CUNY Exhibition: Black Africans in Early DR

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AlterEgo

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Those of you in the NY area might be interested in this. I post it as information only, and because DR1 rules do not permit racial discussion this thread will not be open to comments/discussion.

CUNY Exhibition Documents Lives of Black Africans in Early Dominican Republic
By SANDRA E. GARCIA
JULY 13, 2015

Scholars at the City University of New York are using clues left in 16th-century manuscripts and Spanish records to track the lives of the earliest black Africans in the Dominican Republic.

An exhibition now on view of letters and other documents from the archives of CUNY’s Dominican Studies Institute and the General Archives of the Indies in Seville, Spain, provides a window onto the lives of the often ignored black Africans of La Espa?ola, the island of Hispaniola.

In the exhibition, “16th-Century La Espa?ola: Glimpses of the First Blacks in the Early Colonial Americas,” 25 panels display photos of an original letter or record, along with an English translation, that explain or question situations involving formerly enslaved Africans on the island.

When searching the archives, Anthony Stevens-Acevedo, the assistant director of the Dominican Studies Institute, focused on keywords like “mulatto,” “negro” and “negra,” he said.

In a letter from the Seville archives, an archbishop in Santo Domingo responded to a letter he had received from King Carlos II of Spain. The archbishop described a hut or shack where a black woman “took in the sick people and attempted to heal them or cure them,” Mr. Stevens-Acevedo said.

The woman was described as pious and poor, and the archbishop wrote that before she opened her hut there were no hospitals in Santo Domingo. Later, where her hut had stood, the San Nicolas of Bari Hospital was erected. The hospital, a two-story structure, was impressive at the time, Mr. Stevens-Acevedo said.

Another artifact, a page from a judiciary record filed by a prosecutor in 1694, documents colonists who were selling commodities smuggled into what is now the Dominican Republic.

One of those “commodities” was a black man, Sebastian, described as “Ladino,” which meant he was “knowledgeable of the Spanish culture,” Mr. Stevens-Acevedo said. He had been working as a sailor on a Portuguese ship that was seized by pirates, and he was considered property.

Sebastian testified that he should not be enslaved, that he was a free man in Africa. He claimed to be the son of a king in Guinea.

Other accounts are requests from people who described themselves as having black skin for licenses to travel from Spain to the Dominican Republic “to attend to their parents and their hacienda,” said Lissette Acosta Corniel, a postdoctoral fellow who worked on the exhibition. Some of the requests were approved, and many freed black Africans were allowed to return to Hispaniola.

Ms. Corniel said she hoped the exhibition “nurtures the consideration that above all Dominicans have a common history of blackness.”

That theme has been underlined recently by the controversy over a 2014 immigration law in the Dominican Republic that has left many Dominicans of Haitian descent in limbo and stateless.

“Both nations share a common history for liberation and struggle for social justice,” Ms. Corniel said. “The realization of this is going to take generations to come.”

A version of this article appears in print on July 14, 2015, on page A18 of the New York edition with the headline: Telling Stories of First Blacks to Live in Dominican Republic.

http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/dsi/sixteenth-century-la-espanola-exhibit.cfm

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/14/n...in-early-dominican-republic.html?ref=nyregion
 
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