Latin America is preparing to
settle accounts with its white settler elite
The political movements and protests sweeping the continent
- from Bolivia to Venezuela - are as much about race as
class
By Richard Gott
11/15/06 "The
Guardian" -- - The recent explosion of
indigenous protest in Latin America, culminating in the
election this year of Evo Morales, an Aymara indian, as
president of Bolivia, has highlighted the precarious
position of the white-settler elite that has dominated the
continent for so many centuries. Although the term "white
settler" is familiar in the history of most European
colonies, and comes with a pejorative ring, the whites in
Latin America (as in the US) are not usually described in
this way, and never use the expression themselves. No
Spanish or Portuguese word exists that can adequately
translate the English term.
Latin America is traditionally seen as a continent set apart
from colonial projects elsewhere, the outcome of its long
experience of settlement since the 16th century. Yet it
truly belongs in the history of the global expansion of
white-settler populations from Europe in the more recent
period. Today's elites are largely the product of the
immigrant European culture that has developed during the two
centuries since independence.
The characteristics of the European empires' white-settler
states in the 19th and 20th centuries are well known. The
settlers expropriated the land and evicted or exterminated
the existing population; they exploited the surviving
indigenous labour force on the land; they secured for
themselves a European standard of living; and they treated
the surviving indigenous peoples with extreme prejudice,
drafting laws to ensure they remained largely without
rights, as second- or third-class citizens.
Latin America shares these characteristics of "settler
colonialism", an evocative term used in discussions about
the British empire. Together with the Caribbean and the US,
it has a further characteristic not shared by Europe's
colonies elsewhere: the legacy of a non-indigenous slave
class. Although slavery had been abolished in much of the
world by the 1830s, the practice continued in Latin America
(and the US) for several decades. The white settlers were
unique in oppressing two different groups, seizing the land
of the indigenous peoples and appropriating the labour of
their imported slaves.
A feature of all "settler colonialist" societies has been
the ingrained racist fear and hatred of the settlers, who
are permanently alarmed by the presence of an expropriated
underclass. Yet the race hatred of Latin America's settlers
has only had a minor part in our customary understanding of
the continent's history and society. Even politicians and
historians on the left have preferred to discuss class
rather than race.
In Venezuela, elections in December will produce another win
for Hugo Chávez, a man of black and Indian origin. Much of
the virulent dislike shown towards him by the opposition has
been clearly motivated by race hatred, and similar hatred
was aroused the 1970s towards Salvador Allende in Chile and
Juan Perón in Argentina. Allende's unforgivable crime, in
the eyes of the white-settler elite, was to mobilise the
rotos, the "broken ones" - the patronising and derisory name
given to the vast Chilean underclass. The indigenous origins
of the rotos were obvious at Allende's political
demonstrations. Dressed in Indian clothes, their affinity
with their indigenous neighbours would have been apparent.
The same could be said of the cabezas negras - "black heads"
- who came out to support Perón.
This unexplored parallel has become more apparent as
indigenous organisations have come to the fore, arousing the
whites' ancient fears. A settler spokesman, Mario Vargas
Llosa, the Peruvian-now-Spanish novelist, has accused the
indigenous movements of generating "social and political
disorder", echoing the cry of 19th-century racist
intellectuals such as Colonel Domingo Sarmiento of
Argentina, who warned of a choice between "civilisation and
barbarism".
Latin America's settler elites after independence were
obsessed with all things European. They travelled to Europe
in search of political models, ignoring their own countries
beyond the capital cities, and excluding the majority from
their nation-building project. Along with their imported
liberal ideology came the racialist ideas common among
settlers elsewhere in Europe's colonial world. This racist
outlook led to the downgrading and non-recognition of the
black population, and, in many countries, to the physical
extermination of indigenous peoples. In their place came
millions of fresh settlers from Europe.
Yet for a brief moment during the anti-colonial revolts of
the 19th century, radical voices took up the Indian cause. A
revolutionary junta in Buenos Aires in 1810 declared that
Indians and Spaniards were equal. The Indian past was
celebrated as the common heritage of all Americans, and
children dressed as Indians sang at popular festivals. Guns
cast in the city were christened in honour of Tupac Amaru
and Mangoré, famous leaders of Indian resistance. In Cuba,
early independence movements recalled the name of Hatuey,
the 16th-century cacique, and devised a flag with an Indian
woman entwined with a tobacco leaf. Independence supporters
in Chile evoked the Araucanian rebels of earlier centuries
and used Arauco symbols on their flags. Independence in
Brazil in 1822 brought similar displays, with the white
elite rejoicing in its Indian ancestry and suggesting that
Tupi, spoken by many Indians, might replace Portuguese as
the official language.
The radicals' inclusive agenda sought to incorporate the
Indian majority into settler society. Yet almost immediately
this strain of progressive thought disappears from the
record. Political leaders who sought to be friendly with the
indigenous peoples were replaced by those anxious to
participate in the global campaign to exterminate indigenous
peoples. The British had already embarked on that task in
Australia and South Africa, and the French took part after
1830 when they invaded Algeria.
Latin America soon joined in. The purposeful extermination
of indigenous peoples in the 19th century may well have been
on a larger scale than anything attempted by the Spanish and
the Portuguese in the earlier colonial period. Millions of
Indians died because of a lack of immunity to European
diseases, yet the early colonists needed the Indians to grow
food and to provide labourers. They did not have the same
economic necessity to make the land free from Indians that
would provoke the extermination campaigns on other
continents in the same era. The true Latin American
holocaust occurred in the 19th century.
The slaughter of Indians made more land available for
settlement, and between 1870 and 1914 five million Europeans
migrated to Brazil and Argentina. In many countries the
immigration campaigns continued well into the 20th century,
sustaining the hegemonic white-settler culture that has
lasted to this day.
Yet change is at last on the agenda. Recent election results
have been described, with some truth, as a move to the left,
since several new governments have revived progressive
themes from the 1960s. Yet from a longer perspective these
developments look more like a repudiation of Latin America's
white-settler culture, and a revival of that radical
tradition of inclusion attempted two centuries ago. The
outline of a fresh struggle, with a final settling of
accounts, can now be discerned.
· This article is based on the third annual SLAS lecture,
given to the Society for Latin American Studies in October.
Richard Gott is the author of
Cuba: A New History
(Yale
University Press) - Rwgott@aol.com
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