Kaliforniako genozidioa
Kaliforniako genozidioa | |
---|---|
Mota | genozidio |
Honen parte da | genocide of Indigenous peoples of the Americas (en) eta Native American genocide in the United States (en) |
Denbora-tarte | 1846 - 1871 |
Kokaleku | Kalifornia |
Herrialdea | Ameriketako Estatu Batuak |
Parte-hartzaileak | |
Pertsona hilak | 100.000 |
Pertsona zaurituak | 25.500 |
Kaliforniako genozidioa Estatu Batuetako gobernuko agenteek eta herritar batzuk XIX. mendean egindako ekintzak izan ziren, Kaliforniako (Mexiko) konkista estatubatuarraren ondoren, Kaliforniako populazio indigenaren beherakada dramatikoa eragin zuena. 1849 eta 1870 bitartean, Estatu Batuetako kolonoek Kaliforniako 9.500 biztanle inguru hil zituztela uste da modu kontserbadorean, eta esklabotza, bahiketa, bortxaketa, haurren banantzea eta lekualdatze ekintzak orokortu, bultzatu, gauzatu eta onartu egin zituzten estatuko agintariek eta miliziek.
1925eko "Handbook of the Indians of California" liburuak Kaliforniako indigenen populazioa 1848an 150.000 pertsonatik 1870ean 30.000 pertsonara jaitsi zela kalkulatu zuen, eta 1900ean 16.000 pertsonara jaitsi zela. Gaixotasunek, goseak eta sarraskiek eragin zuten murrizketa. Kaliforniako amerikarrak, batez ere urrearen sukarraren garaian, hilketen jomuga izan ziren. Kolonoek 24.000 eta 27.000 amerikar artean ere hartu zituzten lan behartuetarako. Kaliforniako estatuak bere erakundeak erabili zituen kolono zurien alde egiteko, eta bertakoen gonozidioaren arduraduna izan zen.
2000ko hamarkadatik hona, Ameriketako Estatu Batuetako hainbat erakunde akademiko eta aktibistak AEBek Kalifornia konkistatu ondorengo garaia lurraldean bizi ziren amerikarren aurkako genozidio gisa definitu dute, estatu mailako gobernuek eta gobernu federalak egindakoa. 2019an, Gavin Newsom Kaliforniako gobernadoreak barkamena eskatu zuen genozidioagatik, eta ikerketa talde bat osatzea eskatu zuen, gaia hobeto ulertzeko eta etorkizuneko belaunaldiei informazioa emateko.
Aurrekariak
[aldatu | aldatu iturburu kodea]Herri indigenak
[aldatu | aldatu iturburu kodea]Espainiarrak iritsi baino lehen, Kalifornia 300.000 indigenen bizilekua zela kalkulatzen da. Talderik handiena Chumash herria izan zen, 10.000 biztanle inguru zituena. Eskualdea oso anitza zen eta hizkuntza ezberdin asko hitz egiten ziren. Eremu honetan aniztasun handia egon zen arren, aurkikuntza arkeologikoek tribuen arteko gatazken ebidentzia gutxi erakusten dute.
Taldeak eremu eta lurralde partikularretara egokituta zeuden. Kaliforniako habitatek eta klimak bizitza basati ugari sostengatu zuten, untxiak, oreinak, arrain barietateak, frutak, sustraiak eta ezkurrak barne. Bertakoek, neurri handi batean, ehiztari-biltzaile bizimodua jarraitzen zuten, euren lurraldean zehar, urtaroetan zehar mugitzen zirelarik, elikagai mota ezberdinen bila.
Lenengo harremanak
[aldatu | aldatu iturburu kodea]Kaliforniako estatua eta genozidioa
[aldatu | aldatu iturburu kodea]Dokumentatutako sarraskien zerrenda
[aldatu | aldatu iturburu kodea]Orri honetako zati batzuk ez daude euskaraz Beraz, itzulpena behar dute. |
Urtea | Data | Izena | Oraingo kokapena | Deskribapena | Biktimak |
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1846 | Apirilak 6 | Sacramento River massacre | California | John C. Frémont kapitainaren gizonek Kaliforniako Sacramento ibaian zegoen indiar talde bati (Wintun ziurrenik) eraso zioten, 120 eta 200 indiar artean hilez. | 120–200 |
1846 | Maiatzak 12 | Klamath Lake massacre | California | John C. Frémont kapitainaren gizonek, Kit Carson buru zutela, Klamath indiar herrixka bati eraso zioten Klamath lakuaren ertzean, gutxienez 14 pertsona hilez. | 14+ |
1846 | Ekaina | Sutter Buttes massacre | California | John C. Frémont kapitainaren gizonek Sacramento ibaiaren ertzean zegoen arrantxeria bati eraso zioten Sutter Buttesetik gertu, zenbait indigena Patwin hilez. | 14+ |
1846 | Abendua | Pauma massacre | California | 11 Californio Rancho Pauman harrapatuak izan ziren, indiarrek zaldi lapur bezala hil zituztenak Warner Springsen, Kalifornian, Temeculako sarraskia eragin zuena. | 11 (kolono) |
1846 | Abendua | Temecula massacre | California | 33 to 40 Luiseño Indians killed in an ambush in revenge for the Pauma Massacre east of Temecula, California. | 33–40 |
1847 | Martxoa | Rancheria Tulea massacre | California | Esklabista zuriek errepresaliak hartzen dituzte esklabo baten ihesagatik, Tulea Arrantxerian bost indiar sarraskituz. | 5 |
1847 | Martxoak 29 | Kern and Sutter massacres | California | In response to a plea from White settlers to put an end to raids, U.S. Army Captain Edward Kern and rancher John Sutter led 50 men in attacks on three Indian villages. | 20 |
1847 | Ekainaren amaiera/uztailaren hasiera | Konkow Maidu slaver massacre | California | Slavers kill 12–20 Konkow Maidu Indians in the process of capturing 30 members of the tribe for the purpose of forced slavery. | 12–20 |
1850 | Maiatzak 15 | Bloody Island massacre | California | Nathaniel Lyon and his U.S. Army detachment of cavalry killed 60–100 Pomo people on Bo-no-po-ti island near Clear Lake, (Lake Co., California); they believed the Pomo had killed two Clear Lake settlers who had been abusing and murdering Pomo people. (The Island Pomo had no connections to the enslaved Pomo.) This incident led to a general outbreak of settler attacks against and mass killing of native people all over Northern California. The site is now California Registered Historical Landmark #427. | 60–100 |
1851 | Urtarrilak 11 | Mariposa War | California | The gold rush increased pressure on the Native Americans of California, because miners forced Native Americans off their gold-rich lands. Many were pressed into service in the mines; others had their villages raided by the army and volunteer militia. Some Native American tribes fought back, beginning with the Ahwahnechees and the Chowchilla in the Sierra Nevada and San Joaquin Valley leading a raid on the Fresno River post of James D. Savage, in December 1850. In retaliation Mariposa County Sheriff James Burney led local militia in an indecisive clash with the natives on January 11, 1851 on a mountainside near present-day Oakhurst, California. | 40+ |
1851 | Old Shasta Town | California | Miners killed 300 Wintu Indians near Old Shasta, California and burned down their tribal council meeting house. | 300 | |
1852 | Apirilak 23 | Bridge Gulch massacre | California | 70 American men led by Trinity County sheriff William H. Dixon killed more than 150 Wintu people in the Hayfork Valley of California, in retaliation for the killing of Col. John Anderson. | 150 |
1852 | Azaroa | Wright massacre | California | White settlers led by a notorious Indian hunter named Ben Wright massacred 41 Modocs during a "peace parley". | 41 |
1853 | Howonquet massacre | California | Californian settlers attacked and burned the Tolowa village of Howonquet, massacring 70 people. | 70 | |
1853 | Yontoket Massacre | California | A posse of settlers attacked and burned a Tolowa rancheria at Yontocket, California, killing 450 Tolowa during a prayer ceremony. | 450 | |
1853 | Achulet Massacre | California | White settlers launched an attack on a Tolowa village near Lake Earl in California, killing between 65 and 150 Indians at dawn. | 65–150 | |
1853 | Abenduaren 31 baino lehen | "Ox" incident | California | U.S. forces attacked and killed an unreported number of Indians in the Four Creeks area (Tulare County, California) in what was referred to by officers as "our little difficulty" and "the chastisement they have received". | |
1855 | Urtarrilak 22 | Klamath River massacres | California | In retaliation for the murder of six settlers and the theft of some cattle, whites commenced a "war of extermination against the Indians" in Humboldt County, California. | |
1856 | Martxoa | Shingletown | California | In reprisal for Indian stock theft, white settlers massacred at least 20 Yana men, women, and children near Shingletown, California. | 20 |
1856–1859 | Round Valley Settler Massacres | California | White settlers killed over a thousand Yuki Indians in Round Valley over the course of three years in an uncountable number of separate massacres. | 1,000+ | |
1859–1860 | Jarboe's War | California | White settlers calling themselves the "Eel River Rangers", led by Walter Jarboe, killed at least 283 Indian men and countless women and children in 23 engagements over the course of six months. They were reimbursed by the U.S. government for their campaign. | 283+ | |
1859 | Iraila | Pit River | California | White settlers massacred 70 Achomawi Indians (10 men and 60 women and children) in their village on the Pit River in California. | 70 |
1859 | Chico Creek | California | White settlers attacked a Maidu camp near Chico Creek in California, killing indiscriminately 40 Indians. | 40 | |
1860 | Ez da ezagutzen | Massacre at Bloody Rock | California | A group of 65 Yuki Indians were surrounded and massacred by white settlers at Bloody Rock, in Mendocino County, California. | 65 |
1860 | Otsailak 26 | Indian Island massacre | California | In three nearly simultaneous assaults on the Wiyot, at Indian Island, Eureka, Rio Dell, and near Hydesville, California, white settlers killed between 80 and 250 Wiyot in Humboldt County, California. Victims were mostly women, children, and elders, as reported by Bret Harte at Arcata newspaper. Other villages were massacred within two days. The main site is National Register of Historic Places in the United States #66000208. | 80–250 |
1863 | Apirilak 19 | Keyesville massacre | California | American militia and members of the California Volunteers cavalry killed 35 Tübatulabal men in Kern County, California. | 35 |
1863 | Abuztuak 28 | Konkow Trail of Tears | California | In August 1863 all Konkow Maidu were to be sent to the Bidwell Ranch in Chico and then be taken to the Round Valley Reservation at Covelo in Mendocino County. Any Indians remaining in the area were to be shot. Maidu were rounded up and marched under guard west out of the Sacramento Valley and through to the Coastal Range. 461 Native Americans started the trek, 277 finished. They reached the Round Valley on 18 September 1863. | 184 |
1864 | Oak Run massacre | California | California settlers massacred 300 Yana Indians who had gathered near the head of Oak Run, California for a spiritual ceremony. | 300 | |
1865 | Owens Lake massacre | California | To avenge the killing of a woman and child at Haiwai Meadows, White vigilantes attacked a Paiute camp on Owens Lake in California, killing about 40 men, women, and children. | 40 | |
1865 | Three Knolls massacre | California | White settlers massacred a Yana community at Three Knolls on the Mill Creek, California. | ||
1868 | Campo Seco | California | A posse of white settlers massacred 33 Yahis in a cave north of Mill Creek, California. | 33 | |
1871 | Kingsley Cave massacre | California | 4 settlers killed 30 Yahi Indians in Tehama County, California about two miles from Wild Horse Corral in the Ishi Wilderness. It is estimated that this massacre left only 15 members of the Yahi tribe alive. | 30 |