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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Is the ‘Radical Pope’ About to Canonize a Priest Who Helped Enslave and Murder Native Americans?
Why Is the Radical Pope About to Canonize a Priest Who Helped Enslave and Murder Native Americans?
It's time to confront, not celebrate, the other American slavery.
Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead his Wednesday general audience in Saint Peter's square at the Vatican.
Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead his Wednesday general audience in Saint Peter's square at the Vatican. (Reuters / Alessandro Bianchi)
Earlier this summer, to great fanfare, Pope Francis apologized for the Catholic Churchs role in the colonial invasion of the Western Hemisphere and the violent subjugation of its indigenous inhabitants. Many grave sins were committed against the Native people of America in the name of God, he told a gathering in Bolivia. I humbly ask forgiveness, not only for the offense of the church herself, but also for crimes committed against the native peoples during the so-called conquest of America.
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Yet when he visits the United States next week, the pope will commit a grievous and historical error, one for which some super-radical pope of the future will have to apologize in turn. On Wednesday, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, DC, Francis will canonize Father Junípero Serra, the founder and most famed symbol of the system of missions in the Spanish colony of Alta California.
Born in Spain, Serra arrived in Spanish-held Mexico in 1749 and quickly set about working for the Inquisition, citing by name several natives who refused to convert to Christianity; they were guilty, he wrote, of the most detestable and horrible crimes of sorcery, witchcraft and devil worship. Serra soon gained control of the missions of Baja California, but he found that the native population had already been nearly extinguished by contact with the Spanish. Looking for fresh converts, he led expeditions up the coast into the present-day state of California, where he settled at Monterey and set up ten new missions to spread the gospel through the new land.
From their establishment in the late 1760s until Mexico declared independence and secularized them in the 1820s, the California missions formed a network of forced-labor camps and, in effect, slaughterhouses, where the once-vibrant native peoples of California were systematically reduced to mere shadows of their former selves: Under the mission system, the overall indigenous population of Southern California declined by nearly 1,000 every single year. If they were lucky enough not to be killed by European diseases spread largely through sexual violence on the part of the Spanish, many natives at the missions sought to run away, not terribly unlike African slaves on the East Coast in the United States. According to Carey McWilliams (editor of The Nation from 1955 to 1975), in his classic 1945 book Southern California: An Island on the Land, the missionaries didnt even much mind runaways, because that gave them a reason to go on fugitive-hunting expeditions to distant villages from which they could round up more natives and bring them back to the missions.
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http://www.thenation.com/article/why-is-the-radical-pope-about-to-canonize-a-priest-who-helped-enslave-and-murder-native-americans/
msongs
(67,436 posts)niyad
(113,527 posts)hunter
(38,325 posts)The sadder thing is that white Protestant U.S.A. treated Native Americans even worse, not even seeing them as human beings.
In those parts of the U.S.A. that were once part of Mexico, Native Americans have a complicated relationship with the Catholic Church; though without question there is a strong history of abuse and racism.
It's similar to the relationship people whose ancestors were slaves from Africa have with the Southern Protestant Churches.
History is ugly.
No, I don't think Serra was any kind of saint.