What Became of the Taíno?
The Indians who greeted Columbus were long believed to have died out. But a journalist's search for their descendants turned up surprising results
- By Robert M. Poole
- Photographs by Maggie Steber
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
For more than a year, I searched for these glimpses of Taíno survival, among living descendants in New York City and dusty Caribbean villages, in museums displaying fantastic religious objects created by long-dead artists, in interviews with researchers who still debate the fate of the Taíno.
My search began in the nooks and crannies of limestone caves underlying the Dominican Republic, where the Taíno believed their world began. “Hispaniola is the heart of Taíno culture and the caves are the heart of the Taíno,” said Domingo Abréu Collado, chief of the speleology division in the Dominican Ministry on Environmental and Natural Resources. He clapped on a hard hat at the entrance to the Pomier Caves, a complex of 55 caverns less than an hour’s drive from the gridlock of Santo Domingo. He led me from the eye-numbing brilliance of tropical noon into a shadowy tunnel, where our headlamps picked out the image of a face carved into stone, its eyes wide in surprise.
“That’s Mácocael,” said Abréu. “This guy was supposed to guard the entrance of the cave at night, but he got curious and left his post for a look around outside. The sun caught him there and turned him to stone.” The sentinel, whose Taíno name means “No Eyelids,” now stands guard for eternity.
More than 1,000 years before the Spaniards arrived, local shamans and other pilgrims visited such caves to glimpse the future, to pray for rain and to draw surreal images on the walls with charcoal: mating dogs, giant birds swooping down on human prey, a bird-headed man copulating with a human, and a pantheon of naturalistically rendered owls, turtles, frogs, fish and other creatures important to the Taíno, who associated particular animals with specific powers of fecundity, healing, magic and death.
Abréu, a lean man with sharp features, paused before a sweaty wall crowded with images. “So many paintings! I think they are concentrated where the points of energy converge,” he said. Abréu’s headlamp fell upon images of stick figures who seemed to be smoking pipes; others bent over bowls to inhale snuff through long tubes. These were the tribal leaders who fasted until their ribs showed, cleansed themselves with vomiting sticks and snorted cohoba powder, a hallucinogen ground from the seeds of the Anadenanthera peregrina, a tree native to the Caribbean.
The cohoba ritual was first described by Friar Ramón Pané, a Hieronymite brother who, on the orders of Columbus himself, lived among the Taíno and chronicled their rich belief system. Pané’s writings—the most direct source we have on ancient Taíno culture—was the basis for Peter Martyr’s 1516 account of cohoba rites: “The intoxicating herb,” Martyr wrote, “is so strong that those who take it lose consciousness; when the stupefying action begins to wane, the arms and legs become loose and the head droops.” Under its influence, users “suddenly begin to rave, and at once they say . . . that the house is moving, turning things upside down, and that men are walking backwards.” Such visions guided leaders in planning war, judging tribal disputes, predicting the agricultural yield and other matters of importance. And the drug seems to have influenced the otherworldly art in Pomier and other caves.
“Country people are still afraid of caves—the ghosts, you see,” said Abréu. His voice was accompanied by the sound of dripping water and the fluttering of bats, which swirled around the ceiling and clicked in the dark.
The bats scattered before us; we trudged up into the daylight and by early the next morning we were rattling through the rain-washed streets of Santo Domingo bound for the northeast in search of living Taíno, in Abréu’s opinion a dubious objective. Formerly an archaeologist for the Museum of the Dominican Man, he was skeptical of finding real Indians but was happy enough to help scout for remnants of their influence. The first signs began to appear around the town of Bayaguana, where the road narrowed and we jounced past plots of yuca, plantains and maize, some of which were planted in the heaped-earth pattern favored by Taíno farmers of old. New fields, cleared by the slash-and-burn methods Indians brought here from South America, smoldered along the way. On the fringes of Los Haitises National Park, we met a woman who had set up shop beside the road to sell casabe, the coarse, flat Taíno bread made from yuca. “None left,” she said. “I sold the last of it yesterday.” We began to see simple, sensibly designed houses with thin walls of palm planks and airy roofs of thatch, like those depicted in Spanish woodcuts from Columbus’ day.
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Comments (50)
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Please do not disregard the Tainos/Arawaks of Jamaica. My 2xgreat grandmother was full-blood Indigenous Arawak, and always acknowledged as such.They were called the "Tree People". I know they love to say we all died out, but considering the English were unable to go up to the hills&mountains without difficulty and threat of raids, I think its erroneous to believe that no one survived. Also I am a mixture of Arawak/Taino, Maroon, and European ancestry. A lot of the tribes ran off to the mountains to escape the slavers and as the African slaves ran off, they integrated with together and intermarried. My Maroon families vocabulary (patois) has both African and Taino words. Many Jamaicans are also aware of their indigenous heritage and honour it. I would also like to see investigation into medical anomalies or differences in reaction to pain medication/threshold, susceptibility to back problems, and food intolerance, that anecdotaly I have noticed in my research of my heritage. But my , and others physical features cannot be disputed as evidence and proof that "some Taino/Arawak" survived.
Posted by lisa on February 10,2013 | 12:18 AM
Yes the DNA of Taino does survive in many puerto ricans but Taino as a tribe or culture is definitely extinct but many do have some small degree of taino Dna as they also have african in much greater degrees so they are more african than indian for sure vastly overwhelmingly due to disease and extinction but it is interesting to know how long the taino lasted after columbus came but anyone claiming to be an actual half or pure Taino is not possible on such a small island no matter how remote at best we can say fractionally small Dna remains and with most puerto ricans moving out to new york or florida it will diminsh even more.
Posted by Johnson smith on February 9,2013 | 12:32 AM
PS....There is NOTHING WRONG with being called an Indian.....that is so ignorant of you Mariangeles!!!
Posted by Rosa Gonzalez on February 7,2013 | 03:29 AM
The Domenicans do not have anything to do with Taino indians!! They have their history with the Haitans!!
Posted by Rosa Gonzalez on February 7,2013 | 03:26 AM
I like to present my project to the Smithsonian curators in charge of the indigenous people department or exhibitions. I have been working on a Taino series for that last year in oils. Almost a few months away from completion, I wanted to receive contact info of parties involved to present the project.visit the site: www.tainospiritgallery.com Thank you, Meri
Posted by Meri Ramos on January 29,2013 | 06:21 PM
While looking at the photos accompanying the article, I was wondering why the legs of the figures were oddly big. An explanation might be that if the shamans kept themselves in a constant state of near-starvation, they would suffer from edema of the lower limbs. Having just finished reading about the siege of Leningrad (St. Petersburg), I had been made aware of the terrible signs of severe starvation.
Posted by Jennifer Hardacre on January 29,2013 | 02:23 PM
The History of the Arawak/Taino Indians in the Bahamas is not know by many. Arriving in the Islands of the Bahamas in approximately 500 AD, the Arawaks developed a System of Commerce,Travel, and Trade that can rival these Modern Times. Fleeing from the Wrath of the fierce Caribs, these Peaceful Indians were expert Canoeists and traveled with great speed as they maneuvered among the rocky shoals around the Bahamian Islands. I am an Historian of the Early Bahamas. (500 AD - 19TH Century)
Posted by Vera Chase on January 7,2013 | 08:30 PM
Tau (hello) I have been working on a book that I started 20 years ago and hope to finish before my passing, simply because there is so much information that I have attained through my own research of my true identity that the deaper I go into my research the more I find; finding it hard to to just make a close statement. I truely am loving it though. love
Posted by Anna Maria Cruz Ruiz on November 29,2012 | 02:38 PM
Well, I believe my family is Taino from Aguadilla, PR. They grew up there, but moved to NY; then, various places in the states. The characteristics tells the story.
Posted by Robert Montoya on October 25,2012 | 01:11 AM
My GreatGrandmother was fullblooded Lakota and I dont even know her name but I was told she spoke no english I like reading about the Taino culture. I am from Pennslyvania
Posted by Heather on October 8,2012 | 03:57 PM
My great-great grandmother was from "Las Indieras, Maricao, Puerto Rico. She was captured by a "criollo" with the help of two dogs. She was a native Taino girl.
Posted by Carlos Santiago on September 1,2012 | 03:14 PM
Thanks for your insight and reporting with photographs. I assisted in the Boriken Peace and Dignity run and we all had a pleasurable experience with Maggie (SI photographer) and all the folks roadside who applauded the resurgence of Taino blood line affirmation. Dakar Taino!
Posted by Roger Guayakan Hernandez on August 20,2012 | 10:01 PM
Im 1 300 and direct inheritor of my grandparents and GREAT grandparents cave and land in Puerto Rico. And yes. We are Tainos. Most of us marry within the taino descendence. So we live throughout the United States. It does not change our BLOOD LINE, or DNA. Remeber BLOOD is always thicker then water. La sangre llama. ;)
Posted by Sylvia Velez Rivera Toledo Roman on July 21,2012 | 06:15 PM
I was so glad to find and read this article to find, to my surprise and delight, that there are still Tainos in my native Cuba. Growing up there, we were always told in school that our aborigenes (there were another 2 tribes in Cuba in addition to the Tainos) had been exterminated by the Spaniards. As a child, I heard rumors of just one family escaping to the mountains where they had managed to survive but I am so glad to hear that it was many more. As a descendant of Spaniards and natives of the Canary Islands, I have a great deal of respect for our aborigines and their way of life. They truly were the greatest cultures ever and their way of life is to be envied - and perhaps to be imitated - in today's tumultuous times.
Posted by Lola Flores on May 28,2012 | 05:55 PM
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