Editorial Statement:
The Indigenous Legacy of the Caribbean
The Native Inhabitants of the Caribbean
have a long and rich history of cultural development that is often overshadowed
by the tragedy of their being the first Amerindian people to suffer the
effects of European colonization. As the first to encounter Columbus,
the Taino and Carib have been written into Western history as the first
victims of Spanish genocide in the Americas.
For reasons of political expediency,
the Native people of the Caribbean were declared extinct in the mid-sixteenth
century, even though they continued to exist on the margins of Caribbean
colonial society. Against great adversity -- sharing with and borrowing
from other cultures -- Indigenous bloodlines, traditions, and life ways
persisted for five hundred years to the present. While the degree
of Native heritage and the strength of Native identification varies from
island to island and community to community, many individuals of Indigenous
Caribbean ancestry are today reclaiming their past. Upon examination
and contemplation, the story of their extinction is proving to have been
a myth. There is a general awakening of the Native contributions to Caribbean
culture and, contrary to the record of extinction, the Taino and Carib
are entering the twenty-first century very much alive.
Critical re-assessment of historic
chronicles along with ethnographic studies of Indigenous survivals in the
Caribbean are providing a more complete record that contradicts the supposed
extinction of the Taino and Carib. Indian people and customs are found
continuously "between the lines" of census records and historical reports
and a large amount of Native culture has survived in the forms of language,
food ways, architecture, agriculture, medicinal knowledge, folklore, family
life, spiritual practice, and popular identity. Blood studies and
anthropometric studies have also supported commonly held understandings
of the persistence of certain biological characteristics identified with
Natives in many parts of the Caribbean.
While it is certainly true that
the Native people mixed with Africans and Spaniards, and incorporated different
bloodlines and culture into their own, this does not mean they became "extinct."
Anthropologists have begun to discard racist definitions of group boundedness
and today see how populations are in a constant state of flux. When survival
is the principal goal of community, cultural forms become flexible toward
this end. From outside the community come questions of "Who is or
is not an Indian?" Inside the community it goes without saying and begs
the question "Who has the authority to define?" Furthermore, as suggested
in the American Anthropological Association's recent Statement on Race,
the notion of "blood purity" is neither a biological concept nor does biology
have a necessary connection to cultural continuity.
In different parts of the
Caribbean, Native identification is expressed differently. In the
Dominican Republic, for example, Taino heritage is so pervasive in many
contemporary cultural forms-- including language, food ways, agriculture,
architecture, medicinal knowledge, crafts and technologies, folklore and
religion, and other forms of popular expression -- that it is difficult
to maintain the theory of Taino extinction. However, while Taino
heritage is strong, the Taino past has been downplayed in favour of an
assimilated, colonized Hispanic nationalist identity. Like the identities
of many colonized people living in American nations, history and culture
have been driven by the actions of State and Church control. Furthermore,
contemporary European and Western culture threaten traditional cultural
forms as do social and economic processes of foreign emigration and migration
to cities to work for foreign sponsored assembly and tourist industries.
The direction that Taino
and Carib identity will take in the twenty-first century Caribbean seems
to depend on both the survival of indigenous cultural elements in the face
of advancing Western capitalist culture, and on the work of motivated individuals
to critically examine the composition and politics of their past and present.
The same could be said of Taino and Carib identity in the American diaspora.
Ultimately, though, it is
an emotional feeling of identification that comes from the heart that leads
to the defining and strengthening of culture. The simple possession
of an inventory of cultural attributes, rituals, or the expression of resistance
against oppressive forms of history and culture are only part of the story.
This "identification from the heart" arises from the active vision of elders,
the true teaching of parents to their children, the selfless commitment
of individuals to their community, and the heartfelt love and respect for
the spirit of the land people live on and call their home. And it is in
these subtle, yet transcendent ways that the Taino and Carib have struggled
and survived.
Copyright (C) 1999, Pedro J. Ferbel, Ph.D.
Director, Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, Historical Archives
of Santiago, Dominican Republic;
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Black Studies, Portland State University,
Portland, Oregon, USA.
Posted on: 02 August, 1999
Editorial Policy:
The Editors welcome any papers,
essays, review articles or websites that either in whole or in part support,
challenge, critique or otherwise modify the issues and perspectives as
presented in the Editors' Statement above.
In general, the Editors will include
for listing websites of relevance to the broad topic of Caribbean Amerindians,
from any perspective and from any angle of investigation or presentation.
We only ask that contributors treat serious topics in a serious manner.
We also invite papers to be hosted online by the CAC, again from any perspective.
Until a formal electronic journal is established, papers submitted will
be peer reviewed in-house by the editorial staff of the CAC. Please contact
CaribAmerindianCentre@yahoo.com
for Notes for Contributors, format guidelines and related details.