Compare The Devastation of the Indies by Bartolomé Las Casas, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Bartolomé Las Casas
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Five hundred years after Columbus's first voyage to the New World, the debate over the European impact on Native American civilization has grown more heated than ever. Among the first-and most insistent-voices raised in that debate was that of a Spanish priest, Bartolome de Las Casas, acquaintance of Cortes and Pizarro and shipmate of Velasquez on the voyage to conquer Cuba. In 1552, after forty years of witnessing-and opposing-countless acts of brutality in the new Spanish colonies, Las Casas returned to Seville, where he published a book that caused a storm of controversy that persists to the present day. The Devastation of the Indies is an eyewitness account of the first modern genocide, a story of greed, hypocrisy, and cruelties so grotesque as to rival the worst of our own century. Las Casas writes of men, women, and children burned alive ""thirteen at a time in memory of Our Redeemer and his twelve apostles"". He describes butcher shops that sold human flesh for dog food (""Give me a quarter of that rascal there"", one customer says, ""until I can kill some m | The Devastation of the Indies by Bartolomé Las Casas, Paperback | Indigo Chapters