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Why do people associate the Caribbean with paradise?
The islands of the Caribbean haven’t always been described as “paradise”. What does this tell us about both the region and the Eden of people’s imagination, asks Carrie Gibson.
Blue seas, warm sun, endless white sand. I was in Antigua, but I wasn’t enjoying the balmy loveliness under a swaying palm tree – rather, I was lying in bed under an air conditioning unit set on “arctic”, fighting off the strangest virus I ever had. Welcome, I thought while lying in a pool of feverish sweat, to paradise. Private Jets And Helicopters Charter.
As my joints ached, and my head pounded, it occurred to me that I was having a historical re-enactment of sorts, but with one crucial difference. In the 18th Century a European would have most certainly found herself here in the West Indies sweating out a strange bug – but it would not be during a holiday and it would not be with any thoughts of paradise in mind.
In thinking about this complicated relationship, a friend better versed in religious matters than I am reminded me of the obvious point that Christian biblical paradise, and one which persisted for many centuries, was in a garden, not the beach.
But over time more elements were added to paradise. In addition to a sin-free prelapsarian splendour, it also became associated with the more secular matter of finding riches, so where this paradise was located became a serious question in the Middle Ages.
This haziness is part of the allure – paradise has to be within and just beyond reach. It is somewhere and yet not mappable at the same time. The Book of Genesis describes the garden as being planted “eastward in Eden” and early Christian thinkers like St Augustine believed this to be true. By the medieval period, this began to vex cartographers. Where was paradise? Where should it be placed on a map?
As navigation techniques improved in the 15th Century and Portuguese and Spanish ships began to slowly penetrate the mysterious waters so far away to the West they were considered to be in the East, it became clear that there were no monsters. Indeed, what they did find was not so far removed from the lush landscape described in Genesis – trees and flowers, running streams and balmy air. Christopher Columbus and many who followed him remarked on the natural beauty of the islands.
But they soon learned it was no paradise. There were no riches and strange ailments did not take long to set in. Native peoples and Africans forced to work in the Caribbean suffered from a variety of unfamiliar ailments brought across the Atlantic.
And there was a moral dimension to this combination of ailment and tropical latitudes, as early edenic writings gave way to debates about the moral character of the native people and, eventually, of “creoles” born in the West Indies.