Goodbye Columbus Day: Time to End the MythIn a few weeks, many of us will slip on costumes and fantasy identities for Halloween. When Christmas nears, we'll perpetrate a fiction on our kids about Santa Claus.
But this week, as the nation marks Columbus Day, maybe it's a good time to confront the mythology about the heroic explorer who ''discovered'' America.
Journalism should help reveal facts and truths. Yet when it comes to Christopher Columbus, many mainstream pundits hold on dearly to myth.
Columbus set sail in 1492 after convincing Spain's monarchy that gold and other riches were to be found in Asia. He ended up instead in the Americas: the Bahamas, then Cuba and Haiti.
In the revealing log that Columbus kept during his voyage, he described how the friendly Arawak Indians first greeted his ships: ''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 would make fine servants.
With 50 men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.''
Columbus then embarked on a frenzied hunt for imaginary gold fields, using Indian captives: ''As soon as I arrived in the Indies, on the first island which I found, I took some natives by force'' as guides to ''whatever there is in these parts.''
After establishing a fort in what is now Haiti, Columbus returned to Spain -- with many Indian prisoners dying aboard ship -- to give a glowing report to the royalty in Madrid about what he'd found in the New World.
Columbus described the Indians as ''so naive and so free with their possessions'' that ''when you ask for something they have, they never say no.'' His report ended with a plea for more support from the Spanish king and queen so he could return from his next voyage to the Indies with ''as much gold as they need... and as many slaves as they ask.''
Columbus' second expedition was granted 17 ships and 1,200 men in pursuit of gold (which was sparse) and potential slaves (who were plentiful). The result was a holocaust against the native population.
In 1495, Indians were shipped to Spain as slaves, many dying en route. ''Let us in the name of the Holy Trinity,'' Columbus later wrote, ''go on sending all the slaves that can be sold.''
But far more Indians were enslaved in their homelands to harvest gold from bits of dust found in streams. Columbus' men ordered everyone over age 13 in a province of Haiti to bring in a quota of gold; Indians who failed had their hands cut off and were left to bleed to death.
The war against the native population was so vicious -- including hangings, burnings and then mass suicides -- that historians estimate half of the Indians on Haiti (as many as 125,000 people) were dead within a few years.
Today, media voices that boom the loudest in defense of Columbus are often the most ignorant. Rush Limbaugh, for example, once asserted that ''Columbus saved the Indians from themselves.''
History tells a different story. The most important document of the era is the multivolume ''History of the Indies'' by Bartolome de las Casas -- a Spanish priest involved in the conquest of Cuba, who owned a plantation employing Indian slaves. But Las Casas had a change of heart and began recording what he had witnessed.
He described a cooperative Indian society in a bountiful land, a generally peaceful culture that occasionally went to war with other tribes. Yet there'd been no subjugation of the kind brought by Columbus. Writing in the early 1500s, Las Casas detailed how a whole people was basically worked to death: men in gold mines, women in the fields.
Las Casas witnessed Spaniards -- driven by ''insatiable greed'' -- ''torturing the native peoples'' with ''the strangest and most varied new methods of cruelty.''
The Spaniards ''thought nothing of knifing Indians by tens and twenties and of cutting slices off them to test the sharpness of their blades,'' wrote Las Casas. ''My eyes have seen these acts so foreign to human nature, and now I tremble as I write.''
This bloody history might make modern readers tremble -- if they had access to it instead of just today's mythology.
It's true that Columbus was a gifted navigator, personally brave and tenacious. But his enterprise -- as historian Howard Zinn documents in ''A People's History of the United States'' -- was infused with racism and greed.
Holiday fantasies about jolly old Saint Nick may be harmless. But urging Americans to blithely celebrate Columbus every year is a denial of our past -- and an affront to our multicultural present.
It's estimated that Columbus, either directly murdered, or caused the death through policies of slavery and systemic extermination, approximately 100 million aboriginals.
Holding Christopher Columbus and his deeds up as commendable not only causes mental harm to members of the Indigenous community, but also encourages public inticement of genocide and implies complicity after the fact.
The Colorado AIM group asks the following:
- On the weekend of October 7-9, organize actions in your own communities or states to educate the public about the true nature of Columbus and the Columbus legacy (Visit the Transform Columbus Day Website for supporting materials).
- Demand the repeal of Columbus Day as a local, state and national holiday. This can be done through petitions, group lobbying efforts at state legislatures and visits to the office of US Senators and representatives. Insist on the unnaming of public places and streets to Columbus and work to remove statues and monuments to Columbus.
- Work to ensure that the United States live up to its treaty obligation with indigenous nations, and that the federal and state governments cease the continuing theft of indigenous territories and natural resources of such places as Newe Sogobia (Western Shoshone), the He Sapa (Lakota Nation) and in Alaska (Gwich'in Nation) (See TCD website for more information on these struggles). Demand a new trial for Leonard Peltier.
- Form alliances with local or regional indigenous peoples who are arranged in active struggle against colonialism and genocide (contact Colorado AIM or TCD for contacts in your region).
- Never surrender to oppression, colonialism or genocide.
For International Allies:
- Organize Local, national or regional rallies at US consulates or embassies on Saturday, October 8th or Monday, October 10th. (the official national Columbus holiday in the US)
- At these rallies, ask why the United States condones a national celebration to Columbus - an international colonial murderer. Send delegations to demand responses from US officials about how the United States can claim to champion human rights, and at the same time, celebrate the man who began the genocide against indigenous peoples in the Americas.
- Express solidarity with indigenous peoples struggles in the US and around the world. Demand that the US honor its treaty obligations in the Black Hills, at Western Shoshone, freedom for Leonard Peltier. Oppose policies of globalization from the US that adversely effect indigenous peoples in Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru, Brazil, throughout the Pacific, Asia and Africa.
- Form solidarity groups with indigenous peoples in struggle.
If anyone on GM wants information about events and protests against Columbus Day in their own areas, PM me and I'll find what I can for you, if none exist, feel free to organize your own!
Thanksgiving is the celebration of the genocide as a whole, but Columbus Day is the celebration of the man who started the slaughter. Take a stand.
[/]

Blah!!! Can a mod edit the post and add the closing list tag so my html isn't all weird? ;) (can you tell it's Monday?)
Wow. Thank you for posting this. Its sickening how much of history is incredibly skewed or just untrue. In elementary schools (at least here) we learn how great Columbus was for "finding america" when really there were people here for many years before that. And when he really was here killing people. Yeah. And its even more fucked up that so many people don't even know that this ever happened.
If you know of anything going on in the twin cities in MN let me know!
the Twin Cities has one of the largest urban native populations in the country, so I bet you there's something, just a matter of finding it. Let me look around, I'll get back to you.
There's a rather big one in Minneapolis:
Ticket sales proceeds directly support NVision, which is a national native non profit org.
Other then that, can't find much for rallies or protests, it seems some nice anarchists thought they'd change the day to their own agenda, and are holding Columbus Day as the day to bring attention to their anti war efforts instead.
I'd love to be at the parade protest in Columbus. Woot to Ward Churchill for taking a stand against the parade and Columbus Day too.
Anyways, if you wanted to see if there are others, maybe try calling Minneapolis's AIM (American Indian Movement) chapter to see if they know of any rallies or protests going on other then the above event.
(612) 721-3914
I wish I lived in minneapolis. There's nothing going on around here. I'm not looking forward to when Matt gets into school. Right now it's easy to ignore racist holidays, but when he gets in school they'll be "teaching" him bullshit stories that I'll have to battle down again.
Thanks for posting this. I think we'll do the Denver thing on Friday. I have to babysit all weekend so we won't be able to stay but it'll be good to show up.
It's really annoying tho, because the average American just doesn't give a shit. Life is comfy.
Naivete do you know of anything in Austin? If not I can try and put something together.
Thank you for posting this !
Thanks Cristi!
Anyone wanna go with me?? Mamamayhem... you should totally come visit! That would be fun...
Adcaela: I don't have time tonight to look, but I'll definitely do some digging tomorrow and let you know!
thank you so much for posting it.
although i was never a fan of columbus and thought that a lot of the celebration about him was a load of crap, i never got to read the excerpts from his journals and this was really eye-opening.
i'll definitely be engaged in some unlearning with my daughter once she starts school.
Thanks for posting this! Is there a centralized site posting actions in other locations? If work/school allow, I'd love to participate in an event that was happening in my city (it's a major city...seems like there should be something).
There is no one stop place to see it, when I find different events in different cities, it comes from about 1/2 hour of googling and digging. If you'd like, you can PM me your city and I'll PM you back with things going on in the area.
Adcaela: Haven't found anything in Austin yet, or even texas at all!! I'll still keep looking. I did however find this, which I thought was a good article:
The terrorist watch list? For protesting? Come on.
I was just thinking about what a shitty holiday Columbus Day is.
I'm making a banner tomorrow that says "Abolish colombus day" and I'm just gonna hold it by my lonesome outside school and flyer Cae's daycare (it's closed for Colombus day).
i found while searching around
http://www.transformcolumbusday.org/
ugh...I've ALWAYS hated hanksgiving and columbus day I remember pointing out the murder/slavery parts in, like, 2nd grade. All I got was a lunch detention for it :? Every year I've made it tradition to complain though these holidays and this year is no exception!