This paper utilizes the tragic figure of Sisa from José Rizal's Noli Me Tangere as a philosophical archetype for a uniquely Filipino encounter with radical, innocent suffering. It argues that her descent into madness is not merely a psychological break but a profound existential collapse—a failure of prevailing Catholic eschatology to provide a coherent narrative for suffering that destroys the very subject who might receive consolation. The paper introduces diliman (profound darkness) as an original Filipino philosophical category to name this condition. Distinguishing nihilation (the destruction of the self) from nihilism (a philosophical stance adopted by a subject), it argues that Sisa's condition exceeds the explanatory resources of Western existentialism and traditional theodicy. Drawing on Filipino relational ontology (kapwa, loob), the paper demonstrates how Sisa's selfhood is constituted through her sons and dissolved when that relational matrix is destroyed by colonial violence. Employing a hermeneutic of suspicion (Ricoeur, Sölle), the paper deconstructs the institutional deployment of eschatological consolation in colonial Philippines, arguing that consolation offered by the agents of harm is structurally compromised. Engaging with Levinas, Marion, Weil, and liberation philosophy (Dussel), the paper considers whether any framework can genuinely address the nihilated subject. It concludes that the most honest response is not explanation but witness—a sustained, non-appropriating attention that refuses to close the question that Sisa's silence opens. The paper contributes to Filipino philosophy, philosophical theology, Rizal studies, and the philosophy of religion by developing an indigenous conceptual framework for understanding the limits of theodicy in the face of irredeemable suffering. Keywords: Sisa, Noli Me Tangere, Diliman, Nihilation, Theodicy, Filipino Philosophy, Kapwa, Liberation Theology, Hermeneutic of Suspicion, Colonial Philippines, Eschatology, Simone Weil, Emmanuel Levinas, Innocent Suffering
Sam Narra (Wed,) studied this question.