The True Legacy
of Christopher Columbus |
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CLICK HERE to see Lou Gallo, expert on
Christopher Columbus, defends Columbus in a one
man show. Letter from NY State President Michele Cangiano Ment and NY State CSJ Chairperson John Fratta, to the President of Drexel University urging the reinstatement of Columbus Day on the University Calendar. Click Here To See The Letter Click on the link below to see a page linking to all fourteen interviews by Robert Petrone regarding the latest attacks on Christopher Columbus. Interviews are anywhere between 10 and 20 minutes. Click Here to see the Page New York State OSDIA Immediate Past President Anthony Naccarato’s Message: Rally Opposing NYC Board of Education Decision to Remove Columbus Day. An extensive 34 page letter from Michael A. Santo to NYC school Chancellor outlining and explaining the true narratives of Christopher Columbus and now the false narratives must be understood and rejected. Click Here To Read The Letter Click on the link below to see the NY State OSDIA Immediate Past President Anthony Naccarato's video requesting OSDIA members and their families to write to their local NY State politicians to stop NY Senate bill S8553 introduces by Senator Jessica Ramos in an attempt to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous People's Day. Click here to see the video. |
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There are Several New Worthwhile Additions to the
Website A 36 page Letter Written by Lawyer Michael A. Santo Regarding the Elimination of Columbus Day and He Lists The True Facts and where the facts were obtained. This is a must read. An excellent must read article by R. A. Harvey lays bare the mistruths and lies written by Howard Zinn about Columbus. The article "The Attack on Columbus" by Robert Ferrito National Commission for Social Justice Chairperson The Eight Part Article by Robert Petrone Esq. Titled "Christopher Columbus is the Greatest hero of The 15th and 16th Centuries". Our Thanks to Robert Petrone Esq. for allowing us to publish the entire document. There are more excellent articles by the sane author on the "Links" page
On May 21, 2021, Russ Crespolini, North Jersey
Regional Manager of Patch Media, wrote a
critical piece about Columbus. He claims
Columbus brought so much woe to the new world
that Columbus Day should be eliminated on the
calendar and replaced with Election Day in
October rather than November. Lou Gallo,
National Consultant on Columbus for the Order
Sons and Daughters of Italy in America, and
Robert Petrone, a Philadelphia lawyer and
historian, vigorously respond. The Italian America One Voice Coalition America’s largest independent Italian American anti-bias organization, presents a video interview of Dr. Mary Grabar, author of the definitive work disputing and debunking Howard Zinn’s book that fuels the ongoing attacks on Christopher Columbus and America’s history. Click Here to See The Video (Scroll a little down the page) |
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Courage and Conviction The True Story of Christopher Columbus
Produced by the
Knights of Columbus and National Columbus
Education Foundation
About the Documentary
Courage and Conviction:
The True Story of Christopher Columbus
is a
thorough examination of the life and legacy of
the fearless discoverer of America. This film
provides insight into Christopher Columbus'
remarkable genius as a sea navigator as well as
his deep desire to bring all nations to Christ.
Through expert interviews and archival footage,
we look at the origins of Columbus Day and the
symbolic role that Columbus has for Catholic
immigrants, especially Italian Americans.
Finally, the film addresses the current
indictments against Christopher Columbus with
boldness and exposes the motive behind the
attacks of revisionist historians. This film
shows why Christopher Columbus remains not only
a man worthy of admiration, but a noble icon of
what it means to be a Catholic and an American.
The documentary is available for on Demand viewing at www.kofc.org/Columbus.
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Grand
Lodge of
New York
Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America
Commission for Social Justice
The True Legacy of Christopher Columbus |
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October 31, 1451 - May 20, 1506
By prevailing over all obstacles and
distractions, one may unfailingly arrive at his
chosen goal or destination
–
Christopher Columbus |
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The great Renaissance explorer Christopher Columbus, founded
the first permanent European settlement in the
New World.
The arrival of Columbus in 1492 marked
the beginning of recorded history in America.
For much of its history, the United States
considered Christopher Columbus a man worthy of
admiration.
Columbus Day is one of America’s oldest
patriotic holidays, first celebrated on October
12, 1792, when the New York Society of Tammany
honored Columbus on the 300th
Anniversary of his first voyage.
The Pledge of Allegiance was written in
1892 in honor of the 400th
Anniversary.
That same year, President Benjamin
Harrison declared
Columbus
Day a legal holiday.
In 1905, Colorado became the first state to declare
Columbus
Day a holiday.
In 1971,
Columbus
Day became a federal holiday in all fifty
states after Congress passed a law declaring the
second Monday in October
Columbus
Day.
Columbus Day celebrates the beginning of cultural exchange between America
and Europe. After Columbus, millions of European
immigrants brought their art, music, science,
medicine, philosophy, and religious principles
to America.
These contributions have helped shape the
United States and include Greek democracy, Roman
law, Judeo-Christian ethics and the belief that
all persons are created equal.
Columbus Day also commemorates the arrival on these shores of more than
five million Italians beginning in 1880.
Today, the children and grandchildren of
these early Italian- Americans constitute the
nation’s fifth largest ethnic group, according
to the US Census Bureau.
Like all of us, Christopher Columbus may not have been a perfect person but there is no doubt that he accomplished extraordinary things during his life. These are undisputed “facts” that no reasonably minded person can deny. · Columbus proved that it was possible to safely cross the Atlantic · Columbus was the first European to realize the full importance of the Atlantic wind pattern called the prevailing Westerlies, which blew steadily east · Columbus’s transatlantic route lay the foundation for future navigation in the region. His maps were used by Amerigo Vespucci (the Italian explorer for which America is named). · The route across the Atlantic Ocean that Columbus charted in the 15th century is still used by sailors today.
·
Columbus introduced the principles of compass variation (the
variation at any point of the Earth’s surface
between the magnetic north and true north). |
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We currently live in an age where there are those who rebuke
and dismiss the extraordinary accomplishments of
Columbus. They choose to promote a false and
deceptive narrative with accusations of
opportunism, ruthlessness, greed, cruelty, and
an all consuming thirst for glory.
We cannot sit by in silence and watch
and listen to any political or social agenda of
the 21st century that serves to
tarnish and undermine the reputation of this
great man.
Simply stated, a true knowledge and
understanding of the
“facts” will
better enable us to provide and cascade the
truth and eradicate the fiction concerning
Columbus’s legacy.
The following
“facts” serve to
provide that path.
·
In every significant way, Columbus discovered
America.
Even if
others visited the continent sporadically before
he did, their voyages had no historical
significance.
It was Columbus’s voyages that marked the
end of thousands of years of isolation between
the Western Hemisphere and the rest of the
world.
The recorded history of the Americas and
the Caribbean starts with Columbus.
·
Columbus was
not
a slave trader.
He never owned any slaves nor did he
bring any slaves to the Western Hemisphere from
Africa.
During the his first voyage in 1492,
Columbus landed on the island of Hispaniola (now
Haiti and the Dominican Republic).
There with the help of a tribe of
friendly Taino Indians, he built a fort called
Navidad and left thirty-nine of his crew there
when he returned to Spain in January 1493.
On his return to Hispaniola in November 1493, he leaned that all his men had been massacred by another Taino tribe. Columbus and his men fought these Indians, capturing approximately two thousand, and in 1495 sent five hundred of these prisoners of war to Spain to be sentenced by the sovereign, as was the custom in 15th century Europe. Columbus sent another thirty Indian prisoners of war to Spain the following year, but the Spanish monarchs ordered Columbus to stop the practice and he never again sent Indians to Europe to be sentenced.
Columbus found slavery practiced in the
Caribbean by the Caribs/Canibs who made slaves of the tribes they conquered
and also ate their victims.
Such practices horrified the Spanish and
caused them to look down on these native
cultures.
An important point of fact is that the
Spanish arrival in the New World
was the decisive factor that eventually
ended human sacrifice and cannibalism.
Many of the native tribes Columbus
encountered were hunters-gatherers who
engaged in bloody tribal wars, and in the
case of the Arawaks and Caribs/
Canibs, slavery, torture, and cannibalism
existed.
·
Columbus did
not
destroy the
balance between man and nature.
He and the other
Europeans brought with them Old World
agricultural techniques, including crop rotation
and animal breeding. They introduced new tools
(including the wheel) as well as new plants and
domesticated animals, including the horse.
The native population depended on
“slash-and burn” cultivation of the land along
with
hunting, fishing, and collecting edible wild
plants, seeds, and shellfish.
In their struggle for survival, they were
not the champions of the environment that
they are often portrayed today.
·
It is a sad fact of human civilization that
powerful nations usurp the land of the
vanquished.
The Spanish conquistadors who followed
Columbus in the 16th and 17th
centuries were establishing an empire through
military conquest.
·
Columbus was
not
a racist.
No evidence indicates that Columbus thought the
islanders he met were racially inferior in any
way.
In the journal of his first voyage, Columbus
describes the Tainos and other tribes as
well-made people with fine shapes and faces.
He noted that they had large and very
beautiful eyes.
They were straight limbed without
exception and handsomely shaped.
He praised their generosity, innocence,
and intelligence, saying that “they would readily
become Christians as they have a good
understanding.”
·
Columbus did
not
commit genocide.
The destruction of native populations of North
and South America over the centuries is a
complex historical tragedy.
No one knows exactly how many people were
here when the Europeans arrived.
Many researchers believe the number to be
around forty million.
Columbus made four voyages to the
Caribbean in a twelve-year period (1492-1504),
spending from only seven months to two years and
nine months (including the year he was
shipwrecked on his fourth voyage).
It is inconceivable that he could have
killed millions of people in so short a time.
Prior to the Europeans’ arrival, the Western
Hemisphere was no paradise. New medical research
on pre-Columbian mummies in Peru, Chile, and
remote areas far from the early European
colonies reveals tuberculosis, long thought
European in origin, was rampant among the Indian
tribes before the arrival of Columbus.
Arthritis, periodontal diseases, and
significant bone erosion also afflicted the
native populations long before the arrival of
Columbus.
Blaming Columbus for the extermination of the
native population is as fair as blaming the
native population for killing people who die
from using tobacco and cocaine, which the
natives introduced to the Europeans.
In 2016, the National Education Association
issued a press release encouraging school
districts nationwide to celebrate the second
Monday in October as “Indigenous People Day” on
the same day of the traditional federal holiday
Columbus Day. It also
stated it would provide access to funds in order
to accomplish this mission.
Many Americans, especially Italian-Americans,
have protested this action. If it is run
simultaneously or as a substitute for
Columbus
Day, it is obvious that the legacy of
Columbus will be pushed aside with the eventual
intent of obliterating the recognition of his
achievements and accomplishments.
The Grand Lodge of New York Order Sons and
Daughters of Italy in America Commission for
Social Justice (CSJ) has been at the forefront
of phone call and letter writing campaigns
throughout the country that has delayed or
stopped this attempt.
While we have been successful in several
states, the campaign to eliminate
Columbus
Day continues and New York State is the now
a prime target.
CSJ has delayed a change in some of the school
districts in upstate New York and will continue
its fight to preserve the memory of Christopher
Columbus and the significant part he played in
the history of the Americas.
We believe in diversity and tolerance by
ADDITION,
not
by SUBTRACTION or SUBSTITUTION.
Columbus Day represents not only the accomplishments and contributions of Italian Americans, but also the indelible spirit of risk, sacrifice and self-reliance of a great Italian icon that defines the United States of America. Once again, we should perform tolerance by ADDITION, not by SUBTRACTION or SUBSTITUTION! |
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Steve Byas.
History’s
Greatest Libels: A Challenge to Some of the
Great Lies of History Carol Delaney.
Columbus
and the Quest for Jerusalem Tommy De Sano.
The Truth About Christopher Columbus Rich DiSilvio.
Tales of Titans
Rafael.
Christopher Columbus the Hero
Columbus: Fact Vs
Fiction.
Available at
http://newyorkcsj.org
Grand Lodge of New York
Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America
2101 Bellmore Avenue * Bellmore, New York 11710
1800 322-OSIA * Fax: 516 221-OSIA
http://newyorkcsj.org
* osiajohnf@gmail.com
This document is
the property of the Grand Lodge of New York
Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America.
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Christopher
Columbus brochure. A downloadable PDF can be downloaded HERE |
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