Brief History Of The Caribs

Columbus' blundering 'discovery' in 1492 had him believing he had discovered East India and hence he called the aborigines he encountered, Indians". The "Carib Indian" was first introduced to the "civilized" world, by Christopher Columbus when he made his second trip to the 'New World' in 1495. In that year, Columbus had landed in Guadaloupe, where he 'discovered' the Caribs, whose fierce reputation had preceded them. Their reputation as fiercely strong warriors was well known by the other aborigines, who had dutifully informed Columbus about them.

The palm of physical superiority and intelligence is to be awarded to the Caribs. They are without doubt the most robust, and the most intelligent of those in Venezuela. Not only this, I am inclined to consider them the superiors of all the Indians of South America. Vespucci too speaks of them as "Magnae Sapientiae viri" - Men of superior strength and valor. -- Exploracion Official by Sr. F. M. Rojas, p. 54

The Caribs were indeed a breed apart from the Indians. They did not succumb easily or quickly to the Europeans nor to anyone else. By the sixteenth century, they had conquered numerous territory in South America and the Caribbean where they could be found as far north as Puerto Rico. These Caribs were great warriors and were such a thorn in the side of the European settlers that the Europeans did everything they could to overcome them.

The Caribs were the last of the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean and South America to be overcome by the Europeans (1635). Henceforth, the Europeans, primarily the British, deemed it necessary to decree that the Caribs were too uncivilized and dangerous and must be removed from their homes and banished as far away as possible.

Red & Black Caribs Of The Caribbean

Today, the red Caribs are the descendants of the original Caribs and the European settlers. The Black Caribs today, have a much more colorful history and are the descendants of the original Caribs and African slaves. History states how the Caribs would attack slave ships and release the slaves, killing the crew. They did this to annoy the European settlers. It is said that the Caribs became allies of the runaway slaves and gave them shelter. Soon, a new race was born - the 'Black Carib'. One can see how it would have behooved the runaway slaves to adopt the language, customs and way of life of the Caribs. This new race of Caribs is today known as the Garifuna (singular) or Garinagu (plural).

Red Caribs have virtually disappeared: exterminated en masse by the Early Explorers, decimated by disease and displacement, and extinguished through assimilation. There are a few descendants of the original Red Caribs still living in Dominica today. However, they have lost much of their customs and language. A small number of Black Caribs have survived and have clung tenaciously to their old beliefs, customs and language. Their culture is very much alive, although constantly threatened with extinction by the youth who prefer to assimilate into and adopt Western culture.

Where Are The Garinagu? (Black Caribs)

By 1635, the Caribs had occupied large portions of territory in South America and almost all of the Windward Islands. Little by little, the Europeans wrestled control of the lands from the Caribs. The clincher came in 1748 when Britain and France signed the Treaty of Aix La Chapelle and used it as justification to settle land they had agreed was to be Carib land. By 1797, the Garinagu numbered a few thousand and were virtually homeless.

In March of 1797, a great manhunt ensued in which the Garinagu were hunted and rounded up like cattle from the Islands. The British then placed them aboard several ships and sent them out to the mercy of the sea and whomever would take pity on them. By unjustly and falsely accusing the Garinagu of cannibalism, the British had ensured that no one would want to aid them.

Eventually, the Garinagu arrived and settled in Roatan Island in the Bay of Honduras. When the Spaniards (who controlled Honduras, saw that they were honest, hardworking and not at all what the British had branded them as, they were allowed to stay. Within a few years they had migrated to the coastal communities of Central America where they can still be found today. Major communities of Garinagu exist today in Belize, Honduras and Guatemala, although many have migrated to the U.S. and elsewhere.