欧洲第一个殖民者对非洲的殖民入侵:对加那利群岛原住民的种族灭绝

IF 0.1 Q3 HISTORY
M. Adhikari
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引用次数: 55

摘要

加那利群岛由摩洛哥南部海岸外的七个岛屿组成,居住着来自非洲西北部柏柏尔语社区的土著居民。加那利群岛土著社会的灭绝代表了现代欧洲第一次海外定居者殖民种族灭绝。14世纪上半叶,欧洲的奴隶掠夺者开始了社会毁灭的进程,15世纪末,主要是伊比利亚的征服者和定居者推动了社会毁灭的完成。除了对加那利人无限制的大规模暴力之外,欧洲征服者几乎没收了全部土地,几乎完全奴役和驱逐了岛屿人口。同时发生的奴役和驱逐造成了最多的受害者,是种族灭绝进程的核心。实际上,它们与杀戮一样具有破坏性,因为受害者通常是社区中最有生产力的成员,他们的社会永远失去了他们。没收儿童、性暴力和使用焦土战术也加剧了加那利人民所遭受的破坏。在被征服后,加那利土著社会的残余受到持续的暴力和文化压制,这确保了他们的生活方式的灭绝。对整个岛屿社区的奴役和驱逐是征服者有意识地明确表达的目标,这确立了他们“整体毁灭的意图”,这是符合《联合国种族灭绝公约》对种族灭绝定义的核心标准。这篇文章认为,加那利群岛社会毁灭的所有七个案例单独和集体都是种族灭绝的明显例子,这是第一篇认为破坏加那利土著社会构成种族灭绝的文章。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Europe’s First Settler Colonial Incursion into Africa: The Genocide of Aboriginal Canary Islanders
ABSTRACT The annihilation of the aboriginal societies of the Canary archipelago, which consists of seven islands off the coast of southern Morocco and was populated by indigenes derived from Berber-speaking communities of north-west Africa, represents modern Europe’s first overseas settler colonial genocide. The process of social destruction, initiated by European slave raiders in the first half of the fourteenth century, was propelled to completion by mainly Iberian conquistadors and settlers towards the end of the fifteenth century. In addition to unrestrained mass violence against Canarians, European conquerors practised near-total confiscation of land and near-total enslavement and deportation of island populations. Enslavement and deportation, which went hand in hand, accounted for the largest number of victims and were central to the genocidal process. They were in effect as destructive as killing because the victims, generally the most productive members of their communities, were permanently lost to their societies. Child confiscation, sexual violence and the use of scorched earth tactics also contributed to the devastation suffered by Canarian peoples. After conquest, the remnants of indigenous Canarian societies were subjected to ongoing violence and cultural suppression, which ensured the extinction of their way of life. That the enslavement and deportation of entire island communities was the consciously articulated aim of conquerors establishes their “intent to destroy in whole,” which is the central criterion for meeting the United Nations Convention on Genocide’s definition of genocide. This article argues that individually and collectively all seven cases of social obliteration in the Canaries represent clear examples of genocide, and it is the first article to contend that the destruction of aboriginal Canarian societies constitutes genocide.
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