Was
Columbus a Jew?
and Other Tales of Political Incorrectness in American
Textbooks
by
William Marina
by William Marina
October
12th, the Discovery. It was nice to have known America, it might
have been better not to.
~
Mark Twain, Puddenhead
Wilson
Twain was too
early on to have to deal with "political correctness," but we must
now say it is 513 years today since Columbus "encountered" America.
The recent death of Simon Wiesenthal, the great Nazi hunter, who
was a famous fan of the view that Cristobal Colon was a Jew, reminded
me of my own views on that theory, which occurred along with my
own first "encounter" with political correctness.
In 1975, I
was asked by Robert Hoffman, a publisher himself, and the son of
Sylvan Hoffman, the originator of an American history in the format
of a newspaper, News of the Nation, to become the Associate
Editor of a new edition of the book. The first edition, published
in 1953 had been a Book-of-the-Month selection, the subject of high
praise in a "My Day" column by Eleanor Roosevelt, and had sold widely
as a textbook as well.
The publisher,
Prentice-Hall sent me a book containing all of the politically correct
grammar already in vogue by then. I cut out about a third of the
old edition, added new pieces on cultural and social history, as
well as bringing the book up to date, I had, beyond Bob, about a
half dozen various editors at P-H, who were looking over all of
the hundreds of articles I produced.
Amazingly,
there were only two of my articles that caused a bit of a controversy.
One detailed how after the War with Mexico, Hispanics in the southwest
had been deprived of their property, and the efforts of the Justice
Dept. to rectify that injustice. It was deemed too permeated with
notions of Marxism and class conflict. I gave in to the majority
when it became clear that they had no understanding of libertarian
class theory and property rights.
The second
involved Colon. The first edition carried a story entitled, "Fourteen
Italian Cities Claim Columbus," which I suggested be replaced by
a piece called "Was Columbus a Jew?" I was especially excited
by the opportunity this offered in the Teacher's Guide to introduce
the teachers to some of the exciting literature that existed on
this subject. Most of the editors were themselves Jews, but I was
again overridden, not because my research was wrong, but because
no one wanted to offend any Italian-American readers. Oh well, 2
out of maybe 400 ain't bad!
For those in
doubt about the question of Columbus, I recommend, especially, Salvador
de Madariaga's classic, Christopher
Columbus: Being the Life of the Very Magnificent Lord, Don Cristobal
Colon (1940), but, these days try googling "Columbus+Jews"
as well, along with other variations. In the turmoil of the Inquisition,
Colon's family had left Spain for Genoa, but he continued to use
Spanish and as a young man fought with the French against Genoa.
He began his
diary at the time of the expulsion of the Jews early in 1492, and
his log was later kept in the Jewish calendar. It was the Jewish
bankers around Ferdinand, himself of Jewish ancestry, who financed
the expedition with a motive of finding some opportunity for the
Jews. Sephardics did come to the New World, and it is perhaps no
accident that the Cubans were known as the Jews of the Caribbean.
My point is
not to attempt to build that case here, that has been done in a
number of books, but to ask, why has this information, even as controversy,
not made its way into American textbooks? I am less concerned with
political correctness than with accuracy.
The same thing
is true, for example, with one of the central events in our history,
the American Revolution. David McCullough has just published a book,
1776, detailing the military events of that year. In testimony before
the Congress, and in a number of radio and television appearances,
he has complained about the poor quality of American textbooks,
arguing that we need more good, narrative history to catch the interest
of our students.
I would not
argue with that, assuming the facts are correct, but would only
add that the real problem is a lack of perspective. McCullough needs
to begin by examining his own statements and assumptions. It is
a trivial error to refer to Abigail Adams and the historian, Mercy
Otis Warren, as "good friends," when they were actually also cousins,
but one expects accuracy from someone who wrote a book on Abigail
and her husband.
In each of
those same appearances, and in his recent book, he noted, one time
mentioning John Adams' name, that only a minority of the American
people supported the Revolution. Nowhere does he ever document that
statement. If that were true, then the Revolution was simply an
elite coup. There is a great deal of evidence to suggest otherwise,
but McCullough is just plain wrong in attributing that one-third
notion to John Adams, although it is found in a number of American
books, even recent ones.
In News
of the Nation we devoted an article to refuting that idea, based
upon an article I had done earlier, "The
American Revolution and the Minority Myth."
In short, there
is a great deal more deplorable about American textbooks than how
they deal with Evolution! We might start by dealing honestly about
who Colon really was, as well as the nature of the American Revolution.
Until historians begin to do so, it is useless to complain about
the historical ignorance of a public that is susceptible to the
incredible historical mendacity of so many of our political leaders.
October
13, 2005
William
Marina [send him mail]
is Professor Emeritus in History at Florida Atlantic University,
a Research Fellow of the Independent Institute, Oakland, CA, and
Executive Director of the Marina-Huerta Educational Foundation.
He lives in Asheville, NC. This article originally appeared on the
History News Network.
Copyright
© 2005 History News Network
William
Marina Archives
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