Relevant History welcomes Elizabeth Zelvin, a New York City psychotherapist whose latest contemporary mystery, Death Will Extend Your Vacation, is the third in the series featuring recovering alcoholic Bruce Kohler. Her short stories about a young marrano sailor on Columbus's first voyage have appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. Her YA novel about the second voyage is currently making the rounds. Three of Liz's short stories have been nominated for the Agatha Award and another for the Derringer Award. Liz has just released a CD of original songs, Outrageous Older Woman. For more information, check her author web site. Liz participates in group blogs at Poe's Deadly Daughters and SleuthSayers.
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I never expected to write historical fiction, but I woke up in the middle of the night about four years ago with a character knocking on the inside of my head and demanding to be let out so insistently that I had to tell his story. This was Diego, a young marrano sailor on Columbus's first voyage in 1492. I eventually wrote two stories that both appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine: "The Green Cross," which was nominated for an Agatha Award for Best Short Story, and "Navidad." But Diego wasn't through with me, and he and his younger sister Rachel are the protagonists of Voyage of Strangers, a Young Adult novel set during the second voyage, from 1493 to 1495, that is still seeking a home.
How can I explain how Diego got into my head (unless you conclude I was channeling a real person, which I sometimes almost believe)? I knew what anybody knows about Columbus: a Genoese sponsored by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain, he sailed west across the Atlantic, seeking a trade route to Asia, and found the Americas. He had three ships: the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria. Because I'm Jewish, I knew that the Jews were expelled from Spain on the very day that Columbus sailed: August 3, 1492. I knew that the marranos were the secret Jews who converted in order to save their lives and homes, otherwise forfeit to the Inquisition and the Crown. I knew that Europeans didn't believe the earth was flat, as I'd learned in school in the 1950s, and that there has been some recent speculation that Columbus and some of his crew might have been Jewish. In terms of the emotional truth of the characters I created, although I have fortunately experienced minimal anti-Semitism in my own life, I know how it feels to live as an outsider in a Christian society.
I had a stroke of luck in that the primary sources on Columbus and his voyages are few. We have portions of his own log book of the first voyage and a letter he wrote to the King and Queen to report his discovery; his biography, written by his son; a book by a Spaniard, Bartolomé de las Casas, an early settler in the New World who became violently opposed to the enslavement of the native Taino population; a letter from a childhood friend of Columbus (the only other Italian involved in the discovery) on the second voyage, with a smug, self-congratulatory description of how he raped a young Taino woman; and a description of the Taino beliefs by a friar who also participated in the second voyage.
Here are some of the things I learned in the course of my research for the stories and especially the YA novel:
- Columbus lied. He kept two records of the fleet's day to day progress, one that he believed was accurate and a more optimistic one that he told the sailors, so they would not get too discouraged. Modern navigation has revealed that the lies were in fact closer to accurate.
- Although Italian-Americans celebrate Columbus Day, this story is not about Italians. There were no Italians other than Columbus on the first voyage and his brothers and his buddy the rapist on the second. The story of the discovery is about Spain, its desire for wealth and expansion, and its determined persecution by expulsion, enslavement, and genocide of all who were not Christian, including the Jews, the Taino, the Moors, the Guanche of the Canary Islands, and the Roma.
- The Santa Maria never made it home. She ran onto shoals on a calm, moonlit night off Hispaniola on Christmas Eve, 1492, when the whole crew was asleep after a drunken three-day party with the Taino.
- No way was Columbus Jewish. His own writings are infused with his devout Catholicism. Nor were the crew. Eighty-seven of the ninety men on the first voyage are known to history by name. Most came from the fishing village of Palos. Only three were even close to jailbirds (another apocryphal tale). One proponent of Columbus's Jewishness were a respected Jewish scholar who claims Columbus was seeking a homeland for the Jews (not likely for several reasons); the other was an anti-Semitic Spanish fascist writing in 1939 (in the context of Franco's alliance with Hitler), who argued that Columbus's greed for gold indicated he must have "Jewish blood."
- It's not primarily disease that killed off the Taino, as is often said. They were systematically slaughtered and enslaved from the second voyage on. By 1496, one-third of them were already dead. Many committed suicide (with cyanide extracted from their staple food, the yuca) rather than be killed or captured by the Spaniards. Early in 1495, 1,500 of them were rounded up, 500 of the "best" loaded into the holds of the returning ships, and the others handed over to the settlers as slaves. By the time the ships made landfall, 200 were dead.
What makes me so self-confident in my conclusions and interpretations? A whole body of speculation and opinion has been built on the slim foundation of the handful of primary sources. Each historian chose what to believe and what not to believe, and so do I. A recent PBS special trotted out the story that the navigational genius on the first voyage was not Columbus, but Martín Alonso Pinzón, the captain of the Pinta. The primary source for that is legal documents prepared for a suit the Pinzón family brought against Columbus—which they lost. So says historian and naval man Samuel Eliot Morison, who in his own sailboat followed the course of all four voyages, using Columbus's log as a guide. He says Columbus was the navigational genius, and I choose to believe him.
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A big thanks to Elizabeth Zelvin. To someone who contributes a comment on my blog this week, she'll give away an advanced review copy of her contemporary mystery Death Will Extend Your Vacation in trade paperback format or a copy of the Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine issue that includes her Agatha award-nominated short story about Diego and Columbus, "The Green Cross." Winner's choice! I'll choose the winner from among those who comment by Sunday at 6 p.m. ET. Delivery is available in the U.S. and Canada.
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Fascinating post, Elizabeth. I particularly enjoyed your statement: “Each historian chose what to believe and what not to believe, and so do I.” History (or herstory!) is not always the truth. It’s often more about who wins vs who loses, and who tells the story.
Welcome to my blog, Anne! Very true, that business about history being written by the winners. Maybe we should call it “Propaganda Class” instead of “History Class” in school. Unbelievable, the distortions of truth I’ve found while researching for my series set during the Southern theater of the Revolutionary War.
Thanks for having me on the blog, Suzanne, and thanks, Anne. Just yesterday I read about more recent research giving additional reasons to suspect Columbus might have been a marrano, including what could have been cabalistic signs on some of his letters and items in his will–but I still don’t believe it. One argument is that Columbus cared passionately about taking Jerusalem away from the Muslims. That seems ridiculous as evidence for his Jewishness, considering that the Christian Crusades were fought over that very issue.
Read about the confluence of expulsion and Columbus’ sailing but have no idea of the historical events generating either or both. Interesting speculation.
Elizabeth, in both history and science, I’ve seen the same piece of evidence twisted to support opposing conclusions. Conclusions are the most tenacious when they have a shock value. “Columbus was a Jew” may be around for a long time.
Nice to have you back, Liz. Speculate with us all you like. Speculation is what they didn’t want us to do in high school history class.
What a fascinating post! This is not an area of history I have read about in depth, but you’ve piqued my interest. I echo the first comment–I love that you said “I choose to believe him.”
Thanks for stopping by, Ramona. I don’t usually read in this time period, either. Elizabeth has found a cool niche in Diego the marrano sailor.
Suzanne, I was lucky in high school–our teachers did want us to speculate and think. On some issues, I understand a lot more in hindsight. One history teacher had us constantly repeat, “Only Congress can declare war.” I now think he was waiting for one of us to wake up and say, “Oh, yeah? What about the Korean War?” so we could have a discussion about how government gets around its own rules. (This was before Vietnam.)
You were indeed lucky! It sounds as though your history teacher was a wee bit disappointed with the government, trying to be careful that no other faculty realized he was displaying his opinion. In those early days of the Cold War, to disagree with the government could mean getting yourself labeled a commie.
My sons have been fortunate in history class, too. A teacher who sets up the lesson so students will think and form their own conclusions makes the class memorable and fun.
Fascinating, Liz. I recently read something about Columbus’s being Jewish based on the supposition (fact?) that he sought freedom for Jerusalem. I’m not an historian and I haven’t researched the period. I certainly enjoyed “The Green Cross.” Interesting post.
Great Post. AS a history lover this is my first post here.
Can you post any further reading ideas for Columbus? Good Biography would be great. Thanks in advance and I look forward to future visits. DCKat
This was a superb post. I am constantly amazed at how brilliant Liz Zelvin is amd so versatile a writer! I’d love to have the paper copy of Death… Vacation. Thelma Straw , MWA-NY
Whenever I read about Columbus, I get upset about how he is portrayed in school curricula. Interesting post!
Liz: What is your opinion of the evidence (suspicion?) that Luis de Torres, Columbus’s interpreter on the 1st voyage, was Jewish?
I went to a Yeshiva (Jewish religious school)where I was taught that Columbus had a Hebrew abbreviation at the top of any of his writings (letters and journals)that all Jews use. Yet it occurred to me at the time that even if he were Jewish, he would have needed to conceal it to avoid becoming the victim of the Inquisition. I doubt that he would have included Hebrew on any writings that others would have seen. Christopher Columbus’ Jewish Roots by Jane Frances Amler argues that Columbus’ grandfather was Jewish.
I would be delighted to win a copy of The Green Cross
Ilene, the fact that Luis de Torres was included because he spoke classical languages, including Hebrew, and that it was supposed that this would help if they encountered the ruler of Japan, where in fact they expected to end up, is evidence of how ill prepared the expedition was in general. DCKat, my main sources for the YA novel I’m trying to sell now were Samuel Eliot Morison’s 1942 Pulitzer Prize winning ADMIRAL OF THE OCEAN SEA and the radical historian Kirkpatrick Sale’s 1984 THE CONQUEST OF PARADISE, along with translations of the primary sources. Morison’s view is Eurocentric and patriarchal, but he knows navigation. He was an admiral in the US Navy and followed the route of all four of Columbus’s voyages in his own sailboat. Sale calls attention to the rape and genocide, which historians had been overlooking for 500 years. About DEATH WILL EXTEND YOUR VACATION, Thelma, it’s in hardcover only, and I hope that won’t deter readers.
Absolutely fascinating, Liz! I’ve found in my own research that different historians can draw very different conclusions from the same primary sources.
I would love to win a copy of Bruce’s third adventure. I love his character!
Fascinating reading. I’m sure the book will be as well.
Thanks to all who’ve commented and said good things about my work. Can you imagine what Columbus’s contemporaries would have said if I claimed I flew 3000 miles in a single night? The Inquisition would have burned me as a witch–but that’s exactly what I did yesterday, New York to California on JetBlue to sing at the birthday party of a friend who helped create history in the Sixties as a leader of the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley.
This is history at its most fascinating, when we see the very human effects up close and not just the political implications for monarchs.Very interesting post.