(Note: The following was written as a letter to the editor to the Florida Times-Union, in response to a Columbus Day editorial which misrepresented the nature of Native American culture and society as well as the nature of the encounter itself. The Times-Union editors exercising their right of freedom of the press- they are, after all, free to publish or not publish whatever they want- did not publish my response, so I am placing it here on my web site. -R. Kephart)
Editor:
In
their editorial "Civilization:
Day to Remember" (October 11, 2002), the Times-Union editorial writers
have provided their readers with an example of precisely why a real university
education, as opposed to simple career training, is vital in today's world.
The writers display a hair-raising level of ignorance with regard to both
the nature of the indigenous American populations at the time of Columbus,
and also the nature of the consequences of the Encounter. As if this were
not enough, they quote as their authority a "researcher" at the
Ayn Rand Institute, a center for the diffusion of ethnocentric polemic hiding
under cover of a libertarian "philosophy."
To
quote the "researcher": "Prior to 1492, what is now the United
States was sparsely inhabited, unused and undeveloped. The inhabitants were
primarily hunter-gatherers." It is true that population density, overall, was lower than
in Europe, but in some regions it was certainly as high or higher, where conditions
supported dense populations. But that the land was "unused and undeveloped"
is Orwellian doublespeak, true only if you define "used" and "developed"
by European notions, under which people have to live in one place and practice
farming on a bounded plot of land.
Yes,
some Native Americans were hunter-gatherers, people who tend to have a very
well-elaborated knowledge of their ecosystem and how best to exploit it. And
while it is true that such peoples typically lack the ability to store food,
and therefore must forage on a daily or near-daily basis, it is not true that
their lives are "nasty, brutish, and short" as the "researcher"
claims. They generally live very healthy, happy lives, with more leisure time
to devote to relaxation, music, storytelling, and sexual trysts than people
have in modern industrial societies, unless they’ve been pushed off
their productive lands, as is generally the case for today's hunter-gatherers.
Native
Americans were not all hunter-gatherers, however. By 1492 they had organized
themselves into a diverse array of societal types, including, in several regions,
state societies as complex as anything known to the conquering Europeans,
complete with social stratification, division of labor, written language,
full-time religious specialists, a military, and so on. So, to argue that
the Europeans brought "civilization" to the Americas is a blatant
lie.
To
suggest as the Ayn Rand "researcher" does that there was "little
agriculture" in Pre-Columbian America is also a lie. Native American
farmers grew an astounding variety of foods. Perhaps their most important
contribution to world cuisine was corn, but they also provided potatoes, which
became a cheap and easy-to-grow source of food for Europeans. Some other Native
American contributions: tomatoes, peanuts, squash and pumpkins, chili peppers,
pineapples, various kinds of beans, papaya, guava, avocado, cassava, cocoa
(chocolate), and turkeys. Try to imagine Italian cuisine without tomatoes,
or the Swiss without chocolate.
What
did the Europeans bring to the Americas in exchange for this bounty? They
contributed the Eurasian suite of domesticated animals (horses, cattle, pigs,
sheep, goats) and grains (wheat, oats, barley, etc.), which were mixed
blessings when we take into account the social and ecological disruptions which
they caused. Probably the most
important crop contributed by the Europeans was actually one from southeast
Asia: sugar cane. But, significantly, this was not a food crop, but rather one
which, cultivated and processed into sugar, molasses, and rum by millions of
enslaved Africans (industrialized slavery was another European contribution to
the New World), provided much of the capital for the industrial revolution and
the rise of European world hegemony.
The
Europeans also contributed influenza and smallpox, which helped them by killing
off huge numbers of Native Americans before they ever even saw a European. They
sometimes used smallpox deliberately, in an early form of biological warfare.
My
point in writing this is not to put Columbus on trial; after all he's dead,
so what would be the point? But, as the historian Howard Zinn says, "to
emphasize the heroism of Columbus and his successors as navigators and discoverers,
and to de-emphasize their genocide, is not a technical necessity but an ideological
choice. It serves- unwittingly- to justify what was done."
It
also makes it easier to keep doing it.
Ronald
Kephart
University
professor
Jacksonville