Racial Genocide
There is much written concerning the Jewish Holocaust during World War II, when an estimated six million Jews were slaughtered or died from the elements and starvation, and there is much written concerning the African slave trade and the horrors surrounding the practice of slavery in America. However, little is written or even acknowledged concerning the genocide by the Europeans of the Native American people.
The term "genocide" derives from the Latin "genos," race or tribe, and "cide," killing, and means literally the killing or murder of an entire tribe or people (Genocide pp). The Oxford English Dictionary defines genocide as "the deliberate and systematic extermination of an ethnic or national group," and cites the first usage of the term as R. Lemkin's 1944 Axis Rule in Occupied Europe, "by genocide we mean the destruction of a nation or an ethnic group" (Genocide pp). In 1946, the United Nations General Assembly adopted this term and defended it as "a denial of the right of existence of entire human groups" (Genocide pp).
Twenty-one years after Christopher Columbus first landed on the Caribbean island he named Hispaniola, some eight million native people, he chose to call Indians, had been killed (Stannard pp). And this was only the beginning, for within a mere few generations, the Europeans had exterminated all but a handful of the Western Hemisphere's native peoples (Stannard pp). For years historical demographers have been uncovering, in region upon region, "post-Columbian depopulation rates of between 90 to 98% with such regularity that an overall decline of 95% has become a working rule of thumb" (Stannard pp). To put this in perspective, the ratio of native survivorship in the Americas following European contact was less than half of what the survivorship ratio would be in the U.S. today if every single white person and every single back person died (Stannard pp). By far, the extermination of the Native American was the most "massive act of genocide in the history of the world" (Stannard pp).
By 1496, the native population of Hispaniola had dropped from eight million to four million, and by 1508, it had fallen to less than a hundred thousand, and a decade later in 1518, there were less than twenty thousand left, and according to leading scholars, by 1535, "for all practical purposes, the native population was extinct" (Stannard pp). It had taken less than the normal life span of a human being, to exterminate an entire culture of people, millions in number and thousands of years resident in their homeland (Stannard pp). This same fate fell to the native peoples on the surrounding islands and well as the mainland of the Americas (Stannard pp).
Ironically, Columbus had written back to the King and Queen of Spain:
So tractable, so peaceable, are these people,' [referring to the Tainos on the island of San Salvador, so was named by Columbus], 'that I swear to your Majesties there is not in the world a better nation. They love their neighbors as themselves, and their discourse is ever sweet and gentle, and accompanied with a smile; and though it is true that they are naked, yet their manners are decorous and praiseworthy (Massacre pp).
Yet rather ominously, he wrote in his journal, "I could conquer the whole of them with fifty men, and govern them as I pleased" (Genocide-I pp). And he did.
Of all the horrific genocides that have occurred in the twentieth century none has come close to destroying so many -- in such great a proportion - of wholly innocent people (Stannard pp).
The gratuitous killing of the native people throughout the Caribbean and the Americas by the Spanish soldiers amounted no nothing less than outright sadism (Stannard pp). There are numerous accounts of Indians being led into mines, chained together at the neck and decapitated if they faltered, and of women routinely having their breasts cut off and heavy gourds tied to their feet before being tossed into the lakes (Stannard pp). Babies were taken from their mothers' breasts, killed and then left as roadside markers, and it was common practice to cut off arms, legs, hips, and heads with one stroke, like butchers cutting up meat for market (Stannard pp). Moreover, the conquistadors and padres routinely took children from their parents in order to feed their dogs and other animals (Stannard pp).
Within seventy-five years following the Europeans' first appearance, the overall population in central Mexico fell by 95%, from more than 25, 000,000 in 1519, to barely 1,000,000 in 1595 (Stannard pp). Within a century following...
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