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American Historia, Ep. 01 - Echoes of Empires
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
View on the Pragda STREAM site
Join host John Leguizamo as he examines the accomplishments and rise of the Great Empires and civilizations in Mexico, South America and the Caribbean, from the Taino to the Olmec, Inca, Maya, Aztec, and more. Although they were ultimately decimated by the conquistadors, these societies had an enduring influence on culture, agriculture, and the sciences.
Series Description:
Join creator and host John Leguizamo on a quest to uncover Latino and Latina heroes and their contributions. In this new three-part series, John takes viewers on a captivating journey, delving into both well-known and lesser-known stories of Latino history, spanning thousands of years, from the Ancient Empires to the present, and shining a light on the rich and often overlooked history of Latinos.
“It serves as a corrective for the fact that 87% of Latino contributions to making America are absent in history textbooks.” - Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press
"John Leguizamo is tired of the omission of Latino stories in American history. And he is doing something about it … again." - Andrea Flores, LA Times
A panoramic, kaleidoscopic landscape exalting the centuries‑long contributions of Latinos … a colorful, dramatic and illuminating cinematic wall mural.” - Latin Heat
"With expert knowledge from historians, anthropologists, authors...the series hopes to assert the long-standing existence of Latinos in the U.S. and their contributions." - Andrea Flores, LA Times
Citation
Main credits
DeJesus, Ben (film director)
Leguizamo, John (creator)
Leguizamo, John (host)
Andrade, Edgar (film producer)
Kay, Ariel (film producer)
Kay, Ariel (screenwriter)
Perez, Hugo (screenwriter)
Other credits
Cinematography, Chris Ungco; editing, Ryan Gifford; music, Chris Hajian & Gary Rottger.
Distributor subjects
History; Culture + Identity; Migration Studies; North America; Latinx; Race + Ethnicity; Indigenous Peoples; SociologyKeywords
WEBVTT
00:00:09.343 --> 00:00:13.156
You know, when I was growing up
in Jackson Heights, Queens,
00:00:13.180 --> 00:00:14.449
I learned the same history
00:00:14.473 --> 00:00:16.535
that they taught kids
all over America.
00:00:16.559 --> 00:00:20.121
That George Washington
cut down his cherry tree,
00:00:20.145 --> 00:00:22.791
that Ben Franklin flew his kite,
00:00:22.815 --> 00:00:24.543
and Abe was honest.
00:00:24.567 --> 00:00:25.586
Guess what was missing?
00:00:25.610 --> 00:00:30.364
Us, the Latino contributions
to this country.
00:00:31.281 --> 00:00:33.468
Colón: You can\'t have
a history book
00:00:33.492 --> 00:00:34.302
about the United States
00:00:34.326 --> 00:00:36.012
without considering
the histories
00:00:36.036 --> 00:00:37.765
of all of the Latino
communities.
00:00:37.789 --> 00:00:39.600
Most of the history
we\'re still taught
00:00:39.624 --> 00:00:42.937
is from the point of view
of the conquistadors
00:00:42.961 --> 00:00:45.313
who tried to wipe out any trace
00:00:45.337 --> 00:00:47.190
of advanced indigenous cultures.
00:00:47.214 --> 00:00:51.737
As a kid, that lack of inclusion
in history textbooks
00:00:51.761 --> 00:00:53.948
made me feel invisible.
00:00:53.972 --> 00:00:58.201
I think it\'s essential
that we set the record straight
00:00:58.225 --> 00:01:00.770
about Latinx history.
00:01:01.228 --> 00:01:03.874
Well, with the strike
and with the boycott,
00:01:03.898 --> 00:01:06.001
we were trying
to give farm workers
00:01:06.025 --> 00:01:08.110
basic human rights.
00:01:08.528 --> 00:01:10.798
Ortiz: We don\'t just make
contributions
00:01:10.822 --> 00:01:15.385
to U .S. history,
we have changed U.S. history.
00:01:15.409 --> 00:01:19.305
Latinos are the most highly
decorated ethnic group
00:01:19.329 --> 00:01:20.849
in U.S. military history.
00:01:20.873 --> 00:01:24.937
People tend to forget
that Latinos were here
00:01:24.961 --> 00:01:27.898
long before
the United States existed.
00:01:27.922 --> 00:01:31.067
Colón: If we consider
the richness of our past,
00:01:31.091 --> 00:01:34.070
we\'re able to reconstruct
a much richer picture
00:01:34.094 --> 00:01:36.197
of how our cultures came to be.
00:01:36.221 --> 00:01:38.575
It\'s important
to not underestimate the people
00:01:38.599 --> 00:01:41.578
that came before us
and what they knew.
00:01:41.602 --> 00:01:44.372
Leguizamo: They invented
life-saving medical practices
00:01:44.396 --> 00:01:47.125
and engineered
incredible infrastructure.
00:01:47.149 --> 00:01:49.252
They also calculated
the movements of the planets
00:01:49.276 --> 00:01:52.380
and they wrote it all down
in their sacred books.
00:01:52.404 --> 00:01:55.509
It\'s as epic
as any of the great wonders
00:01:55.533 --> 00:01:57.845
you\'ve learned about
in history class.
00:01:57.869 --> 00:01:59.930
This is the story
from the point of view
00:01:59.954 --> 00:02:03.642
of the people who were already
living in the Americas.
00:02:03.666 --> 00:02:05.686
Carrasco: It is really important
for Latinos to know
00:02:05.710 --> 00:02:08.605
and for other people to know
about Latino roots.
00:02:08.629 --> 00:02:11.149
Leguizamo: Imagine
how others would see us
00:02:11.173 --> 00:02:12.609
if they knew our rich history.
00:02:12.633 --> 00:02:15.486
Imagine
how we would see ourselves
00:02:15.511 --> 00:02:17.614
if we knew our own stories.
00:02:17.638 --> 00:02:19.950
We\'re going to fill in
the parts of our history
00:02:19.974 --> 00:02:23.037
that were lost, all the way
from the ancient Olmecs
00:02:23.061 --> 00:02:27.206
to the Latinos who helped
build this great nation.
00:02:27.230 --> 00:02:30.209
I know that\'s
a lot of ground to cover,
00:02:30.233 --> 00:02:33.171
but don\'t worry,
because I got you.
00:02:46.542 --> 00:02:49.354
Narrator: To bring the history
in this series to life,
00:02:49.378 --> 00:02:51.607
the following program
includes images
00:02:51.631 --> 00:02:54.275
generated by AI tools.
00:02:58.888 --> 00:03:03.326
This is my chance to dig deep
on the real history of Latinos.
00:03:03.350 --> 00:03:06.955
Our history is a complicated
one because Latino identity
00:03:06.979 --> 00:03:09.958
isn\'t always well-understood,
even by ourselves.
00:03:09.982 --> 00:03:13.128
It means you\'re descended
from the original peoples
00:03:13.152 --> 00:03:16.464
of the Americas,
because once Europeans arrived
00:03:16.488 --> 00:03:17.215
to the New World,
00:03:17.239 --> 00:03:19.093
they mixed
with the native populations
00:03:19.117 --> 00:03:20.803
and enslaved Africans,
00:03:20.827 --> 00:03:22.721
and the first Latinos were born.
00:03:22.745 --> 00:03:24.389
Of course,
we come in every color
00:03:24.413 --> 00:03:25.181
and diverse flavor.
00:03:25.205 --> 00:03:29.019
Some of us are Afro-Latino
or Indigenous Latino.
00:03:29.043 --> 00:03:30.562
Some identify as \"Latinx\",
00:03:30.586 --> 00:03:33.774
but \"Hispanic\" refers
to native Spanish speakers.
00:03:33.798 --> 00:03:38.070
Today, hundreds of millions
of people across the globe
00:03:38.094 --> 00:03:39.195
share this identity,
00:03:39.219 --> 00:03:42.574
but our roots go back
thousands of years.
00:03:42.598 --> 00:03:45.035
Between 2000 BC and 1492,
00:03:45.059 --> 00:03:48.789
the peoples of the Caribbean,
Central and South America
00:03:48.813 --> 00:03:50.624
built fantastic cities.
00:03:50.648 --> 00:03:54.753
Fernández: The sophistication
in the arts and architecture
00:03:54.777 --> 00:03:56.004
of these massive cities
00:03:56.028 --> 00:03:57.840
that were bigger
than European cities.
00:03:57.864 --> 00:04:01.093
When the Spanish arrived here,
they found civilizations
00:04:01.117 --> 00:04:03.762
that were in many ways
more advanced
00:04:03.786 --> 00:04:05.139
than where they came from.
00:04:05.163 --> 00:04:08.142
But in order to justify
colonizing and converting
00:04:08.166 --> 00:04:10.185
the natives
and stealing their wealth,
00:04:10.209 --> 00:04:11.937
the conquistadors
created a narrative
00:04:11.961 --> 00:04:15.440
about barbaric cultures
that had to be subjugated.
00:04:15.464 --> 00:04:21.113
Anything that didn\'t fit
this narrative was destroyed.
00:04:35.193 --> 00:04:37.129
Fernández: We know,
we tend to start
00:04:37.153 --> 00:04:41.281
Latin American history
with Columbus.
00:04:41.741 --> 00:04:43.802
I always start in my classroom
00:04:43.826 --> 00:04:44.678
with the Taíno people.
00:04:44.702 --> 00:04:46.805
It\'s important to know
who were the original people
00:04:46.829 --> 00:04:51.226
of the land that Columbus
first encountered.
00:04:51.250 --> 00:04:53.520
Leguizamo: Today,
we use the word \"Taíno\"
00:04:53.544 --> 00:04:56.607
to refer to all the indigenous
people of the Caribbean,
00:04:56.631 --> 00:04:58.775
but the fact is,
there were many different
00:04:58.799 --> 00:05:01.987
political and cultural groups
living throughout the region.
00:05:02.011 --> 00:05:05.157
Moya: The Taíno people
were originally from the mouth
00:05:05.181 --> 00:05:06.783
of the Orinoco River
in Venezuela,
00:05:06.807 --> 00:05:10.913
and they were able to move
into the Caribbean Islands,
00:05:10.937 --> 00:05:13.540
going to Puerto Rico,
then Hispaniola,
00:05:13.564 --> 00:05:16.292
what is Dominican Republic
and Haiti today.
00:05:16.316 --> 00:05:19.838
It\'s the only time
that we know of so far
00:05:19.862 --> 00:05:20.839
where ancient seafarers
00:05:20.863 --> 00:05:23.008
were moving
out of the continent,
00:05:23.032 --> 00:05:24.718
losing sight
of the land behind them
00:05:24.742 --> 00:05:28.138
to cross hundreds,
even thousands of nautical miles
00:05:28.162 --> 00:05:30.807
and settle
into newly inhabited lands,
00:05:30.831 --> 00:05:31.432
in this case, islands.
00:05:31.456 --> 00:05:33.644
Researchers have suggested
that there could have been
00:05:33.668 --> 00:05:37.940
anywhere between 70,000
to 100,000 indigenous peoples
00:05:37.964 --> 00:05:41.276
living in the Caribbean
before contact.
00:05:45.930 --> 00:05:47.699
We often think of islands
as paradise,
00:05:47.723 --> 00:05:51.745
a beautiful and warm place
where there are no stressors,
00:05:51.769 --> 00:05:55.290
but eking out a subsistence
for thousands of years
00:05:55.314 --> 00:05:57.751
on an island
is really hard work.
00:05:57.775 --> 00:06:00.045
You have to be able
to manage agriculture
00:06:00.069 --> 00:06:03.590
in a place where hurricanes
are extremely common.
00:06:03.614 --> 00:06:05.842
You need to be able
to navigate effectively
00:06:05.866 --> 00:06:10.055
the challenging ocean currents
that are still challenging
00:06:10.079 --> 00:06:11.056
to navigate today.
00:06:11.080 --> 00:06:13.141
You need to have
trading partners
00:06:13.165 --> 00:06:14.350
across different islands
00:06:14.374 --> 00:06:15.852
and speak different languages
00:06:15.876 --> 00:06:17.353
in order to do so.
00:06:17.377 --> 00:06:19.690
They had intensive agriculture,
00:06:19.714 --> 00:06:20.649
which allowed them to feed
00:06:20.673 --> 00:06:23.110
a growing population
both within
00:06:23.134 --> 00:06:24.820
as well as between islands.
00:06:24.844 --> 00:06:26.280
The Indigenous people
of the Caribbean
00:06:26.304 --> 00:06:29.908
have so many
awesome cultural achievements
00:06:29.932 --> 00:06:30.659
that I feel I get lost
00:06:30.683 --> 00:06:33.036
when we talk about them
because we often talk about them
00:06:33.060 --> 00:06:35.247
in the worst possible moment
of their history,
00:06:35.271 --> 00:06:39.942
which is, of course,
contact with Europeans.
00:06:41.527 --> 00:06:44.339
When Columbus first set foot
in the New World,
00:06:44.363 --> 00:06:46.675
that was the beginning
of the end
00:06:46.699 --> 00:06:48.927
for many indigenous cultures.
00:06:48.951 --> 00:06:50.679
Let\'s name it
for what it really was.
00:06:50.703 --> 00:06:54.308
Three boats and 86 men
landed in 1492,
00:06:54.332 --> 00:06:58.020
bringing with them
billions of European germs
00:06:58.044 --> 00:07:01.064
in what turned out to be
the apocalypse.
00:07:01.088 --> 00:07:03.317
Now, the first people
to encounter Columbus
00:07:03.341 --> 00:07:05.652
in the New World were the Taíno.
00:07:05.676 --> 00:07:07.946
Sadly, the Taíno
were also the first
00:07:07.970 --> 00:07:12.491
to suffer this
civilization-ending devastation.
00:07:12.516 --> 00:07:16.705
Columbus arrives
to this landmass.
00:07:16.729 --> 00:07:18.456
He doesn\'t know where he is,
and actually,
00:07:18.480 --> 00:07:22.502
one of his three ships
runs aground
00:07:22.526 --> 00:07:23.962
and is destroyed.
00:07:23.986 --> 00:07:27.174
The people living
on that island,
00:07:27.198 --> 00:07:28.884
they come out to help him,
00:07:28.908 --> 00:07:30.093
and they help them
00:07:30.117 --> 00:07:32.012
load all the people
on their canoes.
00:07:32.036 --> 00:07:35.891
As the Spanish tell it,
they gave them their best houses
00:07:35.915 --> 00:07:39.227
for them to stay
and to store their goods.
00:07:39.251 --> 00:07:42.397
That was the first encounter.
00:07:42.421 --> 00:07:44.191
Leguizamo: We never
even stop to think
00:07:44.215 --> 00:07:45.817
about how these natives lived
00:07:45.841 --> 00:07:48.362
before these ships arrived.
00:07:48.386 --> 00:07:50.113
When history is written
by the victors,
00:07:50.137 --> 00:07:53.825
we miss out on the perspective
of the oppressed.
00:07:53.849 --> 00:07:57.537
Columbus: \"They willingly traded
everything they owned.
00:07:57.561 --> 00:07:58.789
They have no iron.
00:07:58.813 --> 00:08:00.582
\"Their spears are made of cane.
00:08:00.606 --> 00:08:02.334
\"They would make fine servants.
00:08:02.358 --> 00:08:04.628
\"With 50 men,
we could subjugate them all
00:08:04.652 --> 00:08:06.838
\"and make them do
whatever we want.\"
00:08:06.862 --> 00:08:09.508
Leguizamo: Contrary
to popular belief,
00:08:09.532 --> 00:08:11.510
he did know the Earth was round,
00:08:11.534 --> 00:08:12.761
but he didn\'t know
that there were
00:08:12.785 --> 00:08:15.889
two entire continents
and millions of people
00:08:15.913 --> 00:08:16.598
between Europe and Asia.
00:08:16.622 --> 00:08:21.269
When he accidentally docked
in Hispaniola in 1492,
00:08:21.293 --> 00:08:22.229
mistaking it for India,
00:08:22.253 --> 00:08:25.232
he quickly took the opportunity
to begin enslaving
00:08:25.256 --> 00:08:27.442
the native people
who lived there,
00:08:27.466 --> 00:08:29.861
stealing
their land and resources,
00:08:29.885 --> 00:08:31.738
brutalizing their families,
00:08:31.762 --> 00:08:33.489
and spreading European diseases.
00:08:33.514 --> 00:08:37.035
I don\'t think he was neither
particularly brave
00:08:37.059 --> 00:08:38.578
nor particularly visionary.
00:08:38.602 --> 00:08:41.665
You have to remember,
before the Portuguese
00:08:41.689 --> 00:08:44.167
and the Spaniards
came to the Americas,
00:08:44.191 --> 00:08:46.294
they had gone
to the Canary Islands,
00:08:46.318 --> 00:08:47.295
they had gone to the Azores,
00:08:47.319 --> 00:08:49.172
so they
were pushing the boundaries.
00:08:49.196 --> 00:08:49.840
If it hadn\'t been Columbus,
00:08:49.864 --> 00:08:53.802
it would have been any
other leader of an expedition.
00:08:53.826 --> 00:08:54.761
So it was going to happen.
00:08:54.785 --> 00:08:57.347
There was nothing special
about Columbus, really.
00:08:57.371 --> 00:09:00.475
In my opinion, the only thing
that was exceptional
00:09:00.499 --> 00:09:02.853
about Columbus was his cruelty,
00:09:02.877 --> 00:09:03.812
because he quickly became known
00:09:03.836 --> 00:09:07.274
for enslaving, brutalizing,
and terrorizing the Taínos.
00:09:07.298 --> 00:09:11.236
Columbus\'s men even documented
that he captured Taíno women
00:09:11.260 --> 00:09:13.864
and gave them to his crew
to be raped.
00:09:13.888 --> 00:09:17.993
Life under Spanish rule
was a nightmare.
00:09:18.017 --> 00:09:19.953
The indigenous people
of the Caribbean
00:09:19.977 --> 00:09:20.996
were the first to experience
00:09:21.020 --> 00:09:22.956
the brunt
of European colonization
00:09:22.980 --> 00:09:25.250
and the atrocities
that came with that.
00:09:25.274 --> 00:09:26.460
And of course, there was also
00:09:26.484 --> 00:09:28.628
forced displacement
and enslavement.
00:09:28.652 --> 00:09:31.631
So it really amounts
to something very close
00:09:31.655 --> 00:09:33.949
to a genocide.
00:09:34.534 --> 00:09:37.721
De las Casas: \"It was a general
rule among Spaniards
00:09:37.745 --> 00:09:38.346
\"to be cruel.
00:09:38.370 --> 00:09:40.766
\"Not just cruel,
but extraordinarily cruel,
00:09:40.790 --> 00:09:43.226
\"so that harsh and bitter
treatment would prevent
00:09:43.250 --> 00:09:45.937
\"Indians as daring
to think of themselves
00:09:45.961 --> 00:09:47.147
\"as human beings
00:09:47.171 --> 00:09:49.441
\"or having a minute
to think at all.
00:09:49.465 --> 00:09:51.234
\"So they would cut
an Indian\'s hand
00:09:51.258 --> 00:09:53.612
\"and leave them dangling
by a shred of skin,
00:09:53.636 --> 00:09:56.490
and they would send him on
saying, \'Go now,
00:09:56.515 --> 00:09:58.033
spread the news to your chiefs.\'
00:09:58.057 --> 00:10:01.703
\"They would test their swords
and their manly strength
00:10:01.727 --> 00:10:02.788
\"on captured Indians
00:10:02.812 --> 00:10:04.998
\"and place bets
on the slicing off of heads
00:10:05.022 --> 00:10:07.793
\"or the cutting of bodies
in half with one blow.\"
00:10:07.817 --> 00:10:10.295
Leguizamo: When we tell
the real story of Columbus,
00:10:10.319 --> 00:10:13.215
that\'s how we challenge
our colonial mindset
00:10:13.239 --> 00:10:16.384
in the present
because the truth is the Taíno
00:10:16.408 --> 00:10:20.180
were not frightened or awed
by these European sailors.
00:10:20.204 --> 00:10:23.850
Fernández: There was a lot
of rebellions against Columbus.
00:10:23.874 --> 00:10:25.268
It was utter chaos.
00:10:25.292 --> 00:10:28.230
The Taíno
were not a passive people.
00:10:28.254 --> 00:10:31.858
There were five different
kingdoms on Haiti alone,
00:10:31.882 --> 00:10:34.986
and some of them were allies
and some of them were enemies,
00:10:35.010 --> 00:10:37.739
and they were
experienced warriors.
00:10:37.763 --> 00:10:41.284
And in fact, when Columbus
and his followers
00:10:41.308 --> 00:10:43.286
were waging war on them,
they fought back.
00:10:43.310 --> 00:10:46.331
Leguizamo: Each chiefdom
was ruled by a leader
00:10:46.355 --> 00:10:48.625
called a \"cacique\" or chief.
00:10:48.649 --> 00:10:51.878
Notably, women could become
caciques as well as men,
00:10:51.902 --> 00:10:55.715
and many fought in battle
alongside their male relatives.
00:10:55.739 --> 00:10:59.719
Agüeybaná II was one
of the most powerful caciques
00:10:59.743 --> 00:11:01.096
in the whole Caribbean
00:11:01.120 --> 00:11:02.973
at the time
of the European invasion.
00:11:02.997 --> 00:11:06.101
He had seen firsthand
the Spanish arrival
00:11:06.125 --> 00:11:08.395
in Puerto Rico in 1493,
00:11:08.419 --> 00:11:10.355
and he devoted his entire life
00:11:10.379 --> 00:11:13.066
to the fight
for his people and their land.
00:11:13.090 --> 00:11:16.111
We know that Agüeybaná
was capable of uniting
00:11:16.135 --> 00:11:18.488
a large alliance
of indigenous peoples.
00:11:18.513 --> 00:11:20.657
He united to fight
against the Spanish,
00:11:20.681 --> 00:11:24.202
and I think that tells us
something about leadership
00:11:24.226 --> 00:11:25.370
at this time,
00:11:25.394 --> 00:11:26.037
and it also tells us something
00:11:26.061 --> 00:11:30.792
about pan-Caribbean unity
in the face of oppression.
00:11:30.816 --> 00:11:32.752
The Taíno fought back.
00:11:32.776 --> 00:11:35.088
Let\'s get rid
of those stereotypes
00:11:35.112 --> 00:11:36.298
of the passive Indian.
00:11:36.322 --> 00:11:38.551
Colón: There are historical
documents that tell us
00:11:38.575 --> 00:11:41.803
that in 1511 the Taíno people
of Puerto Rico
00:11:41.827 --> 00:11:44.347
mounted a huge resistance
against the Spanish
00:11:44.371 --> 00:11:48.226
that included burning down
the Spanish city of Caparra.
00:11:48.250 --> 00:11:49.769
It included raiding many towns,
00:11:49.793 --> 00:11:53.023
and also that they worked
together with indigenous peoples
00:11:53.047 --> 00:11:55.317
from other islands,
not just from Puerto Rico,
00:11:55.341 --> 00:11:58.278
but once African peoples
arrived into the Caribbean,
00:11:58.302 --> 00:12:02.264
they often united
with indigenous people to fight.
00:12:02.890 --> 00:12:05.452
We know that Spanish authorities
were so afraid of this
00:12:05.476 --> 00:12:06.995
that they were writing
to the crown
00:12:07.019 --> 00:12:08.914
asking for reinforcements
to be sent,
00:12:08.938 --> 00:12:11.875
or the whole colonial enterprise
would have been threatened.
00:12:11.899 --> 00:12:15.712
And I mention that because it
really goes against this idea
00:12:15.736 --> 00:12:17.964
that these people
never resisted,
00:12:17.988 --> 00:12:18.757
that they never fought back.
00:12:18.781 --> 00:12:23.386
And because we think of them
that way today as docile,
00:12:23.410 --> 00:12:26.056
we tend to devalue
their contributions
00:12:26.080 --> 00:12:27.724
to our heritage.
00:12:27.748 --> 00:12:28.559
Leguizamo: But here\'s the thing.
00:12:28.583 --> 00:12:30.810
Because the Taíno stories
weren\'t preserved,
00:12:30.834 --> 00:12:34.607
historians have long relied
on the writings and narrative
00:12:34.631 --> 00:12:35.482
from the Europeans,
00:12:35.507 --> 00:12:38.777
which painted the Taíno
as simple and backwards.
00:12:38.801 --> 00:12:42.447
Fernández: It\'s absolutely
not true that the native people
00:12:42.471 --> 00:12:45.075
lost because they
had inferior weaponry.
00:12:45.099 --> 00:12:46.993
That\'s absolutely not true,
and it just feeds
00:12:47.017 --> 00:12:51.122
into these hierarchies
of European superiority.
00:12:51.146 --> 00:12:54.585
The advantage
that the Spaniards had
00:12:54.609 --> 00:12:57.879
in terms of conquering
the Native American
00:12:57.903 --> 00:12:59.839
was immunity to smallpox.
00:12:59.863 --> 00:13:02.759
It turns out the conquistadors\'
best weapons
00:13:02.783 --> 00:13:04.761
were not their guns and steel.
00:13:04.785 --> 00:13:06.221
No, instead it was their bodies,
00:13:06.245 --> 00:13:08.807
which carried billions
of deadly germs with them.
00:13:08.831 --> 00:13:12.561
It was dozens of pandemics,
one right after the other,
00:13:12.585 --> 00:13:15.690
mainly smallpox,
measles, and typhus,
00:13:15.714 --> 00:13:19.025
that almost wiped out
the native populations.
00:13:23.680 --> 00:13:27.325
There\'s no question about it
because the Spanish friars
00:13:27.349 --> 00:13:30.036
who wrote back to the king
of Spain said, you know,
00:13:30.060 --> 00:13:31.788
\"I\'m trying to convert
all these people,
00:13:31.812 --> 00:13:33.498
and they\'re just dying
all around me.\"
00:13:33.523 --> 00:13:35.584
Motolinía: \"As the Indians
did not know the remedy
00:13:35.608 --> 00:13:40.005
\"of the disease, they died
in heaps like bedbugs.
00:13:40.029 --> 00:13:41.757
\"In many places it happened
00:13:41.781 --> 00:13:43.676
\"that everyone in a house died,
00:13:43.700 --> 00:13:45.511
\"and as it was impossible
00:13:45.535 --> 00:13:47.137
\"to bury
the great number of dead,
00:13:47.161 --> 00:13:49.014
\"they pulled down
the houses over them
00:13:49.038 --> 00:13:52.100
\"so that their homes
became their tombs.\"
00:13:52.124 --> 00:13:54.102
The statistics
speak for themselves
00:13:54.126 --> 00:13:56.354
that the estimates
are that there were
00:13:56.378 --> 00:14:00.108
about a million inhabitants
of Hispaniola
00:14:00.132 --> 00:14:05.614
in 1492 when Columbus
and his followers arrived.
00:14:05.638 --> 00:14:10.368
16 years later, in 1508,
00:14:10.392 --> 00:14:13.913
94% of them were gone.
00:14:13.937 --> 00:14:16.667
94%.
00:14:16.691 --> 00:14:19.878
When I think about
what the indigenous people lost,
00:14:19.902 --> 00:14:23.465
it\'s almost too much for me
to wrap my head around,
00:14:23.489 --> 00:14:24.550
let alone my heart.
00:14:24.574 --> 00:14:27.844
Imagine 94%
of your community gone.
00:14:27.868 --> 00:14:29.846
Empty homes, empty towns,
00:14:29.870 --> 00:14:32.432
almost all of your friends
and family gone.
00:14:32.456 --> 00:14:35.060
How do you keep going
after such a loss?
00:14:35.084 --> 00:14:37.563
That\'s why we should never
forget the genocide
00:14:37.587 --> 00:14:40.608
that was inflicted
on our ancestors.
00:14:40.632 --> 00:14:44.779
We need to celebrate
the people of Taíno heritage
00:14:44.803 --> 00:14:47.639
who still exist today.
00:14:48.305 --> 00:14:52.661
Columbus committed so much
violence, rape, and murder
00:14:52.685 --> 00:14:54.287
that he was eventually arrested
00:14:54.311 --> 00:14:54.954
for his violent atrocities.
00:14:54.978 --> 00:14:58.751
The governor of Hispaniola
arrested him on mismanagement
00:14:58.775 --> 00:15:01.587
and brutality charges
against the Taíno
00:15:01.611 --> 00:15:02.713
and his own soldiers,
00:15:02.737 --> 00:15:05.131
and then had him forcibly
returned to Spain
00:15:05.155 --> 00:15:07.802
where he was stripped
of his noble titles.
00:15:07.826 --> 00:15:10.805
And yet we still celebrate
Columbus Day.
00:15:10.829 --> 00:15:13.641
Don\'t get me wrong,
we\'re starting to see change.
00:15:13.665 --> 00:15:17.853
Indigenous Peoples\' Day
is now replacing Columbus Day
00:15:17.877 --> 00:15:20.731
in many cities and states
across the U.S.
00:15:20.755 --> 00:15:23.651
Colón: Indigenous ancestry
is a central part
00:15:23.675 --> 00:15:25.944
of Puerto Rican identity
to this day.
00:15:25.968 --> 00:15:28.363
In fact,
we call ourselves \"boriquas\",
00:15:28.387 --> 00:15:29.489
and boriqua is the Taíno word.
00:15:29.514 --> 00:15:33.702
The idea that the Caribbean\'s
indigenous peoples disappeared
00:15:33.726 --> 00:15:35.453
soon after European contact
00:15:35.477 --> 00:15:37.330
and that they contributed
very little
00:15:37.354 --> 00:15:39.415
to our culture
and our biology today.
00:15:39.439 --> 00:15:43.546
But when we look at the DNA
that people still carry in them,
00:15:43.570 --> 00:15:45.881
that forces us to reconsider
00:15:45.905 --> 00:15:46.715
this extinction narrative.
00:15:46.739 --> 00:15:50.176
In fact, we are connected
culturally, biologically,
00:15:50.200 --> 00:15:51.970
and also genetically
to these people.
00:15:51.994 --> 00:15:54.055
The history
of the New World civilizations
00:15:54.079 --> 00:15:55.850
isn\'t just oppression and pain
00:15:55.874 --> 00:15:58.561
because our story
is so much bigger than that.
00:15:58.585 --> 00:16:01.229
And our story includes more
than just the Taínos
00:16:01.253 --> 00:16:05.609
that had the bad luck to be
the first ones to meet Columbus.
00:16:05.633 --> 00:16:07.903
At the time
of Columbus\'s arrival,
00:16:07.927 --> 00:16:09.530
indigenous civilizations thrived
00:16:09.554 --> 00:16:12.157
throughout all of Southern
and Central America,
00:16:12.181 --> 00:16:16.829
including what we know now
as modern-day Mexico.
00:16:16.853 --> 00:16:17.453
It all starts here.
00:16:17.477 --> 00:16:21.249
The Olmec, the Taíno, the Maya,
the Inca, the Aztec,
00:16:21.273 --> 00:16:24.587
these were the OG civilizations
of Latin America,
00:16:24.611 --> 00:16:27.463
and their great-great-grandkids
to the Nth degree
00:16:27.487 --> 00:16:30.509
would become
the Latinos of today.
00:16:39.208 --> 00:16:42.478
First we have to pay homage
to the \"madrina\",
00:16:42.503 --> 00:16:46.567
or godmother of all ancient
Mesoamerican cultures,
00:16:46.591 --> 00:16:51.780
the Olmecs, whose culture
was old when Rome was young.
00:16:51.804 --> 00:16:53.574
Carrasco: There existed
in Mexico
00:16:53.598 --> 00:16:56.952
what is called the mother
culture of Mesoamerica,
00:16:56.976 --> 00:16:57.620
the Olmecs.
00:16:57.644 --> 00:17:01.247
Leguizamo: The Olmecs
had already formed a complex,
00:17:01.271 --> 00:17:03.542
wide-ranging civilization,
00:17:03.566 --> 00:17:05.628
all before Buddha was even born.
00:17:05.652 --> 00:17:06.795
They\'re considered the earliest
00:17:06.819 --> 00:17:09.130
major Latin American
civilization.
00:17:09.154 --> 00:17:12.342
So many of these things,
the numerical systems,
00:17:12.366 --> 00:17:15.638
the writing systems,
the calendar,
00:17:15.662 --> 00:17:18.831
were created by the Olmecs.
00:17:19.414 --> 00:17:21.769
Carrasco: Over the last
100 years,
00:17:21.793 --> 00:17:22.477
a number of archaeologists
00:17:22.502 --> 00:17:26.439
sort of accidentally discovered
these huge heads.
00:17:26.463 --> 00:17:30.861
Some of which weighed 9 tons,
taller than a man.
00:17:30.885 --> 00:17:32.153
Why the great heads?
00:17:32.177 --> 00:17:33.363
Well, nobody really knows,
00:17:33.387 --> 00:17:36.867
but it seems to me
what the big heads represent
00:17:36.891 --> 00:17:38.744
is some sort of awareness
00:17:38.768 --> 00:17:42.145
of the importance
of intelligence.
00:17:42.939 --> 00:17:44.667
The materials that they used
00:17:44.691 --> 00:17:46.376
for their monumental
architecture
00:17:46.400 --> 00:17:48.629
were brought
from great distances.
00:17:48.653 --> 00:17:52.591
Things that were very heavy,
very difficult to transport.
00:17:52.615 --> 00:17:55.678
They developed some kind
of transportation system,
00:17:55.702 --> 00:17:57.805
maybe through the waterways,
00:17:57.829 --> 00:17:58.889
to take these stones,
00:17:58.913 --> 00:18:02.518
float them down close
to these ceremonial centers,
00:18:02.542 --> 00:18:04.269
then transport them across logs
00:18:04.293 --> 00:18:07.523
or some way of rolling them
into the ceremonial center.
00:18:07.547 --> 00:18:10.215
And then the sculptors
went to work.
00:18:11.551 --> 00:18:12.653
Do you play basketball?
00:18:12.677 --> 00:18:14.947
Well, without the Olmec
and their rubber balls,
00:18:14.971 --> 00:18:17.932
you would never have heard
of Kobe Bryant.
00:18:18.140 --> 00:18:22.287
People think rubber was invented
by Charles Goodyear
00:18:22.311 --> 00:18:23.454
in the 1840s,
00:18:23.478 --> 00:18:24.665
but he was building off the tech
00:18:24.689 --> 00:18:27.208
originally invented
by the Olmecs
00:18:27.232 --> 00:18:28.961
3,000 years ago.
00:18:28.985 --> 00:18:32.965
In Mesoamerica today,
people still play the ballgame.
00:18:32.989 --> 00:18:35.341
So the ballgame
is a great element
00:18:35.365 --> 00:18:37.385
of the Latino ancestors.
00:18:37.409 --> 00:18:40.723
Leguizamo: The Olmec
established several great cities
00:18:40.747 --> 00:18:42.432
throughout their empire,
00:18:42.456 --> 00:18:44.100
but the greatest jewel
00:18:44.124 --> 00:18:46.020
of all pre-Columbian Mesoamerica
00:18:46.044 --> 00:18:51.549
was a mysterious city
called Teotihuacán.
00:18:54.468 --> 00:18:56.739
Now, most of us
are taught to think
00:18:56.763 --> 00:18:57.488
of Greece and Rome
00:18:57.513 --> 00:18:59.867
as the cradles
of Western civilization,
00:18:59.891 --> 00:19:03.704
but the ancient peoples
of Central and South America
00:19:03.728 --> 00:19:05.748
had sophisticated cultures
00:19:05.772 --> 00:19:07.415
hundreds of years before Europe.
00:19:07.439 --> 00:19:12.004
And I\'m here at the real cradle
of Western civilization,
00:19:12.028 --> 00:19:12.880
Teotihuacán,
00:19:12.904 --> 00:19:15.381
where there\'s evidence
of diverse, powerful,
00:19:15.405 --> 00:19:19.803
intelligent cultures
dating back to 400 BC.
00:19:19.827 --> 00:19:24.808
So the great capital
of Mesoamerica was Teotihuacán.
00:19:24.832 --> 00:19:27.728
And it comes into being
as an urban center.
00:19:27.752 --> 00:19:30.647
We really are in the first
century of the Common Era,
00:19:30.671 --> 00:19:33.817
and it rises to be
the great imperial center.
00:19:33.841 --> 00:19:37.613
Teotihuacán is the symbol
of this great achievement
00:19:37.637 --> 00:19:40.991
of building some of the first
cities in the world.
00:19:41.015 --> 00:19:43.994
And Mesoamerica, Mexico,
as well as Peru,
00:19:44.018 --> 00:19:46.496
are two of the areas
where people invented
00:19:46.521 --> 00:19:47.122
these first cities
00:19:47.146 --> 00:19:48.916
without any influence
from other cities.
00:19:48.940 --> 00:19:52.753
The others are Mesopotamia,
northern China,
00:19:52.777 --> 00:19:53.712
Egypt, and the Indus Valley.
00:19:53.736 --> 00:19:55.839
And this is really important
for Latinos to know
00:19:55.863 --> 00:19:58.675
and for other people to know
about Latino roots.
00:19:58.699 --> 00:20:00.511
Leguizamo: All these places
that today
00:20:00.535 --> 00:20:01.970
we\'d consider Third World
00:20:01.994 --> 00:20:04.723
turns out were actually
the places
00:20:04.747 --> 00:20:07.101
where civilization began.
00:20:07.125 --> 00:20:09.937
For instance,
the pyramids of Teotihuacán
00:20:09.961 --> 00:20:14.733
were built around the same time
as the Roman Colosseum.
00:20:14.757 --> 00:20:17.986
Archaeologists estimate
that Teotihuacan had
00:20:18.010 --> 00:20:21.949
up to 200,000 inhabitants
at its peak.
00:20:21.973 --> 00:20:24.159
For comparison,
London\'s population
00:20:24.183 --> 00:20:27.453
didn\'t even break 100,000
until the 16th century.
00:20:27.477 --> 00:20:30.874
So one of the wonderful things
that archaeologists
00:20:30.898 --> 00:20:33.502
have been able to find
is that Teotihuacán
00:20:33.526 --> 00:20:34.044
was a multi-ethnic city.
00:20:34.068 --> 00:20:37.338
The things that brought people
of different ethnicities
00:20:37.362 --> 00:20:39.465
from all over Mesoamerica to Teo
00:20:39.489 --> 00:20:42.719
are the same things that draw
people to cities today.
00:20:42.743 --> 00:20:46.682
Better infrastructure,
bigger ideas, and of course,
00:20:46.706 --> 00:20:48.559
a shot at a better life.
00:20:48.583 --> 00:20:52.187
Newscaster: Mexico\'s famed
Teotihuacán archaeological site
00:20:52.211 --> 00:20:55.231
still holds many mysteries
for historians.
00:20:55.255 --> 00:20:56.817
But the answers they seek
00:20:56.841 --> 00:20:58.193
may lie below the surface.
00:20:58.217 --> 00:21:01.196
Leguizamo: We didn\'t dig
the subway tunnels of New York
00:21:01.220 --> 00:21:02.321
until about 100 years ago.
00:21:02.345 --> 00:21:05.491
2,000 years earlier,
the original scientists
00:21:05.516 --> 00:21:07.452
and rulers of Teotihuacán
00:21:07.476 --> 00:21:08.954
built a series of tunnels
00:21:08.978 --> 00:21:10.581
dozens of feet
beneath the ground
00:21:10.605 --> 00:21:13.458
without the use
of machinery or power tools.
00:21:13.482 --> 00:21:17.838
These tunnels connected chambers
holding treasures long forgotten
00:21:17.862 --> 00:21:21.091
until they were unearthed
in 2003.
00:21:21.115 --> 00:21:23.426
It was
a groundbreaking discovery
00:21:23.450 --> 00:21:24.427
that changed our perception
00:21:24.451 --> 00:21:28.515
of the civilization
that once thrived here.
00:21:28.539 --> 00:21:30.017
And I\'m here to meet the man
00:21:30.041 --> 00:21:31.935
who uncovered these wonders,
00:21:31.959 --> 00:21:34.395
archaeologist Sergio Gómez.
00:21:34.419 --> 00:21:39.466
[Speaking Spanish]
00:21:53.814 --> 00:21:56.358
[Speaking Spanish]
00:22:07.078 --> 00:22:09.430
Leguizamo: This monumental
discovery
00:22:09.454 --> 00:22:11.725
of turquoise
all the way from Arizona
00:22:11.749 --> 00:22:14.352
proves
that the people of Teotihuacán
00:22:14.376 --> 00:22:16.563
had significant
trade relationships
00:22:16.587 --> 00:22:20.234
with societies as far away
as Arizona to the north
00:22:20.258 --> 00:22:21.944
and Honduras to the south.
00:22:21.968 --> 00:22:25.221
[Speaking Spanish]
00:22:38.192 --> 00:22:40.629
Leguizamo: To put that
into context,
00:22:40.653 --> 00:22:41.797
their network extended
00:22:41.821 --> 00:22:44.508
almost as far
as the Roman Empire
00:22:44.532 --> 00:22:46.885
at about the same time.
00:22:46.909 --> 00:22:50.037
[Speaking Spanish]
00:22:58.212 --> 00:23:01.233
Leguizamo: As we get further
into the tunnel,
00:23:01.257 --> 00:23:03.235
I can feel how deep I am
00:23:03.259 --> 00:23:06.238
below the surface of the earth.
00:23:06.262 --> 00:23:09.849
[Speaking Spanish]
00:23:23.988 --> 00:23:29.492
[Speaking Spanish]
00:23:40.004 --> 00:23:43.966
[Speaking Spanish]
00:23:49.138 --> 00:23:51.241
Sergio, thank you
for bringing me here.
00:23:51.265 --> 00:23:51.700
I feel very honored,
00:23:51.724 --> 00:23:55.770
and it\'s so special
to see this sacred space.
00:23:57.563 --> 00:24:00.667
Leguizamo: We have to stop
centering the European version
00:24:00.691 --> 00:24:03.712
of history
and reconsider our own past.
00:24:03.736 --> 00:24:06.715
Take the incredible inventions
and medical knowledge
00:24:06.739 --> 00:24:11.637
of South America\'s
greatest empire, the Inca.
00:24:17.792 --> 00:24:21.146
The Inca people
gained control of the region
00:24:21.170 --> 00:24:24.316
and established their empire
in 1438.
00:24:24.340 --> 00:24:28.362
The Inca\'s extending
from modern-day Colombia,
00:24:28.386 --> 00:24:30.072
Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia,
00:24:30.096 --> 00:24:32.574
central Chile,
and parts of Argentina.
00:24:32.598 --> 00:24:35.744
Leguizamo: They ruled
for nearly 100 years
00:24:35.768 --> 00:24:38.080
before Europeans
reached their territory.
00:24:38.104 --> 00:24:41.499
The Inca
were also extremely organized.
00:24:41.524 --> 00:24:42.668
They had a system of recording
00:24:42.692 --> 00:24:45.962
using these knotted cords
called \"khipus\".
00:24:45.986 --> 00:24:49.465
They divided up their people,
they had censuses.
00:24:49.489 --> 00:24:51.677
They had labor requirements.
00:24:51.701 --> 00:24:53.345
That was the way they supported
00:24:53.369 --> 00:24:56.682
a massive agricultural economy.
00:24:56.706 --> 00:24:59.893
Leguizamo: Khipu are collections
of knotted strings
00:24:59.917 --> 00:25:02.729
which the Inca
encoded with meaning
00:25:02.753 --> 00:25:04.189
to keep records and record data.
00:25:04.213 --> 00:25:06.817
Using different
string colors and weaves,
00:25:06.841 --> 00:25:11.196
the khipu makers
could have created over 1,500
00:25:11.220 --> 00:25:12.656
separate units of information.
00:25:12.680 --> 00:25:16.243
And in comparison,
the Sumerians of Mesopotamia,
00:25:16.267 --> 00:25:17.661
modern-day Iraq and Iran,
00:25:17.685 --> 00:25:21.581
worked with fewer
than 1,500 cuneiform signs,
00:25:21.605 --> 00:25:24.251
and Egyptians had fewer
than 800 hieroglyphics.
00:25:24.275 --> 00:25:28.088
Even after the Spanish
formally colonized these lands
00:25:28.112 --> 00:25:30.757
and set up
their own rules of law,
00:25:30.781 --> 00:25:33.009
native people still found ways
00:25:33.033 --> 00:25:35.303
to challenge European supremacy.
00:25:35.327 --> 00:25:37.431
Carrasco: The Spanish courts,
they were always demanding
00:25:37.455 --> 00:25:42.436
what becomes very important
for immigrants today, \"papeles\".
00:25:42.460 --> 00:25:43.603
You gotta have your papeles.
00:25:43.627 --> 00:25:47.941
Indigenous people would come
in Peru with their khipus,
00:25:47.965 --> 00:25:49.943
in Mexico with their codices,
00:25:49.967 --> 00:25:52.195
and they would use these
in the courts
00:25:52.219 --> 00:25:54.364
to say, \"Hey, we have a history,
00:25:54.388 --> 00:25:56.199
\"we have a style
of telling stories,
00:25:56.223 --> 00:25:58.744
\"we had our own legal system,
and here it is.\"
00:25:58.768 --> 00:26:00.495
Leguizamo: In fact,
the khipu were accepted
00:26:00.520 --> 00:26:03.832
as legal documents
in colonial Spanish courts.
00:26:03.856 --> 00:26:07.586
There are even accounts of khipu
being used as evidence
00:26:07.610 --> 00:26:08.211
against the Spanish
00:26:08.235 --> 00:26:11.006
during cases
in which Native Inca people
00:26:11.030 --> 00:26:13.633
accused colonists of stealing
00:26:13.657 --> 00:26:14.217
their land or property.
00:26:14.241 --> 00:26:17.679
We very much underestimate
people who lived in the past.
00:26:17.703 --> 00:26:20.223
It\'s important
to not underestimate the people
00:26:20.247 --> 00:26:22.642
that came before us
and what they knew.
00:26:22.666 --> 00:26:24.478
Verano: In Western medicine,
00:26:24.503 --> 00:26:27.063
there\'s often been
a little bit of elitism
00:26:27.087 --> 00:26:28.732
saying that the Greeks
were the greatest artists
00:26:28.756 --> 00:26:32.235
of all time, the Romans
were the greatest engineers.
00:26:32.259 --> 00:26:34.905
Now, where Peru
stands out in particular
00:26:34.929 --> 00:26:38.033
is in a form of surgery
on the skull
00:26:38.057 --> 00:26:39.535
that we call \"trepanation\".
00:26:39.559 --> 00:26:41.828
It comes
from the Greek word \"trypanon\",
00:26:41.852 --> 00:26:42.538
which means a drill.
00:26:42.562 --> 00:26:45.207
If you have
a depressed skull fracture
00:26:45.231 --> 00:26:45.999
and the brain is swelling,
00:26:46.023 --> 00:26:50.212
or there\'s a hematoma blood clot
underneath the bone,
00:26:50.236 --> 00:26:51.922
if you can cut a window,
00:26:51.946 --> 00:26:52.839
you can let the brain expand,
00:26:52.863 --> 00:26:56.384
then the patient can survive,
and then it can retract.
00:26:56.408 --> 00:27:01.348
Just an amazing 2,000-year
tradition of skull surgery.
00:27:01.372 --> 00:27:03.892
We know the Inca
weren\'t the only ones
00:27:03.916 --> 00:27:05.143
performing these surgeries.
00:27:05.167 --> 00:27:07.395
In ancient Greece,
they also drilled holes
00:27:07.419 --> 00:27:12.150
in patient skulls, but the Inca
were a lot more successful.
00:27:12.174 --> 00:27:13.777
One of the most
impressive statistics
00:27:13.801 --> 00:27:17.697
that we have from studying
trepanned skulls from Peru
00:27:17.721 --> 00:27:18.865
is that by Inca times,
00:27:18.889 --> 00:27:21.743
when they got the best results
that we know of,
00:27:21.767 --> 00:27:25.038
they had survival rates
of 80% to 90%.
00:27:25.062 --> 00:27:29.544
If we contrast that to Europe
into the early 20th century,
00:27:29.568 --> 00:27:33.988
they had
about a 10% survival rate.
00:27:35.322 --> 00:27:36.509
American medical practitioners
00:27:36.533 --> 00:27:39.135
didn\'t even reach
the same level of success
00:27:39.159 --> 00:27:42.138
performing trepanations
until after the Civil War,
00:27:42.162 --> 00:27:46.017
but even then they lagged behind
the pre-Incan civilizations
00:27:46.041 --> 00:27:49.522
who also pioneered
the use of anesthesia
00:27:49.546 --> 00:27:52.274
hundreds of years earlier.
00:27:52.298 --> 00:27:52.816
Verano: The Peruvian case
00:27:52.840 --> 00:27:55.861
is like an unwritten chapter
in the history of medicine.
00:27:55.885 --> 00:27:58.655
It should be written
as its own thing.
00:27:58.679 --> 00:28:02.577
Just 7% of American physicians
today are Latino.
00:28:02.601 --> 00:28:05.161
Imagine how much higher
that percentage would be
00:28:05.185 --> 00:28:07.747
if Latino kids knew
that they\'d been descended
00:28:07.771 --> 00:28:10.333
from surgeons
and masters of medicine.
00:28:10.357 --> 00:28:12.919
But it was the Inca
gold and silver,
00:28:12.943 --> 00:28:14.337
not their medical expertise,
00:28:14.361 --> 00:28:17.215
that drove the Spanish
all the way to South America.
00:28:17.239 --> 00:28:19.843
There\'s no question
that the Inca had great wealth
00:28:19.867 --> 00:28:23.805
in precious metals,
primarily gold, but also silver.
00:28:23.829 --> 00:28:24.723
Some of these rulers were buried
00:28:24.747 --> 00:28:27.684
with great amounts of things
like crowns made of gold,
00:28:27.708 --> 00:28:30.812
scepters, nose ornaments,
and a variety of other items
00:28:30.836 --> 00:28:35.859
that we can really appreciate
for their artistic fineness.
00:28:35.883 --> 00:28:36.943
It\'s the quality of the work.
00:28:36.967 --> 00:28:39.112
Some of these things
are masterpieces.
00:28:39.136 --> 00:28:39.863
The Spanish, of course,
00:28:39.887 --> 00:28:43.033
didn\'t care about that
in the 1500s.
00:28:43.057 --> 00:28:44.660
Leguizamo: Though the Inca
didn\'t think
00:28:44.684 --> 00:28:46.662
of gold and silver as currency,
00:28:46.686 --> 00:28:48.121
Europeans certainly did.
00:28:48.145 --> 00:28:51.958
It was this drive for wealth
that spurred the conquistadors
00:28:51.982 --> 00:28:55.504
to violently seize
the land and belongings
00:28:55.528 --> 00:28:56.589
of indigenous Americans
00:28:56.613 --> 00:29:00.467
and led to the centuries
of devastation that followed.
00:29:00.491 --> 00:29:03.720
Verano: In Cuzco, the walls
of the central temple
00:29:03.744 --> 00:29:05.472
had huge gold plates on them.
00:29:05.496 --> 00:29:06.973
The Spanish pried those off,
00:29:06.997 --> 00:29:08.975
quickly melted down
these metals,
00:29:08.999 --> 00:29:10.018
and took them away.
00:29:10.042 --> 00:29:14.397
So we\'ve lost a tremendous
amount of Inca gold work.
00:29:14.421 --> 00:29:15.899
There\'s a great illustration
00:29:15.923 --> 00:29:18.276
done by a native
Peruvian artist.
00:29:18.300 --> 00:29:20.028
Leguizamo: In the drawing,
an Inca ruler
00:29:20.052 --> 00:29:23.281
asks a Spanish soldier,
\"Why are you guys
00:29:23.305 --> 00:29:24.908
\"so totally fixated on gold?
00:29:24.932 --> 00:29:27.410
\"What do you do with it?
Do you eat it?\"
00:29:27.434 --> 00:29:30.789
And the Spanish soldier
jokingly replies,
00:29:30.813 --> 00:29:33.608
\"Yes, we eat it.\"
00:29:35.901 --> 00:29:36.629
In 1545,
00:29:36.653 --> 00:29:40.966
a rich silver deposit was
discovered in Potosí, Bolivia,
00:29:40.990 --> 00:29:43.301
ripe for Spanish exploitation.
00:29:43.325 --> 00:29:44.344
So what did they do?
00:29:44.368 --> 00:29:47.055
They enslaved
the native Bolivians
00:29:47.079 --> 00:29:47.847
in their own land.
00:29:47.871 --> 00:29:50.559
So by the year 1600,
Potosí had over
00:29:50.583 --> 00:29:53.770
600 mines in operation,
which yielded
00:29:53.794 --> 00:29:56.691
9 million silver pesos
00:29:56.715 --> 00:29:57.566
annually.
00:29:57.590 --> 00:30:00.276
That\'s more
than all the other silver mines
00:30:00.300 --> 00:30:02.278
in the world, combined.
00:30:02.302 --> 00:30:03.071
Now, over the centuries,
00:30:03.095 --> 00:30:06.324
the Spanish would steal
an entire mountain\'s worth
00:30:06.348 --> 00:30:10.663
of silver on the backs
of enslaved indigenous Incans
00:30:10.687 --> 00:30:12.665
and African miners.
00:30:12.689 --> 00:30:14.374
During the colonial period,
00:30:14.398 --> 00:30:17.419
80% of the silver of the world
00:30:17.443 --> 00:30:20.839
came out of Peru and Mexico.
00:30:20.863 --> 00:30:22.298
During this period,
00:30:22.322 --> 00:30:24.510
silver was the central thing
00:30:24.534 --> 00:30:27.846
in the making
of a world economy.
00:30:28.245 --> 00:30:31.517
Now, all that silver
didn\'t just float to Spain.
00:30:31.541 --> 00:30:33.602
No, the Spanish
traded silver pesos
00:30:33.626 --> 00:30:36.479
with the Ottoman Empire,
China and India,
00:30:36.504 --> 00:30:38.691
profiting all along the way.
00:30:38.715 --> 00:30:40.568
Now the more wealth
they piled up,
00:30:40.592 --> 00:30:43.319
the more power they had
to crush other cultures,
00:30:43.343 --> 00:30:46.448
not just in Latin America,
but all over the world.
00:30:46.472 --> 00:30:48.784
In fact, it was
this ill-gotten wealth
00:30:48.808 --> 00:30:51.119
that funded
the Enlightenment era
00:30:51.143 --> 00:30:52.580
in Europe in the 1700s.
00:30:52.604 --> 00:30:54.623
Because suddenly governments
could afford to pay
00:30:54.647 --> 00:30:57.543
scientists and philosophers
and artists
00:30:57.567 --> 00:31:00.045
to sit around
and create all day,
00:31:00.069 --> 00:31:03.006
ideas flourished,
technology advanced,
00:31:03.030 --> 00:31:04.257
but only in Europe.
00:31:04.281 --> 00:31:07.242
[Speaking Spanish]
00:31:11.955 --> 00:31:15.393
The European commercial
revolution
00:31:15.417 --> 00:31:17.937
of the 1500s, 1600s,
00:31:17.961 --> 00:31:19.732
would have been impossible
00:31:19.756 --> 00:31:21.525
without the silver
of the Americas.
00:31:21.549 --> 00:31:23.485
And this isn\'t even
ancient history, okay?
00:31:23.510 --> 00:31:27.573
The Spanish stole
so much silver from Potosi
00:31:27.597 --> 00:31:28.907
that, in 2011,
00:31:28.931 --> 00:31:30.366
the mountain collapsed,
00:31:30.390 --> 00:31:32.410
hollowed out
from the inside.
00:31:32.434 --> 00:31:35.997
Now this backbreaking labor
proved deadly.
00:31:36.021 --> 00:31:38.458
Potosi became known in Quechua
00:31:38.482 --> 00:31:40.001
as \"the mountain that eats men,\"
00:31:40.025 --> 00:31:42.378
as many
as 8 million indigenous
00:31:42.402 --> 00:31:43.756
and African enslaved people
00:31:43.780 --> 00:31:45.633
may have perished
in the mines
00:31:45.657 --> 00:31:48.176
500 year history.
00:31:48.200 --> 00:31:50.805
And that 500-year-old
transfer riches
00:31:50.829 --> 00:31:52.472
continues to affect us today.
00:31:52.496 --> 00:31:54.891
Because Europe used
that stolen money
00:31:54.915 --> 00:31:56.519
to fund their empires,
00:31:56.543 --> 00:31:58.353
which generated more wealth.
00:31:58.377 --> 00:32:00.021
And it was an ongoing cycle,
00:32:00.045 --> 00:32:02.650
but the poor indigenous
Inca miners
00:32:02.674 --> 00:32:04.150
back in South America,
00:32:04.174 --> 00:32:04.943
well, they were left
00:32:04.967 --> 00:32:07.530
with generational
poverty instead.
00:32:11.181 --> 00:32:11.659
Hundreds of years
00:32:11.683 --> 00:32:14.620
before the arrival
of the Spanish, however,
00:32:14.644 --> 00:32:16.705
Maya society was thriving.
00:32:16.729 --> 00:32:19.457
Their culture
may be best remembered today
00:32:19.481 --> 00:32:21.417
for their meticulous calendars
00:32:21.441 --> 00:32:23.962
and knowledge of astronomy.
00:32:23.986 --> 00:32:26.005
The Maya originally just meant
00:32:26.029 --> 00:32:27.966
\"the people
in the Yucatan Peninsula,\"
00:32:27.990 --> 00:32:29.844
and that was the word
for their language.
00:32:29.868 --> 00:32:33.429
But now it\'s understood
that encompasses
00:32:33.453 --> 00:32:36.559
the Yucatan Peninsula,
the Peten Basin,
00:32:36.583 --> 00:32:40.478
the Guatemala Highlands,
Belize, part of Honduras,
00:32:40.503 --> 00:32:43.022
Campeche, Tabasco, and Chiapas.
00:32:43.046 --> 00:32:47.026
The Maya were probably
the most sophisticated culture
00:32:47.050 --> 00:32:48.612
in pre-Columbian Americas.
00:32:48.636 --> 00:32:50.238
Leguizamo:
One mind-blowing example:
00:32:50.262 --> 00:32:53.199
how the Maya tracked
the movements of the cosmos
00:32:53.223 --> 00:32:55.368
and recorded it
in their codices,
00:32:55.392 --> 00:32:59.832
which were their form
of books and sacred texts.
00:32:59.856 --> 00:33:02.041
The Maya calculated accurately
00:33:02.065 --> 00:33:06.755
the 365 plus days
of the solar year
00:33:06.779 --> 00:33:08.841
over 2,000 years ago.
00:33:10.032 --> 00:33:12.051
The codices have information
00:33:12.075 --> 00:33:13.596
about the Venus cycle,
00:33:13.620 --> 00:33:16.014
the first rising of Venus
with the sun,
00:33:16.038 --> 00:33:20.059
over 800 years
accurately calculated.
00:33:20.083 --> 00:33:22.688
There is a Mars table
that showed
00:33:22.712 --> 00:33:25.064
that they accurately calculated
00:33:25.088 --> 00:33:27.025
the cycle of Mars.
00:33:27.049 --> 00:33:30.028
So these documents
were probably painted
00:33:30.052 --> 00:33:32.071
within a couple of hundred years
00:33:32.095 --> 00:33:33.657
of the Spanish arriving,
00:33:33.681 --> 00:33:35.784
but it\'s clear
that some parts of them
00:33:35.808 --> 00:33:39.538
were copies of much,
much earlier documents,
00:33:39.562 --> 00:33:42.290
just like the Bible is
a collection of documents
00:33:42.314 --> 00:33:44.960
from a lot
of different periods of time
00:33:44.984 --> 00:33:47.170
and different kinds of material.
00:33:47.194 --> 00:33:48.463
Leguizamo:
Before European contact,
00:33:48.487 --> 00:33:51.382
the Maya had developed
one of the most advanced
00:33:51.406 --> 00:33:54.970
water management systems
in the world.
00:33:54.994 --> 00:33:55.512
Macri: The Maya,
00:33:55.536 --> 00:33:58.807
they were experts
at managing water.
00:33:58.831 --> 00:34:00.016
Leguizamo: The Maya aqueducts
00:34:00.040 --> 00:34:01.142
were so brilliantly constructed,
00:34:01.166 --> 00:34:06.189
they rerouted rivers to flow
beneath their royal plazas.
00:34:06.213 --> 00:34:08.066
We have amazing evidence
00:34:08.090 --> 00:34:11.612
of their ability to store water,
00:34:11.636 --> 00:34:13.572
some in the chultunes,
00:34:13.596 --> 00:34:15.699
some in reservoirs.
00:34:15.723 --> 00:34:20.537
So even at 1,000 BC,
the people of San Lorenzo
00:34:20.561 --> 00:34:24.457
had constructed pipes
of concrete blocks
00:34:24.481 --> 00:34:29.004
to direct water
where they needed it to be.
00:34:29.028 --> 00:34:31.006
At the site of Palenque,
00:34:31.030 --> 00:34:32.591
they diverted a stream
00:34:32.615 --> 00:34:35.719
through the region
known as the palace,
00:34:35.743 --> 00:34:37.345
where there were toilets,
00:34:37.369 --> 00:34:38.388
stones with holes in the center
00:34:38.412 --> 00:34:41.016
that water was diverted
underneath it
00:34:41.040 --> 00:34:44.019
to go through and take it
out to the stream.
00:34:44.043 --> 00:34:44.728
Leguizamo: In contrast,
00:34:44.752 --> 00:34:47.438
the White House
didn\'t get indoor plumbing
00:34:47.462 --> 00:34:48.607
until 1804,
00:34:48.631 --> 00:34:51.067
when Thomas Jefferson
installed a cistern
00:34:51.091 --> 00:34:54.697
that distributed water
through wooden pipes.
00:34:57.139 --> 00:34:59.492
The Maya developed
a writing system,
00:34:59.517 --> 00:35:01.996
they developed
the notion of the zero,
00:35:02.020 --> 00:35:06.583
which doesn\'t exist anyplace
other than in India.
00:35:06.607 --> 00:35:08.376
Perez:
The Maya language contains
00:35:08.400 --> 00:35:08.877
figures and characters
00:35:08.901 --> 00:35:12.130
by which they could signify
everything they desired,
00:35:12.154 --> 00:35:12.965
and that these great books
00:35:12.989 --> 00:35:15.926
are of such a astuteness
and subtle technique
00:35:15.950 --> 00:35:16.259
that we could say
00:35:16.283 --> 00:35:19.220
our writing does not offer
much of an advantage.
00:35:19.244 --> 00:35:22.348
Leguizamo: The conquistadors
and the Catholic friars
00:35:22.372 --> 00:35:24.685
considered
all indigenous documents
00:35:24.709 --> 00:35:26.102
to be the work of the devil,
00:35:26.126 --> 00:35:30.148
and they burned
all that they could find.
00:35:30.172 --> 00:35:33.944
They wanted
to eradicate their religion
00:35:33.968 --> 00:35:36.697
and their society
and their culture.
00:35:36.721 --> 00:35:39.658
The Spanish soldiers
and the sailors
00:35:39.682 --> 00:35:42.036
who arrived to do the conquering
00:35:42.060 --> 00:35:43.954
were not educated people,
00:35:43.978 --> 00:35:44.538
and they didn\'t know
00:35:44.562 --> 00:35:48.542
even the science
that was known in Europe.
00:35:48.566 --> 00:35:51.127
Leguizamo:
Just like in the Caribbean,
00:35:51.151 --> 00:35:52.378
in Mesoamerica,
00:35:52.402 --> 00:35:55.049
conquistadors like Hernán Cortés
00:35:55.073 --> 00:35:56.884
and Francisco Pizarro
00:35:56.908 --> 00:35:58.510
committed forced conversions
00:35:58.534 --> 00:36:01.805
alongside the pillaging
in mass murder.
00:36:01.829 --> 00:36:03.932
One of the things
the Spanish did
00:36:03.956 --> 00:36:04.767
was round up Indians
00:36:04.791 --> 00:36:06.476
and make a move
to a certain region
00:36:06.500 --> 00:36:10.606
where they would be
converted to Christianity.
00:36:10.630 --> 00:36:11.607
People had to leave
00:36:11.631 --> 00:36:12.983
the area that they knew well
00:36:13.007 --> 00:36:15.861
to live in a place
that was unfamiliar to them,
00:36:15.885 --> 00:36:19.197
so you find people
gradually less and less able
00:36:19.221 --> 00:36:20.824
to take care of themselves.
00:36:20.848 --> 00:36:24.870
Once people have been
properly colonized
00:36:24.894 --> 00:36:26.162
by foreign invaders
00:36:26.186 --> 00:36:29.083
and mistreated
for a generation or two,
00:36:29.107 --> 00:36:31.459
they are no longer having
a literate society.
00:36:31.483 --> 00:36:35.089
and then you have Indians
who don\'t read and write.
00:36:35.113 --> 00:36:36.632
And that happened with the Aztec
00:36:36.656 --> 00:36:39.384
and it certainly happened
with the Maya people.
00:36:39.408 --> 00:36:40.594
Leguizamo:
So why doesn\'t history
00:36:40.618 --> 00:36:44.723
remember these empires
as equal to the Spanish?
00:36:44.747 --> 00:36:45.933
Well, like they say,
00:36:45.957 --> 00:36:48.184
history is a fable agreed upon.
00:36:48.208 --> 00:36:51.855
The agreed upon narrative
of European superiority
00:36:51.879 --> 00:36:55.400
is passed down even
when it\'s not the whole truth.
00:36:55.424 --> 00:36:59.195
I think the history textbooks
not only don\'t get it right,
00:36:59.219 --> 00:37:01.280
they mainly don\'t say anything.
00:37:01.304 --> 00:37:02.281
They say very little
00:37:02.305 --> 00:37:05.828
about Mesoamerican
civilizations.
00:37:16.863 --> 00:37:18.966
Leguizamo:
I\'m here at Penn Museum
00:37:18.990 --> 00:37:21.135
of Archaeology and Anthropology,
00:37:21.159 --> 00:37:23.637
which houses
an amazing collection
00:37:23.661 --> 00:37:26.515
of Aztec artifacts.
00:37:27.330 --> 00:37:29.601
I\'m here to meet
expert Simon Martin,
00:37:29.625 --> 00:37:32.146
who\'s been studying
Mesoamerican cultures
00:37:32.170 --> 00:37:35.481
up close and personal
for decades.
00:37:35.506 --> 00:37:38.276
So this is
our Aztec sculpture.
00:37:38.300 --> 00:37:40.278
This is the kind
of great period
00:37:40.302 --> 00:37:41.404
that everyone\'s
heard about.
00:37:41.428 --> 00:37:43.406
This is
when the Spanish arrived.
00:37:43.430 --> 00:37:45.117
And these are
some of the objects
00:37:45.141 --> 00:37:45.909
they would have seen
00:37:45.933 --> 00:37:47.911
when they went
to Tenochtitlan,
00:37:47.935 --> 00:37:49.830
the predecessor
of Mexico City.
00:37:49.854 --> 00:37:52.040
Right, the capital
of the Aztecs.
00:37:52.064 --> 00:37:54.417
Yeah. We know
so much more about them
00:37:54.441 --> 00:37:57.004
because the Spanish
actually saw
00:37:57.028 --> 00:37:58.964
Aztec society in action.
00:37:58.988 --> 00:37:59.756
How advanced
were they?
00:37:59.780 --> 00:38:01.299
Well, they were
very sophisticated.
00:38:01.323 --> 00:38:04.970
They turned essentially
a swamp into a city.
00:38:04.994 --> 00:38:07.973
So they expanded
using drainage
00:38:07.997 --> 00:38:08.891
and using raised fields
00:38:08.915 --> 00:38:12.144
and building big dikes
and aqueducts.
00:38:12.168 --> 00:38:14.188
And there were
at least 100,000 people
00:38:14.212 --> 00:38:16.648
living on essentially
an island
00:38:16.672 --> 00:38:18.650
in the middle
of a lake.
00:38:18.674 --> 00:38:19.275
One of the buildings
00:38:19.299 --> 00:38:20.611
that most impressed
the Spaniards
00:38:20.635 --> 00:38:23.572
when they came
into Tenochtitlan
00:38:23.596 --> 00:38:26.992
was Temple Mayor,
the great Aztec temple.
00:38:27.016 --> 00:38:30.621
Leguizamo:
In 1978, a group of electricians
00:38:30.645 --> 00:38:32.873
installing pipes underground
00:38:32.897 --> 00:38:35.125
struck a huge carved stone,
00:38:35.149 --> 00:38:35.959
which we came to discover
00:38:35.983 --> 00:38:39.671
was a centerpiece
of the Templo Mayor,
00:38:39.695 --> 00:38:42.007
unseen for hundreds of years.
00:38:42.031 --> 00:38:45.468
Narrator: The discovery were
a 20-ton stone medallion,
00:38:45.492 --> 00:38:46.845
which archaeologists
say could provide
00:38:46.869 --> 00:38:49.388
the missing link
to Aztec religious customs,
00:38:49.412 --> 00:38:52.601
which were wiped out
by the conquering Spaniards.
00:38:52.625 --> 00:38:54.895
The medallion
is a story in stone.
00:38:54.919 --> 00:38:58.732
Except for one small crack,
it is perfectly preserved
00:38:58.756 --> 00:39:01.400
five centuries
after it was buried.
00:39:01.424 --> 00:39:03.153
They would like
to widen their search
00:39:03.177 --> 00:39:05.239
to find
more of the ancient city,
00:39:05.263 --> 00:39:07.908
but it lies
under the National Cathedral,
00:39:07.932 --> 00:39:09.408
and too much history
would have to be torn up
00:39:09.432 --> 00:39:15.414
on top of the ground
to get at the mysteries below.
00:39:15.438 --> 00:39:17.876
Carrasco: This discovery
is a sculptural
00:39:17.900 --> 00:39:18.752
and architectural masterpiece
00:39:18.776 --> 00:39:23.298
because what the Aztec artists
and sculptors were able to do
00:39:23.322 --> 00:39:26.677
was to put
a kind of symbolic picture
00:39:26.701 --> 00:39:29.763
of their whole view
of the universe
00:39:29.787 --> 00:39:31.056
in this one building.
00:39:31.080 --> 00:39:33.850
It rocked me to find out
Tenochtitlan
00:39:33.874 --> 00:39:36.394
was five times larger
than Madrid
00:39:36.418 --> 00:39:39.022
before Cortés invaded
the Aztec capital.
00:39:39.046 --> 00:39:41.650
I wish I could have seen
what a major metropolis,
00:39:41.674 --> 00:39:45.486
100% built by Aztec
engineers and artists,
00:39:45.511 --> 00:39:47.155
would have looked like.
00:39:51.183 --> 00:39:52.035
Ledesma: The Aztecs,
00:39:52.059 --> 00:39:53.245
they called themselves Mexicas
00:39:53.269 --> 00:39:56.455
because their biggest god
was Mextli.
00:39:56.479 --> 00:39:59.293
What we know
from their ecological records
00:39:59.317 --> 00:40:02.170
and the historical sources,
00:40:02.194 --> 00:40:07.676
the Aztecs, or Mexicas,
started here in 1325.
00:40:09.492 --> 00:40:11.470
Verano: There were native
healers in Mexico,
00:40:11.494 --> 00:40:13.849
and when the Spanish
first had contact with them,
00:40:13.873 --> 00:40:16.143
they were very impressed
with their ability
00:40:16.167 --> 00:40:17.936
to treat fractures, wounds,
00:40:17.960 --> 00:40:20.272
their control
of herbal medications.
00:40:20.296 --> 00:40:23.108
And it\'s been said
that when the conquistadors
00:40:23.132 --> 00:40:24.985
came to the city
of Tenochtitlan,
00:40:25.009 --> 00:40:27.279
if they had injuries themselves
or illnesses,
00:40:27.303 --> 00:40:30.032
they would prefer
to go to an Aztec doctor
00:40:30.056 --> 00:40:31.407
rather than their own surgeons
00:40:31.431 --> 00:40:34.036
that came across with them
from Europe.
00:40:34.060 --> 00:40:36.913
Leguizamo: Spanish conquistador
Hernán Cortés
00:40:36.937 --> 00:40:38.999
reportedly told
Emperor Charles V
00:40:39.023 --> 00:40:43.879
that the Aztec doctors
were superior to those in Spain.
00:40:43.903 --> 00:40:45.756
So superior, in fact,
00:40:45.780 --> 00:40:46.882
that the king need not bother
00:40:46.906 --> 00:40:51.678
sending Spanish physicians
to the new world.
00:40:51.702 --> 00:40:52.387
Perez: Some of the Indians
00:40:52.411 --> 00:40:54.640
are so experienced
that they have cured
00:40:54.664 --> 00:40:57.225
many old and serious
infirmities,
00:40:57.249 --> 00:41:00.562
which the Spaniards
have suffered many days
00:41:00.586 --> 00:41:02.939
without finding a remedy.
00:41:02.963 --> 00:41:04.358
Leguizamo:
Modern science confirmed
00:41:04.382 --> 00:41:08.695
that over 85%
of the herbs Aztecs used
00:41:08.719 --> 00:41:09.780
are truly effective
00:41:09.804 --> 00:41:12.240
and could not be found
outside of the Americas.
00:41:12.264 --> 00:41:15.327
Your local pharmacy today
is filled with drugs
00:41:15.351 --> 00:41:20.749
that contain compounds
used by the Aztec.
00:41:22.233 --> 00:41:26.213
Hernán Cortés was
the first European conquistador
00:41:26.237 --> 00:41:28.548
to reach
the great Aztec capital.
00:41:28.572 --> 00:41:30.217
And when he
and his troops arrived,
00:41:30.241 --> 00:41:32.886
the Aztec king Moctezuma
greeted them
00:41:32.910 --> 00:41:36.098
on the outskirts of the city.
00:41:36.122 --> 00:41:38.350
Olmos: Gazing
on such wonderful sites,
00:41:38.374 --> 00:41:39.768
we did not know what to say,
00:41:39.792 --> 00:41:45.524
or whether what appeared
before us was real.
00:41:45.548 --> 00:41:50.052
[Speaking Spanish]
00:42:07.236 --> 00:42:09.798
For the indigenous people,
the Spaniards come,
00:42:09.822 --> 00:42:11.216
they don\'t see them
as Spaniards
00:42:11.240 --> 00:42:13.510
the way we see them today
from Europe.
00:42:13.534 --> 00:42:15.262
They see them
as another ethnic group
00:42:15.286 --> 00:42:18.390
who is part of a number
of powerful groups.
00:42:18.414 --> 00:42:23.210
Ledesma: [Speaking Spanish]
00:42:42.229 --> 00:42:44.458
Leguizamo: There was
a third important person
00:42:44.482 --> 00:42:47.210
at this diplomatic
meet and greet,
00:42:47.234 --> 00:42:49.713
Cortés\'s native interpreter,
00:42:49.737 --> 00:42:51.673
the Spanish called her
Doña Marina,
00:42:51.697 --> 00:42:55.677
and the Maya gave her
the title of respect,
00:42:55.701 --> 00:42:57.304
Malintzin.
00:42:57.328 --> 00:43:00.307
Malinche is an extremely
divisive figure
00:43:00.331 --> 00:43:01.433
in Latin history.
00:43:01.457 --> 00:43:03.852
She gave birth
to Hernán Cortés\'s son.
00:43:03.876 --> 00:43:06.730
Metaphorically,
this is the first Latino,
00:43:06.754 --> 00:43:11.109
a child with both indigenous
and European ancestry.
00:43:11.133 --> 00:43:13.612
She\'s the mother
of all modern Mexico,
00:43:13.636 --> 00:43:17.657
but as I learned,
many also see her as a traitor,
00:43:17.681 --> 00:43:21.328
a temptress who aligned
with the conquistadors
00:43:21.352 --> 00:43:22.788
over her own people.
00:43:22.812 --> 00:43:26.750
She actually was born
into a noble Aztec family,
00:43:26.774 --> 00:43:32.339
and she was sold
to a Chontal Mayan community.
00:43:32.363 --> 00:43:34.883
She\'s basically
on the lower rungs
00:43:34.907 --> 00:43:37.427
of the society in Chontal Maya.
00:43:37.451 --> 00:43:40.722
She learns the language,
of course.
00:43:40.746 --> 00:43:42.766
Hernán Cortés is traveling
00:43:42.790 --> 00:43:46.311
through the southern part
of Mexico.
00:43:46.335 --> 00:43:47.979
He looks scary and dangerous,
00:43:48.003 --> 00:43:49.189
and so they just like, \"Here,
00:43:49.213 --> 00:43:51.526
we\'re going to give you
some gifts, move on.\"
00:43:51.550 --> 00:43:55.487
And among those gifts
that they gave Cortés
00:43:55.512 --> 00:44:00.492
was 20 women to serve
as basically sex slaves
00:44:00.517 --> 00:44:01.785
for him and his troops.
00:44:01.809 --> 00:44:03.370
Leguizamo:
Malinche was among these women.
00:44:03.394 --> 00:44:07.666
She was no more than 19
or 20 years old at the time.
00:44:07.690 --> 00:44:08.750
Soon, she learns Spanish
00:44:08.774 --> 00:44:10.043
and she becomes
absolutely crucial
00:44:10.067 --> 00:44:12.379
in the linguistic
and communicative bridge
00:44:12.403 --> 00:44:15.257
between the Spaniards
and Moctezuma,
00:44:15.281 --> 00:44:16.592
because she is trilingual.
00:44:16.616 --> 00:44:21.556
Cortés makes note of that,
and he makes her his woman,
00:44:21.580 --> 00:44:24.182
and says,
\"I will give you your freedom
00:44:24.206 --> 00:44:27.394
if you will be my interpreter
and my secretary.\"
00:44:27.418 --> 00:44:31.064
We do know,
because it is in the record,
00:44:31.088 --> 00:44:35.902
that she did give away
the information
00:44:35.926 --> 00:44:36.653
when they were in Cholula,
00:44:36.677 --> 00:44:40.657
that the Cholulans were going
to attack the Spanish,
00:44:40.681 --> 00:44:42.492
and there was going
to be a massacre.
00:44:42.517 --> 00:44:44.202
And she went and told Cortés,
00:44:44.226 --> 00:44:46.454
so Cortés organized a massacre
00:44:46.478 --> 00:44:48.164
against the Cholulans.
00:44:48.188 --> 00:44:50.834
And she becomes
very close to Cortés,
00:44:50.858 --> 00:44:53.378
so much so
that the indigenous people,
00:44:53.402 --> 00:44:55.755
as a way of kind
of making fun of him,
00:44:55.779 --> 00:44:59.175
called him Malinche
in some of the documents,
00:44:59.199 --> 00:45:01.428
and they\'re calling him
Malinche,
00:45:01.452 --> 00:45:02.470
because they\'re saying
00:45:02.494 --> 00:45:05.348
he\'s not only very close
to Malinche,
00:45:05.372 --> 00:45:08.603
but she has
some control over him.
00:45:08.627 --> 00:45:10.061
Leguizamo:
It\'s painful to imagine
00:45:10.085 --> 00:45:13.440
a native woman helping Cortés
in his conquest.
00:45:13.464 --> 00:45:14.482
In Mexican arts and literature,
00:45:14.507 --> 00:45:18.695
Malinche is usually depicted
as a seller of her nation.
00:45:18.719 --> 00:45:21.323
\"Malinchista\" today
is still used
00:45:21.347 --> 00:45:22.198
as a Spanish insult
00:45:22.222 --> 00:45:24.577
to describe a traitor
or a backstabber,
00:45:24.601 --> 00:45:27.704
and it\'s really easy
to paint Malinche as a villain
00:45:27.728 --> 00:45:29.080
in Mexican history.
00:45:29.104 --> 00:45:31.082
She\'s not siding
with the Europeans,
00:45:31.106 --> 00:45:33.084
she doesn\'t know what Europe is,
00:45:33.108 --> 00:45:34.002
who the Europeans are,
00:45:34.026 --> 00:45:36.880
and she does the work
that she had to do.
00:45:36.904 --> 00:45:39.466
I just want to say
that it\'s ridiculous
00:45:39.490 --> 00:45:40.342
to think that a woman
00:45:40.366 --> 00:45:42.637
who is a translator
for a conqueror
00:45:42.661 --> 00:45:45.221
is the one responsible
for the whole falling
00:45:45.245 --> 00:45:47.516
of the Mexica Aztec Empire.
00:45:47.540 --> 00:45:50.226
Leguizamo: Today,
many Mexican and Chicana women
00:45:50.250 --> 00:45:52.812
are taking Malinche\'s
story back,
00:45:52.836 --> 00:45:56.149
some see her now
as a victim of machismo culture,
00:45:56.173 --> 00:46:00.737
and an icon of motherhood
and feminine power.
00:46:00.761 --> 00:46:01.279
My own mestizo heritage
00:46:01.303 --> 00:46:06.661
includes both the conquerors
and the indigenous people.
00:46:06.685 --> 00:46:07.369
So Malinche\'s story
00:46:07.393 --> 00:46:10.121
can\'t be fully
one thing or another,
00:46:10.145 --> 00:46:11.666
and neither can mine.
00:46:13.608 --> 00:46:17.987
[Speaking Spanish]
00:47:17.672 --> 00:47:19.899
The Aztec,
they were very militaristic
00:47:19.923 --> 00:47:24.112
and they dominated
a huge amount of territory.
00:47:24.136 --> 00:47:27.115
The problem was
that the Spanish arrived
00:47:27.139 --> 00:47:30.745
and the enemies
of the Mexica were like,
00:47:30.769 --> 00:47:36.709
\"Wow, these new strange people
look pretty powerful.
00:47:36.733 --> 00:47:38.209
I think I\'ll ally with them,
00:47:38.233 --> 00:47:42.548
and I can finally defeat
my enemy, the Mexica.\"
00:47:42.572 --> 00:47:45.842
Cortés maybe had less
than 500 troops,
00:47:45.866 --> 00:47:46.802
and he ended up having
00:47:46.826 --> 00:47:48.386
thousands and tens of thousands
00:47:48.410 --> 00:47:49.471
by the time he created alliances
00:47:49.495 --> 00:47:53.601
with those dominated groups
in the Aztec territory.
00:47:53.625 --> 00:47:57.020
80% of the warriors
are indigenous warriors
00:47:57.044 --> 00:47:58.647
from other communities.
00:47:58.671 --> 00:48:00.023
So it\'s not really a conquest
00:48:00.047 --> 00:48:02.108
so much as
it is also a revolution,
00:48:02.132 --> 00:48:04.653
a rebellion
of other indigenous people
00:48:04.677 --> 00:48:06.029
working with this new army.
00:48:06.053 --> 00:48:09.784
So the real conquerors
were all that indigenous people
00:48:09.808 --> 00:48:10.992
rather than the Spaniards.
00:48:11.016 --> 00:48:13.829
Carrasco: But what happens
when they are able
00:48:13.853 --> 00:48:16.873
to defeat the Aztec warriors
in the city,
00:48:16.897 --> 00:48:19.794
is they destroy this city
so badly
00:48:19.818 --> 00:48:22.045
that even
in the Spanish accounts,
00:48:22.069 --> 00:48:25.423
they\'re mourning
what they have done.
00:48:25.447 --> 00:48:26.132
And we have descriptions
00:48:26.156 --> 00:48:28.803
of the flattened parts
of this city.
00:48:28.827 --> 00:48:31.471
Leguizamo: It took
the Spanish conquistadors
00:48:31.495 --> 00:48:32.347
years to traverse
00:48:32.371 --> 00:48:34.057
all of Central
and South America,
00:48:34.081 --> 00:48:37.060
but their diseases
traveled far faster.
00:48:37.084 --> 00:48:39.187
Once the first indigenous person
was infected,
00:48:39.211 --> 00:48:42.775
their germs quickly spread
to the rest of their family
00:48:42.799 --> 00:48:44.943
and then their whole village.
00:48:44.967 --> 00:48:46.152
Villages traded with one another
00:48:46.176 --> 00:48:49.948
and soon whole regions
could be struck down by plagues.
00:48:49.972 --> 00:48:52.325
Even though the Europeans
hadn\'t yet arrived
00:48:52.349 --> 00:48:53.869
at every corner
of the continent,
00:48:53.893 --> 00:48:56.287
their deadly viruses raged
ahead of them,
00:48:56.311 --> 00:48:59.374
carried by the natives
themselves.
00:48:59.398 --> 00:49:00.793
A lot of people died
00:49:00.817 --> 00:49:03.378
because the diseases
the Spanish were carrying
00:49:03.402 --> 00:49:05.840
travel ahead of them.
Right, right.
00:49:05.864 --> 00:49:07.215
So when they arrived,
00:49:07.239 --> 00:49:10.426
very often the societies
were already devastated.
00:49:10.450 --> 00:49:11.846
And that\'s one
of the reasons
00:49:11.870 --> 00:49:12.929
they managed
to win so easily.
00:49:12.953 --> 00:49:14.515
It wasn\'t
that one civilization
00:49:14.539 --> 00:49:15.683
was stronger
or better
00:49:15.707 --> 00:49:17.893
or had better
military knowledge.
00:49:17.917 --> 00:49:18.017
Yeah.
00:49:18.041 --> 00:49:20.604
These people
were vanquished by disease.
00:49:20.628 --> 00:49:22.313
Leguizamo:
The fall of Tenochtitlan
00:49:22.337 --> 00:49:24.232
was a tragedy for the Aztec,
00:49:24.256 --> 00:49:24.692
but it didn\'t mean
00:49:24.716 --> 00:49:27.068
the whole of Latin American
civilization
00:49:27.092 --> 00:49:29.237
instantly came
under Spanish rule.
00:49:29.261 --> 00:49:31.657
No, because indigenous
communities
00:49:31.681 --> 00:49:32.949
fought back with force
00:49:32.973 --> 00:49:35.661
and through subtler ways
as well.
00:49:42.567 --> 00:49:44.879
Macri: At one point,
the Catholic bishop
00:49:44.903 --> 00:49:47.005
brought on a Mayan man in
00:49:47.029 --> 00:49:49.299
and asked him
to give him an alphabet.
00:49:49.323 --> 00:49:52.636
That Catholic bishop said,
\"I want you to write me
00:49:52.660 --> 00:49:54.722
a sentence in your language.\"
00:49:54.746 --> 00:49:57.056
And he wrote down, \"Ma inkati,\"
00:49:57.080 --> 00:50:00.268
and it means, \"I don\'t want to.\"
00:50:00.292 --> 00:50:01.102
And for a long time,
00:50:01.126 --> 00:50:03.772
people translate
as, \"I do not wish.\"
00:50:03.796 --> 00:50:07.066
No, it means, \"I don\'t want to.\"
00:50:07.090 --> 00:50:08.484
I love that story.
00:50:08.509 --> 00:50:11.196
The name of the man is Chu.
00:50:11.220 --> 00:50:12.030
You should know his name.
00:50:12.054 --> 00:50:14.115
I mean, you should not
be nameless.
00:50:14.139 --> 00:50:16.911
That\'s the first
written example we have
00:50:16.935 --> 00:50:18.244
from an indigenous person
00:50:18.268 --> 00:50:23.709
of resistance
to the invaders, really.
00:50:24.399 --> 00:50:26.044
Well, it seems like
a small moment,
00:50:26.068 --> 00:50:29.005
a scribe refusing
to translate a phrase
00:50:29.029 --> 00:50:30.298
from Mayan to Spanish,
00:50:30.322 --> 00:50:34.637
but history is made up
of small moments of resistance
00:50:34.661 --> 00:50:35.554
just like this one.
00:50:35.578 --> 00:50:39.558
Just think about Rosa Parks
sitting at the front of the bus
00:50:39.582 --> 00:50:40.099
and what that led to.
00:50:40.123 --> 00:50:43.520
The scribe chose dignity
for himself and his culture
00:50:43.544 --> 00:50:46.523
in the face
of torture and death.
00:50:46.547 --> 00:50:47.691
Those are my people.
00:50:47.715 --> 00:50:51.904
Leguizamo: Our ancestors endured
an almost total genocide
00:50:51.928 --> 00:50:56.032
through war, plague,
and religious conversion.
00:50:56.056 --> 00:50:57.993
The land and wealth
were seized,
00:50:58.017 --> 00:50:59.452
and they were forced
into a cycle
00:50:59.476 --> 00:51:04.917
of generational poverty
that still exists to this day.
00:51:04.941 --> 00:51:08.963
Today, Latinos are reclaiming
their own histories
00:51:08.987 --> 00:51:10.839
and recovering the real stories
00:51:10.863 --> 00:51:13.174
that were erased
from the records.
00:51:13.198 --> 00:51:14.677
At long last, we\'re getting
00:51:14.701 --> 00:51:17.053
the uncolonized side
of the story.
00:51:17.077 --> 00:51:20.516
When we think of our history
as starting with colonization,
00:51:20.540 --> 00:51:24.185
we\'re really doing a disservice
to our ancestors,
00:51:24.209 --> 00:51:26.271
and that really creates
00:51:26.295 --> 00:51:27.856
a myopic view of history,
00:51:27.880 --> 00:51:29.148
a perspective that is biased
00:51:29.172 --> 00:51:32.110
towards only
one part of our past,
00:51:32.134 --> 00:51:33.696
and erases the rest.
00:51:33.720 --> 00:51:36.489
When we consider
that our history starts
00:51:36.514 --> 00:51:37.574
5,000 years ago
00:51:37.598 --> 00:51:38.909
and not 500 years ago,
00:51:38.933 --> 00:51:42.037
we are able to reconstruct
a much richer picture
00:51:42.061 --> 00:51:44.080
of how our cultures came to be.
00:51:44.104 --> 00:51:44.832
We are able to appreciate
00:51:44.856 --> 00:51:47.208
the contributions
of indigenous ancestors,
00:51:47.232 --> 00:51:49.628
of African ancestors,
of European ancestors,
00:51:49.652 --> 00:51:51.337
and everything
that came after that,
00:51:51.361 --> 00:51:54.215
with a much broader
and critical lens.
00:51:54.239 --> 00:51:57.011
Carrasco: It\'s not just
the victim and the victimizer,
00:51:57.035 --> 00:51:59.013
there\'s the shared culture.
00:51:59.037 --> 00:52:00.556
And that\'s what Latino history
00:52:00.580 --> 00:52:02.599
and Latino culture
really is about.
00:52:02.623 --> 00:52:03.391
It\'s about the sharing
00:52:03.415 --> 00:52:06.352
that has taken place
all through the Americas.
00:52:06.376 --> 00:52:08.564
You can\'t have
an inclusive democracy
00:52:08.588 --> 00:52:13.484
unless people understand
how their histories are shared.
00:52:13.509 --> 00:52:14.528
You have to understand
00:52:14.552 --> 00:52:18.615
that what we call America
or the Americas
00:52:18.639 --> 00:52:19.115
is the result
00:52:19.139 --> 00:52:22.077
of not only competing
with one another,
00:52:22.101 --> 00:52:23.537
but also cooperating.
00:52:23.561 --> 00:52:25.956
And there\'s really
no cultural group
00:52:25.980 --> 00:52:27.248
that has done more of that
00:52:27.272 --> 00:52:29.543
or done it
better than the Latinos.
00:52:29.567 --> 00:52:32.420
And that\'s
the type of affirmation
00:52:32.444 --> 00:52:34.297
that we have to have
of the past,
00:52:34.321 --> 00:52:36.382
so that we can have
a shared future.
00:52:36.406 --> 00:52:40.012
Histories that are
monochromatic and monothematic
00:52:40.036 --> 00:52:43.264
are not only boring,
but they distort reality.
00:52:43.288 --> 00:52:47.310
Reality is complex,
reality is multiple.
00:52:47.334 --> 00:52:48.979
particularly in places
in the Americas,
00:52:49.003 --> 00:52:52.315
where people come
from all over the planet.
00:52:52.339 --> 00:52:54.985
That\'s part of the history.
00:52:55.009 --> 00:52:56.820
Leguizamo:
The Olmecs, Aztecs, Maya
00:52:56.844 --> 00:52:59.197
Incas and Tainos
have been conquered.
00:52:59.221 --> 00:53:02.785
Their wealth had been stolen,
their culture had been erased.
00:53:02.809 --> 00:53:05.286
But there was a new new world
that was being built,
00:53:05.310 --> 00:53:07.915
and Latinos were
a big part of that,
00:53:07.939 --> 00:53:09.374
all across the Americas,
00:53:09.398 --> 00:53:11.292
and even
in a budding new country
00:53:11.316 --> 00:53:14.253
that you know today as US of A.
00:53:14.277 --> 00:53:15.421
And maybe if we recognize
00:53:15.445 --> 00:53:17.591
these achievements
of our ancestors,
00:53:17.615 --> 00:53:19.760
we would see
the tremendous contributions
00:53:19.784 --> 00:53:21.845
we\'ve made
throughout the world.
00:53:21.869 --> 00:53:25.682
I wish I had been taught that
when I was growing up.
00:53:25.706 --> 00:53:26.850
Well, there\'s so much history
00:53:26.874 --> 00:53:30.395
we\'ve barely scratched
the surface.
00:53:30.419 --> 00:53:32.898
Now the more that I\'ve learned
on this journey,
00:53:32.922 --> 00:53:37.611
the more I\'ve realized
how little I knew.
00:53:37.635 --> 00:53:39.195
I\'m a different person today
00:53:39.219 --> 00:53:40.321
because of what I\'ve learned,
00:53:40.345 --> 00:53:44.283
and that\'s why I wanted
to share this with you.
Distributor: Pragda Films
Length: 55 minutes
Date: 2024
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: Middle School, High School, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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