251 Francisco de Vitoria: - Indigenous children are lazy and need to be disciplined with a strong hand so that they learn the value of work. Antonio de Nebrija: - Indigenous children are our natural slaves, because they are born to serve us and work for us. Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo: - Indian children must be taught to work from an early age, so that they learn the value of work and the importance of serving their Spanish masters. All the previous sentences show that the colonizers did feel hatred for the indigenous children. The following phrases are phrases said by indigenous people with respect to children: Quechua Proverb: - Children are like flowers, they need sun, water and love to grow. Guarani Proverb: - Children are sacred, they are the carriers of life and deserve all our respect and care. Navajo Proverb: - Children are like birds that need to fly and explore the world, but always under our protection. Inca Proverb: - Children are like the rain that nourishes the earth and gives life to nature. Tarahumara Proverb: - Children are the light that illuminates our path and guides us towards a more hopeful future. Tzotzil Proverb: - Children are the heart of our community, they need love, care and protection to beat strong. Tehuelche Proverb: - Children are the manifestation of love and union between man and nature. Xochiquetzal Candelaria, Mexican indigenous leader: - Children are sacred beings and we must treat them with love and respect. They are our teachers and teach us to be humble and wise. Vidalina Morales, Honduran indigenous leader: - Children are our most valuable treasures. We must care for and protect them so that they can grow up healthy and happy. The following photographs reflect the innocence and purity of indigenous children:
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257 The purity of indigenous children is an invaluable treasure, an inexhaustible source of love and hope. It is an innocence that is reflected in her gaze, in the smile that lights up her face and in her boundless spontaneity. It is a humility that is expressed in his simplicity, in his ability to find happiness in the simplest things and in his joy for life. Indigenous children are the promise of the future, a sign that the beauty and purity of the human being still persist. His connection with nature is innate, his respect for the land and for life is evident in his way of being and living. His humility and simplicity are a lesson for all of us, a sign that true happiness lies in what is authentic and true. Indigenous children are a source of inspiration. Proof that miscegenation was part of a plan by the colonizers to exterminate the indigenous, we have it in his phrases: Gaspar de Carvajal: - Miscegenation is a way of eradicating inferior races. Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda: - Miscegenation is a way of diluting indigenous culture and strengthening the Spanish one. Lope de Aguirre: - Miscegenation is a way of whitening the indigenous race. Sebastián de Belalcázar: - Miscegenation is a way of ensuring the continuity of colonization. Francisco Pizarro, 16th century: - Miscegenation will allow us to consolidate our domination over the indigenous people. Fray Juan de Zumárraga, 16th century: - Miscegenation is the result of conquest and evangelization. In Argentina there have been several complaints about speeches that promote hatred towards the Mapuches. Some of the most prominent names are: The former Minister of Security of the province of Buenos Aires, Patricia Bullrich, who has been criticized for her position regarding the Mapuche community and her role in the repression of the Mapuche protest in Patagonia. The journalist Eduardo Feinmann, who has been denounced for various sayings on his radio and television program, which many consider to promote hatred towards the Mapuches. The federal prosecutor of Esquel, Fernando Rivarola, who in a trial in 2020 described the Mapuches as predators and savages and affirmed that they did not deserve human rights. Former President Mauricio Macri, who in a speech in 2017 referred to the Mapuches as a minority that feels unpunished for taking land. Carlos Bolsonaro is a Brazilian politician and has been accused by various organizations and activists of fomenting hatred and discrimination towards indigenous peoples in Brazil. Some of the evidence against him includes: In October 2019, Carlos Bolsonaro published a message on his Twitter account in which he stated that the left defends the culture of the Indians, but
258 what they want is to keep them as prehistoric beings to exhibit them as if they were animals in the zoo. This message was considered by many people as a show of contempt towards indigenous peoples. In 2020, Carlos Bolsonaro shared a video on his Instagram account in which he mocked indigenous peoples and their fight to preserve their lands. In the video, a man dressed as an indigenous man was shown speaking comically about defending the Amazon. In a session of the Rio de Janeiro Municipal Council in 2017, Carlos Bolsonaro reportedly stated that indigenous peoples do not have the right to live on their land and that they should be introduced into society. These statements were harshly criticized by organizations defending indigenous rights. In 2017, Carlos Bolsonaro tweeted that the government's indigenist policy has been one of the biggest factories of the poor in the country, and that many of them, in the North, are more animals than humans. This comment was widely condemned by indigenous and human rights organizations. Phrases said by Jair Bolsonaro that demonstrate his hatred for the indigenous people: Jair Bolsonaro (2018): - The amount of land that the Indians have in our country is shameful. We are going to put an end to the policy of demarcation of indigenous lands. There will not be one more centimeter to demarcate. Jair Bolsonaro (2018): - The Raposa Serra do Sol reserve has a huge amount of gold, diamonds, uranium, among others. What do the Indians have? Nothing. They are poor as animals. Jair Bolsonaro (2019): - We cannot allow Brazil to continue being a paradise for the Indians. You have to integrate them into society, and that happens through agriculture and mining. Jair Bolsonaro (2019): - There is no place for more indigenous reserves in Brazil. It is an international shame. What I want is to integrate them into society. Integrating indigenous people into society means that they learn to pollute and destroy the environment, that they learn to be selfish and conceited, it is that they accept being dominated, hated, discriminated against and subjected. Jair Bolsonaro (1998): - It was a mistake that the Portuguese did not exterminate all the Indians in Brazil. Jair Bolsonaro (2017): - You can be sure, there will not be an inch of land for the creation of indigenous or quilombola reserves. Several politicians and military related to Bolsonaro have expressed comments related to hatred of indigenous people in Brazil. Some of them are: General Augusto Heleno, Cabinet Minister for Institutional Security of Brazil: You have made derogatory comments about indigenous peoples and their
259 lands, stating that the Amazon is not a world heritage site and that the presence of indigenous peoples on indigenous lands is an obstacle to development. Damares Alves, Minister of Women, Family and Human Rights of Brazil: You have made comments that minimize the importance of the rights of indigenous peoples and land rights, and have expressed support for the integration of indigenous peoples into Brazilian society. Ricardo Salles, Minister of the Environment of Brazil: He has promoted policies that threaten the rights of indigenous peoples, such as the reduction of indigenous reserves and the reduction of environmental protections on indigenous lands. Luiz Eduardo Ramos, Minister of the Brazilian Government Secretariat: You have supported the expansion of mining and agriculture on indigenous lands, which endangers the integrity of indigenous peoples and their way of life. Phrases by Eduardo Bolsonaro that also show his hatred for the indigenous people: Eduardo Bolsonaro, interview in 2015: - The indigenous question is a shame for Brazil. An Indian does not speak our language, he has no money, he has no culture, he has nothing. Eduardo Bolsonaro, speech in 2017: - There are places where people have nothing, absolutely nothing, and the Indians have land. Because? Because they are poor. These monsters, in their hatred of the indigenous, pretend as if they don't know that the indigenous were on this continent before them, and that the murderous colonizers from whom they are descended came to take away most of their land, and to contaminate it all. Eduardo Bolsonaro, interview in 2019: - The fact is that the Indians are a burden for Brazil. What is good for them is not necessarily what is good for Brazil. Jeanine Áñez Chávez, former president of Bolivia, has been criticized for her statements and attitudes that many considered discriminatory towards indigenous peoples. Some of the phrases that have been attributed to him are: In a speech in 2013, Áñez said that indigenous people do not have the same rights as citizens and that the right of the indigenous cannot be above the right of the citizen. In November 2019, before assuming the presidency, Áñez Chávez published a tweet in which he referred to the Aymara as satellites of chaos and said that Bolivia had been freed from the Indian plague, referring to the indigenous peoples. On another occasion, Áñez Chávez also expressed that the aimaras and other indigenous peoples were the internal enemy of the country. During his government, various cases of violence and repression against indigenous communities were recorded, including the repression of an Aymara protest in the city of El Alto in November 2019, in which several people died.
260 In January 2020, Áñez Chávez promulgated a decree that allowed the use of lethal force by the armed forces and the police in operations to control protests and social conflicts. This measure was criticized by various sectors, including human rights organizations and indigenous peoples, who considered that it encouraged repression and violence against the most vulnerable communities, including the Aymara. In Argentina, some politicians have been denounced for promoting hatred of the Mapuche on Twitter. One of them is the national deputy for the province of Neuquén, Francisco Sánchez, who in a tweet published in 2020 wrote: -We must end these Mapuche criminals and their accomplices, they don't care about anything, only their economic benefit. They are the true enemies of the country. Another case is that of the national senator for the province of Buenos Aires, Gladys González, who in a tweet published in 2017 wrote: The AntiTerrorism Law was sanctioned to fight against violent groups such as the RAM (Mapuche Ancestral Resistance) and not to persecute peaceful protesters. George Washington also took actions that hurt Native American peoples, such as signing the 1790 Treaty of New York, which established federal recognition of tribes as sovereign nations and established territorial boundaries that stripped tribes of large tracts of land. Arawak genocide: Refers to the destruction of Arawak communities in the Antilles and South America by Europeans. Extermination of the indigenous people of the Arawak ethnic group by the Spanish colonizers:
261 In the 1950s, the Costa Rican government implemented an agricultural development program that drove thousands of indigenous people from their ancestral lands in the Talamanca region. This policy, known as the Agrarian Reform, was criticized by human rights groups for its disproportionate effects on indigenous communities and for violating their land rights. Sand Creek Massacre: In 1864, Canadian soldiers killed more than 200 Cheyenne Indians in Sand Creek, Colorado. Soldiers razed a peaceful camp, killing men, women and children.
262 Tina Fontaine Murder: In 2014, Tina Fontaine, a 15-year-old Native American teen, was found dead in a river in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The case of Tina Fontaine drew attention to the violence and abuse experienced by indigenous women and girls in Canada. Acteal Massacre (1997): In Chiapas, a paramilitary group linked to the local government attacked a Tzotzil community in Acteal, killing 45 people, including women and children.
263 The Panzós massacre in 1978, where a group of indigenous Q'eqchi' were killed by the police and the army while protesting against the expropriation of their lands. The Dos Erres massacre in 1982, where more than 200 indigenous people were killed by a group of Guatemalan army soldiers. Ache genocide in Paraguay in the 1960s. Young Aché captured. March 1972:
264 Aché prisoners sent to the Colony: Aché indigenous shortly after being captured in the forest and taken to the Aché Reserve. Paraguay, 1972:
265 The following are phrases said by indigenous people that show that their concept of humility does not consist of humiliating oneself, it does not consist of letting oneself be dominated, it does not consist of feeling inferior and it does not consist of submitting. Cherokee Phrase: - Humility doesn't mean you think less of yourself. It means you think less in yourself. Quechua phrase: - Humility is the ability to recognize that there is always something to learn. Quechua Phrase: - Humility teaches us to accept our limitations and work on them to improve.
266 Agnes Baker Pilgrim, spiritual leader of the Takelma tribe: - Being humble does not mean that you are less than others, but that you are capable of recognizing and respecting the dignity and abilities of each human being. Felipe Gómez, leader of the Nasa community: - Humility is accepting our own limitations and recognizing the wisdom of others. Rosa Pachacama, leader of the Quichua community: - Humility is not weakness, it is a strength that allows us to accept our limitations and work as a team to achieve our goals. Rubén Chino, leader of the Mapuche community: - Being humble is having a grateful heart with life and with others. Raoni Metuktire, Kayapó leader: - Humility is recognizing that we are not the owners of nature, but rather its children and guardians. Aida Quilcue, leader of the Nasa community: - Being humble is being simple, authentic and having your feet on the ground. Phrases said by indigenous people regarding colonization: Tatanka Iyotanka (Crazy Horse), Lakota leader: - The arrival of Europeans in America was the beginning of the end for us. Juana Runa, Kichwa leader: - The colonizers took our lands, they took our culture, they took our lives, but they could never take our resistance. Tupac Katari, Aymara leader: - Colonization stole everything from us, but it could not steal our ability to love, learn and resist. Delfina Cuero, Wayúu leader: - Colonization was the beginning of our fight for survival, and we will continue fighting until our lands and our culture are respected and protected. Ailton Krenak, Brazilian indigenous leader: - Colonization was a cultural and physical genocide that we still feel today in our communities and in our families. Lourdes Tibán, Ecuadorian indigenous leader: - Colonization was the beginning of the destruction of our world and the arrival of a system that does not respect our relationship with nature. Juan Chávez, Mexican indigenous leader: - Colonization was an act of violence that we still face today in the form of discrimination, marginalization and racism. Phrases said by indigenous people regarding women: Mayan Phrase: - Woman is a sacred being who deserves respect and protection. Mapuche Phrase: - The woman is the creator of life and deserves our greatest respect and care. Navajo Phrase: - Women are the balance in our world, we must honor and listen to her. Quechua Phrase: - Women are a fundamental pillar in our culture and we must work together to protect their rights and dignity.
267 Huichol Phrase: - Woman is the sun of our life and we must nurture and honor her so that she shines with all her splendor. Phrases said by indigenous people regarding the LGBT community: Zapotec transgender woman, Mexico: - In our indigenous traditions and cultures, there has always been room for different forms of love and gender expression. Diversity is a natural part of life. Navajo Elder, United States: - As indigenous people, we understand that every human being has a masculine and feminine energy within them. There is nothing wrong with expressing both aspects or identifying with one more than the other. Mapuche leader, Chile: - There is no place for hatred and discrimination in our traditions. We must respect and accept all people, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity. Mayan leader, Guatemala: - Our people have always been inclusive and tolerant towards LGBT people. We are all equal in the eyes of our gods and must be treated as such. Aymara leader, Bolivia: - As a native people, we have a special connection with the land and nature. We must learn to live in harmony and respect all forms of life, including LGBT people. Inuit Leader, Canada: - In our culture, we have always recognized the existence of people with different sexual orientations and genders. We are all human beings and deserve equal rights and opportunities. Catalina Barrios, leader of the Trans community of the Yagan Nation in Chile: - Our ancestors always accepted all people, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity. Celestino Morales, leader of the LGBT community of the Purépecha Nation in Mexico: - In our culture, we have always believed that each person has the right to be who they are, without being discriminated against based on their sexual orientation or gender identity. Esteban Paulón, LGBT activist and representative of the Mapuche people in Argentina: - For us, LGBT people are sacred and deserve the same respect and protection as anyone else. Claribel Alegría, Miskito poet and activist in Nicaragua: - As indigenous peoples, we have a rich history of acceptance and respect for diversity of gender and sexuality. Antonio Medina, leader of the LGBT community of the Kuna Nation in Panama: - In our culture, we have always recognized and respected the diversity of gender and sexuality as something natural. The following photographs demonstrate the beauty of the indigenous villages:
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269 The indigenous villages are places of great beauty because they are surrounded by nature, without water pollution and without air pollution. The indigenous people are truly civilized, and they are civilized because they care for and protect nature. The savage and uncivilized are the non-indigenous who destroy and pollute the environment.
270 Those who are not indigenous are the savages and uncivilized who live in cities full of water pollution, air pollution, car smoke and garbage. This is why, although many indigenous people in their nobility and goodness believe that we are all equal. In reality, the indigenous people are superior in all aspects to those of us who are not indigenous. The following illustration represents the battle of Cajamarca (Peru) in 1532, in which the Spanish colonizers murdered many indigenous people.
271 The following illustration represents the Battle of Otumba in which the Spanish colonizers murdered indigenous people:
272 The following image is from a mural that represents the Battle of Centla (Mexico, 1519), in which the Spanish colonizers murdered indigenous people:
273 The following photograph is of a mural depicting the Napalpí massacre in Argentina, which occurred in 1924, where 200 indigenous people were killed by the Argentine state, by soldiers and by police. Argentina is one of the countries where indigenous people continue to suffer the most today.
274 The following image represents the Guaranítica War (1756-1759) where the indigenous rebelled against the Portuguese colonizers:
275 The military dictatorship (1964-1985) in Brazil had the support of the United States. The United States is guilty of the murder of indigenous people both in the past and in the present. In this dictatorship, the indigenous people were tortured, abused, raped, forced to be part of orgies, and murdered. The bodies of the murdered indigenous were burned. The following screenshot is from a news item entitled: -Military trained by the CIA used napalm against indigenous people in Brazil. Napalm is a flammable substance, based on gasoline in a gel state, used in flamethrowers and incendiary bombs. The United States has never paid for these crimes. One of the photographs that shows the torture suffered by indigenous people during the Military Dictatorship in Brazil:
276 During the colonial era, the indigenous people of the Xingu region were victims of slavery and exploitation by the Portuguese settlers. In the Battle of Mbororé in 1641, the indigenous rebel against the Portuguese colonizers who committed atrocities against them: Battles or massacres that the English, British, and French carried out against Native Americans or indigenous people of the United States and Canada: King Philip's War (1675-1678):
277 Gnadenhutten massacre (1782):
278 Battle of the Little Bighorn (1876) where the United States Army's 7th Cavalry massacred hundreds of indigenous: Battle of Tippecanoe: where the United States Army killed Shawnee indigenous.
279 Cajamarca Massacre (1532): During the conquest of Peru, the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro captured the Inca leader Atahualpa and massacred thousands of his followers who had come to trade with him.
280 Wounded Knee Massacre (1890): The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred during the American indigenous Wars, when United States soldiers massacred hundreds of Sioux who had surrendered and were unarmed.
281 Lakota chief Si Tanka dead in the snow:
282 Indigenous people of the Lakota ethnic group who survived the massacre:
283 The site of the massacre three weeks later:
284 The frozen corpse of a healer in the Wounded Knee camp: The Spanish colonizer Hernán Cortés against Moctezuma:
285 Pedro Teixeira, was a Portuguese colonizer who collaborated in the conquest of Pará in 1616, where he fought against indigenous people. This genocide has a monument in his honor in the Câmara Municipal de Cantanhede. Everything in the countries of America is a tribute to those who dominated, subjugated, tortured and massacred indigenous people.
286 Oberá was a cacique of the Guarani ethnic group who fought against the colonizers.
287 In Chicago in the United States, there are monuments that pay homage to the domination, subjugation and extermination of indigenous people by the English and French colonizers. Even where it is implied that colonization was divine will. Some colonizers who are honored in these statues are: Louis Jolliet (French Canadian), Jacques Marquette (French), René-Robert Cavelier (French), Sieur de La Salle (French), Henri de Tonti (French) and Ensign George Ronan (soldier of the United States who fought against the natives in the Battle of Fort Dearborn in 1812).
288 And the same is in all the countries of this continent. The statues, names of countries such as Colombia, names of currencies such as the Colón, names of cities, and characters that appear on the dollar such as George Washington and Andrew Jackson are a tribute to the hatred, domination, subjugation and extermination of indigenous people. Screenshot of news headlined: United States police repressed indigenous protest against oil pipeline, according to ONU rapporteur. Some other phrases that show that the colonizers, regardless of their nationality, did feel hatred for the indigenous people and that the objective of colonization was to replace the indigenous people with whites and mestizos are: Christopher Columbus, Genoese explorer and colonizer: -The Indians are an abominable race and deserve to perish before the greatness of our civilization.
289 Thomas Jefferson, politician and president of the United States: -It is our sacred mission to remove the Indians from these lands and replace them with our own people. Gaspar de Villarroel, Spanish conquistador: -Indigenous blood is impure and contaminated. We must purify our lands by exterminating them. John Smith, English explorer and colonizer: -The natives are inferior beings destined to be dominated and exploited. They do not deserve any consideration. Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, Spanish explorer and conquistador: -The indigenous people are a primitive and backward race. We must erase their existence from the face of the earth. The following images represent the enslavement of indigenous people by the Spanish colonizers:
290 There are also video games that advocate the extermination and murder of indigenous people, such as: Red Dead Redemption 2.
291 Another example is the video game: Darkest of Days.
292 And there are video games where homage is paid to the colonization of this continent such as: Civilization IV Colonization, American Conquest, Expeditions Conquistador, Commander Conquest of the Americas, Conquistadores del Nuevo Mundo and others. Many people can say that these video games are simple entertainment, but if someone plays a video game about the hatred, subjugation, domination and extermination that indigenous people suffered in the past and suffer in the present, that says a lot about the kind of person. These video games are a way used by those in power to promote hatred and extermination of indigenous people, these video games are a crime because they feed hatred and genocide of indigenous people.
293 And while I am censored on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Amazon, the promotion of hatred and the extermination of indigenous people is never censored and the majority of humanity is complicit in this. In Mexico, an indigenous teacher named Carlos Alfredo Jiménez Olmedo was killed in the Las Bajadas Massacre in 2023. In Colombia, in 2022, three indigenous people from the Awá reservation were murdered.
294 In 2022, Damien Sanderson and Myles Sanderson stabbed 10 indigenous people to death on a reservation in Canada. The following are the photos of the murderers: From the photographs, the killers appear mixed race. The indigenous people should stop thinking that their enemies are only the majority of whites. In reality, the enemies of the indigenous are the majority of those who are not
295 indigenous: European whites, Creole whites, brown mestizos, white mestizos, a part of the blacks and other ethnic groups that are not indigenous. In Colombia, in 1967, the La Rubiera Massacre occurred, where criminals murdered 16 indigenous people. The following is a publication about the case titled: La Rubiera: 16 indigenous people were massacred and their murderers thought it was not a crime. In the 1932 Massacre that occurred in El Salvador, many indigenous people were killed by order of General Maximiliano Hernández Martínez. These indigenous people were killed for demanding the return of their ancestral territories. All those who are not indigenous live in the countries of this continent because of the massacres, genocides, exterminations and the theft of indigenous lands. Most have no forgiveness for their indifference and complicity. On March 11, 1887, in the San Antonio de Obligado Massacre, which occurred in Argentina, many indigenous people of the Qom and Mocoví ethnic groups were murdered by the criminal state of Argentina, by the army and the police.
296 In 1932, an indigenous genocide occurred in El Salvador, where General Maximiliano Hernández Martínez ordered the murder of between 25 000 and 32 000 indigenous people.
297 On the night of December 16, 1991, the Nile Massacre occurred in Colombia, where 20 indigenous people, including adults, men, women and children, were murdered. The following illustration represents one of the many massacres of indigenous people that have occurred in Brazil from the time of colonization to the present.
298 Before the Europeans invented Soccer, the Taínos had the ball game. The following illustration represents the game of the ball in the Tainos. Two centuries before the English regulated the game now called football in 1863 and created the Football Association, the Guarani indigenous people played Manga Ñembosarái, a game that consisted of hitting and controlling a ball made of tree resin with their feet.
299 Therefore, it can be affirmed that, to invent soccer, the Europeans based themselves on the ball game that many indigenous cultures practiced many centuries before. Although many racist and nefarious Europeans hate the indigenous people considering that colonization was a good thing and consider the colonizers as heroes. Many indigenous people, in their nobility, do not hate Europeans and are even fans of European soccer teams like Real Madrid and Barcelona because they love soccer. Even though many Argentines (not all) are despicable beings who believe they are superior because they are descended from Europeans, they are white supremacists, Nazis and totally indifferent to what the indigenous people suffer in Argentina today. The indigenous children of Argentina are fans of the Argentine soccer team and they celebrated with great happiness when Argentina won.
300 The hatred that the majority of the non-indigenous population feels consciously or unconsciously, even if they deny it for the indigenous, is completely irrational, since it is the non-indigenous who hate the indigenous, and not the indigenous those who hate those who are not indigenous. Blacks who are part of ethnic groups in Africa are also indigenous because indigenous means native and also, as in the case of pygmies, they suffer from the destruction of nature. What happens is that blacks who are part of indigenous ethnic groups are a minority just as Asians who are part of indigenous ethnic groups are a minority. Unfortunately, the majority of blacks and Asians are no longer part of indigenous ethnic groups, the majority are part of the white and mixed-race culture that pollutes and destroys the planet.