PRE-COLUMBIAN HISPANIOLA -- ARAWAK/TAINO
NATIVE AMERICANS
Below is an overview of the Arawak/Taino Native Americans, the original
natives of the land today called Haiti (and Dominican Republic). This is not
so much an original treatment, but I pulled a lot of material together from
about a dozen sources, so it's more like an extended report.
The topics I treat are:
- Lifestyle of the Arawak/Taino
- Housing and Dress
- Food and Agriculture
- Transportation
- Defense
- Religion and Myth
- The genocidal end of the Arawak/Taino
- Specific Indian leaders at the time of Columbus (The five caciques of
the time)
I cordially invite comments. If you find that you do not agree with this
report in some point, or you wish to add something that I chose not to
include, or you wish to ask me and others for further information, please
don't hesitate to write and ask.
Bob Corbett corbetre@webster.edu
THE ARAWAK/TAINO NATIVES OF THE ISLAND OF HISPANIOLA
(HAITI)
On December 6th, 1492 Christopher Columbus landed at Mole St. Nicholas in
Haiti's north. Thus began a totally new phase of life on the island of
Hispaniola. Most people are aware that Christopher Columbus landed at San
Salvador on October 12th, 1492, thus "discovering" the New World for Spain.
Less known is that his second land fall was at Mole St. Nicholas, Haiti on
December 1492, or that the first settlement in the New World was La Navidad,
on Haiti's north coast. This settlement, which housed sailors from the Santa
Maria which sank off Haiti's coast, was founded on December 24th, 1492.
Columbus did not discover a lost or unknown land. There was a flourishing
civilization of native Americas. The primary group was the Arawak/Taino
Indians. Arawak is the general group to which they belong, and describes
especially the common language that this group of native Americans shared.
They ranged from Venezuela through the Caribbean and Central America all the
way to Florida. However, the particular group of Arawak-speaking people who
lived on the island of Hispaniola was the Taino Indians. To keep both names
before us, I'll use the term Arawak/Taino to refer to them.
LIFESTYLE OF THE ARAWAK/TAINO
The Arawak/Taino society was basically a very gentle culture. It was
characterized by happiness, friendliness and a highly organized
hierarchical, paternal society, and a lack of guile. Each society was a
small kingdom and the leader was called a cacique. At the time of Columbus
there were five different kingdoms on the island of Hispaniola. The Indians
practiced polygamy. Most men had 2 or 3 wives, but the caciques had as many
as 30. It was a great honor for a woman to be married to a cacique. Not only
did she enjoy a materially superior lifestyle, but her children were held in
high esteem.
HOUSING AND DRESS
The Arawak/Taino used two primary architectural styles for their homes.
The general population lived in circular buildings with poles providing the
primary support and these were covered with woven straw and palm leaves.
They were somewhat like North American teepees except rather than being
covered with skins they needed to reflect the warmth of the climate and
simply used straw and palm leaves.
The caciques were singled out for unique housing. Their houses were
rectangular and even featured a small porch. Despite the difference in
shape, and the considerably larger buildings, the same materials were used.
When the Africans came beginning in 1507 they introduced mud and wattle as
primary building materials. However, there is no record of the Arawak/Tainos
having used these materials.
The house of the cacique contained only his own family. However, given
the number of wives he might have, this constituted a huge family. The round
houses of the common people were also large. Each one had about 10-15 men
and their whole families. Thus any Arawak/Taino home might house a hundred
people.
The houses did not contain much furniture. People slept in cotton
hammocks or simply on mats of banana leaves. They also made wooden chairs
with woven seats, couches and built cradles for their children.
In addition to houses the typical Arawak/Taino village contained a flat
court in the center of the village which was used for ball games and various
festivals, both religious and secular. Houses were around this court. This
was a hierarchical society, and while there was only one cacique who was
paid a tribute (tax) to oversee the village, there were other levels of
sub-caciques, who were not paid, but did hold positions of honor. They were
liable for various services to the village and cacique.
Stone making was especially developed among the Arawak/Tainos, but they
seem not to have used it at all in building houses. It was primarily used
for tools and especially religious artifacts.
The men were generally naked, but the women sometimes wore short skirts.
Men and women alike adorned their bodies with paint and shells and other
decorations.
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
The Arawak/Taino diet, like ours, centered around meat or fish as the
primary source of protein. There never were many wild animals to hunt on
Hispaniola, but there were some small mammals that were hunted and enjoyed.
They also ate snakes, various rodents, bats, worms, birds, in general any
living things they could find with the exception of humans. They were able
to hunt ducks and turtles in the lakes and sea. The coastal natives relied
heavily on fishing, and tended to eat their fish either raw or only
partially cooked. Since they did grow cotton on the island, the natives had
fishing nets made of cotton. The natives of the interior relied more on
agriculture and de-emphasized meat or fish in their diet.
The Arawak/Taino had a developed system of agriculture which was
virtually maintenance free. They raised their crops in a conuco, a large
mound which was devised especially for farming. They packed the conuco with
leaves to protect from soil erosion and fixed a large variety of crops to
assure that something would grow, no matter what weather conditions
prevailed.
(As an aside I would like to comment that many people in the
pre-Columbian Americas had virtually work free agriculture. This system
meant that people living in these materially simple social systems had
enormous amounts of free time and often developed elaborate religious rites
which took a lot of their time, but also had highly developed systems of
games and recreation. There are some nice advantages to very simple living
and diet!)
One of the Arawak/Taino's primary crops was cassava. This is a root crop
from which a poisonous juice must be squeezed. Then it is baked into a bread
like slab. The current method of doing this in Haiti produces a flat bread,
sort of like a stale burrito or pizza shell. The Arawak/Taino grew corn
(maize), squash, beans, peppers, sweet potatoes, yams and peanuts.
They not only had cotton, but they raised tobacco and enjoyed smoking
very much. It was not only a part of their social life, but was used in
religious ceremonies too.
TRANSPORTATION
The Arawak/Taino had no large animals like horses, oxen or mules to ride
or use for work. But they did have river and sea transportation. They used
dugout canoes which were cut from a single tree trunk and used with paddles.
They could take 70-80 people in a single canoe and even used them for long
travels on the sea. These dugouts allowed fishing the few lakes of
Hispaniola as well as fishing out a bit off the coast.
DEFENSE
The Arawak/Taino themselves were quite peaceful people, but they did have
to defend themselves from the Caribs who were cannibals. The Caribs of this
area were centered at what is today Puerto Rico, but some did live in
northeast Hispaniola, an area that today is the Dominican Republic. The
Caribs were war-like cannibals. They often raided the more peaceful Arawak/Tainos,
killing off the men, stealing and holding the women for breeding, and
fattening the children to eat.
Thus the Arawak/Taino had some weapons which they used in defense. They
used the bow and arrow, and had developed some poisons for their arrow tips.
They had cotton ropes for defensive purposes and some spears with fish hooks
on the end. Since there were hardwoods on the island, they did have a war
club made of macana. This was about 1" thick and reminds one very much of
the cocomaque stick used in later Haitian days. They did not develop any
armor or specifically defensive weapons (shields, etc.)
RELIGION AND MYTH
The Arawak/Taino were polytheists and their gods were called ZEMI.
The zemi controlled various functions of the universe, very much like Greek
gods did, or like later Haitian Voodoo lwa. However, they do not seem to
have had particular personalities like the Greek and Haitian gods/spirits
do.
There were three primary religious practices:
- Religious worship and obeisance to the zemi themselves.
- Dancing in the village court during special festivals of thanksgiving
or petition.
- Medicine men, or priests, consulting the zemi for advice and healing.
This was done in public ceremonies with song and dance.
There are many stone carvings of zemi which have survived. Hugh Cave in
his HAITI: HIGH ROAD TO ADVENTURE reports that some of the stalagmites of
the caves of Dondon were carved into zemi. Some of my students on a study
trip visited the caves of Dondon but were unable to find and photograph
these carvings. One often sees stone zemi for sale in Haiti, but I have no
way of knowing if they are genuine Arawak/Taino archaeological finds, or if
they have been remade for tourists!
(As a footnote to this section I might add that Rev. Dr. William Hodges
in Limbe, Haiti, is perhaps the most important of those who have done
archaeological work in Haiti, and he bills himself as a amateur who does it
"on the side for pleasure." However, his small museum in Limbe is simply
fantastic, and worth the trip, which is only about 45 minutes from Cap
Haitien by taptap. He also has a wealth of materials which he has printed
over the years. Dr. Hodges, a U.S. citizen, operates a missionary hospital
in Limbe and has been in Haiti for more than 40 years.)
One account of the religious agricultural feasts which were offered both
in thanksgiving and petition, describes the following features:
- People had special dress for the ceremonies that included paint and
feathers. From their knees on down they would be covered in shells.
- The shaman (medicine man or priests) presented the carved figures of
the zemi.
- The cacique sat on wooden stool, a place of honor. (There are many
surviving stone carvings of the cacique on his stool.)
- There was a ceremonial beating of drums.
- People induced vomiting with a swallowing stick. This was to purge the
body of impurities, both a literal physical purging and a symbolic
spiritual purging.
- This ceremonial purging and other rites were a symbolic changing
before zemi.
- Women served bread (a communion rite), first to zemi, then to the
cacique followed by the other people. The sacred bread was a powerful
protector. (The interesting similarities between this ritual and the
Christian practice of eucharist is obvious!)
- Finally came an oral history lesson -- the singing of the village epic
in honor of the cacique and his ancestors. As the poet recited he was
accompanied by a maraca, a piece of hardwood which was beaten with
pebbles.
There was an afterlife where the good would be rewarded. They would meet
up with dead relatives and friends. Since most of the people they would meet
in this paradise were women, it is curious to speculate if it was mainly
women who were considered good, or if some other reason accounted for this
division of the sexes in the afterlife.
There are many stone religious artifacts which have been found in Haiti.
The zemi take on strange forms like toads, turtles, snakes, alligators and
various distorted and hideous human faces.
The zemi, as well as dead caciques, have certain powers over the natural
world and must be dealt with. Thus these various services are ways of
acknowledging their power (worship and thanksgiving) and at the same time
seeking their aid. Because of these powers there are many Arawak/Taino
stories which account for the origins of some experienced phenomena in myth
and or magic. Several myths had to do with caves. The sun and moon, for
example, came out of caves. Another story tells that the people lived in
caves and only came out at night. One guard was supposed to watch carefully
over people to be sure that they were well divided in the land. However, one
day he was late in returning and the sun caught him and turned him into a
stone pillar. (Shades of Lot's wife!)
Another Indian became angry at the sun for its various tricks and decided
to leave. He convinced all the women to abandon their men and come with him
along with their children. But, the children were deserted, and in their
hunger they turned into frogs. The women simply disappeared. This left the
men without women. But, they did find some sexless creatures roaming around
and eventually captured them. (Actually they used people with a disease like
mange since they had rough hands and could hold on to these elusive
creatures.) However, they tied these creatures up and put woodpeckers on
them. The birds, thinking these were trees started pecking on them and
carved out the sex organs of women, thus re-establishing the possibility of
survival.
A different myth simply tells that once there were no women. Man brought
woman from an island where there were only women.
The origin of the oceans was in a huge flood which occurred when a father
murdered his son (who was about to murder the father), and then put his
bones in a calabash. The bones turned to fish and then the gourd broke and
all the water of the world flowed from the broken gourd.
THE GENOCIDAL END OF THE ARAWAK/TAINO
NATIVES ON THE ISLAND OF HISPANIOLA
This section of the genocidal end of the Hispaniolan Taino/Arawaks
was revised in August 1999 (including the title of the section).
There is a great debate as to just how many Arawak/Taino inhabited
Hispaniola when Columbus landed in 1492. Some of the early Spanish
historian/observers claimed there were as many as 3,000,000 to 4,000,000.
These numbers seem to be based on very little reliable evidence and are
thought to be gross exaggerations. However, since nothing like a census was
done, the methods for estimating the numbers are extremely shaky, whether by
these early historians or later critics.
One long technical article on the population comes in the with the low
estimate of 100,000. Several other modern scholars seem to lean more
forcefully in the area of 300,000 to 400,000. Whatever the number, what
happened to them is extremely tragic. They were not immune to European
diseases, especially smallpox, and the Spanish worked them unmercifully in
the mines and fields. By 1507 the Spanish were settled and able to do a more
reliable job of counting the Arawak/Tainos. It is generally agreed that by
1507 their numbers had shrunk to 60,000. By 1531 the number was down to 600.
Today there are no easily discerned traces of the Arawak/Taino at all except
for some of the archaeological remains that have been found. Not only on
Hispaniola, but also across the Windward Passage in Cuba, complete genocide
was practiced on these natives.
The next three paragraphs were added in August 1999.
It is important to pause and think about what is claimed here. The claim
is not that the entire population of CARIBBEAN (and possibly even Floridian)
Taino/Arawaks were wiped out, but that population which was on the island of
Hispaniola when Columbus arrived. Further, this is not to say that no drop
of Taino/Arawak blood survived, or than not a single word of the language
drifted in later Haitian Creole, perhaps even a zemi god influenced Voodoo
here or there.
Rather, the claim is that the Taino/Arawak as a discernible people with a
discernible culture simply disappeared ON THE ISLAND OF HISPANIOLA.
It is clear that the Taino/Arawak survived in others areas of the
Caribbean, even in near-by Puerto Rico. The claim I am making is limited to
those Taino/Arawaks who inhabited the island of Hispaniola when Columbus
arrived in 1492.
Disease was a major cause of their demise. However, on Columbus' 2nd
voyage he began to require a tribute from the Arawak/Tainos. They were
expected to yield a certain quantity of gold per capita. Failing that each
adult of 14 was required to submit 25lbs. of cotton. For those who could not
produce the cotton either, there was a service requirement for them to work
for the Spanish. This set the stage for a system of assigning the Arawak/Taino
to Spanish settlers as effective slave labor. This system contributed
significantly to their genocide.
In Sidney Lintz's interesting introduction to James Leyburn's THE
HAITIANS, he argues that not only did the natives die out, but nearly
all cultural traces did too. He says this is a very unusual phenomenon.
Haiti's culture is almost entirely African and European. There are some
anthropologists who believe that some Voodoo rites, and especially the Petwo
Voodoo rites, might have their origins in Arawak/Taino religion, but this is
speculative.
Regardless, it does seem that the Arawak/Tainos disappeared without a
trace.
Michel Laguerre does caution that despite the early date of the demise
of the Arawak/Taino, numbers of them did last long enough to have worked
alongside the African slaves who were being brought to Haiti in increasing
numbers. Laguerre suggests that there would probably have been some
inter-mating and thus it is highly unlikely that Indian blood completely
died out in Haiti, even though their cultural heritage did disappear without
a trace.
[Special note: Given my focus on the history of Haiti as
shaping the current situation in Haiti and using history to understand Haiti
today, what is contained in the few paragraphs before this note is very
important. It says, in effect, that the pre-Columbian period has virtually
no role at all in shaping contemporary Haiti. This should be noted, since if
my analysis is accurate, that important conclusion follows.]
SPECIFIC NATIVE LEADERS AT THE TIME OF
COLUMBUS
There were five major caciques when Columbus landed and they had various
relations with Columbus. These caciques, their provinces and relations with
the Spanish were:
- Cacique Guacanagaric
The province of Marien (Bainoa)
This province was on the north east coast + interior, in the area of
the bay of Samana in the Dominican Republic.
He wanted Columbus to protect him from the marauding Caribs who often
came into this area, and he became a friendly advisor to Columbus and a
lifelong friend of the Spanish invaders. His own village was about 2 miles
SE of Cap Haitien.
- Cacique Caonabo
The province of Ciguayos (Cayabo or Maguana)
After the Spanish "settlers" at La Navidad perpetrated many horrors on
local natives, Caonabo led a band which crossed into the province of Maden
and killed all the sailors.
Caonabo then became the rallying point for resistance to the Spanish.
Under a pretext of making peace, Columbus lured Caonabo into a trap. The
Spaniard Ojeda gave Caonabo a gift of polished iron chains and handcuffs.
Mistaking them for ornaments, Caonabo allowed himself to be chained and
taken away. Columbus then sent him off to Spain.
Caonabo's brother, Manicatoex, then led an uprising. The Spanish, with
their superior firepower crushed the natives and the defeated Arawak/Taino
were forced to agree to pay tribute to the Spanish.
There seems to be some unclarity among scholars about these natives.
Some claim that these Indians were not from the Arawak/Taino group, but
some other tribe. lt does seem that an earlier group, the Ciboney, did
live in this area. But, it's not clear if at the time of Caonabo these
were Arawak/ Taino or not.
- Cacique Guarionex
The province of Magua (Huhabo)
This was a densely populated area. This was good inland agricultural
land. In 1494 Guarionex was made to submit, then was imprisoned. The
Spanish raped his wife in front of him, then executed him. They suspected
him of being involved in the attack which Caonabo led on La Navidad.
(A brief digression on La Navidad. Columbus landed at Mole St. Nicholas
on Dec. 6, 1492, his second land fall in the "New World." On Dec. 24, 1492
he was sailing away and on Christmas Eve the Santa Maria ran aground and
sank off the north coast of Haiti, just near Cap Haitien. The Pinta was
lost and the Nina could not accommodate all the sailors. Thus Columbus,
with the help of Arawak/Taino, salvaged a good deal of the Santa Maria and
built a small fort called La Navidad (The Nativity) and left a group of
sailors there.)
On his return on the second voyage all the sailors were discovered to
have been killed. It seems that they began to violate native women and
property and the natives rose up against them.)
- Cacique Behechio
The province of Xaragua
This was in the southwest peninsula. They grew lots of cotton here and
also in the cul de sac, north of where Port-au-Prince lies today.
Behechio's sister was Anacaona, widow of Caonabo. After the Spanish
killed Caonabo and Behechio, she succeeded her husband in Xaragua and was
much loved by her people. However, the Spanish were threatened by this
popularity and the power that went with it. Ovando, a successor to
Columbus, went to her village under the pretext of collecting the Spanish
tribute. Despite Anacaona's instructions to the people to be fully
cooperative and hospitable, and despite her own friendly welcome, the
Spanish began a slaughter, burned the village and took Anacaona prisoner.
She was hanged at Santo Domingo.
- Cacique Cotubanama or Cayacoa
The province of Higuey (Caizcimu)
There were rumors of there being gold in Higuey. De Las Casas reported
that "infinite was the number of people l saw burned alive" in order that
the people tell where the nonexistent gold was. (I'll do a separate piece
on De Las Casas, a most interesting fellow.)
After the death of Anacaona, Cotubanama too was considered dangerous.
The Spanish attacked his province, captured him and hung him in Santo
Domingo.
[Another interruption: A word about "originality." I am not
an historian by profession or training. I gather virtually no data from
original archival sources. Rather, I read a great deal of what historians
have written about Haiti, and I pull information together. However, I do
then build interpretations of that data that is sometimes not the same "use"
of the data that the original historian made of it. Thus, while I want to
caution you that I am not "original" in the sense of data gathering, I do
accept the responsibility for many of my interpretations of that data, or
for other's interpretations which I've come to accept. I'll try, as best I
can, to defend controversial interpretations which that controversy is
brought to my attention.]
The word "genocide" is an interesting term. Etymologically it means the
killing of an entire "gens," a whole people. The word is used a good deal in
politically charged language these days with people often charging that some
group or other is attempting genocide. Certainly Adolf Hitler and the Third
Reich of Germany attempted it on the Jews of Europe, and failed. As far as I
know, the only case in history of where complete and total genocide was
carried out was here on the island of Hispaniola. The entire GENS,
the whole people of the native Americans of the Arawak/Taino people were
wiped out. It is a horrible and astonishing story.
[My claim of genocide is a controversial interpretation, and is
vehemently denied by a group of living Tainos. Now, one may ask, if there
was genocide on the Hispaniola Arawak/Tainos, then how can their be "living
Tainos?" That's the rub, and that's why I stand behind my claim.]
The Tainos were throughout the Caribbean, Bahamas and some areas of the
mainland, especially near northern coastal South America. But, from what I
have read, the Arawak/Tainos of the island of Hispaniola did
not survive at all.
However, if this topic interests you, then I urge you to get in touch
with the active Taino group which has a WWW site and can offer you a
contrary view. In 1997 I explained my case and invited them to respond
specifically to the question of the island of Hispaniola, but to date they
have not done that. Their home page can be found at:
From: Cacique Ciba Guanikeyu
great grandson of Cacique Orocobix
Taino Inter-Tribal Council
The Taino Inter-Tribal Council
Inc NJ
Jatibonuco Tribe
Taino Nation
Forum
THE NJ COUNCIL OFFICE Tel: 609-825-7776 FAX & TAINO BBS: 609-825-7922
We Are Still Here! Taino Indigenous Nation of the Caribbean & Florida
The head of this organization is Peter Torres Torresp@algorithms.com