744 Map of the Philippines by Spanish Jesuit Pedro M. Velarde as part of the

Olomouc Research Library Collection

 

Visit to the Bata Museum in Zlin 

Visit to the Bat’a Museum in Zlin

 

 visit to Moravian Archive1

 

Visit to the Moravian Archive in Brno of Fr. Rene Javellana, Consul Juan E. Dayang, Jr. and Honorary Consul-General Bretislav Skacel

 

 hand-written letter of Georg Kamel1

 

 

 Hand-written letter of Georg Kamel in the Moravia Archive Collection

 

 

Baptismal registry of George Kamel1 

Baptismal registry of George Kamel in the Moravia Archive Collection