From history to Hollywood: the voyage of "La Amistad".
Paquette, Robert L.
In 1839, fifty-three enslaved Africans aboard the Cuban schooner La
Amistad, coasting eastward from Havana toward a village port in
north-central Cuba, took advantage of a summer night and a small, sleepy
crew to rise in revolt. One of the young men, named Cinque, a
Mende-speaker from a region near the Windward Coast of West Africa, led
the uprising by killing the ship's cook and captain. Several
crewmen met the same fate, although Jose Ruiz and Pedro Montes, the
Cuban middlemen who had purchased the Africans in Havana, were spared to
navigate the rebels back to their homeland. Instead, the clever Cubans
tacked indifferently to the east by day and earnestly to the northwest
by night, ending up weeks later, with the increasingly desperate
mutineers dehydrated and diminished in number, off the coast of Long
Island. There the U.S. Coast Guard spotted the wounded vessel and seized
it and the rebels, including Cinque and a handful of others who had
rowed ashore looking for water.
In tow, La Amistad arrived in New London, Connecticut, to await
salvage proceedings. The authorities placed the Africans in custody, but
their plight sparked a much more complicated legal wrangle as a network
of Northern abolitionists rallied to their support. They hired lawyers
knowing flail well that challenging in court the competing claims of the
Coast Guard officers, the Spanish Crown, Ruiz and Montes, and the
administration of President Martin Van Buren would gain considerable
publicity for their antislavery cause. The whole affair heightened
sectional tensions in the United States and unsettled diplomatic
relations between Spain, the United States, and Great Britain. The case
eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court where former president John
Quincy Adams took the floor for the first time in thirty years to defend
the Africans. The ruling in 1841 freed thirty-six survivors to return
home.
Had Steven Spielberg and his Dream-Works lieutenants limited their
claims about the movie Amistad to historical accuracy in the broad
strokes only, they might have evoked a more generous response from
professional historians. The movie falls far short of high cinematic
art, but the producers, as creative artists, have the freedom to take
history and reshape it into whatever fictional drama they see fit. Yet
Spielberg and the DreamWorks crew, even before Amistad's December
premiere, pronounced their film to be a kind of superior history. They
distributed "Dear Educator" learning kits for classroom use in
which the movie would serve, among other things, to stimulate
"critical thinking about the value of history in light of the
long-faded chapter [now] restored to American history in the film:'
Students learn, for example, that the producers "took great care to
make every detail of this historical drama authentic" and that both
"historical drama and historical scholarship aim to portray the
truth about the past."
Quotations from Spielberg and coproducer Debbie Allen stand out in
this publication like epigraphs from Jefferson and Lincoln. After
watching the movie, students are asked "to react" to
Allen's gendered wisdom that "the real history has just been
castrated--left out--and great historians have done it. It's beyond
racism, I think. It's just one culture wanting to be dominant, and
not really acknowledging the contributions of a culture that was far
beyond and centuries ahead." Beyond and ahead of what, the learning
kit does not say.
Allen's breezy indictment of previous studies and unnamed
historians seems incredible given the scholars credited with advising
the project: John Hope Franklin; Henry Louis Gates, Jr.; Arthur Abraham,
a historian of Sierra Leone and Mende culture; Howard Jones, author of
the best historical monograph on the Amistad affair; and Clifton
Johnson, founder and executive director of the Amistad Research Center
in New Orleans, and others. One wonders whether any of these gentlemen
ventured from the sidelines to engage the DreamWorks producers in a
serious conversation about the practice of history and the state of the
profession, for, if the truth be known, probably no field of history in
the United States during the last quarter-century has generated a more
impressive body of scholarship than has the study of slavery.
Slavery citations alone, compiled from a global perspective, now
fill voluminous specialized bibliographies to which the specialized
journal Slavery & Abolition publishes annual supplements. The movie
exaggerates the impact of the Amistad case on the ending of slavery in
the United States and on the course of the South to secession, but
historians can hardly be said to have ignored the event. The movie
script itself derives from William Owens's popular history of the
revolt, first published in 1953 and reprinted in 1968. Since
Owens's work, more than a dozen scholarly essays, books, and
reprints of published antebellum documents on the Amistad have appeared.
At various times, state and local historical organizations in
Connecticut have initiated educational programs to keep the memory
alive. In 1970 black scholars retold the story in introducing a journal
of history and culture called Amistad, featuring writings by such
luminaries as C. L. R. James, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Toni Morrison. Most
notably, the Amistad Research Center has grown since its founding in
1966 into a prominent archival repository on African-American history
with millions of manuscript items and thousands of related books and
reels of microfilm accessible to professional and amateur historians
alike. The darkness in education to which Debbie Allen alludes has other
causes and conceals far more weighty issues than the Amistad. If
students remained blind to the revolt until the coming of DreamWorks, it
was in spite of historians, not because of them.
Predictably, with the stakes raised by Spielberg's alleged
restoration of a lost chapter of history, historians have pounced from
all directions on the historical accuracy of the film. Nor have
Spielberg's liberal bona fides spared him a pummeling from the
Left. Eric Foner in an Op-Ed piece for The New York Times went so far as
to declare the movie "not appropriate for use in the
classroom." Jesse Lemisch, former apostle among the dissenting
historians of the New Left, called Amistad "conservative
trash" a "screed for white paternalism and black
mysticism." Spielberg's conspicuously present-minded movie, it
seems, failed to rise to Lemisch's standard of usable history in
that the film glorified the agency of white lawyers at the expense of
the black rebels.
The producers boast of their attention to every historical detail,
yet several of the movie's key characters never existed in history,
and those who did have only a faint ring of authenticity. The portrayals
of ten-year-old Queen Isabella II and Spanish officials look as though
they were drawn from childhood memories of the "Zorro"
television series. African-American historians have joined Foner in
complaining about the creation of a fictional Theodore Joadson (Morgan
Freeman) when historical black abolitionists such as the Reverend James
W. C. Pennington, educator and missionary, actually participated in the
Amistad affair. According to the movie, President Van Buren (Nigel
Hawthorne), realizing that the case at the lower court is turning
against the interests of his Southern supporters whom he needs to win
reelection, replaces Judge Andrew T. Judson, a principled old puffball,
with a younger, more ambitious Democratic partisan, Judge Coglin (Jeremy
Northam). Yet Coglin is an invention. In truth, Judge Judson, a
Democratic party man and anti-abolitionist, relied on testimony from the
famous Irish abolitionist Richard Robert Madden (not mentioned in the
movie) to rule on the status of the Africans. Madden, a former British
official in Cuba, offered crucial information on the operation of
Cuba's massive contraband slave trade in blatant violation of an
Anglo-Spanish treaty of 1817. Whatever his prejudices against blacks and
abolitionists, Judson ruled on the evidence at the level of a Federal
district court that the rebels were free Africans kidnapped and
illegally sold as slaves in Cuba.
In Amistad, President Van Buren stands in sharp contrast to his
historical counterpart whose political acumen earned him the nickname
"the Little Magician." The movie portrays him as a rather
dull, manipulable careerist. He rides campaign trains, kisses babies,
and preens on the stump. His middle-aged, beefy jowls and full-arm
gestures take on Nixonesque dimensions. John Calhoun (Arliss Howard)
strides into a White House dinner, svelte and dapper, looking remarkably
fresh for a man who was actually approaching sixty at the time. He
explicates Southern distinctiveness and the intertwining of the master
and slave in the antebellum South. Yet he leaves his table
companions--and the audience--with the grossly misleading notion that
the weight of the Amistad case was such that a decision unfavorable to
the South risked civil war.
Mende spirituality soars with New Age appeal in the movie;
evangelical Protestantism, however, a vital transatlantic source of the
antislavery movement, inhabits a dour and sanctimonious brood. During
one scene, Lewis Tappan (Stellan Skarsgard) lapses in front of Joadson
(the embodiment of a progressive conscience) into thinking about how the
antislavery crusade could reap greater rewards from the Africans'
martyrdom than from their successful defense in court. Tappan then
condescends to the black abolitionist after receiving his stinging
rebuke. Dead Africans, however, could not have accomplished the
expressed goal of the historical Tappan to return them to Africa as free
Christian converts to spread the gospel. The historical Tappan cared
for, educated, and defended them at a staggering cost to his business
and family life, even sacrificing bedside time with a dying daughter to
carry on the struggle. Without Tappan, the Amistad Africans could not
have returned to Africa in 1841 and might not have returned at all.
Roger Sherman Baldwin (Matthew McConaughey) and John Quincy Adams
(Anthony Hopkins) seem scripted to resonate with campus crowds. In the
film, Adams dodders about, lecturing high-mindedly as he goes, like some
Ivy League eccentric. Baldwin, a kind of brashly intelligent yet untidy
graduate student, recruits Adams to help him defend the noble Africans
before the Supreme Court. Cinque (Djimon Hourisou), in a face-to-face
meeting with Adams for which there is no historical evidence, inspires
the direction of the defense by getting Adams to think like a Mende
about his own father and the other ancestors of the founding. Like Aphra
Behn (in Oroonoko) and Victor Hugo (in Bug-Jargal) long before him,
Spielberg, a stand-in European, directs his audience to a noble African.
The historical Baldwin was actually forty-six years old and an
established lawyer with antislavery credentials when he became the
Africans' principal attorney. A graduate of Yale College at the age
of eighteen and the grandson of one of the framers of the Constitution,
Baldwin ranked in 1839 as one of the outstanding legal minds in
Connecticut. Contemporaries describe him as tall and fastidious, noted,
in particular, for wearing tailored black suits. John Quincy Adams was
in his seventies during the Amistad case, but it is doubtful whether the
movie version had the stamina to match the historical Adams who
performed before the court to a packed house for about eight hours over
two days. Adams did stop at one point to turn eyes to two copies of the
Declaration of Independence hanging on the wall and declared that its
principles of inalienable human rights were incompatible with slavery.
In the movie, the Adams character essentially repeats these lines.
But the real Adams knew better than to base his defense to a
predominantly Southern Supreme Court on the abstract phrases of the
Declaration. His sprawling argument, which legal scholars regard as
inferior to that of Baldwin, labored through the history of the case,
the actions taken by the Van Buren administration, and the fine points
of international treaties. Justice Joseph Story rendered a narrow
decision that made no sweeping assertions about the inalienable rights
of man. Indeed, had the evidence proved that the Amistad rebels were
Cuban-born slaves, the Court would almost certainly have ordered their
return to the island where the adult males would have faced sure
execution.
Perhaps the most riveting scenes in the movie depict the slave
trade. In the beginning, Cinque, caked with dirt and sweating profusely in the stinking, blackened hold of the Amistad applies bleeding fingers
to extricate himself from his shackles. He and his liberated mates crack
into a box of sugarcane knives, then hack their way to victory. In a
fierce struggle with the captain, Cinque explodes into a primal rage
that allows him to overcome the captain by running him through the chest
with his own sword. The camera lingers on a triumphant Cinque, of
formidable physique and stature, towering over the body. For the sake of
historical accuracy, Spielberg might have dwelled on the prime target of
Cinque's rage, the Amistad's mulatto cook, but his death might
have thrown a disturbing nuance into a simpler conversation about race
relations.
More than midway through the movie, Cinque tells more of his story,
how he arrived on the Amistad in the first place. ("Whoever tells
the best story wins" says Adams.) Kidnapped by Africans, Cinque is
sold with other men, women, and children at the Lomboko slave fortress
to a Portuguese trader. Chained and naked, slaves embark on the
"notorious" slave ship Tecora in a frenzy of fear, panic, and
brutality. One white crewman pops up to shoot a slave indiscriminately.
Others beat and lash their human cargo until blood streams down the
decks, all before the ship weighs anchor. Chains and black bodies pack
the hold of the ship. Starving mouths lap up a starchy paste ladled into
their hands. During the middle passage, one enslaved woman hugging her
child to her breast flips herself overboard to escape her white
tormenters. A provision crisis forces dozens of slaves to be thrown
overboard. The survivors, once in Havana, are rudely rubbed down with
palm oil in preparation for sale. A mixed crowd of prosperous Cuban
ladies and gentlemen assembles to observe the spectacle of the auction
block.
No honest scholar can deny the brutality and horror of the Atlantic
slave trade. Slaves were horribly beaten and lashed during the middle
passage. They suffered disease and malnutrition. Some committed suicide.
Slaving captains, for various reasons, dispatched some to watery graves.
Amistad's producers, however, strayed beyond the bounds of the
historical evidence on the voyages of the Tecora and Amistad to confront
the audience with a carefully selected medley of the horrific.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., must have neglected to mention to the
producers that at the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute at Harvard University a
distinguished group of specialists have been working for years to
compile a database on the Atlantic slave trade. At present, this team
has gathered quantitative information on an estimated two-thirds of all
known slaving voyages across the Atlantic. Their preliminary findings,
along with previous scholarship, provide standards by which to judge the
movie's depiction of the slave trade.
The notorious Tecora does not yet show up in the slave-trade
database, and it may be that the word itself is a corruption by the
African witnesses of another Portuguese name. By Lomboko, depicted in
the movie as a masonry fortress, the Africans meant Dombokoro or
Lombokoro, a stockaded compound built on mainland Sierra Leone by an
infamous Spanish trader named Pedro Blanco. His stronghold contained
several large holding depots or barracoons for slaves brought from the
interior. Disease and British antislaving cruisers had prompted men such
as Blanco to become more efficient in loading illegal slave ships
quickly from one spot with full cargoes. The uplifting scene near the
end of the movie when Captain Fitzgerald (Peter Firth) broadsides the
fortress into oblivion seems taken from Commander Joseph Denman's
destruction of Blanco's emporia in 1840, thus well before the
Amistad case had reached the Supreme Court.
For one of their most gruesome scenes, the scriptwriters may have
borrowed from the atypical result of the 1781 voyage of the British
slave ship Zong, when depleting water stocks caused more than a hundred
sick and dying slaves to be bound and tossed overboard. Had these and
similar atrocities become the norm, the Atlantic slave trade might not
have lasted a generation, much less four centuries. At the time of the
Amistad, the average return on investment for individual traders
involved in the contraband Cuban trade had risen to almost 20 percent.
Because of the risks associated with British suppression policies,
however, many big traders were going bankrupt. In making economic sense
of the Tecora atrocities, District Attorney Holabird (Pete
Postlethwaite) was heading in the right direction.
In reality, only a small proportion of enslaved Africans entered
the Americas from the Windward Coast region either during the nineteenth
century or during the entire history of the Atlantic slave trade. Of the
425,000 slaves imported from West Africa to the Americas from 1836 to
1840, little more than 1 percent came from the Windward Coast. Enslaved
men formed a minority of those cargoes; almost 70 percent were women and
children.
At less than 10 percent, the shipboard mortality rate for slaves
imported from Sierra Leone from 1821 to 1867 ranks as one of the lowest
in the history of the Atlantic slave trade. White crews who parked in
the mosquito-infested waterways of those lands suffered higher
casualties. Data show that adult slaves imported into Cuba from 1855 to
1859 averaged five feet two inches in height. Observers thought that the
Amistad men averaged about five foot six with Cinque a bit taller. The
rebels of Spielberg's movie, even at the end of their debilitating voyages, look ready for the NFL draft. Their pallid white allies, by
contrast, obviously needed a better diet and more exercise.
The movie's anachronisms mount to dizzying heights if focus is
diverted to architecture, mannerisms, and language. But Amistad has less
to do with historical reconstruction than future direction. Spielberg
designed his movie to speak to the feelings and sensibilities of a
multicultural Nineties audience. In what was intended to be a powerful
scene, Cinque and Adams, black and white, begin to find a common ground
of understanding in Adams's greenhouse when Cinque recognizes under
a glass protector Adams's treasured African violet. With
Adam's permission, Cinque bends down and gently extends his hands
with uplifted palms to inhale its scent. Like much else in this movie,
the intended metaphor loses force when grounded in the history it
purports to represent. The African violet originated in East not West
Africa; no European harvested one for transplantation until the last
decade of the nineteenth century; the flowers give off no scent.
Robert L. Paquette is a professor of American history at Hamilton
College.