Columbus Day Research Paper

1702 Words4 Pages

Matthew I. Wanner
December 03, 2014
History 201

Columbus Day:
A Celebration Of Destruction

Casaus shows that the West, and particularly Spain, ravaged the land they raided. The people native to the Americas, at the time, were peaceful and accepting of strangers; being accepting of strangers made them easy prey for wide spread exploitation by western powers. If there is to be anything to celebrate about Columbus’ Day it is not the beginning of a wholesale destruction of peoples, cultures and ways of life that Christopher Columbus heralded; Columbus’ Day should be stripped of Columbus’s name in recognition of the atrocities perpetrated by western expansion into the Americas, and be changed into a celebration and recognition of the affected …show more content…

However, it was often worse for those left alive. The people taken for slaves had to face hard labor such as they had never known, like working in the gold mines or diving for pearls. Women, and specifically young girls, were traded among the Spanish or given to soldiers as rewards from their commanders. No mind was given the people taken as slaves, and most died off quickly, only to replaced just as quickly. The people that were attacked and killed or enslaved lost everything. They lost their languages, their culture and their heritage. They were separated from family, even from the same tribes and peoples they had always known and forced into a bleak situation from which there was no escape. When this happened they had no chance to pass on their cultures, there was often nobody to pass them on to as the native peoples never got a chance to have children, or raise children. In some places the Spanish would make demands on the local lords to deliver them slaves and the local lords would have to find slaves from among his own people, or all of his people would have to face the violence of the Spanish. This is the legacy of Columbus.
The Spanish expansion and brutalization of the lands was not well known in Europe at the time. Even without complete knowledge, the government demanded that the native people be given a chance to convert to christianity, made aware that they fell under Spanish rule and be made aware of the laws of Spain. The Spaniards in the Americas, however, paid little but lip service to this

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