Never too Late to Read Classics discussion

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Noli Me Tángere (Touch Me Not)
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2018 June: Noli Me Tangere by Jose Rizal
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Yeah, I read about this, incredibly brave!!!
I really liked how he told this very complicated story - I appreciate it came up here, otherwise I would have missed a really good read :))
It has taken me a while to get into the story, but now at about 15% of the book, the action is starting after many of the characters have been introduced, including the hero and his enemy, the priest Damaso.
After 18 chapters, I realize just how corrupt the society and the Organized Church was. The poor people were exploited and often abused.

I thought the opening scene was quite something, but once I got a sense of who is who and their motivations, it was a shock to see the picture that was drawn.
I liked how Rizal shows us there is more than one hero, though I am not sure if this is the right word, as their heroics also come from a need to survive.
I have finished the book and feel that it showed a society that had many injustices and corruption. It was not an easy read because of the theme, but I can see why it is considered an important book in the Philippines.

Yeah, some of the themes were tough but somehow (the way I read it) I thought Rizal ended it with a note of hope
Crisóstomo Ibarra, the mestizo son of recently deceased Don Rafael Ibarra, is returning to San Diego in Laguna after seven years of study in Europe. Capitan Tiago, a family friend, bids him to spend his first night in Manila where Tiago hosts a reunion party at his riverside home on Anloague Street. Crisóstomo obliges. At dinner he encounters old friends, Manila high society, the new curate of San Diego, and Padre Dámaso, San Diego’s old curate at the time Ibarra left for Europe. Dámaso treats Crisóstomo with hostility, surprising the young man who took the friar to be a friend of his father.