| Bartolome de Las
Casas made himself the champion of the Indians in the Western Indies
(America) from 1514 A.D. until his death in 1566 A.D. He describes how a
Dominican, Anton Montesinos, had begun the fight for justice in a sermon
to the colonists of Hispaniola (St Dominica) in 1511 A.D.
Montesinos's sermon you are all in a state of mortal sin. You live in
this state and you will die in it, by reason of the cruelty and the
tyranny that you show to these innocent peoples. What right do you have to
keep these Indians in such cruel and horrible slavery? Who could have
authorized you to wage all these detestable wars on people who lived
quietly and peaceably in their country, and to exterminate them in such
unimaginable numbers, by murder and unprecedented carnage? How can you
oppress them and exhaust them in this way, without giving them food or
tending to the diseases to which they are fatally exposed by the excessive
labor that you demand from them? Would it not be more just to say that you
are killing them in order to extract and amass your daily gold? What care
do you take to see that they are converted? Are not these people human
beings? Do they not have a soul? Do they not have reason? Are you not
obliged to love them as yourselves? |