The Myth of "America"

by: Dahr Jamail and Jason Coppola, t r u t h o u t | Feature

The Myth of "America"
The Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria lying in the North River, New York, in 1912. (Photo Illustration: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

    Happy Columbus Day

    Columbus sailed the ocean blue in Fourteen Hundred and Ninety Two ...

    May the spirit of adventure and discovery always be with you.

    Wishing you a great Columbus Day

    - Columbus Day greeting card

    To mark Columbus Day In 2004, the Medieval and Renaissance Center in UCLA published the final volume of a compendium of Columbus-era documents. Its general editor, Geoffrey Symcox, leaves little room for ambivalence when he says, "This is not your grandfather's Columbus.... While giving the brilliant mariner his due, the collection portrays Columbus as an unrelenting social climber and self-promoter who stopped at nothing - not even exploitation, slavery, or twisting biblical scripture - to advance his ambitions.... Many of the unflattering documents have been known for the last century or more, but nobody paid much attention to them until recently. The fact that Columbus brought slavery, enormous exploitation or devastating diseases to the Americas used to be seen as a minor detail - if it was recognized at all - in light of his role as the great bringer of white man's civilization to the benighted idolatrous American continent. But to historians today this information is very important. It changes our whole view of the enterprise."

    But does it?

    ***

    "They ... brought us parrots and balls of cotton and spears and many other things, which they exchanged for the glass beads and hawks' bells," Christopher Columbus wrote in his logbook in 1495. "They willingly traded everything they owned.... They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features.... They do not bear arms, and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance. They have no iron. Their spears are made of cane.... They would make fine servants.... With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want. Let us in the name of the Holy Trinity go on sending all the slaves that can be sold."

    Catholic priest Bartolome de las Casas, in the multi-volume "History of the Indies" published in 1875, wrote, "... Slaves were the primary source of income for the Admiral (Columbus) with that income he intended to repay the money the Kings were spending in support of Spaniards on the Island. They provide profit and income to the Kings. (The Spaniards were driven by) insatiable greed ... killing, terrorizing, afflicting, and torturing the native peoples ... with the strangest and most varied new methods of cruelty."

    This systematic violence was aimed at preventing "Indians from daring to think of themselves as human beings. (The Spaniards) thought nothing of knifing Indians by tens and twenties and of cutting slices off them to test the sharpness of their blades.... My eyes have seen these acts so foreign to human nature, and now I tremble as I write."

    Father Fray Antonio de Montesino, a Dominican preacher, in December 1511 said this in a sermon that implicated Christopher Columbus and the colonists in the genocide of the native peoples:

    "Tell me by what right of justice do you hold these Indians in such a cruel and horrible servitude? On what authority have you waged such detestable wars against these people who dealt quietly and peacefully on their own lands? Wars in which you have destroyed such an infinite number of them by homicides and slaughters never heard of before ..."

    In 1892, the National Council of Churches, the largest ecumenical body in the United States, is known to have exhorted Christians to refrain from celebrating the Columbus quincentennial, saying, "What represented newness of freedom, hope, and opportunity for some was the occasion for oppression, degradation and genocide for others."

    Yet America continues to celebrate "Columbus Day."

    That Americans do so in the face of all evidence that there is little in the Columbian legacy that merits applause makes it easier for them to avoid taking responsibility for their own actions, or the actions of their government. Perhaps there is good reason.

    ***

    In "Columbus Day: A Clash of Myth and History," journalist and media critic Norman Solomon discusses how historians who deal with recorded evidence are frequently depicted as "politically correct" revisionists while the general populace is manipulated into holding onto myths that brazenly applaud inconceivable acts of violence of men against fellow humans.

    For those of us who are willing to ask how it becomes possible to manipulate the population of a country into accepting atrocity, the answer is not hard to find. It requires normalizing the inconceivable and drumming it in via the socio-cultural environment until it is internalized and embedded in the individual and collective consciousness. The combined or singular deployment of the media, the entertainment industry, mainstream education or any other agency, can achieve the desired result of convincing people that wars can be just, and strikes can be surgical, as long as it is the US that is doing it.

    Never has this process been as blatant and overt as in recent years when the time has come for America to legitimize the idea of global domination. A Department of Defense report titled Joint Vision 2020 calls for the US military to be capable of "full spectrum dominance" of the entire planet. That means total domination and control of all land, sea, air, space and information.

    That's a lot of control.

    How might this become accepted as "Policy" and remain unquestioned by almost an entire population?

    The one word key to that is: Myths. The explanation is that the myths the United States is built upon have paved the way for the perpetuation of all manner of violations.

    Among the first of these is that of Christopher Columbus. In school we were taught of his bravery, courage and perseverance. In a speech in 1989, George H.W. Bush proclaimed: "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."

    Never mind that the monumental feats mainly comprised part butchery, part exploitation and the largest part betrayal of host populations of the "New World."

    ***

    On their second arrival in Hispaniola, Haiti, Columbus's crew took captive roughly two thousand local villagers who had arrived to greet them. Miguel Cuneo, a literate crew member, wrote, "When our caravels ... were 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."

    In 1500, Columbus wrote to a friend, "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."

    Such original "monumental feats" as were accomplished by our nation's heroes and role models were somewhat primitive. Local inhabitants who resisted Columbus and his crew had their ears or nose cut off, were attacked by dogs, skewered with pikes and shot. Reprisals were so severe that many of the natives committed mass suicide and women began practicing abortions in order not to leave children enslaved. The population of Haiti at the time of Columbus's arrival was between 1.5 million and 3 million. Sixty years later, every single native had been murdered.

    Today, "perseverance and faith" allow us to accomplish much more and with far greater impunity. The US continues to liberate Iraq and Afghanistan with 2,000-pound bombs in civilian areas and purge Pakistan via drone attacks on weddings.

    Neither case is of isolated whimsy. It was and remains policy.

    In "A People's History of the United States," celebrated historian Howard Zinn describes how Arawak men and women emerged from their villages to greet their guests with food, water and gifts when Columbus landed at the Bahamas. But Columbus wanted something else. "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," he wrote to the king and queen of Spain in 1503.

    Rather than gold, however, Columbus only found slaves when he arrived on his second visit with seventeen ships and over 1,200 men. Ravaging various Caribbean islands, Columbus took natives as captives as he sailed. Of these he picked 500 of the best specimens and shipped them back to Spain. Two hundred of these died en route, while the survivors were put up for sale by the archdeacon of the town where they landed.

    Columbus needed more than mere slaves to sell, and Zinn's account informs us, "... desperate to pay back dividends to those who had invested, (he) had to make good his promise to fill the ships with gold. In the province of Cicao on Haiti, where he and his men imagined huge gold fields to exist, they ordered all persons fourteen years or older to collect a certain quantity of gold every three months. When they brought it, they were given copper tokens to hang around their necks. Indians found without a copper token had their hands cut off and bled to death.

    "The Indians had been given an impossible task. The only gold around was bits of dust garnered from the streams. So they fled, were hunted down with dogs, and were killed."

    As a younger priest, the aforementioned De las Casas had participated in the conquest of Cuba and owned a plantation where natives worked as slaves before he found his conscience and gave it up. His first-person accounts reveal that the Spaniards "thought nothing of knifing Indians by tens and twenties and of cutting slices off them to test the sharpness of their blades. They forced their way into native settlements, slaughtering everyone they found there, including small children, old men, pregnant women, and even women who had just given birth. They hacked them to pieces, slicing open their bellies with their swords as though they were sheep herded into a pen. They even laid wagers on whether they could manage to slice a man in two at a stroke, or cut an individual's head from his body, or disembowel him with a single blow of their axes. They grabbed suckling infants by the feet and, ripping them from their mothers' breasts, dashed them headlong against the rocks. Others, laughing and joking all the while, threw them over their shoulders into a river, shouting: 'Wriggle, you litle perisher.' They slaughtered anyone on their path ..."

    ***

    Full Spectrum Dominance

    In a letter to the Spanish court dated February 15, 1492, Columbus presented his version of full spectrum dominance: "to conquer the world, spread the Christian faith and regain the Holy Land and the Temple Mount."

    With this radical ideology, Las Casas records, "They spared no one, erecting especially wide gibbets on which they could string their victims up with their feet just off the ground and then burned them alive thirteen at a time, in honour of our Saviour and the twelve Apostles."

    About incorporating these accounts in his book, Zinn explained to Truthout, "My point is not to grieve for the victims and denounce the executioners. Those tears, that anger, cast into the past, deplete our moral energy for the present ... but I do remember a statement I once read: The cry of the poor is not always just, but if you don't listen to it, you will never know what justice is."

    ****

    Author journalist Chris Hedges believes that glorification of (the atrocities of) Columbus is one of several myths that sustain the illusions that justify the imperial visions of the United States.

    In conversation with Truthout, he said, "It's really easy to build a holocaust museum that condemns Germans. It's another issue to build a museum that confronts our own genocide, the genocide that was perpetrated by our own ancestors towards Native Americans or towards African-Americans. I am all for documenting and remembering the [World War II] Holocaust, but the disparity between the reality of the [World War II] Holocaust or the reality of the genocide as illustrated in the [World War II] Holocaust museum and the utter historical amnesia in the Native American museum in Washington is really frightening and shows a complete inability in a public arena for us to examine who we are and what we've done."

    Noam Chomsky holds a similar view. "We have [World War II] Holocaust museums all over the place about what the Germans did," Chomsky told Truthout. "Do we have one about what we did? I mean about slavery, about the Native American population? It's not that the people involved didn't know about it. John Quincy Adams, a great grand strategist, who had a major role in these atrocities, in his later years when he reflected on them, referred to that hapless race of North Americans, which we are exterminating with such insidious cruelty. They knew exactly what they were doing. But it doesn't matter. It's us."

    Explaining how the mythology of a country becomes its historic reality, Chomsky stated, "If you are well-educated, you can internalize that and it. That's part of what a good education is about, enabling people to live with those contradictions. And you see it very consistently. In the case of, say, the Iraq war, try to find somebody who had a principled objection. Actually you can, occasionally, but it's suppressed."

    Historical revisionism and amnesia are critical for nation-building, opines Paul Woodward, the writer and author of the blog "War In Context". He elaborates, "Every nation is subject to its own particular form of historical amnesia. Likewise, imperial powers have their own grandiose revisionist tendencies. Yet there is another form of historical denial particular to recently invented nations whose myth-making efforts are inextricably bound together with the process of the nation's birth ...

    "Whereas older nations are by and large populated by people whose ancestral roots penetrated that land well before it took on the clear definition of a nation state, the majority of the people in an invented nation - such as the United States or Israel - have ancestry that inevitably leads elsewhere. This exposes the ephemeral link between the peoples' history and the nation's history. Add to that the fact that such nations came into being through grotesque acts of dispossession and it is clear that a psychological drive to hold aloft an atemporal exceptionalism becomes an existential necessity. National security requires that the past be erased."

    Robert Jensen is an author and teaches media law, ethics and politics at the University of Texas. In an essay where he justifies his decision to not celebrate Thanksgiving as a holiday, he says, "Imagine that Germany won World War II and that a Nazi regime endured for some decades, eventually giving way to a more liberal state with a softer version of German-supremacist ideology. Imagine that a century later Germans celebrated a holiday offering a whitewashed version of German/Jewish history that ignored that holocaust and the deep anti-Semitism of the culture. Imagine that the holiday provided a welcomed time for families and friends to gather and enjoy food and conversation. Imagine that businesses, schools and government offices closed on this day. What would we say about such a holiday? Would we not question the distortions woven into such a celebration? Would we not demand a more accurate historical account? Would we not, in fact, denounce such a holiday as grotesque?"

    Of course we would.

    But our story is different, and once again this year, on October 12, we will once again "Hail Columbus."

    ---------

    Bhaswati Sengupta contributed to this report.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

»



Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Jason Coppola is the director and producer of the documentary film "Justify My War," which explores the rationalization of war in American culture, comparing the siege of Fallujah with the massacre at Wounded Knee. Coppola has worked in Iraq as well as on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.


Comments

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Columbus had a map.... The

Columbus had a map.... The Chinese circumnavigated the earth almost a hundred years before Columbus. A great read is 1421: The Year China Discovered America by: Gavin Mendzies


Why even have a Columbus

Why even have a Columbus day? He did not discover America, he only rediscovered it, after the Church said the world was flat but the religious nobility were more interested in finding wealth. Columbus opened the way for a disaster in the Americas, with anywhere from 5 to 35 million natives killed--nobody knows the exact number because Indians weren't considered human beings. In any case, all sorts of people came to America before Columbus--the Vikings, the Phoenicians, the Africans, the Asians, possibly the Romans--the list is endless.


They still sing songs in

They still sing songs in music class about him. My 7 year old stood up and raised his hand and told them that the song was a lie, and then preceded to tell the teacher that Columbus was worse than Hitler. Good times :)


Has Spain ever even

Has Spain ever even apologized for the rape of the Americas?


Since both Cherokee and

Since both Cherokee and European blood flow in my veins, I use this day each year to commemorate in sad reverence the genocidal and racist horrors visited upon the indigenous peoples of the American continent. I never call it by its popular name. To me, it will always be Bloody Conquistador Day.


Besides Columbus's brutal

Besides Columbus's brutal approach, another way the strong control the weak is by making them dependent. In my part of the country (Great Lakes) Indians were bought off with payments given twice or so a year. Indian men went into debt while waiting for the payments and, upon receiving them, spent the largess on liquor. I understand the Comanchee of Texas did not accept the "buy-out" of their lands and fought the invaders. They preserved their culture longer and retained some measure of dignity. Whether by torturing, killing, infecting with disease or by offering paltry money for lands taken, the result is the same: people left diminished.


Africans made contact with

Africans made contact with the "New World" at an even earlier point going back to dynastic Egypt up until the Malian Empires of West Africa. Agricultural as well as the oral traditions of the Amerindians support this. See "They Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America."


I think the holiday persists

I think the holiday persists mostly because people relish having holidays. They are a break from work. Perhaps the move should be to re-direct the holiday rather than abolish it.


I celebrate the holiday as

I celebrate the holiday as "Native American Day"!


Not a whole lot has changed.

Not a whole lot has changed. The US economy (like the 15th century Spanish one) has always functioned on the backs of slaves: first American Aboriginals, then African Blacks, then assorted Immigrants, and now so-called Illegal Immigrants. We just don't seem to be able to do without slavery in some form or other in order to make our garden grow. Columbus introduced us to it; we continue the tradition. Megacorps are the new Columbuses looking for gold. And think about it. Who cleans your house and who does your garden? Some things just never really change, do they?


History belongs to the

History belongs to the victors. It is just one more lie that peoples live in every land in the world. Besides, it can't go away, it is a holiday for federal workers and a few others. We must maintain our real priorities. Right?


Who is this "we" ? I am

Who is this "we" ? I am descended from Norwegians and Irishmen, not Spaniards. Columbus was not my fault! True, he was a despicable greedy person and by all accounts a very evil person - but he has to answer to God for his own crimes. There is plenty in the Viking tradition and the Irish civil war for me to be ashamed of, but again, I was not party to those atrocities either. Let us candidly admit that people in the past were less than perfect, and honestly attempt to do better today... and let that be the end of it.


History is replete with such

History is replete with such atrocities. They were committed by Roman soldiers, Cossacks, Spanish conquistadors, Chinese emperors, Japanese ronin, white American slave owners, Nazis, the Savak, Saddam Hussein's secret police, the Hutsis and Tutus, the Taliban ... the list is endless. That does not mean we should not condemn such atrocities, or whitewash them into feel-good holidays. But editorials like this do little to change the conquering attitude that is cloaked in nationalism, patriotism, and sometimes just simple capitalism. It's hardwired into human DNA. And it's just another step into the final Mathusian solution.


Was the treatment of "Native

Was the treatment of "Native Americans" (the discovery of Kennewick Man has put that designation in some doubt) any worse than the barbarities committed by Asians against Asians (or Europeans), or those still committed by Africans against Africans? The displacement of the weak by the strong, while not something to be celebrated, is a simple fact of history. On a different note, I find it amusing that Columbus, a man claimed by the Italians as one of their own, did not view himself as such, but as an "extranjero," a man without a country.


Solid, good, well done

Solid, good, well done article, in the most part. A powerful piece, standing on its on. Unfortunately, he throws in heavy handed analogies to Iraq/Afganistan as though they are proven fact. It lowers the otherwise good quality of this article. For the main part of the piece, that of the racist/genocidal nature of America's founding, it is a good piece! our challenge is to find ways to present reality (both past & present) to a public that is frightened & feels more comfortable with myth.


Columbus was a brute, but at

Columbus was a brute, but at least we don't consider him to be a prophet of God.


Although I know many people

Although I know many people like to use things like this to take pot-shots at the United States, am I wrong in mentioning that Columbus was from Spain? And maybe the anger should be directed upon the country of Spain for its greed, rather than making a bizarre link to current-day US policy in Iraq, etc?


By what sudden turn, freak

By what sudden turn, freak of evolution or sober epiphany - in the short span of only a few hundred years - have contemporary holders of power and wealth become different from Columbus, whom they continue to celebrate? Is there a day or event that marks a change? No, they remain the savages and amoral monsters that Columbus was.


I think the NCC resolution

I think the NCC resolution critical of the Columbus Quincentennial you refer to was adopted in 1990, not 1892. "A Faithful Response to the 500th Anniversay of the Arrival of Christopher Columbus" http://www.indigenouspeople.net/faithful.htm


Who was the most brutal?

Who was the most brutal? Columbus or Bush? Who was the most greedy? Columbus or Bush? Who was the richest of them all? The choice is a difficult one! Both were corporate capitalist seeking profits without morals.


The "Dia de la Raza",

The "Dia de la Raza", celebrated on october 12 in South America, as Columbus arrival, was rebaptized by Hugo Chavez in 2002. It is "El dia de la Resistencia Indigena", the Day of Indigenous Insurgency. What a great exemple!


Three things I want to say

Three things I want to say here is 1) I totally agree, Columbus day is not something we should be celebrating. What happened is disgusting, sick, and makes me outraged to have been handed this pack of lies about Columbus. There are other people we can celebrate instead of this rubbish excuse for a hero.

I also want to say that 2) while I was reading this, I took issue with the fact that "we" were the ones who did this. Our ancestors, yes, but I am not my ancestors and I do not hold the same religion and beliefs they did (in fact I do not even know where they lived and what they believed having never talked with them). I think that is an important distinction to make and why people today are not outraged (besides the outrage of being misled).

3) As it is with everything, the people who make it their cause will get something done. I am going to write a letter to my members of Congress to bring this up to their attention not because I feel the need to atone for my ancestors (who may or may not have been involved in this atrocity) but because I believe it is the right thing to do as an American. I hope you do the same. You can reach them at: https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml



So the Aztecs, Maya and

So the Aztecs, Maya and other "advanced" cultures of the Americas did not practice slavery? It was brought by Columbus? You dare to call other revisionist? Slavery predates human civilization. Human beings compete for resources and conquer one another. It is what we do, not only Europeans, everyone. Enough with the white guilt trip.


You might want to check your

You might want to check your ownselves You are to be commended for your critique, but in one regard, you perpetuate Columbus' harms in your own article. You have silenced and invisiblized indigenous peoples. Citing everyone from Las Casas to Chomsky , you did not cite one indigenous perspective. There are many indigenous resisters, from Vine Deloria, Jr. to Evo Morales, to Shari Hundorf to Winona LaDuke and Russell Means. Here's a video from the epicenter of the resistance to Columbus Day -- Denver: http://www.democracynow.org/2006/10/6/challenging_columbus_day_denver_organizers_discuss and two websites: www.transformcolumbusday.org and http://www.colorado-aim.blogspot.com/ Video of Denver protest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdOK67DLNOQ


Anon. 19:34 -- First, the

Anon. 19:34 -- First, the Aztec and Mayan weren't in North America -- straw man #1. Second, the Mayan didn't take over Europe -- straw man #2. Enough of the white refusal to acknowledge the past.


History has flowed through

History has flowed through the channels prepared for it by guns, germs, and steel. Nobody involved in the process is inherently more or less depraved than anyone else--and any people in the circumstances of the others would do more or less what the others did and are doing.

The end result of the historical process will either be the realization (for the first time) of a human race or the annihilation of the collection of irreconcilable opposites that now exists.

Let's understand that if we are going to speak of human rights, we cannot be speaking of something handed down by god or the rights of nationalities to inhabit nations. The former is a useless fiction the supposed author of which has never shown the slightest interest in the outcome. The latter is a guarantee of genocide.

This is true no matter with group is in charge.

Human rights, which do not exist yet, will be the sign that humanity has achieved a stable existence as a single coherent, if complex species.

Therefore it behooves us as progressives to look forward to the human future, not backward to a past full of horrifying injustices that can never be put right in the terms on which they were originally perpetrated. This is not fair, but it is a condition of our existence as a species.



I do not celebrate Columbus

I do not celebrate Columbus day. He didn't discover anything but a small Island in the Caribbean that he thought was off the coast of China. Many others where on the actual North American continent long before he landed on Hispanola. While the North and South American Indians could be pretty brutal too and were not the gentle savages that some like to whitewash them as, their savagery was nothing compared to the savage of the Columbus and the Spaniards and the other conquistadors that followed. It was nothing compared to what the Europeans that followed did to millions of people that lived on this continent. It is time we taught the truth. Even venerable institutions like the Field Museum in Chicago, continue to propagate the lie that Columbus was the first European in the Americas. I bitched out the curator of their exhibit about the Indians when I saw that they stated that he was the first, when we have a plethora of physical evidence of groups like the Scandinavians that landed in Newfoundland almost 1000 years before Columbus. He told me something to the effect of that is what people want to see. I told him that the job of the museum was to educate and express the facts and the truth, not what the people want to see. Unfortunately, they still have yet to change that signage. We need to get more people to publicly stand up for the truth and raise their voices against falsehoods and lies. Only then will the cacophony be so loud that we will not be able to be ignored.


The Black Legend continues

The Black Legend continues on Truthout. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Legend Other commentators have pointed out that the Spanish have been no more cruel than other imperialists. Spanish atrocities against the indigenous people of the Western Hemisphere would have been forgotten without Las Casas’ writing, which was published and in translated into English in his lifetime. King Carlos V held an unprecedented debate between Las Casas and Juan Ginés de Sepulveda about Indian slavery in 1550. Since you rely so heavily on Bartolome Las Casas’ words to make your arguments and especially since his words were used by English Protestant propagandists to demonize the Spanish Catholics, it may be helpful in the context of your article to read what Las Casas felt about Columbus and ‘the Discovery’. Las Casas wrote in his introduction to Brief History of the Destruction of the Indies: "Everything that has happened since the marvelous discovery of the Americas has been so extraordinary that the whole story remains quite incredible to anyone who has not experienced it at first hand. Indeed, it seems to overshadow all the deeds of famous people in the past, no matter how heroic and to silence all talk of other wonders of the world." It appears Las Casas saw Columbus’ signature achievement differently. Clearly, his life’s work was to be a champion for the downtrodden. But he saw that history is never black and white, it is always chromatic, perhaps the best word would be ‘full spectrum’ without the emphasis you place strictly on ‘dominance’.


This article was not meant

This article was not meant to be an attack on the Spanish. It is meant to demystify Columbus Day.

All I can say is awareness is key to this issue. I was observing a third grade class on Columbus day and we did half of the day on how Columbus was an adventurer, hero etc. and the other half on how he treated the Indians and conquered over them... showing the kids the two side of the coin.

I liked how the article tied in Columbus to (Bush, in the comments) and U.S. foreign policy. It is important that as we look in horror at the events of the past, we bear in mind we aren't too far off in the present. As one comment brought up, slavery has just shifted forms from Native Americans to African Americans to illegal immigrants today.



This article was not meant

This article was not meant to be an attack on the Spanish. It is meant to demystify Columbus Day.

All I can say is awareness is key to this issue. I was observing a third grade class on Columbus day and we did half of the day on how Columbus was an adventurer, hero etc. and the other half on how he treated the Indians and conquered over them... showing the kids the two side of the coin.

I liked how the article tied in Columbus to (Bush, in the comments) and U.S. foreign policy. It is important that as we look in horror at the events of the past, we bear in mind we aren't too far off in the present. As one comment brought up, slavery has just shifted forms from Native Americans to African Americans to illegal immigrants today.



This article was not meant

This article was not meant to be an attack on the Spanish. It is meant to demystify Columbus Day.

All I can say is awareness is key to this issue. I was observing a third grade class on Columbus day and we did half of the day on how Columbus was an adventurer, hero etc. and the other half on how he treated the Indians and conquered over them... showing the kids the two side of the coin.

I liked how the article tied in Columbus to (Bush, in the comments) and U.S. foreign policy. It is important that as we look in horror at the events of the past, we bear in mind we aren't too far off in the present. As one comment brought up, slavery has just shifted forms from Native Americans to African Americans to illegal immigrants today.



The "truth" about Columbus

The "truth" about Columbus mirrors the 9/11 atrocities. Society will not wake-up for another generation, and our school system will continue to brainwash kids.



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