Manataka American Indian Council
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Celebrate Columbus Day?
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"Columbus started off not knowing where he was going and upon his arrival, did not know where he was. When he returned to Europe, he did not know where he had been -- and, he did it all on borrowed money." ~Author Unknown |
Was Christopher Columbus the first to 'discover' North America? Absolutely not. There were millions of indigenous people here eons before Europeans stumbled on this continent. Asians, Africans and people from the Middle East probably came centuries before Erickson or Columbus. Contrary to almost every school textbook, Columbus did not prove the world is round. This fact was proved centuries before Columbus was born.
A short time after Columbus' arrival in the Caribbean, he began enslaving and slaughtering thousands indigenous people. In the name of God, church and greed millions of people needless died during the ensuing period of 'discovery' and colonization. The Roman Catholic Church issued the Papal Bull of 1493 giving permission to the kings of Europe to rape, pillage, slaughter and steal property. The Papal Bull became a legal precedent known as the The Doctrine of Discovery the spawned hundreds of new laws used by discoverers, colonists and later by the U.S. government to justify forced confiscation of personal property. (see Native America, Discovered and Conquered)
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"50,000 Native People... died within months of the establishment of the first Spanish colony on the island of Espanola. The soldiers held contests to see who could cut the most heads off with one blow. Women's breasts were cut off for sport while their babies were fed to the Mastiffs; The 24 million people perished at the hands of the Conquistadors in Central Mexico... [the Conquistadors] held contests to see whose dogs could tear apart the most people. Babies were thrown into the air for the dogs to fight over; The 95% of the People in Western and Central Honduras who perished in less than 50 years; In Western Nicaragua the population fell from more than a million to less than 10,000 in only 60 years; In Peru, Chile and Brazil the population decreased from 14 million to 500,000 in less than a century. The soldiers, it was written, kept "the quarters of Indians hanging on porches to feed to the dogs." While many of the deaths were from diseases spread from the filth which permeated the "Old World" many of our People were simply worked to death. It was cheaper to work the slaves until they died than to feed them. There were always more slaves to be had. These are but a few of the atrocities that led to the development of The New World...." Susan Bates, Hill and Holler column, October 2006 |
Why
does the U.S. government and schools continue to celebrate the farce and
atrocities of Columbus? Why does this lie continue to be taught in
schools? Why is Columbus Day a legal holiday?
The “Columbus Day” holiday is the only national holiday that insults millions of Americans. Columbus Day celebrates the opening of slave trade and the most hideous periods of genocide in human history.
We encourage you to help stop this ridiculous farce that continues to be rammed down the throats of school children and all American citizens. Sign the petition to: Abolish Columbus Day and Re-name it "First Americans Day" http://www.petitiononline.com/fadoct/petition.html
Also Read: Miller: Will others follow Episcopal Church’s lead? Repudiate the Doctrine of Discovery
Examining the reputation of
Christopher Columbus
By Jack Weatherford
Christopher Columbus' reputation has not survived the scrutiny of history, and
today we know that he was no more the discoverer of America than Pocahontas was
the discoverer of Great Britain. Native Americans had built great civilizations
with many millions of people long before Columbus wandered lost into the
Caribbean.
Columbus'
voyage has even less meaning for North Americans than for South Americans
because Columbus never set foot on our continent, nor did he open it to European
trade. Scandinavian Vikings already had settlements here in the eleventh
century, and British fisherman probably fished the shores of Canada for decades
before Columbus. The first European explorer to thoroughly document his visit to
North America was the Italian explorer Giovanni Caboto, who sailed for England's
King Henry VII and became known by his anglicized name, John Cabot. Caboto
arrived in 1497 and claimed North America for the English sovereign while
Columbus was still searching for India in the Caribbean. After three voyages to
America and more than a decade of study, Columbus still believed that Cuba was a
part of the continent of Asia, South America was only an island, and the coast
of Central America was close to the Ganges River.
Unable to celebrate Columbus' exploration as a great discovery, some apologists
now want to commemorate it as the great "cultural encounter." Under this
interpretation, Columbus becomes a sensitive genius thinking beyond his time in
the passionate pursuit of knowledge and understanding. The historical record
refutes this, too.
Contrary to popular legend, Columbus did not prove that the world was round;
educated people had known that for centuries. The Egyptian-Greek scientist
Erastosthenes, working for Alexandria and Aswan, already had measured the
circumference and diameter of the world in the third century B.C. Arab
scientists had developed a whole discipline of geography and measurement, and in
the tenth century A.D., Al Maqdisi described the earth with 360 degrees of
longitude and 180 degrees of latitude. The Monastery of St. Catherine in the
Sinai still has an icon - painted 500 years before Columbus - which shows Jesus
ruling over a spherical earth. Nevertheless, Americans have embroidered many
such legends around Columbus, and he has become part of a secular mythology for
schoolchildren. Autumn would hardly be complete in any elementary school without
construction-paper replicas of the three cute ships that Columbus sailed to
America, or without drawings of Queen Isabella pawning her jewels to finance
Columbus' trip.
This myth of the pawned jewels obscures the true and more sinister story of how
Columbus financed his trip. The Spanish monarch invested in his excursion, but
only on the condition that Columbus would repay this investment with profit by
bringing back gold, spices, and other tribute from Asia. This pressing need to
repay his debt underlies the frantic tone of Columbus' diaries as he raced from
one Caribbean island to the next, stealing anything of value.
After he failed to contact the emperor of China, the traders of India or the
merchants of Japan, Columbus decided to pay for his voyage in the one important
commodity he had found in ample supply - human lives. He seized 1,200 Taino
Indians from the island of Hispaniola, crammed as many onto his ships as would
fit and sent them to Spain, where they were paraded naked through the streets of
Seville and sold as slaves in 1495.
Columbus tore children from their parents, husbands from wives. On board
Columbus' slave ships, hundreds died; the sailors tossed the Indian bodies into
the Atlantic.
Because Columbus captured more Indian slaves than he could transport to Spain in
his small ships, he put them to work in mines and plantations which he, his
family and followers created throughout the Caribbean. His marauding band hunted
Indians for sport and profit - beating, raping, torturing, killing, and then
using the Indian bodies as food for their hunting dogs. Within four years of
Columbus' arrival on Hispaniola, his men had killed or exported one-third of the
original Indian population of 300,000. Within another 50 years, the Taino people
had been made extinct [editor's note: the old assumption that the Taino became
extinct is now open to serious question] - the first casualties of the holocaust
of American Indians. The plantation owners then turned to the American mainland
and to Africa for new slaves to follow the tragic path of the Taino.
This was the great cultural encounter initiated by Christopher Columbus.
This is the event we celebrate each year on Columbus Day. The United States
honors only two men with federal holidays bearing their names. In January we
commemorate the birth of Martin Luther King, Jr., who struggled to lift the
blinders of racial prejudice and to cut the remaining bonds of slavery in
America. In October, we honor Christopher Columbus, who opened the Atlantic
slave trade and launched one of the greatest waves of genocide known in history.
--- Jack Weatherford is
an anthropologist at Macalaster College in St. Paul, Minn. His most recent book
is "Indian Givers." He wrote this article for the Baltimore Evening Sun.
~Submitted by Gray Beard Vinson