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Bartolomé
de las Casas (1542)
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Annotation:
Late in the eighteenth century, around the time of the three
hundredth anniversary of Columbus's voyage of discovery,
the Abbé Raynal (1713-1796), a French philosophe,
offered a prize for the best answer to the question: "Has
the discovery of America been beneficial or harmful to the
human race?"
Eight
responses to the question survive. Of these, four argued
that Columbus's voyage had harmed human happiness. The European
discovery of the New World had a devastating impact on the
Indian peoples of the Americas. Oppressive labor, disruption
of the Indian food supply, deliberate campaigns of extermination,
and especially disease decimated the Indian population.
Isolated from such diseases as smallpox, influenza, and
measles, the indigenous population proved to be extraordinarily
susceptible. Within a century of contact, the Indian population
in the Caribbean and Mexico had shrunk by over 90 percent.
During
the sixteenth century, when the House of Habsburg presided
over an empire that included Spain, Austria, Italy, Holland,
and much of the New World, Spain's enemies created an enduring
set of ideas known as the "Black Legend." Propagandists
from England, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands
vilified the Spanish as a corrupt and cruel people who subjugated
and exploited the New World Indians, stole their gold and
silver, infected them with disease, and killed them in numbers
without precedent. In 1580, William I, Prince of Orange
(1533-1584), who led Dutch Protestants in rebellion against
Spanish rule, declared that Spain "committed such horrible
excesses that all the barbarities, cruelties and tyrannies
ever perpetrated before are only games in comparison to
what happened to the poor Indians."
Ironically,
the Black Legend drew upon criticisms first voiced by the
Spanish themselves. During the sixteenth century, observers
like Bartolomé de las Casas (1474-1566), the bishop
of Chiapas, condemned maltreatment of the Indians. As a
way to protect Indians from utter destruction, las Casas
proposed an alternative labor force: slaves from Africa.
Given the drastic decline of the Indian population and the
reluctance of Europeans to perform heavy agricultural labor,
African slaves would raise the staple crops that provided
the basis for New World prosperity: sugar, coffee, rice,
and indigo.
Las
Casas would come to regret his role in encouraging the slave
trade. Although he rejected the idea that slavery itself
was a crime or sin, he did begin to see African slavery
as a source of evil. Unfortunately, las Casas's apology
was not published for more than 300 years.
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New Spain [Mexico] was discovered in 1517 and, at the time,
great atrocities were committed against the indigenous people
of the region and some were killed by members of the expedition.
In 1518 the so-called Christians set about stealing from the
people and murdering them on the pretence of settling the area.
And from that year until this--and it is now 1542--the great
iniquities and injustices, the outrageous acts of violence and
the bloody tyranny of these Christians have steadily escalated,
the perpetrators having lost all fear of God, all love of their
sovereign, and all sense of self-respect. Even now, in September
1542, the atrocities get worse by the day, it being the case,
as we have said, that the infernal brutality and utter inhumanity
of the acts committed have readily increased as time has gone
on.
Among
other massacres was one which took place in Cholula, a great
city of some thirty thousand inhabitants. When all the dignitaries
of the city and the region came out to welcome the Spaniards
with all due pomp and ceremony, the priests to the fore and
the high priest at the head of the procession, and they proceeded
to escort them into the city and lodge them in the houses of
the lord and the leading citizens, the Spaniards decided that
he moment had come to organize a massacre (or "punishment"
as they themselves express such things) in order to inspire
fear and terror in all the people of the territory. This was,
indeed the pattern they followed in all the lands they invaded:
to stage a bloody massacre of the most public possible kind
in order to terrorize those meek and gentle peoples. What they
did was the following. They requested the local lord to send
for all the nobles and leading citizens of the city and of all
the surrounding communities subject to it and, as soon as they
arrived and entered the building to begin talks with the Spanish
commander, they were seized without anyone outside getting wind
of what was afoot. Part of the original request was they should
bring with them five or six thousand native bearers and these
were mustered in the courtyards when and as they arrived. One
could not watch these poor wretches getting ready to carry the
Spaniards' packs without taking pity on them, stark naked as
they were with only their modesty hidden from view, each with
a kind of little net on his shoulders in which he carried his
own modest store of provisions. They all got down on their haunches
and waited patiently like sheep. Once they were all safely inside
the courtyard, together with a number of others who were also
there at the time, armed guards took up positions covering the
exits and Spanish soldiers unsheathed their swords and grasped
their lances and proceeded to slaughter these poor innocents.
Not a single soul escaped.
From
Cholula they made their way to Mexico City. On their journey,
they were showered with thousands of gifts from the great king
Montezuma who also sent some of his men to stage entertainments
and banquets for them on the way. When they reached the Great
Causeway which runs for some two leagues right up to the city
itself, they were greeted by Montezuma's own brother and many
local dignitaries bearing valuable gifts of gold, silver and
apparel from the great lord.
Yet
that same day, or so I am reliably informed by a number of eye-witnesses,
the Spaniards seized the great king unawares by means of a trick
and held him under armed guard of eighty soldiers, eventually
putting him in irons.
....The
pretext upon which the Spanish invaded each of these provinces
and proceeded to massacre the people and destroy their lands--lands
which teemed with people and should surely have been a joy and
a delight to any true Christian--was purely and simply that
they were making good the claim of the Spanish Crown to the
territories in question. At no stage had any order been issued
entitling them to massacre the people or to enslave them. Yet,
whenever the natives did not drop everything and rush to recognize
publicly the truth of the irrational and illogical claims that
were made, and whenever they did not immediately place themselves
completely at the mercy of the iniquitous and cruel and bestial
individuals who were making such claims, they were dubbed outlaws
and held to be in rebellion against His Majesty.
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