resistance and revolt

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Caribbean Studies Handout #3 Topic: Responses to oppression and development of Peasant groups in the Caribbean Resistance Used by the Amerindians Tainos Resistance to European colonization was due in part to the systems of production that were established in the region. It is the view that the plantation system was so organized to keep the Amerindians and the Africans subjected and powerless. According to Gordon Lewis, the Tainos like the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas were determined to defend what belonged to them. Therefore, the idea that the indigenes were a passive group of people was a myth. The Tainos resisted oppression via open warfare with the Europeans this was first noted in 1493 when they killed Columbus’ men in La Navidad in Hispaniola. They further resisted during the course of the Spanish Encomienda system where caciques such as Guarionex of Hispaniola, Hatuey in Cuba and Agueybana of Puerto Rico fought for the freedom of the natives. Apart from open warfare used to resist the Europeans the Tainos resisted via running away and withdraw from settled areas so that the Encomienda could not be enforced. Sabotage and suicide was used Kalinagos The Kalinagos engaged in open guerilla warfare with the Spaniards in the mountainous areas of the Lesser Antilles. Their social organization permitted flexibility has they did not have a traditional noble line 1

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Resistance in the Caribbean

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Caribbean Studies Handout #3Topic: Responses to oppression and development of Peasant groups in the CaribbeanResistance Used by the AmerindiansTainos

Resistance to European colonization was due in part to the systems of production that were established in the region. It is the view that the plantation system was so organized to keep the Amerindians and the Africans subjected and powerless. According to Gordon Lewis, the Tainos like the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas were determined to defend what belonged to them. Therefore, the idea that the indigenes were a passive group of people was a myth. The Tainos resisted oppression via open warfare with the Europeans this was first noted in 1493 when they killed Columbus men in La Navidad in Hispaniola. They further resisted during the course of the Spanish Encomienda system where caciques such as Guarionex of Hispaniola, Hatuey in Cuba and Agueybana of Puerto Rico fought for the freedom of the natives. Apart from open warfare used to resist the Europeans the Tainos resisted via running away and withdraw from settled areas so that the Encomienda could not be enforced. Sabotage and suicide was usedKalinagos

The Kalinagos engaged in open guerilla warfare with the Spaniards in the mountainous areas of the Lesser Antilles. Their social organization permitted flexibility has they did not have a traditional noble line with hereditary power; instead the leadership resided in the best warriors. The Kalinagos usually retreat in the interiors from there they launched continuous raids on settlements of the Europeans. They formed alliance with one group of Europeans to conquer the other. In St. Vincent they mixed with the Black Caribs after a bloody warfare with the British where they were deported to the coast of Belize. Today these Caribs are known as the Garifuna people of Belize. The Kalinagos were not totally subdued as they fought relentlessly to keep their territories. However, part of their survival today is attributed to the Treaties signed with the Europeans. A large number of them can be found in Dominica and Belize.Africans

Passive forms of resistance used were acts of sobatage such as damaging tools and equipment and other property belonging to the planter, malingering ( as protracting an illness or delaying or avoiding work), deliberately misunderstanding instructions, suicide and induced abortions. Although these acts were done because power was taken away from them it served as a means of inspiration for the slaves that they could still control their lives. For example, the deliberate abortions and infanticides committed denied the planters a continuous source of slaves so that the enslaved labour supply always had to be replenished by the slave trade. Running away was another option where most of the enslaved escaped to the mountainous regions and established their maroon communities. These maroon communities were normally hidden and so the slaves could ambush the Europeans easily. These communities can be found in Jamaica, Suriname, Guyana and Hispaniola which boosted the psyche of the enslaved to fight against their oppressors. Inspite of the brainwashing that ensued under slavery the Africans did not discontinue the practice of their African cultures. For example, they continued to use their African languages, they told their Anansi stories, made up songs and they performed in ways that ridiculed the white man. Although drumming was banned in several territories, they continued this as a major part of their cultural retention. The Africans also used active forms of resistance which included revolts and rebellions which made the life risky for the Europeans in the colonies. For example, an African killing a white man and the act of being poisoned by a house slave made the whites fearful. Some historians believed that the slave rebellions and revolutions were instrumental in the ending of the slave trade and ultimately slavery in the colonies.Indentured Servants

The indentured servants protested due to poor wages and working conditions in Guyana and Trinidad While some of the indentured servants ran away or refused work, most of them established small businesses on the side, usually market gardening and invest its proceeds in land and small scale enterprises. Their efforts at entrepreneurship represented an extraordinary resilience amidst every kind of hardship and so became less dependent on plantation labour for survival. Economic independence was successful and this was due to their joint house hold structure ( two or three generations of family living in the same household) where everyone worked in the family business.Development of Peasant groups in the Caribbean

The peasantry may be described as that class of people who own small plots of land from which they gained a livelihood. Despite the fact that some planters refused to sell land to blacks, many grouped and purchased land. Others squatted on vacant land and began farming.

The major economic activities of this group were farming, fishing, livestock production and charcoal burning.

Many peasants were denied access to crown lands, some paid exorbitant prices for rent and taxes on land.

The importance of peasantry to the Caribbean

It reduced the dependence on imported food as they grew food crops for the local market and for their families. They grew a variety of cash crops such as cocoa, nutmeg and banana, which represented a change from the traditional mono-crop to multi- crop farming. This diversification led to a decrease in the importance of the plantation system and enabled the former enslaved to make a vital contribution to the growth and development of the Caribbean. A system of direct and middlemen trading developed in places like Jamaica, where not all the peasants who produced came to market. For example, farmers who lived in the mountainous regions traded with those on the coast who brought such produce to the towns. Money earned was used to expand businesses and to send their children to school. They contributed to the economic system of the region by exporting some of their produce such as spices, ginger, logwood, coffee, arrowroot, pimento, limejuice and coconuts. They also developed saving societies for example, the Peoples Co-operative Loan Bank of Jamaica. They pooled their resources to buy build schools and churches. As a nucleus of importance, which could constitute the stability of the society, the peasants presence and activity combined to soften the rigid divisions of race and class in the Caribbean.References

1. Ashdown, Peter and Francis Humphreys. ( 1988). Caribbean Revision History for CXC. Macmillan Publishers2. Beckford, Evol. Caribbean Studies Course Outline and Notes.3. Beckles, Hilary and Verene Shepherd. ( 2004). Liberties Lost: Caribbean Indigenous Societies and Slave systems. Cambridge Univesity Press.4. Greenwood, Robert and Shirley Hamber ( 2003). Amerindians to Africans. Macmillan Publishers.5. Mohammad, Jeniffer. (2008). CAPE Caribbean Studies: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Macmillan Publishers. Limited.6. _____ ( 2011) Caribbean Examination Council CAPE Caribbean Studies: Self Study Guide. Nelson Thornes Limited.7. Shepherd, Verene. ( 2006) . Freedoms Won: Caribbean Emancipations, Ethnicities and Nationhood. Cambridge University Press. Pg. 46.

Review Questions1. Compare and contrast the resistant strategies used by the Amerindians, Africans and the indentured servants to oppression.2. In what ways were the African tradition used as a form of resistance to colonial oppression?3. What is peasantry?4. How did peasantry contributed to the socio- economic development of Caribbean society after emancipation?CAPE 200& 2008

1. Describe the role of peasant groups to the development of Caribbean society and culture. ( 20 marks)

2. Using examples from the Caribbean, explain how Caribbean people throughout history have responded to oppression. (20 marks)3