The lunar eclipse that changed Jamaica forever.. (A fact-based,
fictional account)
by Bill
Evans
Tano
stood on a hillside trail overlooking a horseshoe-shaped
harbor where nearly nine years ago he had stood by his father's
side while they watched three strange sailing ships invade
their fishing grounds. The White Gods advanced in small
boats on the normally friendly Tainans, who were attempting
to defend their land and village from the shoreline. The
boats were full of crossbowmen who exacted a terrible toll
on the mainly defenseless Indians but it was the large,
man-eating dog of the booming bark and ferocious bite, that
terrified them the most. Tano and his family were Siboneys,
or "Rock Dwellers" and were the first inhabitants of this
beautiful land. They had arrived by canoe from the large
land to the north many centuries before. The Tainans, sometimes
called Arawaks, had captured and used the Siboneys as servants
after landing on this island from the South around 1000
BC.
The
Tainans were mostly just masters. They did, however, disrespect
the Siboneys in death when they took their bones and cast
them on the middens (refuse heap) along with pottery shards
and broken stone implements. This distressed Tano to no
end as even a common Tainan is carried into the bush and
stranded with some cassava and water when death approaches.
High-ranking Tainans, like the Cacique (Chief), would be
buried with ceremony in caves with selected body parts placed
in honored pottery bowls.
Tano
readjusted the bag over his shoulder that was full of captured
water birds. He was proud to be given the daily job of providing
birds to eat for his Cacique and other high ranking Tainans,
but mostly he just reveled in the hunt. He would first locate
some birds feeding in the slow moving water and would circle
upstream. There, he would float calabash gourds past the
wary birds until they lost interest in the intrusion. Tano
would then slip a gourd, having eyes and mouth openings,
over his head and submerge his body. Only the gourd would
appear above the waterline. He then simply floated next
to the feeding birds and grabbed their legs and pulled them
under to drown, then placed them into his sack. Today, Tano
got five birds before the rest of the flock became alarmed
and flew away. Tano received word to return to the village.
The White Gods had returned!
It
was May, 1503, and Christopher Columbus was completing his
4th, and final, voyage to the New World when he reasoned
that his two caravels were unfit to make the dangerous Atlantic
crossing. He decided to take his worm-eaten and battered
ships "Capitana" and "Santiago" to Hispanola for much needed
repairs when a tropical storm off the coast of Cuba made
him opt for Saint Jago (Jamaica), instead. He had claimed
the island for Spain after a crossbow massacre nearly nine
years ago. The storm damaged the already less than seaworthy
caravels. When he re-entered Santa Gloria, where he had
dispersed the hostile Tainans with a round of blank shot
on that earlier voyage, he could only stand by and watch
as the unrelenting sea water caused both caravels to settle
into the soft sand less than a bow's shot from the beach.
Columbus,
his brother Bartholomew and Columbus' son Ferdinand ordered
the sailors to gather materials from the beach to build
palm-thatched shelters on the decks of the hapless caravels.
The cabins were mostly unusable from the rising seawater.
He also sent word to the Cacique at the large nearby village
of Maima that he wanted to trade for some water and provisions.
Provisions were provided daily by the Cacique's followers
in exchange for ornaments and trinkets. However, the real
problem remained. How to get off the island!
Tano's
Cacique had ordered a group of servants to go to Maima and
assist in providing these White Gods with food and provisions
and that group included Tano. Tano was now 23 years old
and stood 5' 10" in height and was a giant compared to his
Tainan captors. Tainans were short, slight-built people
with coarse black hair and broad faces. Their most prominent
feature was a thick, flat forehead caused by having a board
strapped in place from early childhood. As a Tainan aged,
their family would start to tie cotton bands ever tighter
around the arms and legs causing them to be thinner and
more fragile below those straps. This non-combative body
style fit the mild and peaceful, simple and generous people.
The most grievous of crimes was theft where punishment meant
being pierced to death with a pointed stick. Tano placed
his small amount of belongings along with some cassava bread
and two calabashes full of water and reported to the Cacique's
large rectangular hut to meet the other travelers.
The two Siboneys who were joining Tano for the trip were
a skilled hunter and a skilled fisherman. The hunter owned
an alcos, a small, barkless dog, which he used to catch
the elusive utia, or coney, which is a medium to large rodent.
He also carried a net and noose to trap doves and snare
parrots. The fisherman used a remora (sucking fish) which
he skillfully placed in a school of fish so it could attach
itself to another fish, then be retrieved and used again
and again. He also carried a cast net to trap unsuspecting
fish who swam closest to shore. The Cacique emerged from
his hut and addressed the three hunters before beginning
their half-day journey to Maima. The Cacique blessed a Yocahuna
(male idol), wrapped it in a piece of colorful cloth and
placed it in a woven reed bag for transport to the Maima
Cacique as a tribute gift. He bid the group a safe journey
and then returned to his many wives in the thatched-roof
hut.
Tano
and his traveling companions walked the jagged beach until
the sharp rocks caused them to turn inland along a trail
used by messengers between the far flung villages. Soon,
the village of Maima came into view. Maima was the largest
Tainan village on the north coast. The men and unmarried
women were mostly naked except for an occasional palm leaf
or short, cotton, brightly colored skirt with a fiber waistband.
Many of the villagers wore tattoos, ornaments and necklaces
of beads for decoration and walked around smoking cigars
made from wraps of dried cohiba plant. Others were smoking
a tobacco pipe, which contained the cohiba plant that they
smoked until they were rendered unconscious. Tano and the
men were escorted to the Maima Cacique's house where they
joined three of the chief's men to go to the shore to take
provisions to the White Gods.
Columbus
watched from the deck of the Capitana as the six Indians
approached, laden with provisions. Through the spyglass,
Columbus noticed that three of the Indians did not have
flat foreheads and were taller than the other three and
he found that curious. Columbus sent a rowboat ashore and
his sailors loaded the provisions while giving the Indian
representatives some trinkets and small personal items from
the sailors, like a knife and a sewing needle. Columbus
continued to watch the group as they made their way back
to the village and focused his attention on Tano. Perhaps
someday he would like to know more about this young man
but he had a more pressing problem at this time. After eating
a good meal, Columbus called his sailors together and asked
for volunteers to go to Hispanola by dugout canoe. Only
Diego Mendez came forward, to be later joined by Bartolome
Fieschi, to attempt the perilous journey. They purchased
a dugout canoe, provisions for the long crossing and some
paddlers from the Cacique in exchange for a hawk's bell,
pair of scissors and a looking glass. Bartholomew went along
till they reached the east end of the island and watched
them fade out of sight before returning to Santa Gloria
to hope beyond hope.
Weeks
turned into months and Tano's working position had changed
- he was now a part-time personal servant to the Cacique.
The White Gods ate twelve times more per day than the average
Tainan and the Cacique was tiring of the trinkets and useless
goods. The waterfowl and birds were becoming scarce and
the hunters needed to range farther from the village with
their alcos to capture the elusive utia. The Cacique sent
for Columbus to discuss the situation. When Columbus approached
the village, he noticed the Cacique had a large group of
villagers in front of his hut where they were listening
to a zeme (carved idol) speaking to the group. From his
position behind the hut, he noticed the tall Indian he had
seen on the beach talking into a bamboo tube connected to
the back of the carved idol. Columbus decided not to reveal
the deception, as he did not want to destabilize the Cacique's
position with his people. Columbus noticed that the Cacique
and his followers we not treating him and his men like the
White Gods they once were and that was worrying him a lot.
He
decided to trade for several canoes and provisions to be
ready for the day when he and his men might have to leave
to save their lives. The meeting was finished. The Cacique
ordered Tano and some other servants to carry the canoes
and provisions over to the beach where the ships were stranded.
Mutiny!
Francisco and Diego Porras and scores of disgruntled sailors
seized the canoes and provisions from the beach in the pre-dawn
hours. They kidnapped about one hundred of the villagers
necessary to paddle the canoes in an attempt to reach Hispanola.
They barely had cleared the east end of the island when
a large storm approached. The sailors frantically tossed
some paddlers overboard to lighten the load. When the terrified
Indians clung to the side of the canoes, the sailors chopped
off their hands with a cutlass and left them to die in the
shark infested waters. The Porras brothers and their followers,
having little choice, decided to return and throw themselves
on the mercy of Columbus and his sailors. Columbus forgave
the sailors for their action but imprisoned the Porras brothers
in a storeroom on the Capitana. Now Columbus and his men
had no more boats or provisions and the Indians did not
want more useless trinkets. The Tainans had decided that
these White Gods were no longer powerful and their Cacique
began plotting how to kill them. The tension was thick in
the air as Columbus and his men knew their days on Saint
Jago were numbered. Columbus decided to play his one last
trump card.
During
the early moonlit evening, the Maima Cacique gathered a
group of Siboney servants, including Tano, in front of his
hut and ordered them to prepare for an attack on Columbus
and his men. The attack would take place when they left
the relative safety of their caravels the next morning to
forage for food. Just at that time, Columbus and a few sailors
boldly entered Maima. Columbus loudly told the Cacique that
the God he worshipped was angry with the Tainans for stopping
the provisions. He continued by threatening to turn the
moon to blood to show the God's power. Columbus' timing
was perfect as the lunar eclipse began just as the astronomy
book had predicted. The Tainans were terrified and cried
in fear. They begged Columbus to plead to his God on their
behalf. The Indians quickly promised to never let Columbus
and his sailors want for anything. So, when the moon began
to reappear, the Indians were overjoyed and deeply thankful.
Columbus
surveyed the cowering crowd and saw the new respect and
reverences that he desired in the eyes of all except for
Tano who refused to bow his head. Tano realized that this
was the end of the end. This "cosmic event" sealed the Indian's
fate as their complete extinction took only a few more generations.
Columbus and most of his sailors were eventually rescued.
Spain's domination over Saint Jago was later replaced by
England's colonial rule over Jamaica that continued over
the next four hundred years.
Respect
Bill Evans
Need
help in planning your adventure travel while in Jamaica.
Feel free to email me at the following addresses : accompong98@yahoo.com
OR accompong2000@aol.com
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