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Title: Our Indians Author: Manuel González Date: 1904 Language: en Topics: Latin America, Native Americans, Peru Source: From Robert Graham (Ed.), Anarchism: A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas; Volume One: From Anarchy to Anarchism (300 CE to 1939).
Editor’s note: Manuel Gonzalez Prada (1848–1919) was a Peruvian poet,
writer and intellectual who moved toward an anarchist position around
1902. He was familiar with the major anarchist writers, and shared with
Kropotkin an admiration for the French moral philosopher, Jean Marie
Guyau (1854–1888), and opposition to Social Darwinism (Selection 54). He
was one of the first Latin American writers to discuss the issue of
indigenous peoples. Thefollowing excerpts are taken from his 1904 essay,
“Our Indians,” translated here by Paul Sharkey. A collection of Gonzalez
Prada’s writings, translated by F. H. Fornoff, including a good
selection from his anarchist period, has recently been published as Free
Pages and Other Essays: Anarchist Musings (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2003).
---
WHAT A HANDY INVENTION ETHNOLOGY is in the hands of some! Once one has
accepted that Mankind is divided into superior races and inferior races
and acknowledged the white man’s superiority and thus his right to sole
governance of the Planet, there cannot be anything more natural than
suppression of the black man in Africa, the redskin in the United
States, the Tagalog in the Philippines and the Indian in Peru.
Just as the supreme law of existence works itself out by selecting or
eliminating the weak on the basis of their failure to adapt, so the
violent eliminators or suppressors are merely accelerating Nature’s slow
and sluggish trend, abandoning the tortoise’s slow gait for the gallop
of the horse. Many do not spell it out but let it be read between the
lines, like Pearson when he speaks of the fellowship between civilized
men of European stock in the face of Nature and human barbarism. For
human barbarism read un-white men.
But not only is the suppression of the black and yellow peoples decreed:
within the white race itself peoples are sorted into those destined for
greatness and survival and peoples doomed to degeneration and extinction
... Some pessimists, thinking themselves the Deucalions of the coming
flood and even Nietzschean supermen, weigh up the disappearance of their
race as if they were talking about pre-historic creatures or events on
the Moon. It has not yet been formulated but the maxim stands: the
crimes and vices ofthe English or Americans are inherent in the human
race and not symptomatic of the decadence of a people; on the other
hand, the crimes and vices of Frenchmen or Italians are freakish and
symptomatic of racial degeneracy ...
Is the suffering of the Indian less under the Republic than under
Spanish rule? The corregidores and encomiendas may have gone, but the
forced labour and impressment endure. The suffering we put him through
is enough to bring the execration of humane persons down upon our heads.
We keep him in ignorance and servitude, debase him in the barracks,
brutalize him with alcohol and dispatch him to self-destruction in civil
wars and, from time to time, orchestrate man-hunts and slaughters ...
Unwritten it may be, but the axiom according to which the Indian has no
rights, only obligations, is honoured. Where he is concerned, the
complaint of an individual is regarded as insubordination, collective
claims as conspiracy to revolt. The Spanish royalists used to butcher
the Indian when he tried to shrug off the yoke of the conquerors, but we
nationalist republicans exterminate him when he takes exception to
onerous taxation, or wearies of silently enduring the iniquities of some
satrap. Our form of government boils down to a big lie, because a state
where two or three million individuals live outside the law does not
deserve to be called a democratic republic. Whereas along the coast
there is an inkling of guarantees under a sham republic, in the interior
the violation of every right under a blatant feudal regime is palpable.
The writ of Codes does not run there, nor do courts of justice carry any
weight, because hacienda owners and lordliness settle every quarrel by
claiming the roles of judge and bailiff for themselves. Far from
supporting the weak and the poor, the political authorities nearly
always abet the rich and strong. There are regions where justices of the
peace and governors are counted as part of the hacienda’s slave force.
What governor, what sub-prefect, let alone prefect, would dare face down
a hacienda owner?
A hacienda comes about through the amassing of tiny plots wrested from
their lawful owners and the lord wields the authority of a Norman baron
over his peons. Not only has he a say in the appointment of governors,
mayors and justices of the peace, but he conducts weddings, appoints
heirs, disposes of inheritances and has the sons submit to a slavery
that normally lasts their life-time just to clear the debts of the
father. He enforces fearful punishments like the foot-stocks, flogging,
the pillory and death; or as droll as head-shaving or cold water enemas.
It would be a miracle if someone with no regard for life or property
were to have any regard for female honour; every Indian woman, single or
married, may find herself the target of the master;s brutish lusts.
Abduction, violation and rape do not mean much when the belief is that
Indian women are there to be taken by force. And for all that, the
Indian never addresses his master without kneeling before him and
kissing his hand. Let it not be said that the lords of the land act that
way out of ignorance or for want of education; the children of some
hacienda owners are shipped off to Europe in their child hood, educated
in France or England and return to Peru with all ofthe appearances of
civilized folk; but once they are back on their haciendas, the European
veneer comes off and they act even more inhumanely and violently than
their fathers; haciendas are tantamount to kingships in the heart of the
Republic and the hacienda owners act like autocrats in the bosom of
democracy ...
In order to excuse the dereliction of Government and the inhumanity of
the exploiters, some ... pessimists place the mark of shame upon the
Indian’s forehead: they charge that he shies away from civilization.
Anyone would think that splendid schools teeming with very well-paid
erudite teachers had been thrown up in all our townships only to find
their classrooms empty because the children, under instructions from
their parents, refuse to attend for education. One would also think that
the Indians are refusing to follow the morally edifying example set by
the ruling classes or have no scruples about nailing to a cross all who
peddle high-minded and unselfish notions. The Indian gets what he is
given: fanaticism and fire-water.
So, what do we mean by civilization? Morality illumines industry and
art, learning and science like a beacon at the top ofa great pyramid.
Not theological morality, which looks for some posthumous sanction, but
rather human morality which looks for no sanction and would look no
further than the Earth. The greatest accomplishment of morality, for
individuals and societies alike, consists of its having turned man’s
strife with his neighbour into a mutual agreement to live. Where there
is no justice, mercy nor goodwill, civilization is nowhere to be found;
where the “struggle for existence” is enunciated as the rule of society,
barbarism rules. What is the point of amassing the learning of an
Aristotle when one is a tiger at heart? What matter the artistic gifts
of a Michelangelo when one has the heart of a swine? Rather than going
around the world spreading the light of art or science, better to go
around dispensing the milk of human kindness. Societies where doing good
has graduated from being an obligation to being a habit and where the
act of kindness has turned into an instinctive impulse deserve the
description highly civilized. Have Peru’s rulers attained that degree of
morality? Are they entitled to look upon the Indian as a creature
incapable of civilization?
... As long as the Indian attends lessons in school or is educated
through simply rubbing shoulders with civilized folk, he acquires the
same level of morality and culture as the descendant of the Spaniard. We
are forever rubbing shoulders with yellow-skinned folk who dress, eat,
live and think just like soft-spoken gentlemen from Lima. We see Indians
in parliaments, town councils, on the bench, in the universities and
athenaeums, where they seem to be no more venal and no more ignorant
than folk from other races. In the hurty-burly of national politics
there is no way of sorting out the blame and being able to state what
damage was done by the mestizos, the mulatos and the whites. There is
such a mish-mash of blood and colouring, every individual represents so
many licit or illicit dalliances, that when faced by many a Peruvian we
would be baffled as to the contribution of the black man or yellow man
to their make-up: none deserves the description of pure-bred white man,
even if he has blue eyes and blond hair...
Some educationists (competing with the snake-oil salesmen) imagine that
if a man can name the tributaries of the Amazon and the average
temperature in Berlin, half the job of resolving all society’s ills is
done and dusted. If, through some super human effort, the illiterate of
this nation were to wake up tomorrow morning not just knowing how to
read and write but holding university degrees, the Indian problem would
still not have been resolved: a proletariat of ignoramuses would give
way to one of BAs and PhDs. The most civilized nations are awash with
doctors without patients, lawyers without clients, engineers without
projects, writers without public, artists without patrons and teachers
without students and they make up a countless army of enlightened brains
and empty stomachs. But where haciendas along the coast occupy four or
five thousand acres and where ranches in the sierras measure thirty or
even fifty leagues, a nation must be split into lords and serfs ...
There are two ways in which the Indian’s circumstances might be
improved; either the hearts of his oppressors soften to the extent that
they concede the rights of the oppressed; or enough manliness is
injected into the minds of the oppressed to chasten the oppressors.
Ifthe Indian were to spend on rifles and cartridges all ofthe money that
he friitters away on drink and fiestas, if he were to hide a weapon in
some corner of his hovel or some hollow in the rocks, his circumstances
would alter and he would command respect for his property and his life.
He would answer violence with violence, teaching a lesson to the master
that rustles his sheep, the trooper that press-gangs him in the
Government’s name, the bully who carries off his livestock and draught
animals.
Preach not humility and resignation to the Indian: rather pride and
rebelliousness. What has he gained from three or four hundred years of
forbearance and patience? The fewer the authorities he tolerates, the
greater the number of harms he avoids. There is one telling fact:
greater well-being is to be found in the districts furthest removed from
the great haciendas, and there is more order and tranquility in the
towns that are least visited by the authorities.
In short: the Indian will be redeemed through his own exertions, not
through the humanization of his oppressors. Every white man, pretty
much, is a Pizarro, a Valverde or an Areche.