Celebrating Hitler Day, Oh I mean Columbus Day
 
Since the first "American history" book was written, there has been, still is, 
a systematic and effective cover up locked in to place that perpetuate the 
fallacies and myths of Christopher Columbus and the assumed "divinity" of the 
fated voyage. [1]"Christopher Columbus' reputation has not survived the 
scrutiny of history, and today we know that he was no more the discoverer of 
America than Pocahontas was the discoverer of Great Britain." 
 
Some academics consider Columbus one of the first instigators of the 
trans-Atlantic slave trade and set in motion, one of the largest intentional 
efforts of ethnic cleansing known in history- and also the one of the least 
known. By some accounts, over 95 million, Indigenous peoples throughout the 
Western hemisphere were enslaved, mutilated and massacred.   Go down to your 
local public school and peruse the American History section and tell me if 
there has been any formal accountability for this American Holocaust.  
Columbus, Cortez, Father Junipero Sierra, and hundreds of others are still 
celebrated as our countries brave nautical explorers and finest heroes, not as 
perpetrators of crimes against humanity. 
 
Obviously, Columbus's atrocities are rarely discussed in the public school 
system.  Recently, Roberta Weighill, Chumash, shared that her third grade son 
disagreed with his teacher about the Columbus discovery story and added that he 
knew Columbus to be responsible for the deaths of many Native people.  The 
public teacher corrected him: "No. Columbus was just a slave trader." Hmmm, 
just a slave trader? Oh! Is that all? 
 
On October 12, 1492, Columbus wrote in his journal:
 
"They should be good servants .... I, our Lord being pleased, will take hence, 
at the time of my departure, six natives for your Highnesses." These captives 
were later paraded through the streets of Barcelona and Seville when Columbus 
returned to Spain."[2] 
 
Soon, there was evidence showing that this was fast becoming a profitable 
business, yet, did these "Savages" deserve to go into bondage and slavery? 
According to Columbus:
 
"they are artless and generous with what they have, to such a degree as no one 
would believe but him who had seen it. Of anything they have, if it be asked 
for, they never say no, but do rather invite the person to accept it, and show 
as much lovingness as though they would give their hearts." [3]
 
In a short time, Columbus seized 1,200 Taino Natives from the island of 
Hispaniola,[4] tearing families apart by abduction and killing the ones that 
resisted going.  On board Columbus' slave ships, hundreds died; and as 
"Christian" as those sailors were, they callously tossed the Natives bodies 
into the Atlantic.
 
Being the nice guy that history would like us to believe, Columbus felt 
required at least to inform the natives of the terms by which they would be 
treated from now on in the "New World" ;
 
"I certify to you that, with the help of God, we shall powerfully enter into 
your country, and shall make war against you in all ways and manners that we 
can, and shall subject you to the yoke and obedience of the Church and of their 
highnesses; we shall take you, and your wives, and your children, and shall 
make slaves of them, and as such shall sell and dispose of them as their 
highnesses may command; and we shall take away your goods, and shall do you all 
the mischief and damage that we can, as to vassals who do not obey, and refuse 
to receive their lord, and resist and contradict him; and we protest that the 
deaths and losses which shall accrue from this are your fault, and not that of 
their highnesses, or ours, nor of these cavaliers who come with us.."[5]
 
(ask yourself how many Taino people understood what Columbus was saying)
 
Within four years of Columbus' arrival on Hispaniola, his men had killed or 
exported one-third of the original Indian population of 300,000. 
 
The History of Columbus Day has been as erratic as Christopher Columbus 
himself.  Since 1971 Columbus Day has been celebrated in the U.S. as federal 
holiday.  Then, Columbus Day was terminated as a national holiday in the 
1990's.  However, October 9, 2002, President George W. Bush (why should we not 
be surprised it was George W.?) issued a presidential proclamation celebrating:
 
"Columbus' bold expedition [and] pioneering achievements, ... the flag of the 
United States be displayed on all public buildings on the appointed day in 
honor of Christopher Columbus."
 
Then six years later, On Oct 11, 2008 Indigenous Peoples Day was established as 
the new holiday replacing Columbus Day.   How often do your children bring 
notices home from school on that?  November is Native American History Month, 
but it is NEVER celebrated with as much zealousness and vigor as our African 
American Awareness Month of February-  go figure, oversight? Mishap? Uh, no, I 
think not.  
 
 So why is there this instance of celebrating such a horrible person in 
history?  Is there an Adolf Hitler day? Well why not? There some similarities 
here.  Ethnic cleansing, slavery, concentration camps, and annihilation. 
 
And here we are in 2012, where there is an effort to "erase" Native people; 
literally & historically, and replace it with a watered down romanticized one.  
"As a student in the public school district, I've noticed that my teachers have 
been leaving out gaps in their teachings,"  said 12-year-old Starr GreenSky, a 
Native student in the Santa Barbara School District. "For instance, my teachers 
have told me that a whole nation, filed by tribes, inhabited a continent. Well 
if that's true, then why are there only two-to-three Native American children 
at my school out of the hundreds? What happened to all of us?"
 
Turn on your television and check out the commercials and imagery that saturate 
prime time hours around this time and through Thanksgiving.  Teri Di Gregorio, 
long time Native rights activist states;
 
"People are oblivious that negative stereotypes of Native people and the myth 
of Columbus and colonizers as "hero" are strategic as product placement. I 
would come across recipes for children to make "Columbus fruit boats bowls" to 
"commemorate" "Columbus Day" in a Fisher Price cookbook for young children, 
"fun" crafts for "Columbus Day" in family oriented magazines written for all 
those homogeneous patriotic drones out there, and of course the list goes on 
and on. Every single grocery, department, big box, retail, book, warehouse, 
furniture, electronics store in 'merica has a sale for "Columbus Day."
 
Pay attention to what your kids are being taught in their schools. Walk around 
the school and check out the signs, the symbols, and the imagery being used in 
this twisted contorted "discovery" story. "He who controls the past, controls 
the future; and he who controls the present, controls the past."[6] 
 
Our schools have a responsibility to teach the truth, and we have a 
responsibility to demand it.  
 
[1] Jack Weatherford is an anthropologist at Macalaster College in St. Paul, 
Minn. His most recent book is "Indian Givers." He wrote this article for the 
Baltimore Evening Sun.
[2] http://www.americanindiansource.com/columbusday.html , Bourne, pp. 111-112; 
Page 18 of Hanke, L. (1949). The Spanish struggle for justice in the conquest 
of America. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press
[3] Bourne, pp. 265-266
[4] Hispaniola (Spanish: La Española) is a major island in the Caribbean, 
containing the two sovereign states of the Dominican Republic and Haiti. The 
island is located between the islands of Cuba to the west, and Puerto Rico to 
the east,
[5] Text quoted from: "El Requerimiento" in Wilcomb Washburn, ed. The Indian 
and the White Man
[6] George Orwell
 
 ©Corine Fairbanks (2012)
http://www.facebook.com/notes/aim-southern-cal/celebrating-hitler-day-oh-i-mean-columbus-day/285215994823081



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