Disney's Carib Indian cannibals deserve boycott
Posted: April 14, 2005 by: Editors Report / Indian Country Today
Walt Disney Pictures is premising its sequel to its film ''Pirates
of the Caribbean'' on the supposed cannibalism of Carib Indians.
This is disgusting. It is a bit beyond the time when the present-day children of the Carib people of the Antilles need to be hit in the face, one more time, with the wanton and highly-disputed idea that they descend from cannibals.
Leaders from at least three communities of Caribs - Salybia in
Dominica, Santa Rosa in Trinidad and a community in St. Vincent -
have registered their strong objections to Disney executives, who
have not responded in any positive way to the critique.
Scholars and others are adding their voices to the challenge.
While the controversy over the Caribs' alleged cannibalism is as old
as the conquest of the Americas, most observers agree that the
Disney movie, slated for worldwide audiences, is beyond the pale as
a vehicle to inculcate the historical stereotype upon even more
generations of Carib and Caribbean children.
Filming of the sequel is scheduled to begin this month in Dominica.
Its predecessor, the first production in the ''Pirates of the
Caribbean'' series, was a 2003 blockbuster that grossed $653 million
worldwide. Some 3,000 Caribs live in the Carib territory on the
island of Dominica, which has a population of 70,000. Tens of
thousands of Carib descendants, now known as Garifuna, live on the
coasts of Belize, Honduras and Guatemala, as well as in the North
American diaspora.
Chief Charles Williams of the Carib community in Dominica has
denounced the concept of his people being depicted as cannibals.
This stereotype has ''stigmatized'' Caribs for 500 years and is
still used both as a form of personal insult and as justification
for mistreating his people, Williams said; the movie will further
''popularize'' the historical insult against his people.
Among other Native leaders, the chief of the Carib community at
Arima in Trinidad, Ricardo Bharath, also strongly condemned the
planned movie. He was joined by Adonis Christo, the community's
shaman or medicine man. The oral tradition among their people
doesn't support cannibalism as a historical fact, they asserted.
''Do you want to know who the real cannibals are?'' Bharath asked
the Inter Press Service. ''They are the ones in modern-day society
who are eating down our mountains, raping the environment, polluting
the waters,'' he said. Stated Christo: ''Our people defended their
families and friends. They defended their homes. They defended their
lands.''
There are early references by Europeans to ritual cannibalism among
the first encounters with the Caribs. But Brinsley Samaroo, head of
the History department of the St. Augustine campus of the University
of the West Indies, is among those who believe the claim is largely
a European i mntion of ''manufactured history.''
In the historical record, one finds a letter from a Dr. Chanca, who
accompanied Christopher Columbus during his second voyage to the
Caribbean. Chanca speculated that some young men held prisoners by a
Carib group were being fattened to the slaughter for feasting.
Neither the wanton killing and rape by Spanish colonists of the
first group of Caribs encountered - recorded during the same trip by
others on the ship - nor the Caribs' fierce, valiant defense of
their territories and people are apparently proper subjects for a
Disney movie.
The St. Vincent and the Grenadines Historical and Archaeological
Society has called for a boycott of the sequel by moviegoers if
Disney does not modify the script. Paul Lewis, the society
secretary, charged that perpetuating the image of Caribs as
cannibals sets back a serious effort in the region to provide a
more ''honest share of [Caribbean] history'' to the indigenous
people.
The governments of St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Dominica, who
will benefit somewhat from the production activities in their
countries, have not objected. In fact, the tourism minister of
Dominica has defended the proposed film, which would bring some
economic benefits to people on the island and which is, as he put it,
only a ''work of fiction.''
Some Caribs, as can be expected, have applied for work as extras in
the movie, a fact that has made some crow that this somehow
exonerates Disney for its production. But that is all just public
relations. Reality is that a huge company like Disney should know
better in 2005 than to besmirch a living people with its most
negative historical stereotype.
Clearly, Disney moviemakers need to consider the negative impacts of
the dramatic storylines they choose to project to such a huge
audience. It is not acceptable to create and recreate villains out
of Native people while exulting and romanticizing the lives of
pirates who in real life were murderers and thieves without regard
for anyone. Call it what you may, ''fiction'' or dramatic or poetic
license, it smacks of racism to us.
Indian Country
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Today April 14, 2005. All Rights Reserved
Special thanks to Glenn Welker for providing this information.
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Last updated on April 22, 2005