Type: | Bishop | ||||||
Nilo Tayag | |||||||
Bishop | |||||||
Church: | International Conference of Philippine Independent Catholic Churches of Jesus Christ, formerly the Philippine Independent Catholic Church/Iglesia Catolica Filipina Independiente | ||||||
Appointed: | --> | ||||||
Retired: | --> | ||||||
Ordination: | 1989 | ||||||
Ordained By: | Manuel Lagasca Sr. | ||||||
Consecration: | March 19, 1993 | ||||||
Consecrated By: | Macario V. Ga, Armando L. de la Cruz, and Melvyn Acosta | ||||||
Birth Name: | Nilo Salumbides Tayag | ||||||
Birth Date: | [1] | ||||||
Birth Place: | Porac, Pampanga | ||||||
Tomb: | --> | ||||||
Nationality: | Filipino | ||||||
Religion: | "Aglipayan sect" | ||||||
Spouse: | Josefina Gutierrez David Angel Garcia | ||||||
Previous Post: | --> | ||||||
Alma Mater: | University of the Philippines Diliman ICFI National Seminary | ||||||
Module: |
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Nilo Tayag is a Filipino bishop, social activist, and revolutionary. Contrary to popular belief, Tayag is not from the Philippine Independent Church, but rather from an offshoot church of the aforementioned. He is an advocate of a revolutionary government in the Philippines[3]
Tayag co-founded, along with Jose Maria Sison and others, the Maoist youth group Kabataang Makabayan ("Patriotic Youth") in 1964, which became the nucleus of the established Communist Party of the Philippines in 1968, and served as its Central Committee member.[4] He was the group's national chairman until he was arrested on June 11, 1970 in Barrio Concepcion, San Pablo, Laguna.[2] Detained along with Benito Tiamzon, Jesus Lava and other left-wing personalities at the Youth Rehabilitation Center in Fort Bonifacio, and later declaring support for the incumbent president Ferdinand Marcos, he was released in 1981 or 1982 after pleading guilty to the charge of subversion.[5]
After being released from prison, Tayag undertook theology studies in the Iglesia Catolica Filipina Independiente (ICFI) National Seminary at Batac, Ilocos Norte (a splinter group from the Philippine Independent Church). In 1987, he ran for the Senate under the UPP-KBL ticket but lost.[6] After losing the election, in January 1988, Tayag and other Marcos loyalists declared their exit from the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan party to form a new party called the Loyalist Party of the Philippines (LPP), of which Tayag was co-vice president with Pacifico de Leon.[7] In 1989, his Church ordained him a priest, and by 1993 consecrated him as a bishop.[3] He was a prominent supporter of Rodrigo Duterte during the latter's campaign for the Presidency[8] and is a founding member of the "Democratic Front for Filipinism" and "Kilusang Pilipinismo", groups supporting Duterte's "revolution against illegal drugs, the oligarchs and the exploiters of the Filipino masses."[9]
Tayag is a member of the UP Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Philippine Guardians Brotherhood Inc., and Freemasonry.