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The Tainos in the D.R. The Taino culture can be defined between the 800 and 1,500 A.D. Earlier, other groups from the same ethnic roots lived in the Antilles, but the culture’s pinnacle of social development and the most significant evidence left of this culture was found after the arrival of the last group of immigrants from the Orinoco-Amazon basin.The Tainos left in canoes from Colombia and Venezuela and one by one colonized the Minor Antilles until arriving to Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Santo Domingo and Cuba. When Christopher Columbus arrived, he found this culture on the island, the first culture that gave the conquistadors an idea of the new continent they had discovered for Europe. Nothing could be further from reality. The aborigines of Hispaniola lived naked, but not because they did not know how to weave or because they did not recognize clothing, but because they simply did not consider it necessary to weigh down their existence with heavy and unhygienic clothing, which suffocated the Europeans in the heat of the tropics. They had their own religion, adorned with myths and fantastical stories, but no more than the stories of the famed Greek mythology. They did not have the competitive and materialistic spirit of the conquistadors, nor did they appreciate the value of gold, and pondered if the mineral was something that could be considered negative. This vice of considering ourselves better than other human groups that were technically less evolved is called ethnocentrism, and in its name, more genocides have been carried out than for any other known cause. The sad reality is that, in addition to their exaggerated ethnocentrism, the colonizers dared to present the Taino culture negatively to the kings of Spain and to European society in general, in order to justify the taking the native people into slavery. In this way, they succeeded in convincing Isabella of Castille to authorize the entrusting of groups of Indians to the colonizers to educate and indoctrinate them in the Catholic faith. The good intentions of the queen, who always considered the natives of Hispaniola as free subjects, were used to subject the Tainos to slavery and, in the end, caused their extermination. Despite the lack of understanding the conquistadors had for the Tainos, there was Catalan priest, Friar Ramón Pane, that was commissioned by Christopher Columbus to study and produce a report on the religion and customs of those mistakenly dubbed “Indians”. A document was born, fruit of the long years in which Friar Ramón lived with the natives, which is now lost in its original version, and named “Story of the Antiquities of the Indians”, a very Taino bible, which contained a number of mythological tales. The first settlers of the island arrived around a quarter of a millennium before Christ. They were hunters and lived in caves. Their utensils were made of sharpened stone and we know very little about them. In all probability, they were the first to record images on the rocks at the entrances of the caves. In a much later period, around the fourth century before Christ, the first migration of agricultural people arrived. They came from the basin of the Orinoco and Amazon river; they brought their technique for producing ceramic pieces and were a part of the Arawak ethnicity. Over the centuries, they continued to occupy the Antillean arc island by island until they one day disembarked on the coasts of Santo Domingo. These settlers probably painted in the caves, but did not live in them, as they had wooden houses, bohíos. Later, possibly around 800 A.D., a new migration of Arawak peoples arrived to the island. These people were, together with the descendants of the first agricultural Arawak migration to the island, those that seven centuries later would face the arrival of the Spanish to the Caribbean islands. . ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
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