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Amerindian Women

Decent Essays

The stand of the Church and sexual violence against Amerindian women.
During the Spanish conquest and the early colonization and missionization of Alta California many problems arose from violence directed towards native women. Today we will discuss, how they were viewed and treated by many of Spanish men, and how the church viewed and reacted to the violence against these women.
In the early eighteenth century, Spain had their eyes set on the Western territory in the Americas. They created missions in locations that would later end up the areas of California and Texas. Each time that a new mission was founded new reports of violence against natives rose. In Castaneda’s article she talks in great detail about the horrible actions taken by the soldiers," The native people were resisting missionization. Some were becoming warlike and hostile because of the soldiers' repeated disrespect against the women. The assaults resulted in Amerindian attacks, which the soldiers countered with unwarranted attacks, …show more content…

Castaneda sums up the practice by asserting that, “under conditions of war and conquest, rape is a form of national terrorism, subjugation, and humiliation, where in the sexual violation of women represents both physical domination of women and the symbolic castration of the men of the conquered group” (MP 53). This point of view contrasts that of the missionaries and points to the slightly hypocritical nature of colonial missions. While the priests like Father Luis Jayme see the assaults as expressions of bad behavior, the soldier view it as an act of dominance. In the second story by Father Luis Jayme, the soldiers assaulted the women because they refused to give them pots. The disrespect of the native women provided for Spanish dominance in California and in other areas of colonial enterprise in Eighteenth century North America and

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