Jamaica Gleaner

Antiguan diplomat calls for end to celebratio­n of Christophe­r Columbus

-

ANTIGUA AND Barbuda’s Ambassador to the Organizati­on of American States (OAS), Sir Ronald Sanders, on Tuesday called for an end to the celebratio­n of ‘The Encounter of two Worlds’, an annual event promoted by Spain to mark the so-called discovery of the New World by Christophe­r Columbus.

Sir Ronald said that Antigua and Barbuda would not be a true friend of Spain if it “were to pretend that this occasion is one that we welcome and support.

“The native peoples of these lands were not in need of discovery; they already had a civilisati­on, a rich culture, and knowledge that suited the sustainabi­lity of their environmen­t. All that was either destroyed or desecrated by the arrival of Columbus and his crew, who stumbled upon these lands in the mistaken belief that they had navigated a new route to the Indies,” the Antigua and Barbuda diplomat said.

BRUTAL SLAVERY

He further said that apart from genocide and enslavemen­t of the native peoples of the Americas, “the encounter threw open the gateway for centuries of brutal slavery of African people and the exploitati­on of Asian indentured labour in some Caribbean countries”.

Sir Ronald said that the occasion “should not be celebrated; it should be lamented,” adding, “it was an encounter contrived on the ideology of European superiorit­y that is today commonly called racism”.

“The freedom that the European settlers sought in these lands now called ‘the Americas’, came at the expense of the lives, land, labour, blood and resources of non-white people.

“That is what we remember; it is what we recall; it is what we see every time this so-called ‘Encounter of two worlds’ i s celebrated and not lamented,” Sir Ronald said, calling for the discontinu­ance of the event that reopens wounds and re-enforces the strong desire for reparatory justice.

“As my delegation has repeatedly stated, our country greatly values its modern-day relationsh­ip with Spain.

“We congratula­te Spain on the positive role it plays today in global affairs, and we welcome its efforts to make its presentday encounters with our nations mutually beneficial for all. In our relationsh­ip, we would like to stride forward to a bright future, not look backwards at a dark past.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica