By THEPHILBIZNEWS STAFF
While the ties that bind both Filipino-Spanish dates back more than 500 years ago, the establishment of Instituto Cervantes in Manila has deepened this Brotherhood as the Philippines and Spain continue to enhance the diplomatic relations.
It is also good to look back and see how the Instituto Cervantes in Manila came into being. Through the auspices of Her Royal Highness Infanta Elena de Borbón, accompanied by the first Director General of the Instituto Cervantes (IC), the historian Nicolás Sánchez Albornoz, on May 6, 1994, then-new headquarters of the Instituto Cervantes in Manila (ICM) was inaugurated in the Mayflower building within the Malate neighborhood, at the intersection of León Guinto and Estrada streets. The property belonged to a Filipino family of Spanish origin, the Delgados. The Mayflower building, constructed in 1938, had previously housed USAID, the Embassy of Indonesia, and that of Spain.
The IC had been established by Law 7/1991, of March 21. This law specified the functions of the institution: to promote the Spanish language worldwide and to contribute, along with other Spanish state institutions, to spread the culture of Spain and Spanish-speaking countries. The IC constitutes a fundamental instrument of cultural diplomacy, often referred to as the flagship of Spanish language and its culture.
The Manila center was part of the founding network of the IC, which currently extends to over 90 cities in 45 countries. Like other centers in that founding network, the one in Manila is the successor of the Cultural Center of the Embassy of Spain, which dated back to 1972.
On August 10, 1993, the Cultural Center ceased its functions as such, to operate since then as center of the Instituto Cervantes. Thousands of Filipinos, from all walks of life, have passed through its classrooms in over thirty years of activity. More than three thousand students take Spanish courses at the ICM every year.
In 2006, the headquarters of the Institute moved to Kalaw Street, to a building owned by the Spanish Casino of Manila (also known as Casa Español), specifically designed to meet the teaching, cultural, and administrative needs of the institution. Surrounded by universities and with an LRT station at the door, the center experienced a spectacular increase in enrollments, making it the most active within the IC world network, consistently ranking among the top five since then. It currently holds the second position behind New Delhi.
In the cultural sphere, “El Cervantes” has been extraordinarily welcomed by Filipino society, which considers it its own. The Spanish Festival for Culture and the Arts was held in October from 2001 to 2008, marking a turning point in the impact of the IC as a cultural and social actor in Manila. Its film section, Película-Pelikula, has endured over time, with its twenty-second edition taking place in 2023. Thousands of Filipinos attend the screenings to watch Spanish-language films. Additionally, thousands of Filipinos attend the Book Day, which the ICM has been celebrating since 2006 to commemorate the death of Miguel de Cervantes.
In 2023, almost 500 million people have Spanish as their mother tongue (6.2% of the world’s population). Spanish is the second most spoken native language in the world, after Mandarin Chinese. The total number of people who can communicate in Spanish—either as a native language or as an acquired language —exceeds 599 million (7.5% of the world’s population). It is estimated that in 2023, over 23 million people will be studying Spanish as a foreign language. Spanish is the official language or the first language of twenty-one countries on three continents, and it is also the official language of the associated state of Puerto Rico in the United States. For over forty-one million US citizens, Spanish is the language they use at home.
As director of the ICM in two periods: since 2001 to 2006 and since 2019 to 2024, I want to thank the Filipino people and institutions for the affection and support they have always shown us. I hope that in the next thirty years, cultural cooperation between Spain and the Philippines will continue to be the cornerstone of their bilateral relations.