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    Origins of Violence 
    - 
    
    2 
                
    
    
                
                
    
    Recognizing a Native American Holocaust 
    
    
                
                
    Prologue
                
                
                
                 Before Columbus
 Pestilence and Genocide
 Sex, Race and Holy War
 Epilogue
 
                 
                
                
                
                Examining the Reputation of Christopher Columbus
 
                
             
             
             Christopher Columbus, Marrano and Mariner 
             
             
             Christopher Columbus Jewish and New Christian 
             Elements 
             
             
             Christopher Columbus and the Indians 
             
             
             Columbus My 
      Enemy 
    
    
    The Native American Discovery of Europe before 
    Columbus 
                
                
                Columbus exposed as iron-fisted tyrant who 
                tortured his slaves  
                
      
                
                
                Columbus Day -The white man’s myth and the Redman's 
      Holocaust 
                
    
   
   How Lincoln's Army 'Liberated' the Indians 
   
      
   
   Lincoln Targeting Civilians Is a War Crime 
      
      
      Massacre at Sand Creek 
                
    
                
                
                Wounded Knee Hearing Testimony 
     
                
                
                An Ojibwe Trail of Tears
                
    
    
    Wisconsin Trail of Tears 
                
      
                
      Ojibwe Creation Story 
                
                
                Paleo-American Origins 
                
     
      
    
    Myth of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel
                
    
    
    Tracing the Path of Violence: The Boarding School 
    Experience 
                
                
                
                The Wallum Olum: a Pictographic History of 
                the Lenni Lenape, Root Tribe from which the Ojibwe arose 
                
                
                A Migration Legend of the Delaware Tribe 
                  
                
                
                Wallum Olum: The Deluge 
                -
                
                Part II 
                
                
                Winter Count: History Seen from a Native 
                American Tradition -
                
                2 -
                
                3 
      
      
      The Story of the Opposition on the Road to 
      Extinction: Protest Camp in Minneapolis 
      
      
      Who Deems What Is Sacred? 
     
    
      
      
      Savage Police 
      Brutality vs Nonviolence of the People
    
                
                
                
                Mendota Sacred Sites - Affidavit of Larry 
                Cloud-Morgan 
                
                
                Cloud-Morgan, Catholic activist, buried 
                with his peace pipe  
                
                Larry Cloud-Morgan and the Silo Pruning Hooks
 
     
                
                
                Larry Cloud-Morgan: Testimonies to a Great Soul
     
    
    
    The Truth about Khazars -
    2
                
   
    
    
    Canadian Genocide of Indian Children by Church and 
    State-
    
    2 -
    
    3 
   
    
    Residential School Genocide: Why "Apology" Isn't 
    Enough 
                 
             
    
    Canadian Prime Minister Harper Apologizes for 
    Residential School Abuse 
          
                
      
    
    
    Quantum Physics Leads Science Back to the Sacred Fire 
      
      
      Cultural Differences Can Lead to Misunderstanding 
                 
                 Maritime 
                Pine Pycnogenol
                
                
                 is 
                the super-antioxidant that has 
                been tried and tested by over 30 years of research for many 
                acute and chronic disorders. The Ojibwe knew about it almost 500 
                years ago.  Didn't call it that, though. White man took 
                credit. 
            
            
            
            Seroctin--the 
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      Plant by Nature is Organic Gardening Nature's Way 
      
    
    
              Accelerated Mortgage Pay-off can 
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        | 
        The Natural Path to HealthDr. Kris Becker, St. Paul, Minnesota
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    A New Beginning: A Practical 
    Course in Miracles1  INTRODUCTION
 2 HISTORY 
    OF COMMERCE
 3 RESPONSIBILITY
 4 
    REDEMPTION
 5 
    POWER OF ACCEPTANCE
 6 
    BEING A DIPLOMAT
 7 
    BEING A SOVEREIGN
 8 
    PRIVATE BANKING
 
             Museum-quality
    
          
          willow animal effigies
           
             of the Southwest 
    Archaic culture, art from a 4,000 year-old tradition by Bill Ott 
                
                
      
      Unique Cherokee Dream-Catcher 
      
      from basket-weavers' numerology by Catherine 
              Sundvall 
                
                
                Indian Tribes and Termination 
                
                
                Ojibwe Art and Dance 
                
                
                Ojibwe Forestry and Resource Management 
                
                
                Ojibwe Homes 
     
                
                
                Ojibwe 
      Encampment on the Winnipeg River by Paul Kane
                
     
                
                
                Interpreting the Ojibwe Pictographs of 
                North Hegman Lake, MN
                
                
                
                Ojibwe Honor Creation, the Elders and 
                Future Generations 
                
                
                Ojibwe Indian Reservations and Trust Land 
                
                
                Ojibwe Language 
                
                
                Introduction to Ojibwe Language 
                
    
    
    Introduction to Ojibwe Noun and Pronoun Grammar 
    
    
    Introduction to Ojibwe Numbersand Money
 
    
    
    Introduction to Ojibwe Verbs and Preverbs
 
    
    
    Introduction to Ojibwe Verb Grammar
 
    
    
    Introduction to Ojibwe Command and Question Grammar 
       
      
    FREELANG OJIBWE DICTIONARY - free downloadable Ojibwe-English & 
    English-Ojibwe dictionary form 
    Freelang.net.
    
                
                
                
                Ojibwe Snowshoes and the Fur Trade 
                
                
                Ojibwe Sovereignty and the Casinos 
                
                
                Ojibwe Spirituality and Kinship 
      
                
                
                
                The 
                Question of Quantum 
     
      
                -
                
                2 -
                
                3 -
                
                4
                
     
                
                
                
                Family, Community, and School Impacts on 
                American Indian and Alaska Native Students' Success
                
                
                
                Construction and Symbolism of the Sweat 
                Lodge 
                
                
                Ojibwe Tobacco and 
                Pipes 
                
                
                Traditional Ojibwe Entertainment 
     
                
                
                Myth of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel 
    - 
    
    2 - 
    3 
    - 
    
    4
                
    Soul of the Indian: 
    
    
    Foreword 
      
      
    
    The Great Mystery -
    
    
    2The Family Altar -
    
    
    2
 Ceremonial and Symbolic Worship 
    - 
    
    2
 Barbarism and the Moral Code 
    - 
    
    2
 The Unwritten Scriptures
    - 
    
    2
 On the Borderland of Spirits 
    - 
    
    2
 
                
     
                
    
    Charles Alexander Eastman
                
        
    
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          Traditional Life of the Ojibwe 
           
          
          Aurora Village Yellowknife 
                The Making of a Man
 Little Dancer in the Circle
 Friends in the Circle
 Grass Dancer
 Shawl Dancers
 Jingle Dress Dancers
 Fancy Shawl Dancer
 Men Traditional Dancers
 Powwow: 
                
      
          
          
          The Good Red Road
 Crater Lake Photo Gallery
 Crater Lake Landscape
 Flowers of Crater Lake
 Birds & Animals of Crater Lake
 Gold Mantled Ground Squirrel
 The Rogue River
 Sacred Fire of the Modoc
 
 
      
      
      Harris Beach Brookings Oregon
    
                 |  | Christopher 
    Columbus Voyage of Discovery: Jewish and New Christian Elementsby Joseph Adler
Midstream 43:25 November 1998 
          
          
               Columbus 
    in 1492. The journey was spectacular not only for its length and daring, but 
    because it led to one of the biggest surprises in history - the discovery of 
    America. All of the biographers of Columbus recognize this great feat, but 
    many are rather reticent concerning the discoverer's early years and 
    ancestry. Indeed, many scholars shrink from the possibility that yje great explorer may have had Jewish ancestors. 
        There is however, little controversy that the epoch-making expedition 
        was largely made possible by Jews, New Christians (i.e., Conversos ) and 
        Marranos. The most dramatic and best known of the voyages of exploration 
    was, of course, the one made by  ( nominally Conversos who secretly retained their allegiance to 
        Judaism). There were many of them. In Lisbon, Columbus knew 
        and consulted with Joseph Diego Mendes Vezinho ( 1450 - 1520 ), a Jewish 
        scientist and cosmographer at the Portuguese court. Vezinho, who was 
        later to convert to Christianity, headed a committee of savants and 
        experts on nautical matters chosen to consider Columbus's proposed 
        expedition of discovery. In his work for the Portuguese monarch, Vezinho 
        had helped develop a new and improved astronomical calendar, star 
        tables, and more efficient nautical instruments. Although Vezinho did 
        not favor Columbus's plan, his work for establishing direction and 
        location at sea would prove of inestimable value to the future 
        discoverer of the New World. Columbus also derived valuable information 
    from Avraham Zacuto ( c. 1450 - 1515 ), a product of the "juderia" of 
    Saragossa, who would be forced by the expulsion of Jews from Spain to flee 
    to Portugal. While still a professor at the University of Salamanca, Zacuto 
    had achieved fame as a scientist, mathematician, and inventor. He is 
    credited with constructing the first metal astrolabe as well as the 
    development of astronomical tables that gave the exact hours for the rising 
    of the planets and fixed stars. His table of ephemeredes was translated into 
    Latin by Vezinho and published under the titile 'Almanach Perpetuum'. This 
    invaluable guide to navigation was used by Columbus on his voyage across the 
    Atlantic. Zacuto met Columbus prior to his first voyage and endorsed the 
    venture, but considered the expedition to be an extremely hazardous 
    undertaking.
 Columbus's navigational skills also owed much to the inventiveness of a 
    handful of Jewish scholars of the Middle Ages. Outstanding among the latter 
    was Levi ben Gershon ( 1288 - 1344 ), Biblical commentator, mathematician, 
    and astronomer. Levi was the inventor of the cross - staff, better known as 
    "baculus Jacob" ( Jacob's staff ). This simple instrument enabled mariners 
    to measure angular separation between two celestial bodies. Still another 
    nautical instrument available to Columbus was the "quadrant Judaicus", the 
    brainchild of Jacob ben Machir ibn Tibbon ( 1236 - 1307 )
 
 Indeed, virtually all the nautical aids used by Columbus were the products 
    of Jewish minds. Many of the discoverer's maps, for example, were the 
    creation of Jehudah Cresques ( c. 1360 -? ), at one time head of the 
    National Academy of Palma on Majorca ( a center of Jewish cartography during 
    the 14th century ). In the persecutions of 1391, Cresques was forced to 
    convert to Christianity and was given a new name - Jayme Ribes. He entered 
    the service of the king of Portugal and became the director of the School of 
    Navigation at Sagres - the institution founded by Henry the Navigator that 
    marked the beginning of the Age of Discovery.
 
 In 1485, Columbus suddenly left Portugal for Spain. Almost immediately, he 
    began a search for a sponsor for his proposed voyage of discovery. After 
    several frustrating false starts, he appealed to a nobleman of Andalusia, 
    Luis de Cerda, the count of Medici -Celi. De Credo's hospitality was 
    legendary, and he took Columbus under his wing, sheltering the mariner for 
    almost two years. The count also offered to outfit three ships for 
    Columbus's contacts, Luis de Cerda recommended him to his cousin, Cardinal 
    Pedro Ganzales de Mendoza, bishop of Toledo. The cardinal and the count were 
    related through the same Jewish grandmother, and both men had been subjected 
    to attacks because of their descent.
 
 De Mendoza, in his capacity as chairman of a special commission that met to 
    consider the merits of Columbus's plans, heartily endorsed the mariner's 
    proposals. His cousin, Luis de Cerda, also continued to lobby on behalf of 
    Columbus; he sent a strong letter to the Spanish monarchs urging them to 
    reconsider their opposition to Columbus's proposals and, at the very least, 
    to grant the mariner an audience. De Cerda's appeal yielded results, and in 
    1486, Columbus was granted a royal audience at Cordoba. Queen Isabella and 
    King Ferdinand were not entirely convinced by Columbus's presentation but 
    agreed to submit his project to a commission of scholars. To head the 
    commission Isabella chose her confessor, Hernando de Talavera ( 1428 - 1507 
    ), prior of the Prado and later archbishop of Granada. Hernando de Talavera 
    was the grandson of a Jewish woman and in his declining years, would be 
    accused of being a Marrano and was brought before the Inquisition. 
    Humiliated, and unable to counter the vicious proceedings of the court 
    headed by Rodriquez Lucerno, the inquisitor of Cordoba, the proud Hernando 
    would die of mortification. Columbus himself suffered patiently for several 
    years, as the so-called experts of the de Talavera commission debated 
    endlessly the feasibility of his proposals ( they eventually rejected his 
    plan.)
 
 It was during these early years of tribulation in Spain that Columbus gained 
    the support of two highly placed and influential Jews - Abraham Senior and 
    Isaac Abravanel. Senior ( 1412 - 1493 ), during the reign of Isabells's 
    predecessor, King Henry 1V of Castile, had served as chief tax collector of 
    the kingdom and was appointed by the monarch to head the Jewish community of 
    Segovia. Along with a number of other influential Jews, Senior had played a 
    key role in arranging the marriage of Isabella to Ferdinand of Aragon. Some 
    years later, in the power struggle between Isabella and her brother, King 
    Henry 1V, Senior, together with a few other notables, succeeded in 
    convincing the commander of the fortress of Segovia to hand over the city to 
    Isabella and her consort. This act opened the way for the unification of 
    Castile and Aragon and, eventually all of Spain.
 
 Once in power, the grateful Catholic monarchs rewarded Senior by appointing 
    him "rab de la corte," i.e., court rabbi and supreme judge of the Jews of 
    Castile. He also received a large pension and was exempted from the 
    restrictions in dress that had been imposed on Spanish Jewry. In 1468, 
    Senior was made treasurer general of the Hermanded, a semi- military 
    organization formed for the maintenance of law and order. In addition, as 
    factor general to the Spanish army, Senior played a major role in 
    facilitating the conquest of Grenada, the last remaining stronghold of the 
    Moors in Spain.
 
 Tradition has it that Senior met Columbus at Malaga, at which time the 
    future admiral outlined his plan to the Jewish courtier. Columbus was well 
    aware that his proposed expedition would require large financial commitments 
    and welcomed the promise of the support of Senior.
 
 Don Isaac ben Judah Abravanel ( 1437 - 1508 ) a close associate of Senior, 
    was another supporter of Columbus at the Spanish court. Born in Lisbon, 
    Isaac was a child prodigy. His many talents eventually attracted the 
    attention of King Alfonso of Portugal, and he became the latter's advisor, 
    as well as the kingdom's financial minister. However, Abravanel's life took 
    an unexpected turn with the death of his royal patron. The new king 
    suspected Abravanel of being involved in an insurrection against his regime 
    led by the duke of Braganca. Abravanel, fearing for his life, fled to Spain 
    (Toledo). When Ferdinand and Isabella learned of his presence in their 
    realm, they invited him to join their court. Some time later, Senior 
    enlisted his aid in tax farming the kingdom's revenues. Abravanel gradually 
    amassed a great personal fortune and loaned enormous sums to the Catholic 
    monarchs in their war against the Moors of Granada. Indeed, it was shortly 
    after the fall of Malaga that Abravanel, in the company of his friend, 
    Senior, met Columbus and was first exposed to the latter's plan for a voyage 
    of discovery across the Atlantic. Although Abravanel favored the mariner's 
    plan, his support would come to an abrupt halt following the issuance of the 
    edict of expulsion of Spanish Jewry in 1492.
 
 Abravanel, in spite of pressure from Ferdinand and Isabella to convert to 
    Christianity, remained steadfast in his beliefs and immigrated to Naples. 
    When theKingdom of Naples, in 1494, fell to King Charles V111 of France, 
    Abravanel accompanied the deposed Neapolitan monarch, whom he had served as 
    treasurer, into exile in Sicily. After the death of the former Neapolitan 
    ruler, Abravanel moved to Corfu and, in 1496, returned to Naples. Some years 
    later, at the urging of his son, Joseph, he settled in Venice, where he 
    served as a diplomat for the republic until his death in 1508.
 
 Abraham Senior, who had served the Catholic majesties so faithfully for many 
    years, was at first given permission to leave Spain with whatever personal 
    possessions he wished to take along with him. However, steady pressure was 
    exerted by Isabella and Ferdinand for Senior to convert. The queen, in 
    particular, threatened to impose further reprisals against the departing 
    Jews, and Senior, too old and tired to fight any longer, accepted baptism 
    and was allowed to remain in Spain. Taking the name Fernando Munez Coronel, 
    he was further rewarded for his apostasy by being appointed "regidor of 
    Segovia" (governor) and made a member of the royal council, as well as chief 
    financial administrator to the crown prince. He died shortly afterwards in 
    1493.
 
 Among Columbus's highly placed patrons was Luis de Santangel, a member of 
    one of the wealthiest and influential families of Aragon. An ancestor, 
    Azarias Chinillo, had converted to Christianity in the early years of the 
    15th century in the wake of the persecutions against the Jews led by the 
    fanatical Dominican friar, Vincent Ferrer. Azarias would become bishop of 
    Majorca.
 
 Luis de Santangel began his career as a tax farmer and courtier. A favorite 
    of King Ferdinand, he was appointed in 1481 'escribano de racion', a kind of 
    comptroller general, to the royal house of Aragon. He would also later hold 
    the post of 'contador mayor' (paymaster general) for Castile.
 
 Although nominally New Christians, the Santangel family's attachment to 
    Catholicism was at best lukewarm, and its members were among the early 
    targets of the Inquisition. Indeed, a kinsman of Luis was accused of 
    complicity in the murder of Pedro de Arbues, canon of the Cathedral of 
    Saragossa and the heart and soul of the Inquisition in Aragon. The kinsman 
    was also charged and condemned for being a secret Jew ( i.e., a Marrano .)
 
 In July of 1491, Luis de Santangel was also accused of being a Marrano. King 
    Ferdinand intervened on his behalf and managed to stop the Inquisition's 
    proceedings.
 
 Luis de Santangel first met Columbus in 1486 and was greatly impressed by 
    the latter's personality and plans for a voyage of discovery. When, some 
    years later, word reached him that Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand had 
    once again rejected Columbus's project and had sent him on his way, 
    Santangel immediately requested and received an audience with Her Majesty. 
    With great eloquence, he pleaded for Columbus's voyage of discovery and 
    prevailed upon the queen to have the mariner brought back to the court for 
    further discussions. The queen agreed, and a bewildered Columbus was brought 
    back to the court to once again present arguments for his proposed 
    expedition of discovery.
 
 Anticipating the royal couple's anxiety on how to finance a voyage across 
    the Atlantic, Santangel reminded the monarchs that the Santa Hermandad, of 
    which he was one of treasurers, had a large endowment that could be borrowed 
    against. He also indicated to the Spanish rulers that he was willing to back 
    the Columbus expedition with a considerable sum from his personal fortune. ( 
    He would later also call upon his Converso friends to contribute toward the 
    financing of the expedition.) The tax farmer also reminded Ferdinand and 
    Isabella of an overlooked debt to the Crown. It seems that the community of 
    Palos on the southern coast of Castile had been found guilty of smuggling, 
    and a fine had been levied against it that had gone uncollected. The town 
    owed the Crown three months of service and two caravels. Santangel's 
    arguments proved to be the decisive factor in swaying the Spanish sovereigns 
    to back Columbus's project. A grateful Columbus would not forget his 
    benefactor. It was to Luis de Santangel that he addressed the famous letter 
    announcing his discoveries. Indeed, Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand would 
    first hear of the successful undertaking from the lips of Santangel.
 
 An identical letter was sent by Columbus to Gabriel Sanchez, one of the 
    three influential New Christians that Luis de Santangel had gotten to help 
    finance the explorer's initial voyage. grabriel Sanchez (d. 1505)
 was the high treasurer of the Kingdom of Aragon, and a member of a 
    distinguished family of Conversos who traced their origins back to a Jew 
    named Alazar Goluff of Saragossa. After the murder of the inquisitor Pedro 
    de Arbues, three of the brothers of Gabriel Sanchez - Juan, Alfonso, and 
    Guillen - were accused of having participated in the conspiracy to eliminate 
    the Inquisitor. Juan managed to escape but was condemned to death in effigy. 
    Alfonso, who was also accused of being a Marrano, managed to flee Aragon 
    before the Inquisition could lay hands on him. The third brother, Guillen, 
    was allowed by the Inquisition to repent. The father-in-law of Gabriel 
    Sanchez, also implicated in the murder plot, was less fortunate than Guillen. 
    He was charged with Judaizing and sentenced to death.
 
 Grave charges were also brought against Gabriel Sanchez. He was accused of 
    having participated in the conspiracy that led to the murder of Pedro de 
    Arbues. Since the allegations could not be proved, and Sanchez continued to 
    have the support of King Ferdinand, he was able to survive the efforts of 
    the Inquisition to tar him as a heretic and backslider.
 
 As in the case of Luis de Santangel, Columbus regarded gariel Sanchez as one 
    of his staunchest supporters. The letter the discoverer sent to Sanchez 
    describing the findings of the first voyage to the New World was reproduced 
    by the high treasurer, and a copy was forwarded to his brother, Juan, in 
    Florence. The latter passed it on to his cousin Lenardo de Cosco, a Marrano, 
    who translated it into Latin and had it published. Within a year, the Latin 
    translation ran through nine editions, thus spreading the news of the New 
    World throughout Europe.
 
 Still another of Columbus's highly placed patrons was Alfonso de la 
    Caballeria. He was the descendant of a Jewish family that had achieved 
    prominence in Spain as early as the 13th century. During the course of the 
    15th century, a family schism occurred, and eight of the nine sons of the 
    head of the household converted to Christianity. In the succeeding 
    generations, many members of the family achieved fame and fortune in the 
    service of the state and the Church. At the same time, by marriage, the de 
    la Caballeria clan became closely allied with almost all the major Converso 
    families in Spain.
 
 Alfonso, like his father before him, started his career as a counselor at 
    the court of Aragon and rose rapidly through the ranks of the bureaucracy. 
    In the 1480's, he was appointed vice-chancellor of aragon. Nevertheless, in 
    spite of his high office, he was not immune from investigation by the 
    Inquisition. He was accused of having been involved in the Pedro de Arbues 
    conspiracy. Allegations concerning other members of Alfonso's family, many 
    of whom were suspected of being Marranos, were also introduced by the 
    tribunal. Thus, Alfonso's father, Pedro, although long deceased, was 
    described by one Inquisition witness as having posed as a Christian who 
    frequently reverted in thoughts and deeds to his ancestral traditions. Still 
    other members of the de la Caballeria clan were accused of still maintaining 
    close ties with the synagogue and the Jewish community.
 
 The judicial proceedings initiated by the Inquisition would drag on for 20 
    years. Finally, in 1501, the papacy confirmed Alfonso de la Caballeria's 
    Catholic orthodoxy, and he was completely exonerated. However, the toll of 
    the prolonged trail had been high. He was unable, for example, to prevent 
    the Inquisition's exhumation of the bones of his grandmother, or his wife's 
    appearance as a penitent in an 'auto-da-fe, or the burning of his brother 
    Jaime in effigy.
 
 Completing the list of powerful Conversos who rendered financial support to 
    Columbus when it was most desperately needed, is that of Juan Cabrero, royal 
    chamberlain of King Ferdinand. He was regarded as one of the king's most 
    faithful and trusted retainers. Carero had fought at Fernando's side in the 
    war against the Moors and was an intimate friend as well as advisor to the 
    monarch. However, even this high-placed New Christian official's family 
    could not escape the tentacles of the Inquisition. Juan's grandfather, 
    Sancho de Patenoy, the grand treasurer of Aragon, was accused in the Arbues 
    conspiracy and sentenced to death. Juan Cabrero, using all his influence at 
    court, managed with great difficulty to have the verdict changed to life 
    imprisonment.
 
 In addition to Luis de Santangel, Alfonso de la Caballeria, and Juan 
    Sanchez, two other individuals merit attention as supporters of Columbus at 
    the Spanish court. They are Marchioness de Moya, and Juan de Coloma. De Moya, 
    a close friend and confidant of Queen Isabella, it is widely believed, was a 
    member of a Marrano family. Although hard evidence is lacking, it is known 
    that the marchioness associated with Marranos and Conversos and on several 
    occasions, intervened to save such individuals, from the Inquisition.
 
 Juan de Coloma, a royal secretary, had a hand in drawing up the contract 
    between Columbus and the Catholic monarchs. Although one of the few high 
    officials of "Old Christian" stock involved with the initial expedition of 
    Columbus, his wife was a New Christian - a member of the Caballeria family.
 
 Columbus's connections with the Jews, New Christians, and Marranos, was not 
    limited to court officials. There is the controversial matter that some of 
    his shipmates were of Jewish stock. Five crew members are generally singled 
    out for this distinction; Alonso de la Calle, a bursar, who eventually 
    settled in Hispaniola and whose very name indicates that he was born in the 
    Jewish quarter; Rodrigo de Sanchez of Segovia, who was related to Gabriel 
    sanchez, the high treasurer of Aragon; Marco, the surgeon; Maestre Bernal of 
    Tortosa, a physician who had been reconciled by the Inquisition in 1490, but 
    was forced to witness his wife's death at the stake of an auto-da-fe, and 
    Luis de Torres, the official interpreter of the expedition, who had been 
    baptized a few days before the fleet sailed. Torres had been specifically 
    appointed by Columbus as interpreter because he knew Hebrew, Chaldean and 
    arabic. This knowledge was expected to prove useful if the voyagers came 
    across 'Asiatic" descendants of the Ten Last Tribes of Israel.
 
 Prior to his conversion, Luis de Torres had been employed as an interpreter 
    by Juan Chacon, the governor of Murcia ( a province with a large Jewish 
    population ). Since Columbus's first voyage coincided with the expulsion of 
    the Jews from Spain, Luis's job with the governor was obviously over. There 
    were no longer any Jews for whom he might have interpreted in their audience 
    with the governor.
 
 When Columbus discovered Cuba, he was convinced that he had found Marco 
    Polo's Cinpangu (Japan). The "admiral", however, was puzzled that there were 
    no silk clad sages, or palaces tiled with gold to be seen anywhere. 
    Accordingly, he decided to dispatch an embassy into the interior of the 
    island, where he believed the cities were located. Tolead the mission, he 
    chose Luis de Torres. The interpreter was given a Latin passport, which he 
    was to present to the chief of the natives ("the Great Khan"), as well as 
    gifts. He also carried letters of credence from Queen Isabella and King 
    Ferdinand. An able-bodied seaman named Rodrigo de Jerez was chosen to 
    accompany Torres. Two native Arawak Indian guides rounded out the embassy.
 
 The mission into the island's interior proved disappointing to Columbus, for 
    the group found nothing resembling an imperial city, or gold. However, 
    Torres did bring back a fairly comprehensive report of the native people he 
    and Rodrigo had encountered, their customs and manners, as well as a 
    description of some of the island's fauna and flora. Among the wonders that 
    Torres had noted was a strange practice of the natives to put thin rolls of 
    dried leaves ( tobacco) into their nostrils or mouths, lighting them, and 
    blowing out smoke.
 
 Although Luis de Torres's linguistic skills proved useless in carrying out 
    his mission, the resourceful interpreter, not understanding the Amerindian 
    dialect, fell back upon sign language to carry out his instructions. Torres 
    would later seek permission to settle in Cuba as a royal agent. His request 
    was granted with an annual pension from the Crown. By cultivating his 
    friendship with the native ruler of the island, Torres would, in time, 
    aquire large tracts of land and carve out for himself a small empire. He was 
    the first European to visit the inhabitants of the New World in their native 
    setting, and the first to describe their life before it was corrupted by 
    contact with the white man.
 
 Scholars have long squabbled over the question as to why high-placed New 
    Christians and Jews were willing to take on the enormous risk of financing 
    Columbus's initial expedition. One possible explanation that has been 
    suggested is that the discoverer and his patrons had a deep and ineradicable 
    impulse to help their fellow Jews, or in the case of the Conversos such as 
    Luis de Santangel, Alfonso de la Caballeria, and Juan Sanchez, their former 
    co-religionists to whom they still felt linked.
 
 A biographer of Columbus, John Boyd Thatcher, putting it more succinctly, 
    has written; "that the triumph of Columbus ---- was the triumph of the 
    Converso Luis de Santangel, visionary and champion of the perennial lost 
    cause of history --- the cause of the Jews." Other writers ( notably 
    Salvador de Madariaga and Simon Wiesenthal) have speculated that the 
    longings of the Conversos who supported Columbus may have run parallel to 
    the dreams of the discoverer himself, namely, an obsessive dream to find a 
    refuge for the Jews in the lands that he hoped to find across the Atlantic.
 
 What ever the truth, it is a fact that many Marranos and Conversos listened 
    to the tales emanating from the New World following Columbus's epic voyages 
    and flocked to the lands that he had claimed for Iberia. They had board 
    ships secretly, for officially they were strictly forbidden to set foot in 
    the new territories. However, disregarding all the bans and harbor controls, 
    they made their way across the ocean, where they hoped to make a new life.
 
 Joseph Adler, an historian, is the author of 'The Herzl Paradox' and 
    articles that have appeared in the Herzl Yearbook
 
 Sources:
 1 Amber, Jane Francis, Christopher Columbus's Jewish Roots.Northvale, NJ: 
    Jason Aronson, Inc., 1991
 2 Baer, Yitzhak. A History of the Jews in Christian Spain.2 vols., 
    Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America.1961
 3 Birmingham, Stephen, The Grandees, New York: Harper & Row.1971
 4 Burgos, Francisco Cantera, Abraham Zacuto, Madrid: M Aguilar.1935
 5 Costa, Abel Fontoura da, L'Almanach Perpetuum de Abraham Zacuto:Congress 
    International d'Histoire des Sciences.1936 pp 137-146
 6 Cohen, Martin A, Joseph Vezinho, Encyclopaedia Judaica vol.16.Jerusalem 
    Keter Publishing House.1971 pp 81-82
 7 Heinrich Graetz, History of the Jews, 5 vols. Philadelphia;The Jewish 
    Publication Society of America.1956
 8 Keller, Werner, Diaspora. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1969
 9 Lebeson, Anita L. Jewish Cartographers, A forgotten Chapter of Jewish 
    history. History Judaica X1, 1949. pp 155/174
 10 Lebeson, Anita l. Pilgrim People. New York: Minerva Press 1975
 11 Minkin, Jacob S. Abrabanel and the Expulsion of the Jews feom Spain: New 
    York Berman's Jewish Book House. 1938
 12 Morison, Samuel E. Portuguese Voyages to America in the Fifteenth 
    Century. Cambridge: Harvard Univ.Press.1940
 13 Morison, Samuel E. Admiral of the Ocean Sea, 2 vols. Boston: Little, 
    Brown Company.1942
 14 Roth, Cecil. A History of the Marranos. Philadelphia: The Jewish 
    Publication Society of America. 1932
 15 On the statement referring to the triumph of Luis de Santangel, see J 
    Boyd Thatcher, Christopher Columbus, His Life, His Work, His Remains. vol.1 New York: GP Putnam's 
    Sons.1903-04 p 459
 16 Simon Wiesenthal, Sails of Hope: The secret Mission of Columbus. New 
    York: Macmillan Publishing Company.1973
 
 Published in Midstream - November 1998
 
     
    
    
    White Eagle Soaring: Dream Dancer of the 7th Fire 
     
        
          
              
              
              
                
              
          
    
      
      Index of DreamCatchers 
      However You Spell DreamCatcher 
        
          
          
          However you've spelled Dream Catcher, these REAL Dream Catchers are 
          natural magic from Creator Direct (Manidoog).
        
 
      This is a crazy world. What can be 
      done? Amazingly, we have been mislead. We have been taught that we can 
      control government by voting. The founder of the Rothschild dynasty, Mayer 
      Amschel Bauer, told the secret of controlling the government of a nation 
      over 200 years ago. He said, "Permit me to issue and control the money of 
      a nation and I care not who makes its laws." Get the picture? Your freedom 
      hinges first on the nation's banks and money system. That's why we 
      advocate using the
      Liberty Dollar, to understand the 
      monetary and banking system. Freedom is connected with
      Debt Elimination for each individual. Not 
      only does this end personal debt, it places the people first in line as 
      creditors to the National Debt ahead of the banks. They don't wish for you 
      to know this. It has to do with recognizing WHO you really are in 
      A New Beginning: A Practical Course in Miracles. 
      You CAN
      take 
      back your power and
      stop volunteering to pay taxes to the collection 
      agency for the BEAST. You can take back that which is yours, 
      always has been yours and use it to pay off your debts. And you can send 
      others to these pages to discover what you are discovering.
      
      Disclaimer: The 
statements on www.real-dream-catchers.com  have not been evaluated by the FDA. 
      These dream catchers are not intended to diagnose nor treat nor cure any 
      disease or illness
          © 2007, Allen Aslan Heart / White Eagle Soaring of the Little Shell Pembina Band, a 
       
 
          
          
      
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          Tribe of the Ojibwe Nation |