Columbus Day--As
Rape Rules Africa and American Churches Embrace Violent "Christian"
Video Games
by Thom Hartmann
"Gold is most excellent; gold constitutes
treasure; and he who has it does all he wants in the world, and can even lift
souls up to Paradise." -- Christopher Columbus, 1503 letter to the
king and queen of Spain.
"Christopher Columbus not only opened the door
to a New World, but also set an example for us all by showing what monumental
feats can be accomplished through perseverance and faith."
--George H.W. Bush, 1989 speech
If you fly over the
country of Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, the island on which Columbus
landed, it looks like somebody took a blowtorch and burned away anything green.
Even the ocean around the port capital of Port au Prince is choked for miles
with the brown of human sewage and eroded topsoil. From the air, it looks like
a lava flow spilling out into the sea.
The history of this
small island is, in many ways, a microcosm for what's happening in the whole
world.
When Columbus first
landed on Hispaniola in 1492, virtually the entire island was covered by lush
forest. The Taino "Indians" who lived there had an apparently idyllic
life prior to Columbus, as seen in the reports left to us by literate members
of Columbus's crew such as Miguel Cuneo.
When Columbus and
his crew arrived on their second visit to Hispaniola, however, they took
captive about two thousand local villagers who had come out to greet them.
Cuneo wrote: "When our caravels where to leave for Spain, we gathered one
thousand six hundred male and female persons of those Indians, and these we
embarked in our caravels on February 17, 1495.
For those who remained, we let it be known (to the Spaniards who manned
the island's fort) in the vicinity that anyone who wanted to take some of them
could do so, to the amount desired, which was done."
Cuneo further notes
that he himself took a beautiful teenage Carib girl as his personal slave, a
gift from Columbus himself, but that when he attempted to have sex with her,
she "resisted with all her strength." So, in his own words, he
"thrashed her mercilessly and raped her."
Columbus once
referred to the Taino Indians as cannibals, a which is to this day still taught
in some US schools. But this a
fabrication, concocted to help justify his slaughter and enslavement of these
people. He wrote to the Spanish monarchs in 1493: "It is possible, with
the name of the Holy Trinity, to sell all the slaves which it is possible to
sell. Here there are so many of these
slaves, and also brazilwood, which although they are living things, they are as
good as gold."
Columbus and his men
also used the Taino as sex slaves: it was a common reward for Columbus to
present his men with local women to rape.
As he began exporting Taino as slaves to other parts of the world, the
sex-slave trade became an important part of the business, as Columbus wrote to
a friend in 1500: "A hundred castellanoes (a Spanish coin) are as easily
obtained for a woman as for a farm, and it is very general and there are plenty
of dealers who go about looking for girls; those from nine to ten (years old)
are now in demand."
However, the Taino
turned out not to be particularly good workers in the plantations that the
Spaniards and later the French established on
Hispaniola: they
resented their lands and children being taken, and attempted to fight back
against the invaders. Since the Taino were obviously standing in the way of
Spain's progress, Columbus sought to impose discipline on them. For even a minor
offense, an Indian's nose or ear was cut off, so he could go back to his
village to impress the people with the brutality the Spanish were capable
of. Columbus attacked them with dogs,
skewered them with pikes, and shot them.
Eventually, life for
the Taino became so unbearable that, as Pedro de Cordoba wrote to King
Ferdinand in a 1517 letter, "As a result of the sufferings and hard labor
they endured, the Indians choose and have chosen suicide. Occasionally a hundred have committed mass
suicide. The women, exhausted by labor, have shunned conception and childbirth.
Many, when pregnant, have taken something to abort and have aborted. Others
after delivery have killed their children with their own hands, so as not to
leave them in such oppressive slavery."
Eventually,
Columbus, and later his brother Bartholomew Columbus who he left in charge of
the island, simply resorted to wiping out the Taino altogether. Prior to Columbus' arrival, some scholars
place the population of Haiti/Hispaniola (now at 16 million) at around 1.5 to 3
million people. By 1496, it was down to 1.1 million, according to a census done
by Bartholomew Columbus. By 1516, the indigenous population was 12,000, and
according to Las Casas (who was there) by 1542 fewer than 200 natives were
alive. By 1555, every single one was dead.
This wasn't just the
story of Hispaniola; the same has been done to indigenous peoples worldwide.
Slavery, apartheid, and the entire concept of conservative Darwinian Economics,
have been used to justify continued suffering by masses of human beings.
Dr. Jack Forbes,
Professor of Native American Studies at the University of California at Davis
and author of the brilliant book "Columbus and Other Cannibals," uses
the Native American word wétiko (pronounced WET-ee-ko) to describe the
collection of beliefs that would produce behavior like that of Columbus. Wétiko literally means "cannibal,"
and Forbes uses it quite intentionally to describe these standards of culture:
we "eat" (consume) other humans by destroying them, destroying their
lands, taking their natural resources, and consuming their life-force by
enslaving them either physically or economically. The story of Columbus and the
Taino is just one example.
We live in a culture
that embodies the principle that if somebody else has something we need, and
they won't give it to us, and we have the means to kill them to get it, it's
not unreasonable to go get it, using whatever force we need to.
In the United
States, the first "Indian war" in New England was the "Pequot
War of 1636," in which colonists surrounded the largest of the Pequot
villages, set it afire as the sun began to rise, and then performed their duty:
they shot everybody--men, women, children, and the elderly--who tried to
escape. Puritan colonist William
Bradford described the scene: "It was a fearful sight to see them thus
frying in the fire and the streams of blood quenching the same, and horrible
was the stink and scent thereof; but the victory seemed a sweet sacrifice, and
they [the colonists] gave praise thereof to God, who had wrought so
wonderfully..."
The Narragansetts,
up to that point "friends" of the colonists, were so shocked by this
example of European-style warfare that they refused further alliances with the
whites. Captain John Underhill ridiculed the Narragansetts for their
unwillingness to engage in genocide, saying Narragansett wars with other tribes
were "more for pastime, than to conquer and subdue enemies."
In that, Underhill
was correct: the Narragansett form of war, like that of most indigenous Older
Culture peoples, and almost all Native American tribes, does not have
extermination of the opponent as a goal. After all, neighbors are necessary to
trade with, to maintain a strong gene pool through intermarriage, and to insure
cultural diversity. Most tribes
wouldn't even want the lands of others, because they would have concerns about
violating or entering the sacred or spirit-filled areas of the other tribes. Even the killing of "enemies" is
not most often the goal of tribal "wars": The goal of such wars is
most often to fight to some pre-determined measure of "victory" such
as seizing a staff, crossing a particular line, or the first wounding or
surrender of the opponent.
“Civilized” man’s
wétiko type of theft and warfare is practiced daily by farmers and ranchers
worldwide against wolves, coyotes, insects, animals and trees of the
rainforest; and against indigenous tribes still subsisting in the jungles and
rainforests. This cultural cannibalism
of ours is our way of life. It comes
out of our foundational cultural notions.
So it should not
surprise us that with the doubling of the world's population over the past 37
years has come an explosion of violence and brutality, and as the United States
runs low on oil, we are now fighting wars in oil-rich parts of the world. It shouldn't surprise us that our churches
are using violent "kill the infidels" video games to lure in
children, while in parts of Africa contaminated by our culture and rich in oil
(Congo) rape has become so widespread as to make the front page of yesterday's
New York Times.
These are all
dimensions, after all, of our history, which we celebrate on Columbus Day. But if we wake up, and we help the world
wake up, it need not be our future.
Excerpted and slightly edited from "The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight: The Fate of the World and What We Can Do Before It's Too Late."