Bill Text: NY J01715 | 2021-2022 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Recognizing December 20-26, 2021, as the Week of the Commemoration of the First Black Revolt Against Slavery in the Americas

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2022-01-20 - REFERRED TO FINANCE [J01715 Detail]

Download: New_York-2021-J01715-Introduced.html

Senate Resolution No. 1715

BY: Senator JACKSON

        RECOGNIZING  December  20-26, 2021, as the Week of
        the Commemoration of the First Black Revolt  Against
        Slavery in the Americas

  WHEREAS,  This  Legislative  Body is justly proud to commemorate the
first historically recorded Black Antislavery Rebellion in the  Americas
on  December  20-26, 2021, the 500th Anniversary of this historic event;
and

  WHEREAS, On the "second day  of  Christmas"  in  December  of  1521,
African  Black  enslaved  people  working  at the Montealegre cane-sugar
plantation west of Santo Domingo City escaped from the  plantation  and,
with  rage unforeseen by their Spanish colonial masters, marched through
a  number  of  other  plantations  with  the  intention  of   recruiting
additional  fellow  slaves into their uprising to overthrow the colonial
local regime that kept them in bondage and set enslaved black people  in
the island-colony free; and

  WHEREAS,  The  sugar plantation owner and slave master against whose
power the 1521 rebel slaves revolted  was  no  other  than  the  highest
political  authority  of  colonial La Espanola and of the entire Spanish
empire as it existed at the time on the Caribbean islands and  parts  of
the  Mainland,  namely  governor  and  viceroy  Diego  Columbus,  son of
Christopher Columbus and heir of the political titles conferred  to  his
father  by the Spanish Kings in reward for facilitating Spanish dominion
over additional territories in the Americas; and

  WHEREAS, With the benefit of superior weapons and after about a week
of chasing and fighting, the  Spaniards  quelled  the  insurrection  and
restored the overall order to La Espanola's slaveholding society, but so
much  fear  was  generated by the revolt among the colonists' population
that colonial authorities had to  quickly  resort  to  promulgating  new
ordinances  that  included  very harsh punishments and death penalty for
those who incurred in any form of resistance or disobedience against the
slavery-based political and social order; and

  WHEREAS, The  Santo  Domingo  black  slaves'  insurrection  of  1521
generated  such a great degree of concern among the colonial authorities
of La Espanola that maintained a slave-holding social order as  to  move
said  authorities  to  issue  a  distinctly  severe  and  harsh  code of
ordinances to control and punish the enslaved  Black  population  of  La
Espanola,  the  oldest  "black code" of the Americas whose text has been
archivally preserved; and

  WHERAS, Awareness and knowledge about the  1521  Santo  Domingo  slave
rebellion  and  the  ensuing  1522  first instance of a "black code" has
until very recently remained limited, and for too  long  confined  to  a
miniscule  number  of  people,  especially  a limited number of scholars
specializing in the research and writing about the beginnings of Europe-
an conquest and colonization of the Americas; and

  WHEREAS, In 2019, the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute at  The  City
College  of  New  York published the first academic monograph devoted to

the black slaves' rebellion of 1521 in Santo Domingo, disseminating  for
the  first  time  images,  transcriptions  and  translations of the 16th
century archival sources about the rebellion,  including  the  chronicle
about  it  and  the  text  of the subsequent "black laws" enacted by the
colonial authorities as a response; CUNY  DSI  continues  to  engage  in
research to further clarify important facts pertaining to the rebellion,
as  it  has  been  the case of an archaeological survey in Santo Domingo
during the summer of 2021 in search for the probable location where  the
rebellion started; and

  WHEREAS,  Furthermore,  CUNY  DSI,  the Black Studies Program at the
City College of New York and Centro Cultural  Eduardo  Leon  Jimenes  in
Santiago,  Dominican  Republic,  have sponsored a large academic virtual
conference on December 2nd and 3rd of 2021,  to  commemorate  the  500th
Anniversary  of the rebellion by convening scholars and artists to share
the most recent knowledge about black resistance in the  early  colonial
Americas,  further  contributing  to public awareness on these important
historical events; and

  WHEREAS, The Santo Domingo slave rebellion  of  1521  is  the  first
known  direct  and  open  confrontation of enslaved Black people against
their enslavers in the Americas in modern times on  which  a  historical
archival record exists, and it provoked the production and enacting also
in  Santo Domingo in 1522, of the first known set of colonial ordinances
specifically targeted at black slaves and black people in the  Americas,
initiating a centuries-long trend of production of officially sanctioned
legal  systems  to  further  control  and  subjugate black people in the
Continent; and

  WHEREAS, The Santo Domingo slave rebellion of 1521 initiated a  long
trend  of  revolts  by Black slaves in La Espanola and the Americas that
challenged slavery during subsequent centuries, and it is vivid proof of
the relentless struggle for freedom  and  dignity  by  people  of  black
African  ancestry  since  the  earliest  dates  of their presence in the
Continent; and

  WHEREAS, The pioneering historical significance of the Santo Domingo
1521 Black slave rebellion is a powerful source of inspiration for civic
action aimed at the elimination of injustice and the  establishment  and
consolidation  of human freedom and equality, and thus should be part of
the collective historical memory of all  freedom-loving  people  in  the
Americas, including the people of the United States and the State of New
York; and

  WHERAS,  The  public  collective  memory  about the Santo Domingo 1521
Black anti-slavery rebellion, together with all other past instances  of
people's resistance against slavery and oppression either in colonial or
contemporary  times  should be facilitated by teaching in public schools
at all levels and by instruction and research in our universities; and

  WHEREAS, New York State has traditionally been, and continues to be,
the largest hub of Dominican-American population in the  United  States,
and  the  collective heritage of Dominican-Americans is an integral part
of  the  cultural  and  social   mosaic   of   the   communities   where
Dominican-Americans reside; and

  WHEREAS,  New  York  State  welcomes  and  embraces  the legacies of
fighting for the achievement of freedom and equality brought in  by  its

immigrant  citizens  and  their  children  from  around  the world; now,
therefore, be it

  RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body recognize December 20-26, 2021,
as  the  Week  of  the  Commemoration  of the First Black Revolt Against
Slavery in the Americas.
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