10 thoughts on “Don’t Blame Columbus: Motivated By The Spirit

  1. Very good. Columbus himself was admirable in many ways (courage and drive) and not especially guilty of vice even from an unfair presentist perspective. His early efforts and Queen Isabella’s instructions were not the least malicious.

  2. The voyages of Christopher Columbus opened the way for the widespread European exploration and colonization of the Americas.

    He died in Seville, Spain in 1506 and is buried there. I was in Seville several years ago and took the opportunity to visit his tomb. at the Seville Cathedral. His remains were there placed on an elaborate catafalque.

    Columbus is getting a bad rap.

    BTW, don’t forget to celebrate Columbus Day this coming Monday, October 13. 2025.

    1. Thanks, Fred. I agree he is getting a bad rap. One thing folks don’t appreciate is the magnitude of the risk he and his crew undertook. Sailing the ocean at that time with the ships they had was perilous, and could have easily ended badly.

  3. From the NY Sun:

    Ahead of Columbus Day, Trump Burnishes the Explorer’s Legacy

    Restoring the holiday’s proper name jibes with the president’s push to restore ‘truth and sanity to American history.’

    Nice to see President Trump burnishing the legacy of “the original American hero,” Christopher Columbus, by restoring the explorer’s name to the federal holiday first celebrated in 1892. The nod to the Admiral of the Ocean Sea follows attempts to downplay, or even denigrate, Columbus’s achievement by renaming the occasion as “Indigenous Peoples Day.” Mr. Trump’s move jibes with his push to restore “truth and sanity to American history.”

    “Outrageously, in recent years, Christopher Columbus has been a prime target of a vicious and merciless campaign to erase our history, slander our heroes, and attack our heritage,” says the proclamation signed Thursday by Mr. Trump. No one is suggesting that celebrating Columbus’s achievement needs to come at the expense of the peoples of the Western Hemisphere at the time of the explorer’s discovery.

    The Columbus Day holiday has always been an occasion to mark the scale of the explorer’s achievement — which, among other things, made possible the birth of America — while also acknowledging the downsides of the encounter between the Old and New Worlds. There’s no need to whitewash the fact that the arrival of Europeans on these shores ravaged the native population, if inadvertently, via disease, nor to ignore the scourge of slavery.

    Too often, though, in recent decades, the pendulum of sentiment among left-leaning intellectuals, academics, and politicians has swung to overlooking the courage displayed by Columbus and his fellow explorers and to shrugging away the transformative implications of the European discovery of America. The editors of The New York Sun, in an editorial on October 12, 1892, made no such muddle of the meaning of Columbus’s landfall.

    Nice to see President Trump burnishing the legacy of “the original American hero,” Christopher Columbus, by restoring the explorer’s name to the federal holiday first celebrated in 1892. The nod to the Admiral of the Ocean Sea follows attempts to downplay, or even denigrate, Columbus’s achievement by renaming the occasion as “Indigenous Peoples Day.” Mr. Trump’s move jibes with his push to restore “truth and sanity to American history.”

    “Outrageously, in recent years, Christopher Columbus has been a prime target of a vicious and merciless campaign to erase our history, slander our heroes, and attack our heritage,” says the proclamation signed Thursday by Mr. Trump. No one is suggesting that celebrating Columbus’s achievement needs to come at the expense of the peoples of the Western Hemisphere at the time of the explorer’s discovery.

    The Columbus Day holiday has always been an occasion to mark the scale of the explorer’s achievement — which, among other things, made possible the birth of America — while also acknowledging the downsides of the encounter between the Old and New Worlds. There’s no need to whitewash the fact that the arrival of Europeans on these shores ravaged the native population, if inadvertently, via disease, nor to ignore the scourge of slavery.

    Too often, though, in recent decades, the pendulum of sentiment among left-leaning intellectuals, academics, and politicians has swung to overlooking the courage displayed by Columbus and his fellow explorers and to shrugging away the transformative implications of the European discovery of America. The editors of The New York Sun, in an editorial on October 12, 1892, made no such muddle of the meaning of Columbus’s landfall.

    “Four hundred years ago, on Oct. 12, at two o’clock in the morning, a gun fired on the Pinta announced to the little fleet of COLUMBUS that at last the unknown land actually had been sighted,” the Sun’s editorial began. Four hundred years to the day after “the Pinta’s signal gun gave the welcome intelligence,” the Sun hailed “the culmination of the great celebration of that discovery in New York.”

    Of Columbus, the Sun noted, “the New World he found is not an earthly paradise, a land of perfect happiness, but of a verity it has proved to be a land of hope and promise for all mankind.” The editorial, grasping the stakes of the discovery of America, added that “here in this republic seventy millions of people are enjoying to-day a larger measure of political freedom and material prosperity than ever before fell to the lot of any nation.”

    Such sentiments might sound quaint at a time when the candidate leading in the polls to become mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani, in a tweet in 2020 made a coarse gesture in respect of a Columbus statue at Astoria, Queens, with the message “take it down.” That kind of animus is best seen as being directed not merely to the person of the explorer, but to the glories of Western civilization that Columbus has come to symbolize.

    In 1892, by contrast, the Sun marveled on Columbus Day how “from one end of the town to the other, in the streets of the poorest and the avenues of the richest,” the “popular enthusiasm is fairly bewildering.” Like Mr. Trump today, the Sun saw that “it is the celebration of an event which in the true popular estimation is the greatest in all history, the discovery of a new world and the opening up of the land which brought the highest benefits to mankind.”

  4. Will the real Columbus please stand up?

    By WILL ASTOR | May 1, 2023

    A few weeks ago, the Vatican formally disowned the Doctrine of Discovery, a development that immediately turned my thoughts to Mario Bucci.

    I had been thinking off and on about Bucci, the current mayor of Genoa, Italy, and a onetime Rochesterian, since last November when the Rochester Beacon published my colleague Peter Lovenheim’s interview with him.

    Lovenheim had learned that Bucci, who worked for Kodak in Rochester for more than a decade, has a strong connection to Rochester. On a trip to Italy, he sought Bucci out.

    Will Astor
    Much of Lovenheim’s interview dealt with Bucci’s dismay over what Bucci calls the current “cancellation” of Christopher Columbus, a Genoese native still celebrated in his hometown for his “discovery” in 1492 of what Shakespeare a century later called a brave new world, which we have come to know as North and South America.

    “It is totally unacceptable, and I will not give into the cancel culture,” especially when it concerns one of our illustrious fellow citizens,” Bucci had written in an opinion piece published in a Genoese newspaper before Lovenheim interviewed him.

    “Cancel culture to me is wrong by definition,” the Genoese mayor told Lovenheim. “You cannot cancel things that have been done in the past. What you need to do is understand what has been done, try to understand the reason and learn the lesson.”

    What nagged at me was that on the topic of Columbus, Bucci seemed to be ignoring his own advice. He was fine with celebrating Columbus’ accomplishments, but was disinclined to consider any lessons from what many now see as the negative consequences of Columbus’ four voyages to the New World.

    The Vatican’s recent refutation of the Doctrine of Discovery returned my mind to Bucci’s defense of his native city’s hometown hero because Columbus is directly and intricately linked to that doctrine, which critics say laid the foundation for European nations’ colonization of North and South America, appropriation of native people’s land globally, and for the capture and forced deportation of millions of Africans the slave trade.

    Derived from three 15th century papal bulls, the Doctrine of Discovery laid out a moral and religious justification for Christians to subjugate and enslave non-Christians and to appropriate lands they lived on.

    The first two bulls, issued in 1452 and 1455 by Pope Nicholas V, declared that King Alfonso of Portugal had the right to “invade, search out, capture, vanquish, and subdue all Saracens and pagans whatsoever, and other enemies of Christ wheresoever placed, and the kingdoms, dukedoms, principalities, dominions, possessions, and all movable and immovable goods whatsoever held and possessed by them and to reduce their persons to perpetual slavery.”

    The last of the three, issued by Pope Alexander VI in 1493, built on the first two by establishing what has become known as the Line of Demarcation.

    The third bull came as a direct response to Columbus’ voyage. It purported to grant rights to own and exploit the non-Christian lands Columbus discovered to Spain and granted similar rights to Portugal to exploit and develop lands in Africa and the East Indies east of the line. As with Pope Nicholas V’s earlier bulls, privileges granted included rights to enslave non-Christians.

    Catholic scholars point out that the 15th century bulls did not constitute actual church doctrine and were expressly reputed in the 16th century in a bull issued by Pope Paul III. Still, 500 years later the Vatican was again moved to formally disavow the Doctrine of Discovery. This time, it did so not through a papal bull but in a press release.

    Bucci denounces slavery, but denies that Columbus had any involvement in the practice.

    “It’s right and good that people condemn slavery and the slave trade—this has to be understood by everybody,” Bucci told Lovenheim. “What’s wrong is that they consider Columbus one of the guys who mistreated native peoples. That was not true historically. There were a bunch of other explorers who did that. Fighting against those others to me is acceptable, but doing that from a historic standpoint is not acceptable. In a word, it doesn’t make sense.”

    In his 2011 book, “Columbus, the Four Voyages,” which cites contemporary accounts by Columbus and close associates as sources, historian Laurence Bergreen paints a different picture. He writes that in Columbus’ day, “slavery was deeply woven into the fabric of the Genoese economy” and that “every Genoese household, even modest ones, had one or two female slaves.”

    While Christian doctrine forbids slavery, Bergreen explains, “an exception was made for non-Christians. Slave traders sold (non-Christian captive teenage girls) to Genoa on a regular basis,” an exception that, Bergreen posits, Columbus likely felt free to apply in the New World.

    Citing as a source Michele de Cuneo, a companion and friend who traveled with Columbus on his first voyage, Bergreen writes that during that trip, “Columbus ordered the seizure of 1,500 men and women on Hispaniola (home to Haiti and the Dominican Republic). Of these, 500 deemed to be most desirable for the slave trade were confined on four caravels bound for Spain.”

    In a second voyage to the Caribbean, whose islands Columbus never acknowledged and may not have understood were not the East Indies, Bergreen writes, Columbus proceeded with plans to claim the islands he discovered for Spain, establishing outposts and trading with natives including Caribs and Tainos. Columbus and soldier-sailors he brought to establish colonies traded with the natives, exchanging trinkets for gold nuggets, which they shipped back to Spain.

    According to Bergreen, “Columbus had planned to establish a regular slave trade between the Indies and Spain. It would focus on the menacing Caribs thereby allowing the more peaceful Tainos to remain in place and it would last until the gold mines functioned.”

    During his second foray, Columbus and his two brothers built three fortresses and imposed a tribute system, requiring natives to supply them with amounts of gold, or in some cases cotton cloth, in amounts that Bergreen writes, impoverished the natives, who found the demand for gold impossible to meet.

    Bergreen quotes Bartolome de Las Casas, a friar and participant in Columbus’ voyages, who described the trials to which such natives were subjected as surpassing “even the cruelest of the Turks or Moors or the Huns and Vandals who laid waste to our kingdoms and lands and destroyed our lives (and) would have found such a demand unreasonable and abhorrent.”

    In his own time, Bergreen writes, Columbus was alternately celebrated and reviled, noting that “while the drastic devaluation of Columbus seems a recent phenomenon, it actually originated at the time of his voyages.”

    After his first voyage, Columbus was lionized as the Admiral of the Ocean and the governor of the new lands he discovered. On his third return to the new lands, he was met with a rebellion and undermined by reports sent by rebellious colonists to his patrons Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain. At that point, Columbus was sent back to Spain in chains. He eventually cleared his name and returned to the new world a fourth time.

    Las Casas, a repentant onetime slave holder who in the 1500s settled in the new world, became one of Columbus’ severest critics, denouncing his fellow Spanish colonists who followed Columbus to the New World for causing the death of 12 million souls and subjecting native populations to the “most iniquitous and brutal slavery man has ever devised for his fellow man.”

    In contrast, supporters like Columbus’ youngest son, Ferdinand, who as a 13-year-old accompanied his father on Columbus’ last voyage to the New World, preserved his father’s legacy as a celebrated explorer. A wealthy bibliophile, Ferdinand Columbus’ library included volumes his father had owned, each inscribed by Ferdinand with the words that it had been left by “Don Fernando Columbus son of Don Cristobel Columbus, the Admiral who discovered India for the benefit of all.”

    In the Beacon interview, Bucci’s pushback against the so-called cancellation of Columbus came after Lovenheim asked him to respond to his observation that “in the U.S. recently, no fewer than 33 statues of Columbus have been defaced, torn down, beheaded, put in storage, or thrown in rivers.”

    Whether Bucci—who as Genoa’s mayor successfully lobbied the mayor of Genoa’s U.S. sister city, Columbus, Ohio, to reinstall a removed statue of Columbus and sent an official to Chicago to help plan a Columbus Day parade—knowingly denies the negative aspects of Columbus’ forays into the New World or is unaware of them is unclear.

    Whatever the reason for Bucci’s insistence on Columbus’ non-involvement with slavery, his pushback against Columbus’ statues’ removal arguably has merit.

    In an epilogue to his exhaustively researched account of Columbus’ New World excursions, Bergreen addresses the contrast between America’s hagiographic treatment of Columbus and both the contemporary and recent “drastic devaluation” of the Admiral of the Ocean’s exploits.

    “Columbus,” he writes, “held up a mirror to the Old World, revealing and magnifying its greed and inhumanity along with its piety, curiosity and exuberance. Columbus’ voyages revealed many harsh truths about the limits of understanding, but it is too late to undo the consequences of these voyages. Their crimson thread is now woven into the fabric of European and global history. For all the scorn Columbus engendered, his four voyages constitute one of the greatest adventure stories in history.”

    A key figure in connecting branches of humanity that were previously unaware of and untouched by each other’s existence, Columbus set changes in motion whose complexity he hardly could have grasped at the time. Some were benign, others less so.

    To name a few, Europeans brought horses, pigs and domestic cattle to the New World and took tobacco, potatoes, squash and tomatoes to the Old World. Diseases Europeans brought to the New World and a steady pace of their settlement across two continents displaced indigenous North and South Americans from lands they had called home for millennia.

    Thanks to an 1823 Supreme Court decision, the Doctrine of Discovery remains a force in U.S. property law despite the Catholic Church’s recent and past disavowals.

    The precedent set by the 1823 case, Johnson v. McIntosh—that as a successor to land right first granted by European monarchs under the Doctrine of Discovery, only the federal government could validly acquire Native American lands—was noted as recently as 2005 by Ruth Bader Ginsburg (insert Town of Sherril v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York), who wrote for an 8-1 majority that overturned two lower-court decisions that would have granted the Oneida Indian Nation’s bid to return former reservation lands the tribe purchased from Oneida County landowners to Oneida Nation sovereignty. (The Doctrine of Discovery was not the basis for her opinion, however.)

    In many other ways, the clashes and syncretic combination of cultures including European, indigenous North and South American, and Africans brought to the New World in chains have created a global mélange that Columbus could hardly have predicted or imagined.

    This cultural blending has not always been smooth. We are currently engaged in a great culture war. Its battles and skirmishes are being by fought by partisans who at one extreme seek to, as Bucci puts it, “cancel” the influence of colonialist Europeans who followed Columbus to the New World, as another extreme seeks to banish and extinguish the voices of any “woke” critics who might cause the colonists’ descendants discomfort by asking them to acknowledge the role sins like slavery, racism or the exploitation of indigenous people played in our history.

    Bucci at one point seemed to suggest that the best way to deal with our past sins and excesses is to take heed of the positive and forget the negative, to let bygones be bygones.

    Ancient Roman military commanders practiced decimation, he noted, randomly executing every 10th soldier as punishment for losing a battle.

    “That was stuff that was done 2,000 years ago, but we don’t complain about the Romans. The Romans did a lot of good things, creating civilization. I mean you don’t cancel the Roman culture. You just understand what the Romans did. If it was good things, you learn and try to repeat it; if it was bad things, you learn and don’t repeat it,” Bucci told Lovenheim.

    Still, one might wonder, how do we learn to not repeat past sins if we don’t acknowledge them?

    1. Thanks, Fred. I think about those papal bulls that were issued 600 years ago. One can make a case they were morally justified in view of the brutality and barbarism that existed in these primitive cultures– child sacrifice and the like.

      I continue to think we can’t view Columbus’ historical record through the prism of contemporary sensibilities.

  5. Redeeming Columbus Day

    It is a celebration of the human spirit, which conquers the unknown in courageous exploration.

    Posted by Nora Dimitrova Clinton
    Sunday, October 12, 2025 

    Over the past two decades or so, we have witnessed a concerted effort by the woke educational and cultural establishment to reject traditional holidays such as Thanksgiving, Christmas, or the 4thof July, and rewrite American history as a simplistic horror story of evil imperialist oppression. One of the worst-affected historical episodes in this regard is the European discovery of the New World.

    Until recently, young children in America were taught to revere Christopher Columbus’s persistence and courage, which ultimately brought Western civilization to the Western hemisphere and led to the most successful experiment in human governance that the United States embodies.

    Now, however, Columbus is “widely considered to be a despoiler of paradise, an enslaver, and a genocidal maniac.” Of course, the European explorers and settlers of the New World were not blameless, but the good they did and the values they introduced far outweighed their flaws. They are falsely accused of genocide, which was never their policy or intention. While there were violent conflicts between the settlers and some tribes, most of the casualties perished from lack of immunity to European diseases.

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