Many Americans celebrated
Christopher Columbus Day without considering the historical implications of the
500-year celebration, of the “so-called discovery,” of the Americas. This was the “beginning of the end” for the
millions of indigenous peoples, who were already living in the Americas, who
did not survive the European legacy of slavery and disease.
I would like to propose to
all Afro-Latinos to declare Columbus Day, as The Day of Atonement, in
dedication to the ancestral Women of African and Indigenous descent, brutally victimized
by the colonial exploitation of the Americas by the Conquistadores, and other
representatives of the Spanish Crown.
The offspring which
resulted from the union between the conquistadores and women of color, created
a racial hierarchy of color that to this day, is evident in the vocabulary of
many Latin Americans words such as mestizos, mulatos, trigueño, jabao etc. Since Spanish and the Portuguese explorers
rarely brought their families with them during their voyages, many women were
forced to become sex slaves, prostitutes and some even became Christian wives.
However, there is a
prevailing cultural myth amongst many modern Hispanics and/or Hispanofiles that
Latin American culture is largely color blind, due to the inter-mixture of the
races at a much grander scale, than their North American counterparts. Spanish colonialism allowed individuals the
option of purchasing their freedom from slavery, once they repaid the debt
incurred when they were purchased as slaves.
Thus, they were able to achieve their full humanity, along with their
descendants.
As cultures evolve,
mythologies also evolve throughout the course of hundreds of years. The mythical explanations of Indigenous and
Afro Latino culture screams for a more accurate description, as to the genesis
of an Afro-Indigenous people. I believe
that the myth of colorblindness perpetrated in Latin American culture, is only a
pretext for the psychological response to the historical denial of Spanish
paternal abandonment.
The mythical mestizo or
mulato born into a patriarchal Spanish culture, created the need for approval
from a European Father at the expense of the afro-indigenous mother, who breast
fed them and ensured their survival. The
humble ancestral mother would allow the Spanish father to receive undue credit,
to protect the child from the brutal reality of being fatherless and
illegitimate. The mestizo or mulatto child
would grow up with male icons in the form of a European God, European standards
of beauty, European education and immortalize the father by “bettering the race,”
and marrying into white families.
A Mexican film made in the
1940’s called “Angelitos Negros,” where a light-skinned baby girl born from an
interracial liaison, was raised as a white woman. It was one of the first Latin American films,
brought to life this brutal reality. Her
true mother, who was Black, had to pretend to be the child’s personal servant as
she grew into adulthood. “La Criada or
servant would not share the truth of their relationship, in order to allow her light-skinned
daughter to enjoy the privileges of white womanhood. La Criada’s self-sacrifice is a running theme
in the lives of our ancestral mothers, who had to live lives of quiet
desperation.
A culture will grow and
develop through various stages of maturity, paralleling the development of a
human being from infancy to its eventual death.
What can be the cultural explanation of Latin America’s denial of
historical truths that readily embrace a mythology, which perpetrates a reality
rendering its historical victims invisible?
However, under conditions of oppression, human resistance will surface
in various forms.
This is evidenced in
religious symbolism and icons expressed in the Latin American cult of the
Virgin Mary. The religious significance
of the Afro-Indigenous Virgin Mary is symbolic of her resistance against a social
order, which almost destroyed afro-indigenous womanhood. In order to ensure the earlier survival of the
mestizo or mulatto child during the conquest; the Virgin Mary was adopted as
the cultural symbol of sacrifice who totally surrenders herself to a higher
order of God/Men.
The transformation of the
Virgin Mary as the archetype of the conquered woman of the Americas permitted
our ancestral mother, to recreate her own myth about her material conditions in
this world. The image of the Virgin
mother, provided hope for our ancestral mother who yearned for liberation by a
risen Christ-child who promised he would return for her in the second
coming. Through her risen son, she will
receive her rightful place in the glory of heaven. Our ancestral mothers envisioned her
atonement in the after life. Our
ancestral mother, will be absolved from her psychological and sexual rape and
regain her purity, which was lost in the conquest.
There is an Afro-Latina consciousness,
which is still a sleeping giant in our midst.
She will mature and she will be one with her creator. She will discard the partial human form of
Yurugu, which in West African culture is synonymous with being an incomplete
being. Suffering will no longer be her
destiny. She will assume control of her
heavenly body, which will transcend the ashes of European civilization, and fly
like the Phoenix to her freedom. Hence,
a new social order where heaven and earth, will become the same and the story
of our Queen Mother begins anew.
Christopher
Rodriguez is an activist, author and lecturer and has written a book entitled
the Latino Manifesto: A Critique of the Race Debate in the U.S. Latino Community. For more information go to www.Latinomanifesto.com.
© Copyright 2007 Blacktino e-News Network
POST YOUR COMMENTS TO DIALOGUE ON ARTICLES:
1. Register to Blacktino.net.
2. Login in with your username & password.
3. Scroll to the end of each article.
4. Post your comments.
5. NO Spam.

|