Zagłada Indian Amerykańskich

 


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W tym dokumencie:
Historia kolonizacji oraz redukcji
populacji Indian amerykańskich
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Historia kolonizacji kontynentu amerykańskiego
oraz redukcji populacji Indian

 

Dokumenty znalezione w sieci

1. http://www.indianie.eco.pl/kola/fbi.htm

Pamięci zamordowanych...

Petycja do Prezydenta Georga W. Busha

W latach 70-tych FBI stworzyło prawdziwy klimat terroru i strachu w rezerwatach indiańskich w USA. Członkowie i sympatycy Ruchu Indian Amerykańskich byli nieustannie zastraszani, a setki ludzi związanych z Ruchem Indian Amerykańskich zginęło w do dziś niewyjaśnionych okolicznościach. W sprawie wielu tych morderstw, związanych z FBI, do dziś nie wszczęto śledztwa.

Prosimy o podpisanie petycji w imię pamięci:

Raymond Yellow Thunder (zamordowany styczeń 1972)
Frank Clearwater (zamordowany kwiecień 27, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Buddy Lamont (zamordowany kwiecień 27, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Clarence Cross (zamordowana/-y czerwiec 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Julius Bad Heart Bull (zamordowana/-y lipiec 30, 1973)
Donald He Crow (zamordowana/-y sierpień 27, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Melvin Spider (zamordowana/-y wrzesień 22, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Alo
ysins Long Soldier (zamordowana/-y październik 5, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Pedro Bisonette (zamordowana/-y październik 17, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Philip Little Crow (zamordowana/-y listopad 14, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Allison Little Spotted Horse (zamor
dowana/-y listopad 24, 1973 - brak dochodzenia)
Verlyn Dale Bad Haert Bull (zamordowana/-y luty 18, 1974 - brak dochodzenia)
Edward Standing Soldier (zamordowana/-y luty 18, 1974 - brak dochodzenia)
Dennis Le Compte (zamordowana/-y wrzesień 7, 1974)
Robert
Reddy (zamordowana/-y wrzesień16, 1974)
Jesse Trueblood (zamordowana/-y listopad 17, 1974 - brak dochodzenia)
Elaine Wagner (zamordowana/-y listopad 30, 1974 - brak dochodzenia)
William J. Steele (zamordowana/-y marzec 9, 1975
Edith Eagle Hawk (zamordowa
na/-y marzec 21, 1975 - brak dochodzenia)
Linda Eagle Hawk (zamordowana/-y marzec 21, 1975 - brak dochodzenia)
Earl W. Janis Jr. (zamordowana/-y marzec 21, 1975 - brak dochodzenia)
Stacey Kotier (zamordowana/-y marzec 25, 1975)
Jeanette Bisonette (zamordowa
na/-y marzec 25, 1975 - brak dochodzenia)
Roxwood Buffalo (zamordowana/-y marzec 1975)
Joe Stuntz Kills Right (zamordowana/-y czerwiec 26, 1975 - brak dochodzenia)
Homer Blue Bird (zamordowana/-y wrzesień 9, 1975)
James Little (zamordowana/-y wrzesień 10,
1975)
Janice Black Bear (zamordowana/-y październik 26, 1975)
Lydia Cut Grass (zamordowana/-y styczeń 5, 1976)
Buyron DeSersa (zamordowana/-y styczeń 31, 1976)
Anna Mae Aquash Pictou (zamordowana/-y luty 1976)
Cleveland Reddest (zamordowana/-y marzec 26,
1976 - brak dochodzenia)
Martin Two Two (zamordowana/-y maj 6, 1976)
Lyle Dean Richards (zamordowana/-y lipiec31, 1976 - brak dochodzenia)
Tina Manning Trudell (zamordowana/-y luty 12, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Ricarda Star Trudell (zamordowana/-y luty 12, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Sunshine Karma Trudell (zamordowana/-y luty 12, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Eli Changing Sun Trudell (zamordowana/-y luty 12, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Leah Hicks Manning (zamordowana/-y luty 12, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Dallas Thunders
hield (zamordowana/-y lipiec 20, 1979 - brak dochodzenia)
Bobby Garcia (zamordowana/-y grudzień 13, 1980 - brak dochodzenia)
i inni...

Zwracamy się do Pana, żeby wyznaczyć niezależną komisję o charakterze wykonawczym do nadzorowania i tropienia poczynań FBI, wymierzonych przeciwko Ruchowi Indian Amerykańskich od początku 1970 do dziś.

2. Drogami Polaków w Brazylii
ks. Ignacy Posadzy,

Książki, które warto przeczytać

Orson Scott Card: Siódmy syn

 

Orson Scott Card - "Badacze czasu"
- alternatywna wizja odkrycia Ameryki przez K
rzysztofa Kolumba.

 

 

“I did not know how much was ended. When I look back now from this high hill of my old age, I can see the butchered women and children lying heaped and scattered all along the crooked gulch as plain as I saw them with eyes still young. And I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud, and was buried in the blizzard. A people’s dream died there. It was a beautiful dream...”

— Black Elk
Oglala Holy Man
on the aftermath of the Massacre at Wounded Knee, South Dakota
December, 1890
the United States Army Seventh Cavalry used gattling guns
to slaughter 300 helpless Lakota children, men and women


Genocide of the
American Indian Peoples

 


The Anglo-American genocide of Indian peoples is actually part of the 500-year tradition of Hispanic genocide begun by the bestial, satanic “conquistadors” — which continues to this day.

The first section of this well-written and researched article by Peter Montague describes the horrific sadism of Christopher Columbus and his men. The second section describes the English/American tradition of genocide.

Excerpted from Rachel’s Environment & Health Weekly newsletter, #671, “Columbus Day, 1999,” by Peter Montague (National Writers Union UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO), with added section titles and notes where indicated.



The Beginnings of the Hispanic Genocide

Columbus made four voyages to the New World. [1] The initial voyage reveals several important things about the man. First, he had genuine courage because few ship’s captains had ever pointed their prow toward the open ocean, the complete unknown. Secondly, from numerous of his letters and reports we learn that his overarching goal was to seize wealth that belonged to others, even his own men, by whatever means necessary.

Columbus’s Spanish royal sponsors (Ferdinand and Isabella) had promised a lifetime pension to the first man who sighted land. A few hours after midnight on October 12, 1492, Juan Rodriguez Bermeo, a lookout on the Pinta, cried out — in the bright moonlight, he had spied land ahead. Most likely Bermeo was seeing the white beaches of Watling Island in the Bahamas.

As they waited impatiently for dawn, Columbus let it be known that he had spotted land several hours before Bermeo. According to Columbus’s journal of that voyage, his ships were, at the time, traveling 10 miles per hour. To have spotted land several hours before Bermeo, Columbus would have had to see more than 30 miles over the horizon, a physical impossibility. Nevertheless Columbus took the lifetime pension for himself. [1,2]

Columbus installed himself as Governor of the Caribbean islands, with headquarters on Hispaniola (the large island now shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic). He described the people, the Arawaks (called by some the Tainos) this way:

“The people of this island and of all the other islands which I have found and seen, or have not seen, all go naked, men and women, as their mothers bore them, except that some women cover one place only with the leaf of a plant or with a net of cotton which they make for that purpose.

“They have no iron or steel or weapons, nor are they capable of using them, although they are well-built people of handsome stature, because they are wondrous timid.... [T]hey are so artless and free with all they possess, that no one would believe it without having seen it.

“Of anything they have, if you ask them for it, they never say no; rather they invite the person to share it, and show as much love as if they were giving their hearts; and whether the thing be of value or of small price, at once they are content with whatever little thing of whatever kind may be given to them.” [3, pg.63; 1, pg.118]

Added note:
In an ominous foreshadowing of the horrors to come, Columbus also wrote in his journal:

“I could conquer the whole of them with fifty men, and govern them as I pleased.”


After Columbus had surveyed the Caribbean region, he returned to Spain to prepare his invasion of the Americas. From accounts of his second voyage, we can begin to understand what the New World represented to Columbus and his men — it offered them life without limits, unbridled freedom.

Columbus took the title “Admiral of the Ocean Sea” and proceeded to unleash a reign of terror unlike anything seen before or since. When he was finished, eight million Arawaks — virtually the entire native population of Hispaniola — had been exterminated by torture, murder, forced labor, starvation, disease and despair. [3, pg.x]


A Spanish missionary, Bartolome de las Casas, described first-hand how the Spaniards terrorized the natives. [4] Las Casas gives numerous eye-witness accounts of repeated mass murder and routine sadistic torture.

As Barry Lopez has accurately summarized it,

“One day, in front of Las Casas, the Spanish dismembered, beheaded, or raped 3000 people.

‘Such inhumanities and barbarisms were committed in my sight,’ he says, ‘as no age can parallel....’

“The Spanish cut off the legs of children who ran from them. They poured people full of boiling soap. They made bets as to who, with one sweep of his sword, could cut a person in half. They loosed dogs that ‘devoured an Indian like a hog, at first sight, in less than a moment.’ They used nursing infants for dog food.” [2, pg.4]


This was not occasional violence — it was a systematic, prolonged campaign of brutality and sadism, a policy of torture, mass murder, slavery and forced labor that continued for CENTURIES.


“The destruction of the Indians of the Americas was, far and away, the most massive act of genocide in the history of the world,” writes historian David E. Stannard. [3, pg.x]


Eventually more than 100 million natives fell under European rule. Their extermination would follow. As the natives died out, they were replaced by slaves brought from Africa.

To make a long story short, Columbus established a pattern that held for five centuries — a “ruthless, angry search for wealth,” as Barry Lopez describes it.

“It set a tone in the Americas. The quest for personal possessions was to be, from the outset, a series of raids, irresponsible and criminal, a spree, in which an end to it — the slaves, the timber, the pearls, the fur, the precious ores, and, later, arable land, coal, oil, and iron ore — was never visible, in which an end to it had no meaning.”

Indeed, there WAS no end to it, no limit.

As Hans Koning has observed,

“There was no real ending to the conquest of Latin America. It continued in remote forests and on far mountainsides. It is still going on in our day when miners and ranchers invade land belonging to the Amazon Indians and armed thugs occupy Indian villages in the backwoods of Central America.” [6, pg.46]


In the 1980s, under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, the U.S. government knowingly gave direct aid to genocidal campaigns that murdered tens of thousands Mayan Indian people in Guatemala, El Salvador and elsewhere. [7]

The pattern holds.


Added note:
And still, in the 21st century, the genocide continues in Colombia, El Salvador and Guatemala.

Continuing the gruesome tradition of the 1980s, which also terrorized the people of Nicaragua, U.S. government-funded fascist paramilitaries mass-murder Indians in Central and South America to this day. The bestial carnage committed by Uncle Sham’s proxy armies includes countless disappearances, epidemic rape and torture. The Colombian paramilitaries have even made their own gruesome addition to the list of horrors: public beheadings.

This latest stage of the American Indian holocaust is enthusiastically supported by the cocaine-smuggling CIA, the Pentagon and all the rest of the United States Corporate Mafia Government.

See:
Colombia: The Genocidal Democracy
by Javier Giraldo


 

The English/American Genocide

Unfortunately, Columbus and the Spaniards were not unique. They conquered Mexico and what is now the Southwestern U.S., with forays into Florida, the Carolinas, even into Virginia. From Virginia northward, the land had been taken by the English who, if anything, had even less tolerance for the indigenous people.

As Hans Koning says,

“From the beginning, the Spaniards saw the native Americans as natural slaves, beasts of burden, part of the loot. When working them to death was more economical than treating them somewhat humanely, they worked them to death.

“The English, on the other hand, had no use for the native peoples. They saw them as devil worshippers, savages who were beyond salvation by the church, and exterminating them increasingly became accepted policy.” [6, pg.14]

The British arrived in Jamestown in 1607. By 1610 the intentional extermination of the native population was well along. As David E. Stannard has written,

“Hundreds of Indians were killed in skirmish after skirmish. Other hundreds were killed in successful plots of mass poisoning. They were hunted down by dogs, ‘blood-Hounds to draw after them, and Mastives [mastiffs] to seize them.’

“Their canoes and fishing weirs were smashed, their villages and agricultural fields burned to the ground. Indian peace offers were accepted by the English only until their prisoners were returned; then, having lulled the natives into false security, the colonists returned to the attack.

“It was the colonists’ expressed desire that the Indians be exterminated, rooted ‘out from being longer a people upon the face of the Earth.’ In a single raid the settlers destroyed corn sufficient to feed four thousand people for a year.

“Starvation and the massacre of non-combatants was becoming the preferred British approach to dealing with the natives.” [3, pg.106]


In Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Jersey extermination was officially promoted by a “scalp bounty” on dead Indians.

“Indeed, in many areas it [murdering Indians] became an outright business,” writes historian Ward Churchill. [5, pg.182]

Indians were defined as subhumans, lower than animals. George Washington compared them to wolves, “beasts of prey” and called for their total destruction. [3, pgs.119-120]

Andrew Jackson — whose [innocent-looking] portrait appears on the U.S. $20 bill today — in 1814:

“supervised the mutilation of 800 or more Creek Indian corpses — the bodies of men, women and children that [his troops] had massacred — cutting off their noses to count and preserve a record of the dead, slicing long strips of flesh from their bodies to tan and turn into bridle reins.” [5, pg.186]


The English policy of extermination — another name for genocide — grew more insistent as settlers pushed westward:

  • In 1851 the Governor of California officially called for the extermination of the Indians in his state. [3, pg.144]

  • On March 24, 1863, the Rocky Mountain News in Denver ran an editorial titled, “Exterminate Them.”

  • On April 2, 1863, the Santa Fe New Mexican advocated “extermination of the Indians.” [5, pg.228]

  • In 1867, General William Tecumseh Sherman said:

“We must act with vindictive earnestness against the [Lakotas, known to whites as the Sioux] even to their extermination, men, women and children.” [5, pg.240]

In 1891, Frank L. Baum (gentle author of “The Wizard Of Oz”) wrote in the Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer (Kansas) that the army should “finish the job” by the “total annihilation” of the few remaining Indians.

The U.S. did not follow through on Baum’s macabre demand, for there really was no need. By then the native population had been reduced to 2.5% of its original numbers and 97.5% of the aboriginal land base had been expropriated and renamed “The land of the free and the home of the brave.”

Hundreds upon hundreds of native tribes with unique languages, learning, customs, and cultures had simply been erased from the face of the earth, most often without even the pretense of justice or law.


Today we can see the remnant cultural arrogance of Christopher Columbus and Captain John Smith shadowed in the cult of the “global free market” which aims to eradicate indigenous cultures and traditions world-wide, to force all peoples to adopt the ways of the U.S.

Today’s globalist “Free Trade” is merely yesterday’s “Manifest Destiny” writ large.

But as Barry Lopez says,

“This violent corruption needn’t define us.... We can say, yes, this happened, and we are ashamed. We repudiate the greed. We recognize and condemn the evil. And we see how the harm has been perpetuated. But, five hundred years later, we intend to mean something else in the world.”

If we chose, we could set limits on ourselves for once. We could declare enough is enough.



Notes


1. J.M. Cohen, editor, The Four Voyages of Christopher Columbus
London: Penguin Books, 1969; ISBN 0-14-044217-0


2. Barry Lopez, The Rediscovery of North America
Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, 1990; ISBN 0-8131-1742-9


3. David E. Stannard, American Holocaust: Columbus and the Conquest of the New World
New York: Oxford University Press, 1992; ISBN 0-19-507581-1


4. Bartolome de las Casas, The Devastation of the Indies: A Brief Account
translated by Herma Briffault
Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992; ISBN 0-8018-4430-4


5. Ward Churchill, A Little Matter of Genocide: Holocaust and Denial in the Americas, 1492 to the Present
San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1997; ISBN 0-87286-323-9


6. Hans Koning, The Conquest of America: How The Indian Nations Lost Their Continent
New York: Monthly Review Press, 1993, pg. 46.; ISBN 0-85345-876-6


7. For example, see Mireya Navarro, “Guatemalan Army Waged ‘Genocide,’ New Report Finds,”
NEW YORK TIMES, February 26, 1999, pg. unknown.
The NY Times described “torture, kidnapping and execution of thousands of civilians” — most of them Mayan Indians — a campaign to which the U.S. government contributed “money and training.”



 

Książki warte przeczytania

 

A People's History of the United States, 1492-Present  By Howard Zinn

niestety tylko po angielsku. Nagle fakty, które są nie kwestionowane przez nikogo i są obecne w podręcznikach, łączą się w co najmniej zaskakujący obraz - wręcz rewelacyjny.


Fragmenty:
So, Columbus and his successors were not coming into an empty wilderness, but into a world which in some places was as densely populated as Europe itself, where the culture was complex, where human relations were more egalitarian than in Europe, and where the relations among men, women, children, and nature were more beautifully worked out than perhaps any place in the world.

 

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Myśli i aforyzmy ku pobudzeniu ducha, Opus - myśli wg ktrych y trzeba, Wiersze - także ze Stowarzyszenia Umarłych Poetów i o śmierci, Niech Stanie się Czowiek - słowa sawiące wolność i potęgę człowieka, Książki piękne,wartościowe i te które warto przeczytać, Piękne opowieści - Anthony DeMello i inni, Wolność - nieustanne czuwanie

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