Saturday, October 10, 2009

What should we make of Columbus?

Note: This column was written in October, 2007 and appeared in several outlets. With Columbus Day being this Monday I thought it an appropriate post.

On October the 8th government employees paused in honor of Christopher Columbus. The rest of us continued on business as usual, except for the banks of course. I took the occasion to reflect on what Columbus was, and I use “what” purposely because his legacy is more than a single man.

I recall some of my grade-school history concerning Columbus. He grew up poor and spent his youth sailing and studying what little was known about geography. Columbus didn’t develop the idea of a spherical earth or of sailing west to reach the East. He did, however, desire to prove each theory and gain some fame and fortune for himself.

Columbus didn’t gain the fortune he sought and died in poverty within 15 years of a discovery he never realized he had made. He certainly gained fame, but he didn’t prove the idea of sailing west to reach India. In fact, he thought the New World was India. By modern standards Columbus would be an ignorant failure. However, he didn’t live in modern times.

For his day he was certainly a great navigator and a pioneer explorer. He discovered an area unknown in his world and found his way back home. How many of us can’t find our way out of the two-acre forest behind our homes? He made his voyage with sailors who believed the sea serpent-filled Atlantic Ocean had no end and the equator was so hot that the ocean boiled. Considering the circumstances, Columbus’ achievement was remarkable.

Yet there’s another side to Columbus, and each anniversary of his landing brings renewed scorn to his memory. Not only do his critics point out his failures, as if that were a new discovery, they charge him with raping the Utopian paradise that was the Caribbean.

Antagonists charge Columbus with establishing a genocidal pattern of murder and slavery that quickly exterminated the Arawak tribesmen. Columbus’ critics maintain that the entire era of European exploration and settlement exploded into a slaughterous inquisition and that Genoa’s famed mariner lit the fuse.

However, the idea that the New World lived in peace and harmony before Columbus is somewhat naïve. Yes, the Spanish abused the Taino Arawak tribe. But Columbus’ critics accentuate his violence only, never mentioning that the New World had a native brand of brutality.

The Taino were rather peaceful. But the Caribs were a warrior tribe that was pushing Tainos from their land before Columbus arrived. They made wives of captured Taino women (slavery, anyone?), made necklaces from a vanquished enemy’s teeth, and may have practiced cannibalism. Perhaps Caribs had decimated the Ciboneys, said to have populated the Caribbean 5000 years ago, before the Spanish arrived to finish off both tribes.

The Ciboneys apparently descended from a prior culture that was nearly exterminated by yet another people. Brazil’s Tupinamba Indians practiced a warrior form of cannibalism whether the Caribs did or not. And each of these tribes came from the mainland meaning that they themselves were explorers and not indigenous to the Caribbean.

I’ll neither praise nor scorn Columbus and his successors. But keep in mind that most known civilizations came from somewhere and displaced someone else along the way, likely by force. Mankind has explored, fought, conquered and lost since Adam and Eve were booted from the Garden of Eden, and it will continue as long as man survives. Is that preferable to living in peace and mutual respect? Certainly not, but it’s reality nonetheless.

One commenter summarized Columbus thusly, “It is not history that is good or bad--history merely is. It is human nature that is good or bad; and we are all a part of it. Let’s celebrate it whenever we can, each in our own ways.”

We must judge Columbus’ contribution, both good and evil, on the standards of his time. To condemn him in retrospect, by modern standards, is an injustice.

1 comment:

Lisa Harper said...

I did some research and found these interesting facts. I did not realize Monday was Columbus Day until I read your post from FB. I have a feeling that this Holiday will gradually be wiped out of the history books, and what our kids get taught will be no telling what in years to come. They might just take Michelle Obama's ancestory clan and turn that into a national holiday. It's coming.

http://www.biography.com/columbus/



Christopher Columbus never set foot on mainland North America. The closest he got was one of the islands in the present day Bahamas.

Columbus did not have any women on his first two voyages. In 1498, Columbus recruited one woman for every ten men on his third voyage.

Neither Columbus nor the Vikings discovered the "New World" as it was settled by people centuries before them. The best claim that can be made is they "encountered" a world which was in his 20s.

Columbus' first voyage included mostly seasoned sailors but the Spanish Crown did grant amnesty to criminals in case Columbus had trouble recruiting a crew. Four such men were members of his crew.

Columbus consulted an almanac and used the knowledge of a pending total lunar eclipse to convince natives in Cuba that he had supernatural powers.

Ramone Pane, a monk who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his second voyage in 1493, is credited with introducing tobacco to Europe.

Columbus calculated the earth's circumference to be nearly 16,000 miles (it's slightly over 25,000 miles around). He estimated the distance between Europe and Japan to be around 2,300 miles instead of the 12,000 it really is.

Despite popular belief, a 55 year-old Columbus didn't die a pauper in 1506, but a relatively rich man.