In 1492
In fourteen hundred
ninety-two
Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
He had three ships and
left from Spain;
He sailed through sunshine, wind and rain.
He sailed through sunshine, wind and rain.
He sailed by night; he
sailed by day;
He used the stars to find his way.
He used the stars to find his way.
A compass also helped
him know
How to find the way to go.
How to find the way to go.
Ninety sailors were on
board;
Some men worked while others snored.
Some men worked while others snored.
Then the workers went
to sleep;
And others watched the ocean deep.
And others watched the ocean deep.
Day after day they
looked for land;
They dreamed of trees and rocks and sand.
They dreamed of trees and rocks and sand.
October 12 their dream
came true,
You never saw a happier crew!
You never saw a happier crew!
“Indians! Indians!”
Columbus cried;
His heart was filled with joyful pride.
His heart was filled with joyful pride.
But “India” the
land was not;
It was the Bahamas, and it was hot.
It was the Bahamas, and it was hot.
The Arakawa natives
were very nice;
They gave the sailors food and spice.
They gave the sailors food and spice.
Columbus sailed on to
find some gold
To bring back home, as he’d been told.
To bring back home, as he’d been told.
He made the trip again
and again,
Trading gold to bring to Spain.
Trading gold to bring to Spain.
The first American? No,
not quite.
But Columbus was brave, and he was bright
But Columbus was brave, and he was bright
– Author
Unknown, www.scholastic.com
This was the most popular
Columbus Day poem/song lyric in the United States when I was growing
up as a Baby Boomer in Scioto County, Ohio, U.S.A. It was used to
help teachers impart the history of Christopher Columbus, the heroic
founder of the country, and to celebrate Columbus Day – a U.S.
holiday that commemorates the landing of Christopher Columbus in the
Americas in 1492.
We accepted the spoon-fed
wisdom from our teachers (who were also likely the unwitting victims
of their own public school education) with celebratory American pomp
and circumstance, putting Columbus on legendary status without
objection. A good man was he.
However …
Revisionists now point to
the realistic harm Columbus inflicted to the indigenous peoples of
the day and question any reason at all to honor Columbus’
achievements. Applying the mores of the 21st century to Christopher
Columbus (Italian – “Cristoforo Colombo”, 1451– 1506) reveals
a man whose infamous deeds seem to outweigh any accomplishments of
his early global navigation.
“What
passes for identity in America is a series of myths
about
one’s heroic ancestors.”
– James
Baldwin
That Columbus was a slave
trader is now historical fact – historians even recognize that he
had been sailing under a Portuguese flag engaged in African slave
trade a dozen year before 1492.
By the time Columbus had
reached the new world, he had begun to envision large settlements
where the Spanish would supervise Indian laborers. He wrote that the
Indians were "fit to be ordered about and made to work, to sow
and do everything else that may be needed . . . all that they are
ordered to do they will do without opposition."
(George E.
Tinker and Mark Freeland. “Thief, Slave Trader, Murderer:
Christopher Columbus and Caribbean Population Decline.” Wicazo
Sa Review. Volume 23, Number 1, Spring 2008)
Columbus is commonly
recognized as an Italian admiral who enslaved many native American
people and treated them with unmerciful violence and brutality.
Columbus lived in an era
in which the international slave trade was starting to grow. As part
of his voyages, Columbus and his men enslaved many native inhabitants
of the West Indies and subjected them to extreme, harsh treatment. On
his famous first voyage in 1492, Columbus landed on an unknown
Caribbean island after an arduous three-month journey.
History.com attests
to this voyage and the subsequent actions of the leader …
“On his first day in
the New World, he ordered six of the natives to be seized, writing in
his journal that he believed they would be good servants. Throughout
his years in the New World, Columbus enacted policies of forced labor
in which natives were put to work for the sake of profits. Later,
Columbus sent thousands of peaceful Taino “Indians” from the
island of Hispaniola to Spain to be sold. Many died en route.
“Those left behind
were forced to search for gold in mines and work on plantations.
Within 60 years after Columbus landed, only a few hundred of what may
have been 250,000 Taino were left on their island.”
As governor and viceroy of
the Indies, Columbus imposed strict discipline on what is now the
Caribbean country of Dominican Republic, according to documents
discovered by Spanish historians in 2005. In response to native
unrest and revolt, Columbus ordered a brutal crackdown in which many
natives were killed; in an attempt to deter further rebellion,
Columbus ordered their dismembered bodies to be paraded through the
streets.
(Editors. “Why
Columbus Day Courts Controversy.” history.com. October 7,
2019.)
Francisco de Bobadilla,
who ruled as governor from 1500 until his death in a storm in 1502,
reported …
“Columbus once
punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and
nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. Testimony recorded in
the report stated that Columbus congratulated his brother Bartolomeo
on "defending the family" when the latter ordered a woman
paraded naked through the streets and then had her tongue cut out for
suggesting that Columbus was of lowly birth.”
Giles Tremlett. "Lost
document reveals Columbus as tyrant of the Caribbean.”
The Guardian.
August 7, 2006.)
The
natives of the islands were systematically subjugated via the
“encomienda” system implemented by Columbus. Adapted to the New
World from Spain, the system rewarded conquerors and resembled the
feudal system in Medieval Europe, as it was based on a lord offering
"protection" to a class of non-Christian people who owed
labor. In addition, Spanish colonists under Columbus' rule began to
buy and sell natives as slaves, including children.
(Timothy J. Yeager.
"Encomienda or Slavery? The Spanish Crown's Choice of Labor
Organization in Sixteenth-Century Spanish America.”
The Journal of
Economic History. 55 (4). 1995.)
When natives on Hispaniola
began fighting back against their oppressors in 1495, Columbus's men
captured 1,500 Arawak men, women, and children in a single raid. The
strongest were transported to Spain to be sold as slaves; 40 percent
of the 500 shipped died en route.
Historian James W. Loewen
asserts that "Columbus not only sent the first slaves across the
Atlantic, he probably sent more slaves – about five thousand –
than any other individual."
(James W. Loewen. Lies
My Teacher Told Me. 1995.)
The law of tribute that he
instituted in the island he called EspaƱola sometime in 1495 forced
Indian people on the island to surrender goods, including gold ore.
This robbery reinforces Columbus' greed.
In October 1499, Columbus
– suffering from arthritis and ophthalmia – sent two ships to
Spain, asking the Court of Spain to appoint a royal commissioner to
help him govern. By this time, accusations of tyranny and
incompetence on the part of Columbus had also reached the Court.
Queen Isabella and King
Ferdinand responded by removing Columbus from power and replacing him
with Francisco de Bobadilla, a member of the Order of Calatrava.
Bobadilla. Bobadilla had also been tasked by the Court with
investigating the accusations of brutality made against Columbus.
(Alicia Lee. “Why
Christopher Columbus wasn't the hero we learned about in school.”
CNN. June 12, 2020.)
Some historians still
claim it is silly to make Columbus the scapegoat for all the ills of
the last five centuries or to suppose that the abrasive interface
between the new and old worlds would have never happened without him.
So, what is the proper view of this once-revered explorer and
discoverer?
“We have
to face the unpleasant as well as the affirmative side of the human
story, including our own story as a nation, our own stories of our
peoples. We have got to have the ugly facts in order to protect us
from the official view of reality.”
– Bill
Moyers
Perhaps, Christopher
Columbus should not be hailed as a hero or damned as a villain. I
guess that middle ground might reflect a needed shift in these
changing times and in revisionist history. There is evidence in 2020
that the percentage of Americans who reject traditional beliefs about
Columbus is small and is divided between those who simply acknowledge
the priority of Indians as the "First Americans" and those
who go further to view Columbus as a villain. The minority rights
revolution has played a significant part in the minds of modern
Americans, and it surely will continue to do so.
“When
you’re publishing a book, if there’s something that is
controversial, it’s better to take it out.”
– Holt,
Rinehart and Winston Textbook Representative
Textbooks and history
teachers? Traditional history textbooks offer students no practice in
applying their understanding of the past to present concerns, hence
no basis for thinking rationally about anything in the future.
Reality gets lost. Authors stray further and further from the primary
sources, and textbooks rarely present the various sides of historical
controversies and almost never reveal to students the evidence on
which each side bases its position.
James Green (1944 –
2016), American historian, author, and Professor of History Emeritus
at the University of Massachusetts, explains …
“The textbooks are
unscholarly in other ways. Of the eighteen I studied, only the two
oldest, published back in the 1970s, contain any footnotes. Ten
textbooks even deny students a bibliography. Despite heavy criticisms
by scholars, new editions of the old texts come out year after year,
largely unchanged. Year after year, clones appear, allegedly by new
authors but with nearly identical covers, titles, and contents. What
explains such appalling uniformity?”
(James
Green, “Everyone His/Her Own Historian?” Radical Historians
Newsletter 80, reviewing and quoting Roy Rosenzweig and David Thelen,
The Presence of the Past. New York:
Columbia
University Press, 1998).
As a result of all this,
most students by the time they become high school seniors are
hamstrung in their efforts to analyze controversial issues in our
society. They enter college with a bland, vanilla-at-best sense of
American history. This lack of understanding in a democracy where a
historian’s duty should be to tell the truth, a democracy where
students need to develop informed reasons to criticize as well as
take pride in their country.
“Lying to children is
a slippery slope. Once we have started sliding down it, how and when
do we stop? Who decides when to lie? Which lies to tell? To what age
group? As soon as we loosen the anchor of fact, of historical
evidence, our history textboat is free to blow here and there,
pointing first in one direction, then in another.
“If we obscure or
omit facts because they make Columbus look bad, why not omit those
that make the United States look bad? Or the Mormon Church? Or the
state of Mississippi? This is the politicization of history. How do
we decide what to teach in an American history course once authors
have decided not to value the truth? If our history courses aren’t
based on fact anyway, why not tell one story to whites, another to
blacks? Isn’t Scott, Foresman already doing something like that
when it puts out a 'Lone Star' edition of Land of Promise,
tailoring the facts of history to suit (white) Texans?”
(James W.
Loewen. Lies My Teacher Told Me. 1995.)
And, this date is 2020,
twenty-five years after the advice from James Loewen. There is a most
grievous reality to this discussion – most of what Americans
believe about Columbus’ discovery (at least old folks like me) is
filled with trite inaccuracies that have continued to dominate
history courses and revile the most learned of history teachers for
centuries. Isn't it time for the truth? How can we perpetuate lies
that misshape and distort not only history but also the minds of
American citizens?
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