F 14-1 S .157 I Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/problemsinpanameOOinma College of Missions Lectureship PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM BY l/ SAMUEL GUY INMAN INSTRUCTOR IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS IN COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, SECRETARY OF COMMITTEE ON COOPERATION IN LATIN AMERICA Author of “ Intervention in Mexico," " Through Santo Domingo and Haiti,” etc. NEW GEORGE H. YORK DORAN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FOREWORD There are two Americas — not North and South, but Anglo-Saxon and Latin. If an accident of history had not given them the same names both peoples might have been spared the serious results of ignoring the significance of wide differences in historical inheritance, religion, language, customs and ideals. But the failure of both parties to take into account these differences has been fatal. Future historians will wonder that Americans, North and South, lived together on this Continent so long without understanding each other. Present citizens of this America of ours are themselves beginning to ask this question. This book is an effort to help the North American to answer it. Guidance in the selection of material from such a vast field, has not been the desire for a logical but rather for a psychological presentation of the problem. In the first place, an effort is made to have the reader share in the author’s admiration of and belief in the future of the Latin American people. Since it is unfair, however, in drawing up the balance sheet of our friends to have only the credit side presented, the outstanding problems of our Southern neighbors are also given, largely as they themselves have stated them. With these friendly contacts established, history is reviewed to show that in the early days, both in the North and the South, there were warm reciprocal desires for Continental Solidarity, incarnated in Simon Bolivar of the South and Henry Clay of the North. But the Mexican War started a current of suspicion, which the Spanish- American War and the extension of North American con- trol over the Caribbean countries developed into hatred. The Monroe Doctrine is shown to have been well received at first in Latin America; reasons for later dislike of it are vi FOREWORD given, as well as the place the Southern Americans would like to see the Doctrine occupy today, in view of the new international situation developed by the World War. The significance of the various Pan American Conferences, from Panama in 1826 to Washington in 1916, is discussed and the radical changes brought about by the World War in the whole problem of Inter-American Friendship are studied. Next are discussed two outstanding questions, without the understanding of which no one can have a deep apprecia- tion of the present status of American Relations. These are the problems connected with the intervention of the United States in the affairs of the small countries of the Caribbean and the resultant growth of the influential school of Pan Latinists, formed by the leading writers of the South who are strongly opposed to the Pan Americanists. Finally, an effort is made to point out a few practical steps that North Americans might take to overcome the handicaps of past mistakes and misunderstandings and build up a true American friendship in which both those of the North and those of the South shall be united in the motto, sug- gested by an Argentine president, “America for Humanity.” Since the book is written by a North American for North Americans, the recognized right of one to criticize those of his own household has been used freely. The experiences of fifteen years’ residence and travel among Latin Americans, intimate friendships with high and low alike, presidents, professors, peons and patriots, real and counterfeit, and a continuous reading of their literature, have inspired the desire to present to my fellow-countrymen the other side of this fascinating problem of harmonious living on our common Continent. If I have presented here largely the blame attached to North Americans for the inharmony of the past, it is not because it would not be easy to show the blame lying at the door of our neighbors. But others have done that, sometimes ad nauseam. I therefore prefer to help us mag- nify the good qualities of our neighbors and scrutinize carefully our own bad qualities as the best policy for build- ing international, as it is for building personal friendships. FOREWORD vii The material here presented was first given in a series of lectures at the College of Missions, Indianapolis, Indiana. Since that time it has been tested out in addresses at other educational institutions both in North and South America, and thoroughly revised and enlarged during the author’s most recent trip to Latin America in 1921. S. G. I. CONTENTS CHAPTER I : ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA A land of the future — Room for overcrowded popu- lations — Production of raw materials — Market for manufactured goods — Intellectual and moral re- sources — Early period: First universities — Presses — Fine Arts — Literature — Contemporaneous Period : Cosmopolitanism of cultured classes today — A Mex- ican poet — An Argentine scholar — Youth in the lead — Practical scientists — Contributions to political idealism, governmental reforms, racial relations, estheticism — Kindness — Summary of assets assur- ing Latin America’s place in future world life . . 15 CHAPTER II : PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA Latin Americans’ diagnosis of their own problems — Alberdi — Sarmiento — Zumeta — Bulnes — Rodo — Fombona — Bunge — Garcia — Prada — Alvarez — Ugarte — Colmo — Barcos — Calderon — Bomfin — Summary — The Indian problem — The system of Latifundios — Caste — Suffrage— Immigration — So- cial problems : Vice, Alcoholism, Hygiene — The economic question — Education — Moral problems — The religious problem 45 CHAPTER III: EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM The Bolivar idea — Introductory — Early expressions in South America of Inter-American friendship — Bolivar’s idea : The Panama Congress, its constitu- tion and program, Instructions of United States delegates; Results of the congress — Further efforts at unity — The Second congress at Lima — Beginning of suspicion of the United States — Differences be- tween various countries — The Second “American Congress” — Various other efforts at unity . IX 97 X CONTENTS CHAPTER IV: EARLY EFFORTS OF THE UNITED STATES TOWARD AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP The period of benevolent neutrality — Early North American champions of friendly relations — Diplo- matic agents sent to South America — Clay’s fight for recognition of South American republics — Recog- nition and the period of goodwill — The disastrous war with Mexico — Consequent reversal of feelings in Hispanic America — Fear engendered by talk of “Manifest Destiny” CHAPTER V: THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA Origin of the Doctrine — Contents — Cordial recep- tion in Latin America when first announced — Inter- pretations of the Doctrine by leading authorities — How related to collection of debts and internal ques- tions — Opposition to Doctrine arising from imperial- istic tendencies — Debate between Bingham and Cal- deron — Confusion of Doctrine with other policies — The Monroe Doctrine and the League of Nations; Request of El Salvador for definition — Proposal for an American League of Nations and joint Monroe Doctrine CHAPTER VI : PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES The United States assumes leadership in developing Inter-American friendship — The First Pan Ameri- can Conference, Washington, 1889: Organization of the Pan American Union — The Second Pan Ameri- can Conference, Mexico, 1901 : Discussions on arbi- tration— The Third Pan American Conference, Rio de Janeiro, 1906 — The Fourth Pan American Con- ference, Buenos Aires, 1910: Discussion of Monroe Doctrine — Results of these conferences — The Christ of the Andes — Questions of intervention and col- lection of debts as related to Pan Americanism — The Venezuelan collection of claims — Mediation — The Mexican experiment — Resultant Pan Ameri- canism CONTENTS xi CHAPTER VII: LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR Economic changes — New credits arranged with the United States — Development of natural resources — Labor movement — World wide competition for Latin American trade — Political changes — Friendly atti- tude toward United States — Spiritual effects — Hu- mility — New facing of moral issues — Changes in education — Spiritual unrest — Some consequent dan- gers — Trade war — Foreign economic domination — American imperialism — Militarism — Materialism — Summary 226 CHAPTER VIII: PROBLEMS OF THE CARIB BEAN COUNTRIES Gradual extension of North American control over the Caribbean — Strategic reasons — Economic reasons — Early relations with Cuba — Platt Amendment — • Securing of control over Panama — Absolute control by marines in Santo Domingo — Good and evil results — How the United States’ dominance was sectired in Haiti — The confusion of governments — Evils of militarism — Neglect of education — Central Amer- ica’s efforts at unity — The Central American Court of Justice — Nicaragua’s revolutions which brought the United States’ intervention — The Bryan-Cha- morro Treaty — Salvador, Champion of nationalism — Recent political changes in Guatemala — Feeling of Central America toward the United States — Sugges- tions concerning relations between the United States and Caribbean countries 270 CHAPTER IX: PAN AMERICANISM VS. PAN LATINISM Two schools in Latin America — Early admiration of the United States — Later developments of antip- athy — Pan Latinism — Outstanding advocates quoted — Godoy — Fombona — Calderon — d’ Albuquerque — Vargas Vila — Nuestra America — Ugarte — Eduardo Prado — Periodicals — Anti-American propaganda — The school of Pan Americanists — Outstanding advo- cates quoted — President Brum — Semprum — Barcas xii CONTENTS — Lobo — Urtecho — Javier Prado — Chocano — Gar- rigo — Enriquez — Various educators — Pinochet — Need of dissipating misunderstanding — Two schools not necessarily antagonistic CHAPTER X: NEXT STEPS IN INTER-AMERI- CAN FRIENDSHIP Review of relations between the Americas — Early friendship as typified by Bolivar and Clay — Change brought by Mexican War — Later steps in imperialism — Confidence renewed by idealism of World War — Present opportunity for friendliness should be im- proved by various steps — Elimination of “Big Stick” and “Shirt sleeve diplomacy” — Reaching solution of Mexican question — Caribbean relations — Improved diplomatic service — Better acquaintance with Latin America — New attitude toward the tropics — Awak- ening to importance of American solidarity in devel- opment of proper relations with the rest of the world — Urgency of a better Inter-American understanding — Appreciation of different racial psychology — Value of educational interchanges — Study of Spanish and English — The exchange of good literature — Impor- tance of spiritual ambassadors — The ideal American a combination of the best in North and South . BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX PAGE 323 363 403 407 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Chapter I ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA The opening of the Panama Canal changed the map of the world. It inaugurated a world movement toward Latin America. That movement was interrupted by the War but it has started again w r ith new impetus. One only has to go into the counting houses, the offices of steamship companies, of manufacturing concerns, and into the council room of the Foreign Departments of the great governments of the world to realize how intensely the commercial and political organizations are stretching every nerve to extend their influence into these twenty young countries. For they are the land of the future. Unlike the old nations of the Orient their Golden Age lies before them. Just as the most re- markable development of the nineteenth century took place in North America so the most wonderful developments of ' the twentieth century are destined to take place in Latin America. This is true of Latin America principally because of four great outstanding reasons. First, there is room there for the overcrowded populations of the world. Second, there is power to produce the food and raw products for the world. Third, those lands are a market place for the manu- factured goods of the world. Fourth, they possess a re- markable circle of intellectual leaders. Beginning at the Rio Grande and stretching on down 15 16 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM through Mexico, over Central America, beyond Panama, through Colombia and Venezuela, the Andean countries, Brazil, Chile, down through the abounding plains of the Ar- gentine to the Straits of Magellan, is the largest expanse of undeveloped, fertile land in the whole world. There is more undiscovered territory in Brazil than there is in the whole continent of Africa. One state in that mighty republic equals the area of Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. If Argentina were as densely populated as is the State of New York, and it is far more capable of caring for a dense population, it would have 225 million people instead of its present population of 9 millions. Ven- ezuela is not considered one of the largest republics but it has three times more territory than Japan, while Japan has a population equal to that of all South America. Arguments might have been made in the old days against the dense population of these lands because they were tropical but modern science has overcome the difficulties of the tropics for men. The island of Santo Domingo is said to be more capable of sustaining a dense population than any other similar sized territory in the world. The over-crowded populations of the Orient and of Europe will without ques- tion seek the great fertile fields and friendly climates of these Latin American countries. The World War has brought to light the wonderful pro- ductive powers of the Latin American lands. In exporta- tion Chile leads the world in nitrates, Argentina in wheat, Mexico in oil, Brazil in coflfee, Cuba in sugar, Bolivia in tin, Costa Rica in bananas, — in fact every one of the twenty Latin American countries is especially noted for at least one product upon which the world is absolutely dependent. The old idea in the United States was that Latin America, being so largely made up of Indians and illiterates, offered little opportunity for our commerce. Business men are gradually awakening to the great error of such an opinion. Little Cuba, with two and a half millions of population, had a foreign commerce in 1919 larger than that of China, with 400 millions of population. Argentina alone did about 2 billion dollars’ worth of foreign trade the year closing June, 1920. In spite of the revolution in Mexico, the United ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 17 States sold more farm implements to that country in 1920 than it did to France, in the midst of reconstruction work. Because of these basic economic facts there is now going on in Latin America a tremendous struggle between those countries which were formerly allies for commercial and cultural supremacy. Germany and Japan are entering this field with well laid plans. For the first time in the his- tory of the United States she too is making a very serious effort to occupy a large place in Latin American life. Some of North America’s greatest business executives are being transferred to South America. Trade commissions from various countries are met in all parts of these southern lands. Prominent representatives of political and intellectual circles from all parts of the world are also visiting these countries. Cultural supremacy is being fought for with little less in- tensity than is commercial supremacy. This very struggle among outsiders has revealed to the Latin Americans them- selves their own strength. The spirit of nationalism is growing rapidly and the people are learning to play off one foreign element against another to the advantage of the national. They have recently begun to develop their own economic independence. Thus we have one of the most intensely interesting situations in any part of the world. These economic possibilities of Latin America have been well advertised. But her people justly complain that little attention has been paid by outsiders to the intellectual and spiritual assets of these countries. It was the frank recog- nition of these latter assets by Secretary of State Root, whose visit to Latin America in 1906 has been called the greatest event in United States history in the first decade of the twentieth century, that so endeared him to the Southern Republics. He began that remarkable tour by declaring in Rip de Janeiro: “I bring from my country a special greeting to her elder sisters in the civilization of America.” Was this a mere compliment to the Latin Americans, an attempt to match their incomparable courtesy? The answer is very clearly revealed by a hasty glance at the civilization of these southern countries. It will not be necessary to enter into detail upon the civi- lizations developed by the Indians. The wonderful ruins 18 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM found in Mexico, Central America and Peru are among the most remarkable in the world. Some of the pyramids of Mexico are larger than those in Egypt and the Maya ruins show an architecture comparable to that of the best of ancient Asia. The old fort just outside the city of Cuzco and the many ruined temples in Peru and Bolivia constitute some of the greatest marvels of the archaeologist. The city of Machu Picchu, recently unearthed by a North American expedition, has shown the very great antiquity as well as the advanced development of these pre-historic people. The Incas and Aztecs were conquerors of races older than them- selves and superior to them in civilization. Unfortunately, most of the evidences of their civilization were destroyed by the fanatical Spaniards. As one of the early ecclesiastics wrote, “We found a great number of their books, but because there was nothing in them that had not some superstition or falsehood of the devil, we burned them all, at which the natives were marvelously sorry and distressed.” Surely we share with the natives such sorrow and distress. It is a significant fact, however, that Mexico and Peru became great centers of culture during the Spanish colonial regime. No doubt, however, Secretary Root was referring to the civilization which the Spaniards brought with them and introduced into these new lands. This in itself, as a brief reference will show, antedated North American culture by many years. FOUNDING OF UNIVERSITIES It is customary to think of the early Spanish settlers as only interested in gold. But the facts show that they had hardly landed on any shore before they began the task of the development of a cultural life. The first university in America, that of St. Thomas, was founded in Santo Do- mingo in 1538, a hundred years before John Harvard con- ceived his plan for a college in Cambridge. It received the patronage of both the Pope and the Spanish king and sent its graduates into Cuba, Porto Rico, Mexico and far-away Peru. Until Santo Domingo lost its prestige it was a nota- ble center of culture and missionary zeal, causing the city to be known as the Athens of the New World. ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 19 A still more famous school is the old University of San Marcos, founded in Lima in 1551. Unlike its predecessor it has maintained a continuous existence up to the present time, and is thus the oldest university in the New World. It has counted among its presidents and professors some of the most distinguished prelates and scholars of America. In all the following cities universities were organized prior to the first North American college: Mexico, 1553; Bogota, 1572; Cordova, 1613; Sucre, 1623. Practically all of these universities had faculties of law, medicine and theology, while North America’s first permanent professor- ship in theology was established in 1721, in medicine in 1765 and in law not until after the Revolution. A school of surgery, a college of mining and a botanical garden which were opened in the eighteenth century gave Mexico City a wide reputation for learning in Europe. PRINTING PRESSES The first book printed in the New World was by Fray Juan de Zumarraga, the first Bishop of Mexico, and was called “Brief Compendium of Christian Doctrine in the Mexican and Spanish Language.” The Mexican historian, Icazbalceta, has made most interesting historical researches concerning the work of these early printing presses. The first printing press in America was set up in 1539 in the City of Mexico. The Jesuits of Paraguay built their own presses out in the wilderness where they established their famous missions. They reduced the Guarani language to writing and made their own type in order to publish books of sermons for the Indians. Among the most curious old manuscripts in existence are those still preserved in the archives at Asuncion to reward the trip of a thousand miles up the Parana River to the Paraguayan capital. In Lima the first issue of the press in 1584 was a catechism in the Qui- chua and Amara tongues. In spite of the expensiveness of printing in those days, more than sixty books were turned off the presses of Mexico City before the close of the six- teenth century. In 1620, the date of the landing of the Pilgrims, there were already appearing in Mexico City and 20 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM in Lima occasional leaflets telling of special events — the forerunners of our modern newspaper. With all these historic developments it should not surprise us as much as it usually does to learn that the greatest mod- ern newspaper} plant in the world is found in Spanish America, the magnificent home of La Prensa in Buenos Aires. Its building is one of the great structures of the city. It houses not only the ordinary equipment of a great news- paper, but also a great conference hall, a suite of rooms for the use of distinguished guests of the city, a large restaurant for its employees, a clinic for the poor, a legal aid bureau and many other community services. ADVANCE IN FINE ARTS In Mexico and Peru during the colonial period the Church enjoyed sufficient revenues to enable it to construct magnifi- cent buildings, especially when the work was that of en- forced labor of the Indians. Some of these great churches are to this day the marvel of visitors. Something was done in the colonies in painting, and many of the finest canvasses, especially of Murillo, were brought from Europe to adorn the walls of the churches and the homes of the rich. LITERATURE One who has not especially studied the literature of Latin America in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is simply overwhelmed when he discovers not only its abundance but its merit. “La Araucana,” by Ercilla, is one of the most remarkable epics ever written. It tells the story of the struggle of the Spaniards in Chile, where after all their sacrifices they were compelled to acknowledge the impossibility of conquering at least one tribe of Indians — the sturdy Araucanians. This long poem was completed in 1590. Juan de Castellano’s poem entitled “Eulogies on the Illus- trious Men of the West Indies,” written in the sixteenth century, contained 150,000 lines. Juana Inez de la Cruz, who lived in Mexico from 1651 to ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 21 1695, was called the “Tenth Muse” because of her remark- able poetry. She learned to read at the age of three. She took the veil at seventeen because she was so tormented by those who admired her, both for her beauty and her wonder- ful intellect. At one time she gathered in her cell 4,000 volumes. She might be called the first American suffra- gette. She wrote defending the education of women and while a girl herself begged her parents to send her to the University of Mexico dressed as a boy. Her ideas of the Mexican male are given in the following poem on men : Stupid men, forever prone To fix a blame on woman’s reason, When ’tis merely your own treason That creates her fault alone ! With an unrestrained desire For her downfall you are scheming; You are of her virtues dreaming While to ill alone you fire. Her resistance you oppose, Then, all serious, attaint her Fickle, light, and faithless paint her, Though ’twas you the role that chose. Stupidly you would procure Baser for a nobler treasure ; Making Thais of your pleasure A Lucretia chaste and pure. Nothing could be funnier Than the tale of him befouling His own mirror and then scowling Because the image was a blur. Whom is the greater evil in — Though both in wayward paths are straying — The poor sinner for the paying, Or he that pays her for the sin? Come, from your flirting cease, and turn, If may be, to a cool reflection, Then blame the still alive affection Of her you started first to burn ! — Translation of Thos. Walsh. 22 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM A literary contest was held in Mexico in 1585 in which three hundred poets took part. I am not sure that we ever had such a contest in North America and we certainly should not have had three hundred poets here before the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers. Senor Arenos de Mello reports that in 1780 his great-grandfather, living in interior Brazil 1400 kilometers from the sea, a man who had never seen the ocean, listened in his home to the presentation by a company of amateurs of some of the tragedies of Voltaire. In the life of John Miller, an Englishman who took part in the struggles of Argentina and Bolivia for independence, are found some interesting references to the great intellec- tual power of the South Americans. The old patriot Guara- chi, a native of La Paz, of pure Indian blood, was more familiar with English history than most Englishmen. He knew as much concerning the civil wars between the houses of York and Lancaster as if they had taken place in his own country and in his own generation. The Peruvian Indians had natural talent for painting and sculpture. They had little knowledge of the principles of art, but were able to copy paintings very successfully. One picture painted by a native of Quito, which was taken to Europe, was considered one of the best paintings of a fine private collection in Brussels. An Indian of Arequipa made some wood carvings representing Inca figures, which were sent to the Emperor Alexander of Russia. He was so de- lighted with them that he conferred upon the Indian the Order of the Santa Anna. PRESENT DAY INTELLECTUAL CIRCLES Nor did these early intellectual currents spend themselves and disappear in the deserts and forests of these lonely lands. It is a fact, startling to many, that there is today in the capitals of Latin America, an intellectual class comparable to that found in the capitals of Europe. My experience leads me to make the strong statement that, on the average, the intellectuals of Latin America have a broader and finer cul- ture than those of North America. The North American is more specialized in his knowledge. He must “major” in ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 23 some special branch in college. One of our great educators has said that the Doctorate of Philosophy, which is a highly specialized course, is the educational fetish of the United States. A large percentage of our university men lack that general culture that makes them agreeable in any company, and capable of talking intelligently on any topic. The educated Latin American, on the other hand, is apt to know how to talk and act under all circumstances, as he generally speaks several languages and has traveled in many countries. A hundred examples of the bruskness of the educated North American as compared with the refined man- ner of the Latin come to the mind of anyone who has often seen the two together. This was forcibly brought home to me a few years ago when I met a company of North Ameri- can educators in Rio de Janeiro. They had been specially selected from our college circles to visit South America as representatives of North American culture in the promotion of closer relations with South American universities. It came over one immediately on seeing them with the recep- tion committee at Rio de Janeiro at what great disadvantage they appeared in comparison with their Brazilian hosts. Another illustration was afiforded by a young Harvard graduate who, because of a brilliant record, had been given a scholarship and an exchange professorship in the Univer- sity of Chile. While waiting to be presented to a certain class to which a professor was talking about the young man’s work, he walked around the room with his hands in his pockets looking at the pictures on the wall. The Chilean professor was so incensed that he publicly requested him to show proper respect and be seated. Later the young man caused further criticism of Harvard by wearing as head dress a little cap, familiar to our college campuses, but con- sidered by Chileans as not only childish but lacking in respect. When the Mexican-American Commission was sitting in 1916 at Atlantic City, a gentleman said to me, “Our men must find it very trying to sit day after day in conference with those Mexicans, so inferior in culture.” How highly humorous the remark was could not be lost on anyone familiar with the personnel of the Joint Commission. Some 24 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM inkling may be gained by those who were not so acquainted from the manner in which the Commission decided a certain question. In view of the superior culture of the United States’ representatives, they would naturally be prepared to carry on discussions in the language of their foreign associates. Did they? As a matter of fact the amount of Spanish possessed by the three American commissioners was negligible, whereas all three of the Mexican members spoke English, two of them fluently. The discussions were in English. And whatever others may think of the Mexican Commissioners, their American associates had no illusions either as to their culture or as to their intellectual acumen. North America’s ignorance of those Latin Americans who have made great contributions to the literary and scien- tific world is irritating and appalling. Some ten years ago there came to this country for a series of lectures a man whom Juan Velara, a noted Spanish literary critic, called the greatest lyric poet in the annals of Spanish literature. But his presence in this country was hardly known to any outside the smallest Hispanic circle. A little later he passed into the life beyond with hardly a reference to him in North American publications. This was Ruben Dario, one of the world’s outstanding figures in literature. A MEXICAN POET What is the single event that has probably attracted more attention in Latin America than any other since the signing of the Armistice? A North American audience could not guess in a thousand guesses. It was not the passage of some law, the victory of some political party, the beginning of some great new enterprise or the defeat of treaty ratification by the United States Senate. It was the death of Amado Nervo! Amado Nervo? And who was he? Nobody, so far as the United States is concerned. Three years ago he passed through New York on his way from Mexico to Buenos Aires where he was to serve his country as Minister. It is true that a few of us met together in a small lecture room in Columbia University to listen to him recite those most marvelous spiritual visions that have made men nobler ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 25 wherever the Spanish language is spoken. But New York did not know that he was in her midst. Later, when he died in Montevideo, Argentina and Uruguay sent battle cruisers to accompany his remains to Mexico. Cuba caused her warship also to join the escort into Vera Cruz. There was thus formed a more remarkable demonstration of Latin American friendship than has been seen for many a day. For weeks it was the principal topic of discussion in the newspapers of Mexico, Cuba, Argentina and Uruguay. Nervo was the philosopher of the quiet faith, a man who loved nature and men and sleep. In one of his little known poems he says, “Friend, your poems are very good and I certainly enjoy listening to them, but what I realfy wish to do now is to go to sleep, for he who sleeps dreams and is therefore a god.” Amado Nervo is at his best when he interprets the Bible and mysticism in general. This little stanza on a Kempis is often quoted and misquoted: O, Kempis, Kempis, pale and ascetic, I have been sad for years, There is illness in my soul; And it is all on account of the book you wrote. The “Mystics” shows Nervo in one of his best developed moods. It leaves in the mind of the reader a lingering sense of procession, of pale browed pageantry. Thomas Walsh has made a translation close to the spirit of the original : Bards of brow funereal With your profiles angular As in ancient medals grand; Ye with air signorial. Ye whose glances lie afar, Ye with voices of command; Theologians grave and tried, Vessels of love meted grace, Vessels full of sorrow found; Ye who gaze with vision wide, Ye whose Christ is in your face, Ye in tangled locks enwound — 26 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM My muse a maid marmoreal Who seeks oblivion as her stay, Can find alone her rapture fanned Amid your air signorial, Amid your looks that lie afar, Amid your voices of command, My soul that doth your spirit trace Behind the incense’s rising tide Within the nave’s calm shadow ground, Hath loved the Christ upon your face, Hath loved your sweep of vision wide, Hath loved your tangled locks enwound. Away up in Asuncion, Paraguay, a thousand miles from the coast but only a few miles from some of the wildest tribes of Indians in existence, one finds a circle of literary men. One of the few Americans who visited that city not long ago called on a member of this circle. The Paraguayan was suspicious of him at first and began ah examination : “Tell me about my Emerson,” he said to the North Ameri- can, who fortunately knew something of the New England philosopher. “Tell me of my Whitman,” he said again, and then, leaning back in his chair; after a few minutes he said, “Now tell me of my Po-a (Poe). Ah! That’s the finest thing I have heard in a long time. You are the first Ameri- can I have seen down here who knew anything about my Po-a and these other dear friends of mine.” Because of Latin America’s early literary development she has an immortal song of the great victory of Bolivar at Junin. What would we not give had there been a bard in our Revolutionary days to sing such a hymn in honor of our own Washington! The poem is entitled “La Victoria de Junin,” and was written by Jose Juaquin de Olmeda (1780-1847). Here is a part of this remarkable paean, scarcely excelled in all literature. (Much, of course, is lost in translation.) If to Americans, Oh Liberty ! The solemn mission is by Heaven given To curb and tame the horrid beast of war, And over all the regions of the earth, And over all the waters of the seas ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 27 To spread thy sovereign rule’s imperial sway, Fear not with such a hero as Bolivar That error blind shall e’er obscure thy light, That superstition shall profane thy altars, That tyranny shall dare affront thy laws. For thee shall be the glory, Oh Bolivar ! For thee the right to break the yoke of kings, In their despite to enthrone the law on high. Forever shall this glory last, ye nations, And irresistible your free estate Shall be before the might and hateful league Of all the tyrants that have sworn to crush you. If in a federal bond from pole to pole, In war and peace ye live fore’er united. In union is your strength, union, Oh nations ! That ye be always free and never conquered. A mightier work, Bolivar, is this union Than to destroy Spain’s iron rod of power, And thou alone art worthy to achieve it. A bosom friend of Olmeda’s was Andres Bello, a much more typical Latin American intellectual, because he was not only a poet, but a great grammarian, a statesman and pedagog. His keen understanding of his people is found in his pointing them to agriculture as one of the surest anti- dotes to civil discord and international strife. “O youthful nations, ye who lift your heads Encircled with new laurel wreaths of victory, Before the gaze of an astonished West! Do honor to the fields, with honor lead The farmer’s simple life, homely and frugal, Thus freedom shall abide with you forever, And ye shall always curb Ambition, and respect law’s sacred might.” Another one of those marvelous brains that accomplished an unbelievable amount of work and whose influence radi- ated to every corner of the Spanish-speaking world, is Eugenio Maria de Hostos. Here is one of those Latin geniuses that seem to be capable of doing any amount of intellectual work in any number of different spheres. He 28 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM wrote one of the best treatises on constitutional law that has been published. An edition in English is scheduled for the near future. His educational principles, which were given through his years of teaching in the normal school in Santo Domingo, show some of the most modern pedagogi- cal theories. It is planned also to publish these as soon as his old students are able to work them out from their notes. A volume called “Meditando” shows the remarkable intellec- tual grasp of the man. First there is a long essay on Hamlet, a splendid critical study of Shakespeare’s play; then follow short essays on several of the great men of South America; a criticism of various authors in Santo Domingo; a treatise on the laws of teaching, on political themes and on literary criticism. This remarkable man was educated in Spain, traveled all through Latin America, came to be a recognized authority in literature and politics in Argentina, Chile, Santo Domingo, Cuba and Porto Rico, in all of which countries he lived for a more or less brief period of time. Before Europe had opened scientific careers to women, Hostos had persuaded the Chilean government to open its courses in medicine and law to women. He was also the first man to urge in Argentina the importance of the construction of the Trans-Andean railway. In Santo Domingo he edited the first laws concerning education and directed for nine years the public education of that country. While in Peru he began a campaign in favor of the protection of the Chinese there and aided the national government in its controversy concerning the Oroya railroad. He worked most arduously for the independence of Cuba and offered to earn by means of his pen a million pesetas for the Liberal cause. AN ARGENTINE SCHOLAR I treasure as one of the finest experiences of my life a visit a year or two ago to the home of Dr. Ernesto Quesada, the great Argentine scholar. I was met at the door by the butler and ushered into a beautiful room filled with rare art treasures and the armor of forgotten knights. From there I was directed to proceed into the adjoining room, where I should find the head of the house. This was a large room ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 29 probably fifty feet long, lined on every side with well-filled bookcases running to the very top of the high ceiling. I advanced rather cautiously, but hearing voices at the other end, found Dr. Quesada with a half dozen friends, seated around the fireside. On being presented to the guests I found myself in the midst of a literary circle which re- minded me of that which used to gather at Cambridge in the days of Emerson and Holmes. There was Dr. Carlos Pena, combining the faculties necessary for a famous the- atrical critic and the editor of a forty-volume work on Ar- gentine law, and several other gentlemen distinguished in the intellectual life of Argentina, including the Director of the Historic Museum of La Plata. The conversation took wide range, from university life in the United States to secondary education and teachers’ problems in Argentina, the celebration of the Fourth of July, the formation of the Argentine soul from many different sources, etc. We afterward broke up into small groups and began ex- amining the wonderful library. Dr. Pena accompanied me, showing me many of the later books of the library and giv- ing me very valuable information concerning Argentina literature. It is interesting to note how this author works. He asked me my opinion of the plan for his “History of the Constitution.” His thought was to begin in a large cir- cumference and gradually close in until he arrived at the Argentine constitution itself. In the first place, there will be a study of the European constitutions, showing that these were entirely monarchical and could have no influence on the Argentine constitution. He will then take all of the American constitutions, giving the largest study to that of the United States, showing that Argentina copied practically the entire constitution of the United States. He would then begin his intimate study of the constitution of his own country and its interpretation. This will be a two-volume work of about 1,400 pages. Did I think that would be sufficiently inclusive? I replied that of course it would be a rather brief treatment of the case, but it would possibly suffice. It is doubtful if our scholars and leaders are doing the research work in literature that is being done in Argentina. so PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM There seems to be no limit to the ability of authors there to turn out large tomes. The books by Dr. Quesada are placed by themselves in his library. They fill more than five feet of space. One volume alone, the “Study of the Teaching of History in the European University,” has 1,200 pages. Before we left that evening we heard many things about new books, written by the various authors present, books that were yet to appear, and arrangements were made for future meetings when chapters of these forthcoming works would be read and criticized by this circle of friends. By special invitation I returned to Dr. Quesada’s on Sat- urday evening to attend one of his classes in sociology. It was a very delightful experience to see the close relationship which exists between this professor and the young men and women who were invited into his library. The subject was “Aztec Civilization,” and a paper of nearly one hour’s length was read by one of the young men, showing great familiarity with Aztec sources but not very much power of interpreta- tion. The paper was followed by criticisms by the class, which were as keen as anything heard in the graduate classes of North American universities. I was convinced of the accuracy of what one of the uni- versity professors had said to me the evening before, that nd students in the world are better prepared intellectually for entrance into the university than those of Argentina. “One of our students can be asked,” the professor said, “about the geography of India, for example, and he will enter into the most minute details concerning it. But the great diffi- culty is that these young men are tired mentally. They have no intellectual initiative. They are not capable of speciali- zation or of penetrating to the very roots of a subject and drawing practical conclusions from it. If we want spe- cialists in any branch,” he added, “we must go to North America for them.” YOUTH IN THE LEAD A short time ago I was in the office of the director of primary education in Mexico City, an officer who controls all primary education in the city and is the head of an or- ganization with a budget of $6,000 a day and em- ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 31 ploying 2,000 teachers. As one follows this young man through the various offices in the municipal palace, sees the respect everywhere accorded him, hears the waiting teachers appeal to him and is shown the modern, well-regu- lated office whose records keep him constantly informed of every detail about each individual school and teacher, in- stinctively one turns to see if after all there isn’t some trace of a wrinkle or gray hair about what seemed at first a boyish face. But there is none discoverable. He is just twenty- four years of age. Two years ago a member of the gradu- ating class of the Escuela de Altos Estudios of the Univer- sity of Mexico, he was president of the National Student Federation. He tells with enthusiasm of his work with the students, which he still continues ; of how he has been seek- ing to lead the students from a “Latin American Solidar- ity” to a “Pan American Solidarity”; of his earnest desire to go to the United States for graduate work; of what he believes the students of these two neighboring peoples could do, with the proper backing, toward developing closer friend- ship between the two countries, and finally of what he is doing in his present position to help educate his people. At this point he produces statistics to show that in spite of all the difficulties with which they are faced, which sometimes even include lack of funds to pay teachers’ salaries, there are today more pupils enrolled and more schools open in the City of Mexico than there were in 1910, the last year of the Diaz administration. This is one illustration of that which constantly im- presses the traveler in Latin America — the brilliancy of the student classes. The students of Latin America are probably more respon- sible for creating what there is of “public opinion” in their several countries than any other force, excepting only the newspapers. They exercise extensive control over educa- tional matters by means of strikes. This phenomenon is very common in Latin America. Akin to the strike, which is generally in protest against something relating to the internal management of the individual school, is the “dem- onstration,” which is organized for the purpose of protest- ing against some public procedure that is believed to be 32 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM wrong. Student demonstrations during the war have been quite common, and often exercised immediate influence. If you should call at the suburban home of Oliveira Lima, in tropical Pernambuco, your first impression would be that ex-President Taft, unbeknown to you, was visiting Brazil. Dr. Lima is wellnigh our ex-President’s exact double in physical appearance. As you talk with the great Brazilian you are impressed also with the fact that intellectually he is the same quiet, dignified type of gentleman, with the same broad, sympathetic nature and scholarly thoroughness which we admire in Mr. Taft. His dissertation on international peace, as we sat together on his veranda, surrounded by palms and cocoanut trees, was one of the most beautiful that I ever heard. He formerly represented Brazil at the Court of St. James. In his London home he collected a library of 33,000 volumes, which he has recently donated to the Catholic University at Washington, where he now lives. He is one of the most genial of men and refutes the charge that Latin Americans cannot appreciate a joke. He laughed most heartily when, referring to his likeness to President Taft, I asked him if he had heard why Mr. Taft was con- sidered the most polite man in Washington — because he got up and gave two ladies a seat in a street car. Pernambuco was also the home of Senor Nebuco, one of the most cultured gentlemen who ever graced the diplomatic circles of our national capital. He completely won the hearts of the people of the United States while he was among us as Brazil’s ambassador. He was the first diplomat to urge publicly, in his farewell address to President McKinley, that all the American nations should assume equally the duties and responsibilities of the maintenance of the Monroe Doctrine. Among the many great deeds credited to his skill is the freeing of the slaves in Brazil, which was done not by a terrible war, as with us, but by a gradual and equitable arrangement between the government and the slave owners. PRACTICAL SCIENTISTS IN LATIN AMERICA It is not alone in the world of letters that Latin Ameri- cans find an important place, but as scientists as well. The ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA S3 traveler who today approaches Rio de Janeiro will have little interest in the old controversy as to whether Naples, with its broad sweeping bay and amphitheater of hills rising over the colored crescent city, or Constantinople, is the most beautiful city of the world. For Rio de Janeiro — with its blending of hill, mountain and valley crowned with tropical verdure, over all of which preside the stately royal palms, on the shore of an island-studded bay that the early navi- gators imagined was a river’s mouth — Rio de Janeiro is immediately recognized as incomparably the most beautiful of the world’s cities. But for many decades the city was shunned by all who were not absolutely compelled to go there. Plague slew its thousands and yellow fever its tens of thousands. From 1891 to 1894 there were 14,445 deaths from yellow fever alone. But a young Brazilian physician, Dr. Oswaldo Cruz, in one of the most remarkable achievements of modern science, has made Rio de Janeiro as healthy a tropical city as one may easily find. Dr. Cruz, after graduating from the School of Medicine in Rio and taking further work in the Pasteur Institute in Paris, became convinced of the possibility of making his own city as healthful as any in the world. “Give me the proper authority and a sufficient force and means to work with and I will rid Rio of yellow fever in three years,” said this young man just past thirty years of age, with no special reputation and no special knowledge of the disease or its method of propagation. The President took him at his word and appointed him Director General of Public Health. On April 20, 1903, less than thirty days after his appoint- ment, the first case of yellow fever was rigorously isolated, and a campaign begun based on lines adopted by the Ameri- can Commission in Cuba. With a force of seventy-five phy- sicians, a number of students and a large force of laborers, he began his stupendous task. When, in 1906, he resigned the position of Director General of Public Health to assume the headship of the Institute of Tropical Diseases, now known as Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Rio was free from the scourge of yellow fever and Dr. Cruz became a world figure, better known in Europe, it is true, than in the United States. 3 4 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM It was Aniceto Menocal, a Cuban, who many years ago traced out for the future construction of a canal across Cen- tral America the route which was later recommended by the American engineers at the conclusion of their elaborate and exhaustive surveys. Two young Peruvians have become noted as aviators — Jorge Chavez and Juan Bielovucio. The former was fatally injured at Demodossola, Italy, on Sep- tember io, 1910, after having flown across the Alps. The latter flew across safely at the same point in 1913. One of the first and most famous kings of the air, Santos Dumont, is a Brazilian. latin America's political idealism Some are inclined to ridicule the democracy of Latin America, and, in fact, it exists practically in only a few of the countries. In spite of this, however, which is due to many historical influences easily pointed out, Latin America’s devotion to democracy is wonderful. For example, Mexico in spite of a century of disappointments and sad experiences, although she has suffered much, keeps to her republican ideal. The execution of Iturbide and Maximilian, who dared to suggest an empire, shows this. The growing vision of equalitarian, fraternal, righteous commonwealths, in which the good of all shall be the quest of each, has become a passion with a considerable group of patriots. If in part it is a recrudescence of the original Spanish genius for individualism and autonomy ere yet the Spanish state was overborne by monarchical absolutism and imposed tradition, this passion is more fully explained by the resilience and creative energy of the Latin American mind itself when once it is free to follow its native elan. This democratic idealism has only incipiently realized itself in the overthrow of imperialism and the setting up of republics. It has soaring dreams of the future. It utters its prophecies in the political ideology of statesmen, the en- thusiasms of sociologists, the fervid eloquence of orators, and above all in the indigenous literature of the young de- mocracies, both poetry and prose. From the early poets — Andrade of the Argentine, Olmedo of Ecuador, Gregorio ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 35 de Mattos of Brazil, Marti of Cuba, de Tagle of Mexico — down to the days of Santos Chocano of Peru and of Ruben Dario of Nicaragua, dean of the present modernist school, the American masters of Spanish and Portuguese verse have never ceased to sing of new hopes and alluring prospects ris- ing out of the ruins of the shattered past. There is much strength in that devotion to ideal political conditions, so often criticized by those whose god is the practical. Faith in grand sonorous principles, in arbitra- tion, democracy, etc., and generous vagueness of humani- tarian declarations, their people in love with the poetical in politics, inheritors of a heroic quixotism, they often invoke pure justice in a world usually governed by selfish inter- ests. At times this leads to the most heroic self-sacrifice and the accomplishment of things which the practical Saxon would have considered impossible. Thus Juaquin Nabuco points out that Princess Dona Isabela, regent of Brazil in 1888, declared voluntarily the freedom of the slaves. She thus separated herself from the conservatives, from the land- lords and from slave owners and contributed directly to the elimination of the monarchy and the founding of the re- public in Brazil. Devotion to a principle cost her the gov- ernment of an empire. It was only an idealist like Fran- cisco Madero that seemed capable of rousing the Mexican people to revolt against a political and economic despotism reaching back into centuries. The French Revolutions of 1789 and 1848 both had pro- found influence on the Latin American, the latter movement finding echo in new parties demanding suffrage, equality be- fore the law and other reforms. The idealism of Lamar- tine was everywhere shared in South America. He had written in 1848 that “Democracy is in principle the direct reign of God.” So groups appeared led by such men as Vilbao and the Lastarria brothers in Chile, Antonio Guzman in Venezuela, and in Colombia by democratic clubs, one of which, because of its appeal to Christ as the great demo- crat, was called Golgotha. The theory of democracy is more carefully thought out by Hispanic America than by us. We take it for granted, but she studies it. Latin America has made the fullest con- 36 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM tribution to the elaboration of the theory Of democracy made by any people. By virtue of French ideas and North Ameri- can example they threw off the Spanish monarchy and set up a democracy. With no experience in self-government they were in need of a gospel of democracy to which they could hold, even though they wandered far from its ideal in practice. Some of these early writers seemed almost in- spired, in the Biblical sense, so keen was their analysis of the situation. Montalvo of Ecuador taught that “a sane and pure de- mocracy has need of Jesus Christ.” He exalted Christian- ity as the author of democracy and believed that democracy would be the law of the nations if some day the spirit of the Gospel were to prevail. Lastarria of Chile was one of the greatest students of political economy and defenders of democracy. In his wonderful book, “Lessons in Positivist Politics,” he applied principles of Positivism to the evolution of South America and particularly Chilean history. Juan Bautista Alberdi, almost unknown to us, was one of the greatest students of democracy that has ever written upon the subject. He believed that “philosophy is meant for politics, morality, industry and history, and if it does not serve them, it is a puerile and a trifling science”; while he desired a philosophy “in which are distilled the social and moral needs of our country, a clear democratic progression and popular philosophy”; he defended Protestantism as a religion peculiarly appropriate for republics on a Catholic continent. His fellow Argentine, Sarmiento, better known, has also written some of the best treatises on government ever pro- duced in America. He became a friend of Horace Mann, while a resident of this country, and found in the United States the larger part of his model, which he worked out later as President of Argentina. Of his more than a score of books, “El Fecundo,” one of the best, has been translated into English by Mrs. Horace Mann. If in the practical development of democracy Latin Amer- ica has generally been behind North America, this is not true in one important matter, the freeing of the slaves. Simon Bolivar, himself, led in this movement by ordering the lib- ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 37 eration of the several hundred slaves on his own estate. In the Central American Congress, on December 31, 1823, Father Canas, rising from a sick-bed, made an impassioned appeal, which reminds one of Lincoln’s addresses during his candidacy for the Illinois Senate, thirty-five years later. The worthy father said : “I come limping, and if I were dying I would come as my last act, to perform a noble deed for hu- manity. With all the energy with which a deputy should promote the interests of his country, I beg that, before any- thing else is done, and on this very day, our brothers who are slaves be declared free, leaving free the right of those ■who have legitimately secured these slaves to make their claims and the immediate creation of a fund for the indemni- fication of these owners. * * * The whole nation has been declared free. Thus should also be the individuals who compose it.” The very first article of the decree which the Liberator of Mexico, Don Miguel Llidalgo, issued in 1810, was “First, that all owners of slaves shall give them their liberty within ten days, the penalty of death resulting in the disobeying of this decree.” Hidalgo’s defeat caused the postponement of emancipation but this was fully consummated under the presidency of Guerrero in 1829. The cultured and humane deputy, Manuel Salas, presented and with his enthusiasm carried through the Congress of Chile, on October 11, 1811, a bill which provided that all persons born in Chile should be free, and all slaves who set foot on the nation’s soil should thereby become free. Buenos Aires followed with a similar law on February 2, 1813, and other Spanish American countries followed suit. In 1838 decrees of freedom were issued in Colombia, Vene- zuela and Ecuador. So it will be seen that, with the excep- tion of Brazil, which was an empire, all the Latin American nations anticipated the Emancipation Proclamation in North America by half a century and by a lesser time the movement in England, which was consummated in 1825. SOME GOVERNMENTAL REFORMS Those who are interested in the great social and economic problems that are stirring the world today should watch Uru- 38 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM guay. It seems heretical for anyone to entertain any doubt that the United States of America, with its president, cabi- net, congress and supreme court, as now formed, represents the very last word in democratic government. But Uru- guay, after trying that form for a century, has just made a radical change which is expressed in a new constitution just adopted. For some time this progressive little country has been attracting world attention on account of certain social legislation which seemed distinctly radical. Today, with her new constitution, she may be considered the social laboratory of America. Here, in brief, is what she has done: The power of the president is greatly limited, the executive power being di- vided between that office and an administrative commission of nine members which is elected every six years by popular vote. This commission prepares an annual budget for the congress, to which it is accountable. Minority representa- tion on the commission is assured by recourse to plurality of votes, as in England. Legislative powers remain in the congress, but the congress also elects the members of the supreme court of the republic, approves or rejects treaties made by the executive and has the explaining and inter- preting power in questions involving the meaning of the new constitution— thus taking for the legislative body the power that has always been the peculiar strength of the Supreme Court of the United States. Congress may call on members of the cabinet for explanations of their acts, as in England and France, and the ministers have seats in the congress with power to introduce legislation. When congress is not in session it is represented by a permanent committee, after the Mexican plan, composed of members of both houses, who deal with the executive in all matters of adjustment be- tween the two departments. Such a comprehensive governmental reform cannot help but yield highly instructive results, and the wise applica- tion of the practices and principles revealed ought to make for progress along such lines in all the western nations. The following from one of its distinguished writers is not an overdrawn statement of Latin American intellectual life: ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 39 “There are certain general principles, like democracy and arbitration, which are scarcely disputed in America. The idea of arbitration as a judicial means of deciding interna- tional differences owes its origin to Bolivar, the Liberator of the New World. We South Americans also have our Walt Whitman. Social sciences throughout the whole con- tinent have made greater progress than metaphysics and theology. Rivals of Giddings and Lester Ward teach in South American universities, and over against the work of Wheaton we can set the work of Calvo. Pragmatism, the philosophy of North America, is also the philosophy of Spanish South America, and, in the books of Alberdi, a sociologist of Argentina, we find thoughts to which Wil- liam James and his disciples subscribed half a century later. We are forced, then, to believe in the definite relationship between the physical order and the moral order. The New World has a geography and a policy which give it genuine originality as compared with Europe.” latin America's contribution to the problem of RACIAL RELATIONS The greatest of world problems are those related to the living together of different races. In respect to acceptance of the doctrine that God made of one blood all the nations of the earth, we may find that the Latin Americans are superior to the North Americans. They did not destroy the Aborigines when they came to this new land as did the North Americans. They intermarried with the Indians and today there is no prejudice against them. Indeed, the aver- age man is much prouder of his Indian blood than of his Spanish ancestry. In spite of the introduction of African slaves and a resultant large negro population in countries like Brazil, there is practically no color line or race problem in any of these countries. There is no such aversion to the Chinese, the Japanese and the East Indians as is shown by the North Americans, Australians and Dutch. The distinction between the races is in Spanish America a distinction of rank or class rather than of color. Against intermarriage there is, therefore, no more feeling than that 40 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM which exists against any union palpably below a man’s or woman’s own rank in life. If it is rare for a pure white to espouse a pure Indian, that is because they are of different ranks, just as it is rare for a well-born Englishman to marry a peasant girl. LATIN AMERICAN LOVE OF THE ARTISTIC While our southern neighbors have not produced any very great artists, yet they have men who stand high in the world of music, painting and sculpture. But here again, if we take the average man, we find that he is a much better judge of the artistic in music and in other arts than is the average North American. The “popular” airs that the band in the plaza plays are not the fleeting ragtime, but are well-known selections from the operas. The military bands which, in Mexico, for example, are found giving popular concerts in two or three different plazas every night, are made up of the lowest classes. Music is natural to them and some of these men who have never worn a pair of shoes would be capable of accompanying Tetrazzini or Galli-Curci in the “mad scene” from Lucia. The love of the beautiful is remarkably illustrated in the Latin American cities, which are among the most beautiful in the world. The most important official is not ordinarily the mayor, but the man who is responsible for the beautify- ing of the city. A few years ago this official in Buenos Aires came to believe that it was necessary for the national capitol and the President’s residence to be united by a broad avenue. It made no difference that the cutting of this ave- nue would mean the destruction of buildings in the most crowded business section of the city and the expenditure of millions. The municipality gladly voted the necessary funds, condemned property and built the beautiful Avenida de Mayo, which is now recognized as one of the most beautiful in the world. The heights of the buildings are carefully regulated. The modern demands for the skyscraper have been recently worked out by having the higher part of the building set back in the center part of the street. It is in- teresting to note that New York has followed the example ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 41 of Buenos Aires in some of her newest tall buildings. It is hoped that we will follow her example in other things. It is impossible to imagine Buenos Aires or Rio de Janeiro allowing unsightly gas tanks or New York Central railroad tracks to be built right along a beautiful waterfront such as the Riverside Drive. There is probably no waterfront more full of natural beauty than the one in Rio de Janeiro. One feels that it is fortunate that nature has done this for a Latin city rather than one of our own, for we might not have co-operated with her as has Rio de Janeiro, resulting in the most beautiful ocean drive in the world. This love of the artistic is found just as strongly among the most humble classes. The Mexican peon may have no more clothes and furniture than he can put in a couple of blankets, but the difficulty of his moving from one house to another is augmented by the fact that he absolutely refuses to leave the plants and flowers that are always a part of his existence. I know of nothing more pathetic or beautiful than to see a peon trudging along the road with all of his belongings on his back, with his wife and children accom- panying him, loaded quite as heavily with their precious little pot plants. KINDNESS Perhaps the greatest of all characteristics of the Latin American is his kindness, and open-heartedness. It is the thing above all others that makes the foreigner so love to live in those southern lands. Charity is not simply a duty, it is a matter of course. If a poor relative dies and leaves helpless children, they will be taken into the family, it makes no difference how little room there may be or how empty the larder may be. If one is without a job, or in hard luck, his more fortunate relatives will always lend a helping hand. There are never too many in any household to keep another out, if he is needy. One of the outstanding experiences of a lifetime was that of driving in a single buggy for four hundred miles through desert country in Mexico, accompanied by my wife and a year-old baby. We knew nothing of the way. We were 42 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM dependent on the country people for lodging, for food for ourselves and forage for our horse, for milk for the baby. If we had been a royal family, instead of humble absolute strangers and foreigners besides, we could have received no greater kindnesses. Sometimes we had to drive for hours before coming to a country hut. If we stopped to inquire the way, the reply would be that we must come in first for a cup of chocolate. Then they would tell us, and if the road was difficult, often someone would go with us long distances to make sure that we took the right turn. SUMMARY With all these fine qualities in the people and with all the riches of the soil, one risks little in prophesying that Latin America is to occupy a most important place in future world life. Here then are all the conditions maturing for great move- ments and consequences. Crowded populations made aware of productive, unoccupied lands tend to migrate. The pro- gressive stabilization of government calls forth capital for- merly reluctant. Railroads throw open regions hitherto in- accessible and idle. The advance of scientific sanitation ren- ders the old cities and new territories safely habitable. But more important than all of these material riches is the wealth found within the people themselves. As Clemenceau, after his visit to Latin America, said : “A country, whatever may be its form of government, is strong only through its men, that is through the sum total of its disinterested energies. Now a people capable of pro- ducing men of intelligence and character of those I fre- quently met during my trip can confidently face the problems of the future.” Notwithstanding the inherited passion for politics, more of the youth of Latin America than formerly are preparing themselves in engineering, scientific agriculture and com- merce, and other productive vocations. In nearly every one of these nations a group of leaders and a constituency are either in power, or are emerging, looking forward, com- mitted to universal education, political stability, social justice ASSETS OF LATIN AMERICA 43 and international good will. These brought to bear in full- ness upon the limitless natural resources of the countries and their patrimony will realize the belief of most observers that Latin America’s Golden Age is ahead and imminent. An illustration of what we may expect Latin America to contribute to the world, once the average level is lifted, is shown in the following production of the Cuban, Jose M. de Heredia. Exiled by the Spaniards in 1823, he came to Bos- ton at the age of 23, and eked out a few years of miserable existence in this country by teaching Spanish. He almost starved at times. But he managed to see Niagara Falls. As a result, we have his immortal description of that great nat- ural wonder. Tremendous torrent! for an instant hush The terrors of thy voice, and cast aside Those wide-involving shadows, that my eyes May see the fearful beauty of thy face ! I am not all unworthy of thy sight, For from my very boyhood have I loved, Shunning the meaner track of common minds, To look on Nature in her loftier moods. At the fierce rushing of the hurricane, At the near bursting of the thunderbolt, I have been touched with joy; and when the sea Lashed by the wind hath rocked my bark, and showed Its yawning caves beneath me, I have loved Its dangers and the wrath of elements. But never yet the madness of the sea Hath moved me as thy grandeur moves me now. Thou flowest on in quiet, till thy waves Grow broken 'midst the rocks; thy current then Shoots onward like the irresistible course Of Destiny. Ah, terribly they rage, — The hoarse and rapid whirlpools there. My brain Grows wild, my senses wander, as I gaze Upon the hurrying waters, and my sight Vainly would follow, as toward the verge Sweeps the wide torrent. Waves innumerable Urge on and overtake the waves before, And disappear in thunder and in foam. They reach, they leap the barrier — the abyss Swallows insatiable the sinking waves. A thousand rainbows arch them, and the woods Are deafened with the roar. The violent shock 44 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Shatters to vapor the descending sheets. A cloudy whirlwind fills the gulf, and heaves The mighty pyramid of circling mist To heaven. The solitary hunter near Pauses with terror in the forest shades. God of all truth ! in other lands I’ve seen Lying philosophers, blaspheming men, Questioners of thy mysteries, that draw Their fellows deep into impiety; And therefore doth my spirit seek thy face In earth’s majestic solitudes. Even here My heart doth open all itself to Thee. In this immensity of loneliness I feel Thy hand upon me. To my ear The eternal thunder of the cataract brings Thy voice, and I am humbled as I hear. Sources of Further Information on Assets of Latin America Calderon, F. Garcia : Latin America, Its Rise and Progress. Clemenceau: South America of Today. Coester, A. : Literary History of Spanish America. Cooper, C. S. : Understanding South America. Ford, J. D. M. : Main Currents of Spanish Literature. Godoy, F. Garcia : Literatura Americana de Nuestros Dias. Goldberg, Isaac: Studies in Spanish American Literature. Lima, Oliveira : Evolution of Brazil Compared with Spanish and Anglo-Saxon America, Na Argentina. Shepherd, W. R. : Latin America. Root, Elihu : Latin America and the United States. Files of “Inter-America” and “Bulletin of the Pan American Union.” Chapter II PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA Granting that Secretary Root’s gracious and now famous phrase concerning the salute due from the younger civiliza- tion of North America to the older civilization of Latin America was entirely justified by the facts, as brought out in the first chapter, this does not mean that Latin America is not confronted with grave and difficult problems, on the solving of which her future place in world life depends. In making up Latin America’s balance sheet we must examine not only the credit side of the ledger, but must frankly face the debit side as well. LATIN AMERICANS' DIAGNOSIS OF THEIR PROBLEMS None have been readier to recognize or franker to de- scribe the things that are holding back these nations than have the Latin Americans themselves. In the beginning of their independence they were too taken up with political questions to consider in any large degree social and moral problems. The remarkable school of writers, to which ref- erence has already been made, who treated political idealism and the problems of democratic government as reflected from the French Revolution of 1848, touched indirectly the social problem. Juan Bautista Alberdi, of Argentina, an outstanding authority, wrote a book called Bases for the Organization of the Argentine Republic, in which he ana- lyzed the evolution of Argentina much as Hamilton in his Federalist studied North American life. Domingo F. Sarmiento, the greatest of Argentines, was the only aggressive worker for social reform known in South America in the early days. His two remedies for social evils are expressed in his own words as follows : 45 46 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “I have projected two ‘bases’ for the regeneration of my country : the education of the present inhabitants, in order to raise them above the moral and racial degradation into which they have fallen, and the introduction of new races into the society of today: ‘popular education and immigra- tion.’ I have followed these two ideas, I have traveled that I might clarify them, perfect them and make them practi- cable. In the prosecution of them I crawled — I must say it, as money was scarce with me — to the United States, and regarding what I saw and examined there, all my later writ- ings bear testimony.” But from i860 to 1890 books on political and moral ques- tions were rare indeed, due partly to the great international wars of that period. From about 1890, however, we find a school of Latin American sociologists developing, and books written since that time show a keen analysis of the problems of those countries. In his book, The Sick Continent, Cesar Zumeta of Vene- zuela, the forerunner of these sociologists, studied the out- ward and inward danger of Latin America, the ills of the race and its questionable future. He and other sociologists following him seemed to be stirred to an analysis of the weaknesses of their people, particularly because they believed they saw a new imperialism in the United States which was destined to overcome Latin America if she were not able to repair her weaknesses and protect herself. In 1899 Fran- cisco Bulnes, a well-known Mexican author, in The Future of Hispanic American Nations, wrote of the future of Latin America in comparison with the progress of the United States. A more pessimistic outlook can hardly be imagined. He makes sport of the legends concerning the riches of Mexico, Peru and Brazil. The curse of Latin America, he holds, is that it is tropical. In those hot zones industrial and progressive nations can never flourish. Alcohol and laziness perpetuate slavery. The entire stretch of territory from Cuba to Bolivia will have by 1980, predicts this pessimist, lost its independence. Bulnes examines the Latin American vices, such as bu- reaucratic selfishness, jacobinism and megalomania. He ex- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 47 plains the South American revolutions by the economic con- ditions of those countries. As industries do not exist, the state must feed the middle class, and if it does not satisfy their desires by enlargement of the bureaucratic public of- fices, then revolutions begin. He doesn’t find in Latin Amer- ican republics any of the virtues of democracy ; not veracity because they exaggerate their riches and grandeur; not jus- tice because inequality and intolerance dominate; not co- operation for the public good because of jealousies which have been inherited from Spain. After Bulnes comes that friend of young men, the Uru- guayan author, Jose E. Rodo. In his book, Ariel, he gives magnificent advice to his young friends. He teaches them, as against the solicitations of politics, anarchy and violence, the worship of the inner life, faith in the multitude, in de- mocracy, in the foundation of a future elite which will de- velop freely in democracies. His ideal for all America is the conservation of Latin traditions and dreams In this pro- saic modern age, the fusion of the essential inspirations of Christianity and Hellenism. Equality is provisional, in- equality constant and necessary. Vulgarity and utilitarian- ism are essential attributes of the young North American de- mocracy. But the excess of practical activity, the power of ambitious plutocrats, the mediocrity of commercialism, in North America work against his ideals for South America — which are unselfishness, nobility, cultivation of art and of intellect. He believes that in republics threatened by bu- reaucracy there should be a circle given up to culture. Blanco Fombona of Venezuela, in his Political and Social Evolution of Spanish America, studies the conflict of the classes during the Spanish domination, and argues that civil wars are explained by the mixed Indian populations, the sparsity of inhabitants, the scarcity of railroads, ignorance and lack of liberty. In spite of these things he believes in the great destinies of the continent. “Cities of 45 thousand inhabitants, as Buenos Aires had a hundred years ago, now have a million and a half. The 15 million of South Amer- ica’s population in 1810 are now 70 million. In countries where Europe had no investments formerly there are tre- mendous commercial enterprises now. Foreigners who a 48 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM century ago were prevented in Spain from establishing them- selves in America, today occupy a large part of the new world.” Fombona’s novel, The Man of Iron , is a satire on social conditions in Venezuela, written while in prison as a result of his governorship of the territory of Amazonas, “as wild as in the days of the conquistadores and whose population has the reputation of assassinating governors.” The book is rich in keen and sarcastic conversations of special types of people, in descriptions of priests, of pious women and of earthquakes. Revolutions, he finds, are often to be ascribed to personal vanity, like the one led by Joaquin Luz, who, in a gaudy uniform, addressed his bedraggled followers as fol- lows : “Redeemers ! Let us depart for war. Our cause de- mands it ; our country needs it. Let us sacrifice our lives to overthrow tyranny and restore law and justice. Weapons the enemy has. Take them away from him. Hurrah for the revolution!” The book of Bunge, Our America, reminds one somewhat of Carlyle’s pamphlets. He writes concerning American vices, concerning the psychology of the creole and of the mulatto, and explains the power of the great despots such as Rosas, Moreno and Diaz. He traces the lack of morality to capitalism and the class distinctions common among In- dians, negroes, mulattos and mestizos. Juan A. Garcia, another Argentine sociologist, discusses the weakness inherent in the imaginative exaggeration, the “more or less” way of putting things, the pessimism, the arrogance, the Spanish blood which is revealed in the lack of respect for law, the cultivation of anger and daring. In his most famous work, La Ciudad Indiana, he says : “The proletariat leads a miserable life, in the most wretched huts built upon waste lands, a simple squatter upon the vacant lots of the city where he sets up his shanty. He eats the butcher’s leavings or subsists on the alms of the great house. He has not the least idea of any possible social betterment. According to his view his situation is final, like that of his companions in misery, the Indians and the negroes. Work is useless, and he resigns himself, aided by his hereditary temperament — a term that has been applied to the effect pro- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 49 duced by the traditional education, which taught both the oppressors and the oppressed that the world is as it is be- cause God wills and has made it thus, and that He is angry with those who rebel against His will and sends upon them terrible punishments over and above those imposed by the king.” Gonzales Prada, until his recent death the director of Peru’s National Library, one of her most brilliant sons, the leader of a large school of South American literary men, attacks fiercely the immorality of Peru. As he examines her life, he sees everywhere abounding corruption and weakness. “Littleness pervades everything, littleness in character, little- ness in hearts.” He launches his heaviest invectives against what he calls “la mentira social ” — the social lie. He says, “Peru is a sick organism ; wherever the finger is applied to her she exudes pus.” Such conditions drive him to a black pessimism and make him exclaim, “Existence and sor- row are synonymous. The most worthy work of a God would be to reduce the universe to nothing.” Franz Tomaya, a young Bolivian sociologist, says : “We believe that peoples were made for the service of rulers and not for the service of peoples ; we believe that learning ought to be acquired to satisfy our personal con- cupiscences, and not to increase the welfare of all; we be- lieve that art, and very especially the art of writing, ought to be treasured like a heritage or a cow, instead of being the divine, elevating and sublimating instrument of the* inner man whom we carry within us ; we believe in the fecundity of laziness, in the efficacy of the lie, in the lawfulness of every scheme that leads to success, although it be a stranger to honesty.” Agustin Alvarez, in his book, South America, and in countless articles published in periodicals, proves himself to be one of the keenest analysts of the reasons for the woes of his countrymen. He is known as the “Emerson of Argen- tina.” In studying the causes of social unrest in South America he traces it to the fact that “the proletarian was surprised by the revolution headed by the proprietors who 50 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM had been excluded from the honors and advantages of pow- er, and which he could not explain to himself as a change of political condition but as a change in social condition, because he never felt the need to govern, but had always been pushed along by the need to live. * * * So the dis- appointment of the proletarian, who had acquired in the revolution the consciousness of his worth and power, caused us an additional thirty years of civil war.” Alvarez is particularly severe on the abuses of the Church and of the proprietors of the great landed estates. He says : “The two great calamities of the colonial period were con- tempt for work, considered as a punishment imposed by sin, and fear of knowledge, regarded as a risk for the salvation of the soul. Upon these two premises some consume in an inverse proportion to what they produce, while others pro- duce in an inverse proportion to what they consume, and society is composed of laborers brutalized by want and in- genious idlers luxuriating in a hothouse of comfort. “By always viewing the qualities of others in the light of our own interests, we attain at once to the ingenuousness of the boy hunter who complained that ‘the quail are becoming more and more shy and will no longer allow themselves to be killed.’ He was not different, certainly, from a very reli- gious professor who raised a cry to heaven because he had to pay to the peons of his vineyard a peso for eight hours of work at present, when formerly he paid them half a peso for sixteen hours, while considering the increase in the price of grapes very just because it meant money for him — and the increase in the cost of the peon very unjust because it was taken out of his pocket. “This is how Christianity, which began by being the re- ligion of the humble, changed into the religion of the power- ful, when the pastor turned into a potentate and could no longer perceive the needs of the ruled except as they touched the interests of the rulers. “According to the theory of colonial morality, man was born to suffer in this world and to reap his reward in the next. Therefore the frightful cruelty of the tutelary regime, springing from natural instincts, had obtained religious sane- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 51 tion and it could not now be diminished, but rather was ag- gravated, by the pastor of souls, who, under the lash, ex- tracted from the hunger of the Indians the ecclesiastical tributes, and under the lash drove them to mass and rosary : the degradation of man for the glorification of God.” Manuel Ugarte, who is today the outstanding enemy of the United States in Latin America, has written an impor- tant analysis of Spanish American life in a book called The Future of Latin America. He points out with cruel frank- ness the weak points of his people which must be strength- ened if they are to resist the “octopus of the North.” Alfredo Colmo, professor of law in the University of Buenos Aires, is a self-made man and brings to the study of his people his own struggles as a background. His book, The Countries of Latin America, is the latest and probably the most extensive of the sociological treatises and is full of criticisms of his own people and praise of the Anglo-Saxon. He says : “What has the United States in common with the coun- tries of Latin America? Very little: the incidental fact of its geographical location in the same hemisphere and the external circumstance that it became independent at almost the same time. * * * What, then, does it offer by way of unlikeness? Nearly everything, and in terms so disparate that they are but little less than diametrically the opposite of one another. Details and secondary matters apart, the con- trasts, in which these countries never hold the place of van- tage, are the following: populousness and habitability; wealth and misery ; deeds and words ; activity and atrophy ; education and inculture; industry and politicalism ; com- merce and militarism ; order and impulsiveness ; legality and defiance of law ; free will and arbitrariness ; morality and egotism ; truth and falsehood ; principles and men ; railways and mules ; civilization and stagnation and even barbarism ; liberty and slavery, etc.” The following from an address I heard him give on July 9th, 1917, in commemoration of Argentine independence, 52 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM gives an idea of this scholar’s way of thinking. Generally on such occasions wonderful eloquence is used in applaud- ing heroes of the past, but Dr. Colmo entirely changed this order of things. He said at the very beginning, “I am going to make a simple talk. I like to talk to the heart and not to the stars. I want to flee from academic discussion. Latin America emphasizes entirely too much the intellectual. We seldom find any of us who have the power of initiative. Anglo-Saxons are the highest expression of character the world has ever known. A bouquet is made up of flowers, but an independent nation cannot be developed except by men. We have an infinitude of riches in our soil and yet as citizens we are never satisfied until we have gotten a posi- tion w’ith the government and have been able to issue a book. Even if we decide to exploit some of our riches, we do it not with our own capital, but demand a concession from the government. We have emancipated ourselves nationally but not individually. This is the one great problem before Ar- gentina — to emancipate ourselves as individuals, to initiate new things, to stand against the common sins and tempta- tions of the majority. “The Young Men’s Christian Association comes among us and is a real Temple, which shows how the Anglo-Saxons stand out individually for what is right and noble. I know of no organization, whether it be of laboring men, of a uni- versity, of business men, or what not, in Anglo-Saxon coun- tries, that has not as its real basis a moral purpose, because it puts emphasis on individual morality and initiative. Too often men on patriotic occasions cry ‘Patria! Patria!’ but when you look into their lives you find that they really care nothing for the Patria. They are dishonest; they do not pay their debts ; they do not tell the truth ; they are not honestly working for the good of their country. The small shop- keeper, who never so much as gives a grito for the country in public, but who works constantly to build up his little business, to educate his family, to treat his neighbor hon- estly, is a greater citizen than the man who makes speeches continually, crying out publicly for the Patria.” Sr. Julio R. Barcos, a leader of the younger generation PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 53 who has lived a good deal in the United States, published in his magazine, Cuasimodo, a remarkable series of articles, in which he takes decided issue with such writers as Rodo, Ugarte and Fombona: “Alberdi is not writing a mere literary paradox when he says that ‘next to the liberators, the poets are the most dan- gerous enemies of liberty in South America.’ For a cen- tury these false idealists, wrapped in the romantic style, have had the floor in the government, in society and in the realm of literature in Hispanic America. They found a world ready made, and their mission has been to reverence it ser- vilely, thus perpetuating the prejudices and castes of the colonial period. We have to confess that, thanks to such educative elements, we are still spiritually molded after the image and likeness of our mother Spain. We have changed only the surface of our customs and beliefs, but in reality, in the depths of our psychology, there is in every one of us Hispanic Americans an embryo soldier, monk or rascal, a remote inheritance of the Pizarros, Loyolas and Gil Biases who, in emigrating to these shores, grafted either their blood or their souls upon the aboriginal stock of our America. In truth, if we do but slightly lift the skin of our double moral personality we discover that while we call ourselves repub- licans we venerate monarchy. We have excluded the king, but we preserve the royal pomp, and the enormous bureau- cratic scaffolding of the epoch of the viceroys. We are lib- erals at the club and ultramontanes at home ; we are gentle- men in form, idealists in words, and opportunist Philistines at bottom during the twenty-four hours of the day. “We have had enough of the camouflage of knighthood, for there is now not a rascal in these lands who does not wear the harness of a knight. Even Don Quixote in this America, according to Alberdi, without ceasing to be always the same old fool, has become also a knave and a peculator. We have a superfluity of haughty and punctilious gentlemen who speak to us in verse and poetic prose, and are lacking in true men, genuine men, who move upon the vast and mul- tiple stage of real life and awaken the soul of these torpid 54 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM peoples to the naked and terrible truth of their immense vital problems. How many are the great, noble, strong things that remain to be done in America ! I shall be told that we are highly cultivated men, artistic writers, eminent poets and brilliant politicians, even philosophers, sages and sociologists. We have such, yes, as a luminous nucleus, sur- rounded by an immense opaque body formed by our masses — hungry, barefoot, filthy and illiterate pariahs. This is the general rule in Latin America. What influence have these, the intellectual elite, exerted upon the fate of the com- munity? * * * “Everything remains to be done among us; all that has already been accomplished by those peoples who really live the civilization of the twentieth century, while we go along on all fours, still in the infancy of the nineteenth century. It is high time for us to come forth from the contemplative ecstasy of our soft and ideal life, more appropriate to ori- ental potentates than to virile men, in order to pass over to the dynamic life sound in body and spirit in all their poten- tial forms: love, work, strife, creation and the constant ir- radiation of our personality. Enough of literary magpies without soul and without a purpose in life, who, along with malaria and uncinariasis, form a part of our American epi- demics. We have already poetized long enough ; it is time that we abandon the cerebral infantilism of ridiculous lit- erary tournaments, which have made of every South Amer- ican a Croesus in verse and a beggar in ideas, in order to enter the formidable ideological tournament which affects the very heart of the social problems of our epoch ; that we abandon the brilliant rhetoricians for thinkers filled with optimism and the vainglorious thaumaturges of art for the sincere priests of life; that we redeem ourselves, in short, from the disease that killed Spain — wordiness — in order to enter the real, energetic, laborious and fruitful life, by min- gling without cowardice in the torrent of the great human struggle that draws us toward the heroically intellectual life like a new Marseillaise. “Welcome to our America be all foreigners, even if we do not always share their doctrines, because they bring to PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 55 us at least a breath of intellectual realism that will cause us to throw aside the crutches of invalids sunk in a quagmire of trickeries and imbecilities peculiarly ours, and advancing rapidly toward the future, putting ourselves first on a level with Europe and surpassing her later, not in so-called ‘cul- ture,’ which is what old men and old peoples treasure, but in the fervor of humanity translated into human redemp- tions; that is, the victorious achievements of life: public hygiene, bread for the people, individual liberty, education, redeemed labor, joy for all, the abatement of plagues in the form either of microbes or of men, the suppression of the pariah by the suppression of the master.” Garcia Calderon is the only author treating his countries’ social problems whose work has appeared in English. His book, Latin America, Its Rise and Progress, while more philosophical than sociological, is of great importance as an analysis of the struggle of the new world Latins. Manoel Bomfin, a Brazilian, has written an important treatise in his Latin America, in which he traces most of the ills of these countries to their inheritances from their mother countries. The fact that their problems in all the various countries are practically the same he contends is ample proof of the theory of parasitism. This is not a complete list, by any means, of the men who have written books on the social and moral problems con- fronting Hispanic America, but it gives an idea of this school of thought which has developed since about 1890 and, as was said before, seems to have been animated particularly by what a writer in La Revista de Chile in 1895 called “The brusk change in the traditional policy of the United States seen in its present imperialistic tendency, which will no doubt consolidate in the great northern republic the arrogant pre- tensions of the politicians of the Blaine school, who consid- er it manifest destiny that their country shall exercise com- mercial hegemony and political tutelage over the rest of the continent.” Three things are particularly noticeable about these writ- ers. The first is the tendency to philosophize and generalize 56 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM rather than to collect detailed facts in specific fields of in- vestigation upon which definite lines of advance could be marked out. The second observation is that sociologists are entirely too few in these countries. As Professor Megalhaes of Brazil says, “We have in Brazil many poets, many artists, many journalists. But it is rare to find among our public men one who dedicates himself to social studies. Rare in- deed are the practical works which study national economy. Learned men often prefer to exchange a real and irrevocable immortality, which might be obtained by serious investiga- tion, for the ephemeral laurels of romance and of the theatre.’’ The third important thing to note about these writers is that all of them express faith in these countries. Their pessimism is confined to the present, based on a defective social system and the lack of immigration. Even Bulnes be- lieves in Mexico, Argentina and Chile. Blanco Fombona says that the balance sheet shows at the ending of a century of independence a distinct amount in favor of these coun- tries. Manuel Ugarte thinks that the wonderful prosperity, the miraculous progress and the superior social conditions of Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Uruguay are a prophecy of what may be expected of the whole continent when ruled by “a unified doctrine.” Bunge thinks that in spite of the inferiority of the mes- tizo, the continent may save itself by the American people assimilating European culture or by producing a civilization of their own as the Japanese have done. He affirms that with the correction of Hispanic American defects his people will be superior to the Yankees and the Europeans, but he falls under his own criticism of “more or less” ways of stat- ing things when he fails to suggest definite ways of achiev- ing this. A consideration of the future place of Latin America in world life requires brief reference to some of the important unsolved problems, which, until solved, must hold these countries back from first place among the nations. PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 57 THE INDIAN PROBLEM Although, as earlier indicated, the process of assimilation by the Iberian conquerors in the early days went on rapidly, resulting in the large mestizo population which constitutes the bulk of the inhabitants today, it must be said that this process seems now to have practically ceased, leaving intact an aggregate community of some eighteen millions of pure Indians, scattered from Mexico to Patagonia. The early culture of their own civilization, so remark- able among the Aztecs of Mexico, the Mayas of Central America, the Chibchas of Colombia and the Incas of Peru and Bolivia, has been swept away and they have all been segregated from the influence of modern life. Consequently they stand out in peculiar and pathetic isolation. Perhaps the most terrible indictment of the government’s treatment of the Indians in South America is made by Sr. Alcides Argiiedas in his well-known book, A Sick People, for the writing of which the author is compelled to live out- side of Bolivia, his native land. Concerning conditions among the Indians in Bolivia, Senor Argiiedas says: “Blinded by different and contradictory creeds, under the material and moral influence of the priests, the patrons and the public officials, his soul is a deposit of rumors from time past. When the flower of his race was shut up against its will in the heart of the mines, he wasted away rapidly, gain- ing the help and sympathy of none. * * * This hate has accumulated so that the race has lost its best characteristics. Today the Indians are the object of general exploitation and general antipathy. When this exploitation in an aggressive and brutal form arrives at a maximum and the sufferers have come to the point where they have gotten beyond the power of human endurance, then the Indian rises, forgets his mani- fest inferiority, loses the instinct of conservatism and, listen- ing to his soul, filled with hatred, looses his passions and robs and assassinates with terrible vigor. Authority, patron, power, priest — all are forgotten by him. The idea of re- prisals and punishment, if it occurs to him, acts only as on the fiendish tiger escaped from his den. Afterward, when 58 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM he has given free rein to all of his passions, let the soldiers, the priests and the judges come and kill and rob — it makes no difference ; and certainly they come. Certainly they kill, they rob, they violate, they sow terror on all sides. Those who escape death are taken before lawyers and judges, well- read, whose occupation consists in showing the terrible ap- paratus of the law. The Indians are put in obscure gaols and taken out once in a while under the armed vigilance of soldiers and made to work ten hours a day without food sufficient to sustain their poor, weak bodies after so much privation.” The visitor to South America will see nothing more piti- ful than the Indians of Peru and Bolivia, descendants ot great civilizations now forgotten. In Cuzco one is at the center of the Indian population of Peru. Riding on horseback through the Ilcamaya, one of the most wonderful valleys in the world, one has the oppor- tunity of seeing the Quechuas in their old haunts, where they have lived for many centuries. Here are found the ruins of great temples and fortresses. Wonderful terraces running up the mountain sides a thousand feet or more are still under cultivation, although built by pre-Inca peoples of whom we have no knowledge. In the shadow of the magnificent ruins which typify the former greatness one sees, for instance, a company of half- clad men and women bearing the body of a dead friend to the grave. The corpse is wrapped in a blanket and carried on one man’s shoulder or between three or four people. It is their one time to enjoy a holiday. They are invariably armed with the cheap native gin and are reeling and cursing and fighting. The fray becomes so interesting that they lay the body down and argue wildly with their hands. One of the women strikes a man and knocks him across the corpse. A free-for-all fight ensues until they are all lying on the ground, so drunk they cannot rise. There they lie until the stupor is worn off and then proceed to the grave. Maybe they have a Padre to say the last rites or maybe it has been impossible for them to collect sufficient funds to command his costly services. PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 59 How have the mighty fallen! In the old Inca days the common salutation as they passed one another on the road was a reference to their two fundamental laws. The first traveler would say “Thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not lie.” The other would reply, “Nor shalt thou do either of these.” The modern salutation is “Ave Maria purissima,” and the reply is “Sin pecado concebida” (Conceived without sin). Above the door of the Catholic Church on the main plaza of Cuzco, next to the University, are these words in bold let- ters : “Come unto Mary all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and she will give you rest.” Anyone who wishes to understand how the Indians are exploited by government officials and priests should read Birds without Nests, a novel by Clorinda Matto de Tur- ner, a native of this district. The plot is developed around a brilliant young lawyer, supposed son of the governor, and a young Indian girl, who is being reared by a philanthropic Spanish family. When they fall in love with one another and are about to be married, it is revealed to them that they are both children of the same priest. “We were born In- dians, slaves of the priests, slaves of the governor, slaves of the chief, slaves of all who have a club to drive us. In- dians! Yes. Death is our only and beautiful hope of lib- erty.” Madam de Turner, like Senor Argiiedas, paid the price of her writings in banishment from her native country until her death. In southern Chile I called on a former chief of the Arau- canians. He received me with as much style as his broken estate would allow and had the accustomed feast prepared. But he could talk of nothing except his lost land. I tried to get his mind away from his troubles by telling him about the wonderful city of New York. He would appear interested for a moment or two, then would turn and say, “But my land, Senor, my land !” Then I would try him on the war, telling him of the tremendous guns, the tanks, and all the wonderful things that modern civilization has developed with which to kill men. This interested him greatly, but only for a few minutes and then again, “But my lands, Senor. You are going back to Santiago. Will you not see the President and explain to him how our lands have been taken 60 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM away from us and that we cannot make a living on the little that we have now? We want our land.” The following clipping from a La Paz daily duly pre- sents another side of the Indian question : “To the President of the Hon. Council of the Province of Arque: “It is my painful duty to report the following shameful charges against Isidoro Claros, priest of Quirquiavi : “In a sermon he told the Indians that those who obeyed the municipality were savages, adulterers and ex-communi- cated ; that neither the municipality nor the President had anything to do with the Church. He recently ordered the Indians to close up a street which the municipality had opened. “He demands from the Indians taxes he has not the least right to demand. “In less than a month he has collected from Manuel Bel- tran $56 for burial rites and $32 for masses, and now threat- ens to send his church officials to take possession of the property of the widow. “From Gaviano Checa, another poor Indian, he demand- ed $12 for having pronounced a blessing over his deceased sister, but Checa not being able to pay, the priest seized four of his sheep and intends to take possession also of three llamas, the property of the deceased sister. “From another widow this heartless wretch has extorted $32 for masses and responses. “He thinks that being a parish priest he is the owner of all the property of the Indians, whom he fleeces extrava- gantly in the face of public outcry. He goes to their pre- serves in search of sheep, which he secures by saying a few prayers over their belongings in order to keep away the evil spirits. He intrudes into the huts and performs these cere- monies against their wishes. He brings them from their ranches and makes them marry against their will, just for the money it brings him. “In August last he whipped a poor widow named Maria Tola from the Church to her house, because she had in- formed the municipality that he had extorted $32 from her. PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 61 He left her, saying, ‘That will teach you not to go to the municipality.’ “The man does just as he pleases and says He fears no- body and no authority.” Franz Tamayo believes that the pure Indian, the native Aymara and Quechua, are the great sources of national energy in Bolivia. The author tries to show the character- istics of the Indian, his virtues and his faults. According to Tamayo athletic contests have proven that the Indian is stronger than the white. “The most moral, that is to say the strongest element in Bolivia, is the Indian; then comes the half-breed, on account of his Indian blood, and lastly the white, who is the parasite of the nation, which oaves its life to the Indian.” The author looks upon the petty task of teaching the In- dian how to read somewhat scornfully. The primary school, as it exists in Bolivia, has weakened the Indian and made a parasite of him, he says. Before giving him instruction, they should instil in him good habits. The Indian’s energy is there, but it must be guided in the right direction and in- tensified, not weakened by a veneer of culture. The main idea of the whole book is this : Bolivian racial characteristics must be studied, the destiny of the race must be foreseen, and a national system of education built up, not copied servilely from Europe, but one of their own creation, adapted to existing facts. And for this work the aid of for- eign psychologists, educators and sociologists must be solicited. The Hon. Ignacio Calderon, recently Minister of Bolivia to the United States, invited to say a word about the Indians, wrote as follows : “I am glad to have this chance to make an earnest plea in favor of the Bolivian Indians. They are the descendants of the great Inca empire, a people that had reached a very high degree of peaceful civilization when the Spaniards con- quered and took possession of their lands. The Inca Em- pire, according to tradition, was founded by Manco-Capac, helped by his wife, Mama-Ocllo, and they based their rule 62 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM and domain not in the use of force, but in the teaching of the arts of peace and mutual help. “At the time of Pizarro’s arrival the Inca Empire ex- tended in the north up to what is now Colombia, and towards the south to northern Chile and Argentina. Won- derful highways connected the various portions of the vast empire, and the people lived contented and happy under the fatherly rule of the Incas. But the Spaniards, taking ad- vantage of the awe which they inspired with their firearms and the sight of ironclad soldiers mounted on strange look- ing animals — the Indians never having seen horses before — subdued them easily and reduced them to mere slaves to their will and power. “Once masters of the country, the Spaniards treated the conquered Indians more like cattle than as human beings. No right, no consideration whatever, was allowed them. The history of the Indian race during the centuries that have passed since the conquest is an uninterrupted tale of woe, of misery and degradation. The once noble and happy sub- jects of the Inca became pariahs in their own land; mere tools of the whims and desires of their masters. All ambi- tion was thus taken away from the Indians and distrust and indolence became prevalent instead. In spite of all that they are the only agriculturists of my country, working in the fields as well as in the mines. “The Bolivian Government has lately very commendably given some attention to improving the miserable condition of the Indians and has established some schools for them. Unfortunately, neither are the resources of the country suf- ficient nor are there enough teachers available, inspired by that noble self-denial that moves the heart and sustains the will of the Christian missionaries in the great work of edu- cating and improving the souls of the downtrodden. “There are many millions of these unfortunate Indians in the different countries of South and Central America and Mexico, who are in dire need of help. They are nominally citizens of the several republics, but have little idea of what that means. As long as they are kept in their present state they will remain a great stumbling block to the orderly and democratic development of the various American republics. PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 63 “The Indian needs to be educated, especially in manual training and in the use of agricultural implements to replace the obsolete and primitive methods they now use. They could be taught carpentry, blacksmithing and other useful and necessary industries that they could do well and which could profitably meet their needs.” THE SYSTEM OF LATIFUNDIOS At the bottom of all the social problems of these countries is the land question. In the early colonial days great sec- tions of land were given to Spanish settlers and whole tribes were assigned to these landlords in order that they might be educated and at the same time furnish the labor necessary. The landlord generally forgot about his duty to educate the Indian, but never his duty to make him work. Often the church authorities, as was particularly the case in Mexico, worked the Indians unmercifully in building great cathe- drals. On passing through a city like Oueretaro one is astounded at the number of great churches and can only understand how it was possible for these to be built when he is told that they cost the Church practically nothing, by rea- son of this enforced labor. During the period of independence also many of these lands have been given to individuals for political favors, so that all over Latin America there exists more or less a feudal condition. The proprietors of these great landed estates in Mexico paid, before the present Revolution, abbut twenty- five cents a day for their labor. A man with a family of a dozen might be excused for going in debt with such a wage. In fact, the land owner encouraged his getting in debt. These debts held the man to the farm. They are passed on from him to his children and to his grandchildren. Before the Revolution if one asked the price of a great farm in Mexico he would be told $100,000, for example, which would in- clude not only the land and the houses, but the peons on the land. That is, one would buy their debts and in that way would practically buy the workmen themselves. There are farms in Mexico which it takes all day on a railroad train to go through. The Mexican census of 1910 64 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM showed that 7,000 families own nearly all the fertile soil of that country. The total area of the country is 757,000 square miles, so these estates must average over 100 square miles each. The Terrazas estate in Chihuahua contains some 13 million acres, an area as large as Holland and Belgium combined. There is an estate in Yucatan said to contain 15 million acres. The peons on these estates re- ceived formerly twelve and a half cents gold a day and were kept in debt so that they might be compelled to remain on the place. The treatment of the Yaqui Indians is a good illustration of how the Indians generally have been deprived of their lands. Their lands had been held in common since time immemorial, their rights recognized by all, with no idea of such a thing as a formal title. The Diaz Government passed a law requiring registration of written titles to all land owned. Since the Indians had no idea of such titles, the creoles took advantage of their ignorance and denounced their lands. The Diaz Government not only recognized this denunciation, but often sent soldiers to drive the Indians off the land. In the case of the Yaquis they did worse, carry- ing them off by the trainload to work on the big haciendas of Yucatan. In Argentina there are 12,000 tracts of land, containing from 25,000 to 62,500 acres, and 1,000 which contain more than 125 acres. In Chile the tillable soil is held by seven per cent, of the population. The ramifications of this evil run out into the economic, political, social and religious life of the people in a way that makes it impossible entirely to solve other problems until this great problem is met. THE PROBLEM OF CASTE From what has been said about the land problem and peonage, it is easy to deduce the fact that in general there are only two great classes in Latin America — the extremely poor and the extremely rich. The great cosmopolitan cen- ters form exceptions to this rule, but, generally speaking, there is no middle class. Jonathan Swift said that society was like beer in that there were three parts, the top, the PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 65 froth; the bottom, the dregs; the center (the middle class), the real strength. To the development of a middle class must the energies of the leaders in government and education be given. SUFFRAGE This matter is wrapped up in questions of illiteracy and others cited. Calderon says: “If these republics persist in a magnificent continent their failure will be explained not by the poorness of the soil nor the hostility of conquering people, but by the mediocrity of their politicians.” Argiiedas’ view is that “The great problem, almost the only one, is to nullify these three elements which fatally cooperate to oppose the development of the country: (i) the excessive immorality and lack of training of the government class; (2) the thorough corruption of the classes governed; and (3) the nullity of the indigenous, the numerically preponderant, group.” Manuel Ugarte says: “What first strikes one in the New World is the contradiction between the loftiness of the* constitutions and the baseness of the political life. The right to vote, which is the foundation of our social con- tract, proves almost always a delusion, because governments or parties substitute their wishes for the will of the people by means of fraud or revolution. * * * X and Z declaim in resounding periods terminating in ‘liberty,’ ‘progress,’ or ‘constitution,’ and we take sides with one or the other, for no apparent reason, as we choose head or tail in a game of chance. * * * In South America the time has not yet come when ambitions are supported by doctrines. The con- test is brutal and open among those who want to occupy the highest post. And as in a proud people, among whom the greatest insult that can be inflicted on a citizen is to call him ‘adulador,’ those who aspire to rise are many, the fact may be accounted for that civil war has been until recently a national function.” IMMIGRATION There are many Spanish Americans who fear immigra- tion, lest they be robbed of their Latin spirit and culture. 66 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM F. Garcia Godoy comments favorably on this fear expressed by various authors, as follows: “The fundamental con- ception of nationality in some of the republics, due to the direct influence of the ethnic elements that make up the great mass of immigrants, is so penetrating the mass that it is gradually destroying the national sentiment, which is the only thing that gives personality to the peoples of Span- ish civilization.” Others, however, believe that only in the blending of the right kind of new blood with the present inhabitants, will they be able to solve their problems. What should this blood be? Many argue that Latin Europe only can supply the desired elements. Others believe that the Anglo-Saxon immigrant would bring those sterling qualities of sternness, sacrifice, determination, thrift and honesty which are the greatest need of the Latin American. As Le Bon says: “That which the struggle with nature is not able to create, the crossing of the races will realize. This is the only in- fallible means that we possess of transforming fundamen- tally the character of a people. For only inheritance is powerful enough to fight against inheritance.” Simon Bolivar, always keen in his appreciation of the difficulties facing the newly liberated countries, was the first to insist on the need of immigration. He said : “We ought to induce immigration of the peoples of North America and Europe, in order that they may settle here and bring us their arts and sciences. These advan- tages, namely, an independent government, free schools and intermarriage with Europeans and Anglo-Americans, will totally change the character of the country, and will render it well-informed and prosperous. * * * We lack mechanics and agriculturists and it is these that the country has need of to insure advancement and progress.” Alberdi says: “To fuse races, to transplant living civilization by means of a current of immigration, is to create the civilization of new peoples. * * * Civilization, like light, causes the buds to burst forth. PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 67 “Without a large population, there is no development of culture; there is no considerable progress; all is mean and small. — Every European who comes to our shores brings us more civilization in his habits than many books of phil- osophy. — If the Argentine is a tyrant, death to the Argen- tine; if the foreigner is a liberator, glory to the foreigner; the throne goes to ideas, not to persons.” Already the problem of assimilating the immigrant is being felt in countries like Argentina. Unlike most Latin American countries her population is made up almost en- tirely of European stock. About half of the pure whites in Latin America live in Argentina and Uruguay. The few Indians that remain are now found entirely separated from the rest of the population, inhabiting only the Chaco in the north and Patagonia in the extreme south. Argentina is doing for the old European Latin races what the United States has done for the old European Anglo-Teutonic peo- ples. Ninety-two per cent, of the foreigners of Argentina are Latins, Italians and Spaniards predominating. The melting pot boils here south of the equator with as much fervor as it does in the United States. In 1913, 225,000 foreigners entered the country. There are a half million Italians in Buenos Aires alone. The influence on the Argen- tine language and culture is already considerable. Tempera- mentally the Italian influx easily relates itself to its Latin cousins. A much more serious question is presented in the Ger- man and Japanese immigration. There are already half a million Germans in southern Brazil, a large colony in southern Chile, and some 25,000 connected with commercial enterprises in Argentina. Their influence in Central Amer- ica before the World War was seen everywhere. Not only have they built up solid communities, which represent little Germanies, transplanted root and branch, but in every col- ony in South America their separate schools were to be found, conducted entirely in German and subsidized directly by the Kaiser. The purpose of all this is now only too plain. While their political aims have been stayed they 68 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM still plan for commercial supremacy and look to Latin America as an inviting field for their activities. When Count Okuma was asked about the future home of the surplus population of Japan he replied: “South Amer- ica, especially the northern part, will furnish ample room for the surplus of our population.” The recent discussion in the United States Senate con- cerning Mexico’s ceding certain privileges in Magdalena Bay to a Japanese colony suggests this problem from a dif- ferent angle. One finds little reference to the Chinese in the discussion of immigration, but, traveling through these countries, he realizes they must be taken into account. In Mexico they already own a considerable number of the hotels, several banks, farms, and the most modern inter- urban trolley. In Panama the Chinese entirely dominate commercial life. In Cuba they not only do the washing, but much of the labor in the sugar districts. In Lima they have erected a joss house in the very shadow of the cathe- dral. The Chinaman, of course, lives by himself and is far from understanding the political conditions of these countries. Ross estimates that unless there is adverse legislation South America may easily be the home of twenty or thirty million Orientals by the end of the century. He further suggests that this might have three results : ( i ) Forestall immigration from Europe, which South American states- men are counting on to help key up mestizo unprogressive- ness and misgovemment. (2) Large areas of South Amer- ica might cease to be parts of Christendom, if some of those republics become as dependent on Asiatic power as Cuba is on the United States. (3) Seal the doom of the Indian, who could make no effective stand against the hard-work- ing, close-fisted Oriental. This question suggests an interesting problem that might be put up to the United States as to whether we would apply the Monroe Doctrine to help keeping out oriental im- migrants. The largest problem of immigration, that is assimilation, is recognized by only a few leaders. Ambassador Nabuco, speaking at the University of Chicago, well said : PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 69 “Take one common point in our destiny. We must all be immigration countries. But in order to be able to oppose foreign immigration with a national spirit capable of turn- ing it quickly into patriotic citizenship, as you do, the assim- ilating power of the Latin organism needs everywhere to be much increased. Immigration countries must have the necessary strength to assimilate all they absorb. Intercourse with you would teach the other American countries the secret of winning over the immigrants that come to them and of attracting them in larger numbers. That would be by far the most useful knowledge they could receive, be- cause when they knew and succeeded in transforming into true citizens their immigrants, the great national problem would be solved for each of them. To understand that they must all be immigration countries and to create the proper immigrant-habitat, they need to study immigration in your laboratory.” SOCIAL PROBLEMS The extent to which marriage is ignored Ms one of the most noticeable social phenomena of Hispanic America. The Peruvian statistician Fuentes states that 51 per cent, of the births of Lima are illegitimate or “natural,” and adds that “a shocking proportion of the people avoid mar- riage and live in a complete libertinage which increases as one descends the social scale.” In Bolivia 28 per cent, of the army recruits in 1910 were born out of wedlock. In all Chile the percentage of illegitimate births is given as 38 per cent., but in cities it runs much higher, 57 per cent in Con- cepcion, for example. In Paraguay the census of 1910 shows 6,038 legitimate births and 8,387 illegitimate; that of 1913, 6,739 legitimate and 9,638 illegitimate. Ross says: “Save in pietistic circles, continence before marriage does not seem to enter into the masculine ideal of the South Americans. Without exception the physicians and educa- tors questioned agreed that all young men sow their wild oats. Outside of Chile it is hardly a matter of blood, for in point of sensuality the Indians of Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia do not seem to differ in endowment from the Span- 70 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM iards. The fact that sex is an overmastering concern in males from puberty on may be attributable in part to cli- mate. There is, indeed, very unequivocal evidence that, ir- respective of altitude, the human organism in the tropics is affected in ways adverse to the moral standards wrought out in the lands of the slanting sun. Then one must allow for the factor of early contamination. Throughout tropical South America the mother of the better classes does not care for her children herself but turns them over to native nurses and servants, so that the obscenities and low stan- dards of the ignorant servile element are emptied into the minds of even the children of the ruling caste. Add to this the easy accessibility of the chola and it is clear why in these countries it is well-nigh impossible to keep any life current free from pollution from below. “Another reason why young men ‘think and talk of noth- ing but women/ why they listen with polite incredulity to an account of the relations between the sexes in the United States and regard our moral tone as pure hypocrisy, is the bareness of life, the paucity of things to do. With us ath- letic games, sports, camping, scholarship, public discussion, political reform, social work, business and travel compete with the sex interest and aid men to control it. If life presented more interests to the young South Americans, their morals would be better. It is strange that such a flank attack on evil does not seem to have occurred to their spiritual leaders. From the pulpit one hears perfervid denunciations of sensuality, but the preacher can suggest no remedy but the conquest of the sensual man by the spir- itual man, while virtue is presented as a sheer dead lift against the downward pull of one’s own nature. He might well take a hint from the Yankee educators in Bolivia, who keep their boarding-school lads straight by the simple expedient of crowding the day so full that they have not time for naughty thoughts.” With regard to sex education and vice regulation but little has been done, although both Brazil and Argentina have taken the first steps in this direction. Among these have been efforts to suppress the publication of obscene lit- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 71 erature and its transmission through the mails. Here and there medical men are being heard and are appearing in print and supporting the continent life as consistent with health and virility. For generations the youth have been instructed to the contrary, as most of them are still. The double standard of morality for men and women is gen- erally accepted by both sexes. The great municipalities continue to put their faith in such discredited devices as segregation, police licensing, medical inspection and other futile measures now being repudiated and abandoned in North America and in Europe as both unChristian and con- tributory to the harm and misery they are designed to remove. The presence of many foreign women of ill-repute in the larger ports, in some inland cities of the east coast and in others north of Panama, confirms the belief in the uni- versality of the “white slave” traffic. Efforts to mitigate this form of commercialized vice are reported from Buenos Aires, where the National Vigilance Association, of Lon- don, maintains a representative. As this is being written there has arrived in the United States a deputation of medical men from Chile who have come to study modern methods of venereal disease control. They state that venereal disease enters into the medical history of about 80 per cent, of the men of South America, with practically nothing being done so far for its treatment or for prevention by educational methods. Senor Santiago de Toro H. says: “Chile needs the educational and publicity methods that have been of such value in other parts of the world, and I am certain that we shall receive assistance from social hygiene agencies in this work.” Alcoholism is one of the most pressing social problems in Latin America, acutely so in Chile and certain other areas. Its ravages are worst among the Indians and mes- tizos of Mexico, Peru and Chile and the lower classes in all the countries. There is a most remarkable temperance movement now gathering headway, however, backed by strong local organizations in Mexico, Peru, Chile, Uruguay and Argentina. Impressed by the “going dry” of the United States and Porto Rico, advanced legislation has 72 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM been passed in a number of countries during the last few months, and there is every indication that sentiment in favor of restriction will grow rapidly. The general principles of the preservation of public health, outside of the larger centers, are largely ignored. Open sewers abound, if, indeed, sewers exist at all. Mar- kets are held in open places without shade, food being laid out upon the ground for sale amid swarms of flies. City water supplies are open to easy contamination, while no effort is made to get rid of mosquitoes, flies or rats until the yellow fever or bubonic plague has made its actual ap- pearance among the people. Typhoid and smallpox are prevalent and often take fearful toll. The hookworm dis- ease is widespread and leprosy spreads its poison farther every day. In many cities there is no isolation of contagious diseases and little attempt made to prevent tubercular per- sons from spreading their disease throughout the commu- nity in which they live. THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM The outstanding economic fact in all Latin American countries is the dependence of those countries on financial help from the outside. In the very first days after their independence they began to borrow capital for the develop- ment of their natural resources, the building of docks and railroads, the exploitation of mines, and, above all, the financing of their governments. This economic dependence has generally had two effects, internal disorders and inter- national complications. Political leaders have often sold the remarkable physical resources of their countries for foreign loans. When these funds have been recklessly spent or used as rewards for partisan support, revolutionary movements are able to force the old party out. The reform party needs money to carry out their reform program and new loans are made, being disbursed usually in the payment of the political debts in- curred during the party’s struggle for the upper hand. Thus foreign loans pile up until the country is practically owned by foreign bankers and the slightest fluctuation of political sentiment in the debtor country immediately be- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 73 comes a matter of economic as well as political interest in the country that has bought its bonds. Sometimes these foreign creditors are able to satisfy their claims, as did the English in Peru, by means of a holding company (the Peruvian Corporation), which takes over and operates the railways, port works and public utilities. In other instances, as in Santo Domingo and Nicaragua, the result of default is diplomatic pressure which may result in the assumption by the creditor nation of responsibility for the integrity of the debtor. It would be difficult to say which of the two parties in interest is most to blame for this result. The descendants of the prodigal Spaniards seem generally willing to borrow wherever there is a lender, without trying to cut budgets or wait patiently for normal returns. A new need generally means a new loan. As payment is almost certain to fall on their successors in office they feel no need to worry about the amortization of their bonds. On the other hand, for- eigners have been uniformly willing to take advantage of such extravagance, and gamble on getting payment in part, at least, through extraordinary rates of interest. Ex-Presi- dent Wilson says: “There is one peculiarity about the history of the Latin American states of which I am sure they are keenly aware. You hear of ‘concessions’ to foreign capitalists in Latin America. You do not hear of concessions granted to for- eign capitalists in the United States. They are not granted concessions. They are invited to make investments. The work is ours, though they are welcome to invest in it. We do not ask them to supply the capital and do the work. It is an invitation, not a privilege ; and states that are obliged, because their territory does not lie within the main field of modern enterprises and action, to grant concessions are in this condition, that foreign interests are apt to dom- inate their domestic affairs, a condition of affairs always dangerous and apt to become intolerable. * * * They have had harder bargains driven with them in the matter of loans than any other peoples of the world. Interest has been exacted of them that was not exacted of anybody 74 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM else, because the risk was said to be greater, and thus secur- ities were taken that destroyed the risk — an admirable ar- rangement for those who were forcing the terms. I rejoice in nothing so much as in the prospect that they will now be emancipated from these conditions, and we ought to be the first to take part in assisting in that emancipation.” The relation of the actual value of the ordinary foreign claim to the amount demanded is illustrated by the follow- ing table of the Venezuelan claims and the amounts finally awarded by the International Commission after proper in- vestigation : Table of Awards and Claims. (A Bolivar is worth about 20 cents in gold) By citizen of Great Britain Claims • 14 , 743,572 Awards 9,401,267 ts “ Germany . 7 , 376 , 68 s 2,091,908 U “ France . 17,888,512 2,667,079 a “ Spain 5,307,626 1,974,818 a “ Belgium 14,921,805 10,898,643 u “ Sweden and Norway... 1,047,701 174,359 n “ The Netherlands . 5,242,519 544 , 3 ° 1 a “ The United States . 81,410,952 2,313,711 u “ Mexico . 2,893,040 2 , 577,328 a “ Italy • 39 , 844,258 5,785,962 190,676,670 38,429,376 Honduras may be taken as an example of the extremes to which this dependence upon foreign capital may lead a nation. One of the first loans was floated in Europe in 1866 for a face value of 5 million dollars. The bonds were issued at 60, bore ten per cent, interest, and the pro- ceeds were supposed to be used in the building of a railroad. But the railroad was not built. The whole scheme was publicly denounced in the British parliament. Not over $250,000 of the original 5 million ever reached Honduras. This sort of thing was worked so often on a weak people that her present foreign debt is somewhere between 150 and 200 million dollars — no one knows how much, as several experts have said that it is impossible entirely to untangle the country’s finances. United States bankers and diplomats PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 75 have recently made several efforts to fund this debt and pay off the English creditors. A treaty similar to the arrange- ment in force with Santo Domingo was proposed by the United States in 1911, but it was rejected by Honduras, now becoming somewhat wary of such arrangements. No one believes that the country will ever pay, or should pay, the full amount of its foreign debt. It is practically living on its trade with the United States, even to the extent that United States currency is the common medium of exchange. The immense banana business developed in Honduras in recent years by the United Fruit Company has given the country a new start financially. This company owns and operates its own railroads, port works and plantations, all of which are new assets to the country. Incidentally, it hasn’t been bad for the United Fruit Company, which earned $40 per share for the 15 months ending December 3L 1919- In Mexico the actual foreign land holdings are small in financial significance compared to the foreign control of what has recently become the nation’s most important source of wealth — the petroleum industry. According to the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com- merce, 97 per cent, of the oil industry is controlled by for- eigners : “Of the total investment in the oil industry of Mexico, 97 per cent, is held by foreigners. In the petroleum in- dustry of the United States but 4 per cent, of the total amount invested is held by foreign capital. In 1918 there were 27 companies in Mexico which produced oil in com- mercial quantities, 17 of these being owned by Americans, 5 by Spanish-Mexican capital, 3 by Dutch, and 2 by British interests. Of the total of 63,828,326 barrels produced in Mexico in 1918, the American interests produced 73 per cent., British 21 per cent., Holland 4 per cent, and Spanish- Mexican 2 per cent. In 1919, however, the British inter- ests materially increased their production. Only American and British interests shipped oil from Mexico during 1918, the oil exports having been 79 per cent. American and 21 per cent. British.” 76 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM The Doheny companies, which have led in the endeavor to direct the United States government’s policy toward Mexico in recent years, recently added to their 600,000 acres another 600,000, giving this group alone the control of more than a million acres of valuable land. Senator Albert B. Fall, in constructing his argument for intervention in Mex- ico, said in his recent report to the United States Senate that the total value of Mexico’s wealth was $2,434,000,000, of which $1,057,770,000 is owned by Americans and $584,- 000,000 by other foreigners. Senator Fall himself is of the opinion that these are minimum figures, and that the total American holdings probably amount to $1,500,000,000. Certainly this would seem to furnish some justification for the adoption by Mexico of the policy of “Mexico for the Mexicans,” an idea which has proved so offensive to a number of American interests. The immense holdings of foreigners in Mexico, secured largely under the Diaz government, were chiefly responsible for the dissatisfaction which in 1910 caused the Mexican people to revolt. According to data furnished by the Gen- eral Agrarian Offices to the Mexican Ministry of Fomento, that part of the territory of Lower California in the hands of foreigners constitutes about two-thirds of that territory, these holdings being equal in extent to the area of Cuba and Porto Rico combined. Many of these grants were made to companies which volunteered to make the surveys them- selves and lay out their own boundaries. Traditional en- gineering accuracy suffered to such an extent under this arrangement that the national government recently re- quested authority from Congress to use the national credit to the extent of 50,000,000 pesos in an effort to recover a large part of these grants. According to a report in a semi- official government organ, The Mexican Review: “From data obtained, it seems that something similar to what came to pass in Lower California and Chihuahua also occurred in the states of Sonora, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, Du- rango, Guerrero, Tepic Territory, and Vera Cruz, and if the work of the boundary surveying companies did not flourish in the central states it was only because that part PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 77 of the republic which produces grain was already in the hands of leading national landholders. “In Quintana Roo, the territory of which is thickly cov- ered by extensive forests, 1,550,000 acres of land were granted to a single company, and a like thing happened in Campeche, Tabasco and Chiapas, where the greatest extent of territory is deeded to a handful of companies, mostly foreign, notwithstanding the legal prohibition against foreigners acquiring immovable estate within the 100 kilo- meters (65 miles) which constitutes the border zone. “Through concessions, foreigners have become possessed of 54,874,557 acres of land within the National Territory, or approximately an area equal to that comprised by the following European countries combined: France, Spain, Portugal and Switzerland. “The following are the grantees of the Territory of Lower California: Luis Huller, with 13,487,473 acres; Adolfo Bulle, with 1,755,660 acres; Flores Haile, with 3,741,138 acres; Pablo Macedo, with 4,489,615 acres; and Guillermo Andrade, with 893,750 acres. “In Sonora: Samuel Wood, 565,920; Sonora Land Co., 3,505,308; C. W. Campbell, 315,300; W. Hennings, 44,- 393; Camou Bros., 403,630; Whiller Land Co., i, 333>3 8 3>' Land and Cattle Co., 280,795. “In Chihuahua: Palomas Concession and minor grants, 2,706,265 acres. “In Coahuila: Boertoni Concession, 664,420; B. Wil- liams, 291,188; Milmo de Helli, 1,040,198; Milmo de Radzi- will, 373.065. “In Tamaulipas : Scott Concession, 875,000 acres, and minor extensions, 61,110 acres. “In Chiapas: Chiapas Mex., Ltd., 1,617,163; Lopez Bru, Marquis of Comillas, 356,053; Bulnes, 311,825; minor extensions, 407,980. “In Quintana Roo: Faustino Martinez Concession, 1,748,- 8 45- “In Guerrero: Anglo-Mexican Land Co., 1,662,803; J. Cardenas, 705,510. “In Sinaloa: Sinaloa Land Co. and minor concessions, 92,453- 78 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “In Nayarit: Luis Gayou and minor extensions, 338,215 acres.” It was pointed out before that political idealism, con- stantly maintained against all odds, is one of the great assets of Latin America. It is very clear, however, that the realization in practice of this ideal of self-government and independent sovereignty is dependent upon the ability of these nations to become economically independent by a process of self-denial and the assumption of the responsibil- ity and risk of developing their own resources. EDUCATION Education in Latin America was from the beginning under the control of the Church, which has carried out the medieval practice of confining it to the few who were supposed to possess superior intellectual ability and to those of wealth, high social position and influence. Since these republics secured their independence, education has gen- erally been brought under the control of the government. Higher education in some centers is well developed, but primary education has not received the attention it deserves, and opportunities for even primary instruction are lacking to the great majority of the people. “Popular education has progressed slowly in most parts of Latin America be- cause of overwhelming indigenous populations, precarious finances, sparse settlement, troubled administrations and persistent opposition of powerful groups.” The prosperous and ambitious have sought and gained education as becom- ing and necessary to their position. The Indians and other poor, as elsewhere, do not want an education because they do not see the use of it. In some considerable areas it might require 100 square miles to assemble enough children to justify the maintenance of a school. Liberal minded leaders advocate education for all, but selfish taxpayers often intervene. The upper classes, as a class, have con- ceived their interests to be best conserved by keeping the peon laborer ignorant, helpless and submissive. The priests have also resisted teaching by the state and have not pro- PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 79 vided for it themselves with any measure of universality. They have taught the common people the doctrines of the Church only, apparently sharing with the wealthy classes the belief that no good can come from education of the masses. Illiteracy, therefore, is stifling national development in practically every Latin American country, the percentages ranging from forty to eighty per cent. In Argentina it is said that forty per cent, of persons six years of age and older are illiterate ; in Bolivia eighty per cent, cannot read ; in Brazil eighty per cent, are illiterate; in Chile sixty-three per cent. ; in Colombia, Venezuela and Peru over eighty per cent. ; in Uruguay forty per cent, of persons six years of age and older. In Mexico about seventy per cent, are unable to read or write, and in Costa Rica about seventy- five per cent. Of course it must be understood that most of these figures, while taken from government reports for the most part, are only approximate — as the Latin would say, “poco mas o menos.” Latin America had one in twenty of its population in schools in 1912, while Germany had one in six and Japan one in seven. In Colombia, about one person in twenty-two is attending school. In Ecuador, where one in sixteen is receiving instruction, the 800,000 Indians who form about one-half of the population are getting practically no educa- tion at all. While landowners are required by law to pro- vide a school if ten or more families are employed on an estate, the law is generally evaded. In the large Indian population of Peru, also, a mere eighteen per cent, of the children of school age are actually under any sort of in- struction. Here it is estimated that two-fifths of the chil- dren live in districts so remote that the state cannot reach them. The Bolivian government sends out traveling teach- ers to spend a brief time in each village of the more remote sections, but only one in forty of her population is in school. The Central American group has three per cent, at school, Cuba ten per cent., Porto Rico twenty per cent. Chile, probably more aggressive educationally than most of the Latin American countries, out of a total population of 3,459,95! had 331,636 pupils in the elementary schools 80 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM and 39,198 in the secondary schools. School buildings are crowded and many children are turned away because of lack of equipment. Argentina has developed her schools along more democratic lines and about one-tenth of the population is in the elementary schools. In some sections the Argentine Government is extending education by the provision of portable school buildings, and in that republic every effort is being made to increase edu- cational facilities. The Uruguayan system in efficiency and outreach is second in no respect to that of its larger neighbor. These two nations are said to expend for educa- tion a larger proportion of their national revenues than any other countries in the world. The state of Sao Paulo, in Brazil, ranks easily with them, leading the country, which has 635,000 in school out of a population of twenty-four million. Yet the municipality of New York alone spends more on its schools than do all the governments of Latin America. The city of Detroit spends as much annually on its night schools and playgrounds as the republic of Haiti does on its entire educational program. The educational system installed by the United States and turned over to Cuba in 1902 has greatly deteriorated. Dr. Arturo Montori ( Cuba Contemporanea, Havana) puts the blame upon the following factors : (1) Scanty instruction and defective education of lower classes. (2) Deficient collective aptitude for economic activity. (3) Frequent political disturbances. (4) The evident depression of patriotic feeling in very considerable portions of our Republic (Cuba). Illiteracy (80 per cent, in 1902) is almost eliminated to- day; but reading and writing is nearly the whole achieve- ment (only 12 per cent, of the pupils get beyond the second grade ) . Four common defects must be corrected by the schools : (1) Economic improvidence — lack of thought for the fu- ture; (2) addiction to gambling (excessive in lower classes) ; PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 81 (3) superstition (among women especially); (4) gross language (among boys). Economic education, today almost lacking, should be given in special schools. The upper classes, educated in private schools, are responsible for political disturbances. Patriotism is weakening, as shown by : (a) Political indifference and avoidance of public life by electorate. (b) The sale (on a great scale) of land and large indi- vidual enterprises to foreigners. (c) The demand for foreign supervisors. The rich are responsible for the first by direct, and the two last by indirect, action. Their indifference has lowered political standards. The remedy lies in bettering all schools. In 1902 the United States left Cuba this centralized school organization: The Secretary of Public Instruction, the Board of Super- intendents, the Commissioner of Schools, the Board of Education, the Masters. National idiosyncrasies rapidly transformed the school system into a political machine. The General Superintend- ent’s powers were given the Secretary of Instruction (usually a politician). Provincial superintendents were administration errand boys, not technical men. A generation, itself uneducated, failed to understand the significance of education (either for the individual or col- lectively). A politically elected commissioner chose teach- ers on political, not educational, grounds. The legal one- year appointments (meant to eliminate the inefficient) be- came a political weapon. Teachers sought appointments like day laborers. Congress (July 18, 1909) passed a law making a teacher permanent after two years’ satisfactory teaching. Political appointees were forced to take the peda- gogical courses. With the organization of the board of inspectors began a disastrous epoch in Cuban pedagogical schools. Politics took the place of teaching. Lecture halls were closed, 82 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM useless books bought, while necessary material was not bought. Examinations for masters were corrupt. The Summer Normal School was suppressed. Resultant scan- dals led to establishment of normal schools (Act of Con- gress, 1915). Simultaneously school salaries were in- creased, and aspirants for school inspector were required to have had five years’ teaching experience. Adequate buildings are lacking almost everywhere. In Ecuador, for example, all the schools are usually in rented buildings originally erected for other purposes and not adapted at all for school use. In Arequipa, Peru, seven- teen schools are in rented private property. Even in rich Argentina many schoolhouses are rented. This condition is quite general throughout Latin America, possibly an ex- treme case being Venezuela, where in all her history there has never been a single building erected for school purposes with the exception of the government military academy. In Paraguay education has made great strides compared to conditions in 1870, when there were less than 1,000 children in school in the entire republic. By 1902 this had increased to 24,752 and in 1910 to 52,200, while the 1916 statistics show 1,047 schools manned by 1,481 teach- ers and having 80,142 pupils. There is little tendency among the people to give their children more than the bare requirements necessary to class them as “literate,” as is shown by the figures for the city of Asuncion, where out of 7,000 children enrolled in the city schools some 4,500 are in the first grade and only 95 in the sixth. Teachers in Paraguay are very poorly paid and often are not much above their pupils in education. One teacher replied to a parent who wished his boy to have a knowledge of decimals with the question as to how long the parent thought he would remain a school teacher at ten dollars a month if he knew decimals himself. Every friend of Paraguay will sympathize with the fol- lowing appeal in a book, The Pain of Paraguay, by a Spaniard who has spent many years in the country: “It would be a fountain of incalculable redemption, here above all places, to send into the country a heroic regiment of one hundred teachers, full of sympathy, capable of gaining the PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 83 love of the children, consecrated to the task of sowing in these young hearts the seed of sincerity and liberty of ideas. But these teachers, are they in Paraguay? Are they in America? Are they anywhere in this great vale of tears?” Bomfin says : “To proclaim democracy and liberty and at the same time maintain and defend social and political conditions of the era of absolutism, is more than senseless. It is the sad- dest conceivable thing. Republic, democracy, liberty and ignorance — one might as well build a house on the sand dunes. Human evolution means the progress of the soul, the cultivation of the mind to understand, the cultivation of the heart to love. “The greatness and extensiveness of our misfortunes is no reason for us to fold our arms. Let us make a cam- paign against our ignorance. There is no other way to save this America of ours. These expedients and political wisdom have now contributed all they are able to give. That progress which some count by tax receipts, others by the number of ships and others in the extent of mines being worked, not only is badly defined, it is false and illusory. Progress must be made by society in its totality; and this is only attained by the education and culture of each social element. The environment is not bettered without bettering the individual. There is no progress for him who is un- able to comprehend and desire it, insist in searching for it. Progress is a triumph — a growing victory over nature, and in the struggle which leads to it the first essential is to free oneself of ignorance, of preconceptions and the discourage- ment which is to be found within them, to know the enemy, to conquer him, to know the obstacles, to overcome them, to know the resources which can serve, to know the reach of each effort, to know, to know, to know — more and more.” The educational systems of Latin America have been constructed, like their political systems, on a highly ideal- istic basis. There is absolutely no question of the desire of the leaders to minister to the educational needs of their people. The noticeable defect is on the practical side, in its 84 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM bearing on actual needs and local conditions. In the matter of education, we have an exhibition of what Prof. Ernesto Nelson of Argentina calls “insistence on logic and sym- metry.” If it is decided that a national college should be put into the provincial capitals, one is placed in an insig- nificant town where only fifty students are to be had, while some large city which does not happen to be a provincial capital is left entirely unprovided for. The symmetry of the plan could not be spoiled for the sake of the needy city, nor would logical consistency permit the most remote rural capital to be deprived of its colegio. The educational institutions are often built from the standpoint of the convenience of the faculty, the gratifying of public pride, conformity to a city architectural scheme, rather than to conform to the needs or convenience of the pupils. Many institutions are built simply because of mod- els seen in other countries which have impressed the imag- ination, to the ignoring of practical adaptability of such an institution to local conditions. Prof. Nelson tells of return- ing to Argentina from the United States and telling of fine children’s libraries there. Immediately the Argentines said they would have them too. They would put up suitable buildings immediately. “But,” the professor replied, “the first thing for the library is to have the children’s books.” They replied, “We have these.” “No,” cautioned the pro- fessor, “the books we have for children represent adult thoughts expressed in children’s language. We must study the children themselves and write books that are really chil- dren’s books ; then we will be ready to build libraries for them.” This kind of reasoning, however, was very diffi- cult for the Argentines to understand. Dr. Villaran of Peru says: “We still maintain the same ornamental and literary edu- cation which the Spanish governors implanted in South America for political purposes, instead of an intellectual training capable of advancing material well-being; an edu- cation which gives brilliancy to cultivated minds but does not produce practical intelligence ; which can amuse the leisure hours of the rich but does not teach the poor how PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 85 to work. We are a people possessed by the same mania for speaking and writing as old and decadent nations. We look with horror upon active professions which demand energy and the spirit of strife. Few of us are willing to endure the hardships of mining or incur the risks and cares of manufacture and trade. Instead we like the tranquillity and security, the semi-repose of public office and the literary professions to which the public opinion of our society urges us. Fathers of families like to see their sons advocates, doctors, office holders, literati and professors. Peru is much like China — the promised land of functionaries and literati.” There is no place on earth where one faces more difficult questions of curricula, discipline and administration. The state education system resembles the French more than the North American, both in its courses and in its fundamental organization. There is no college in the North American sense. From the sixth grade, on the average, though each country differs, the pupil goes into the liceo or colegio civil, which is something like our low grade academy. Most of the work given in our colleges is taught in the first years of the professional schools in Latin America, which, in- stead of having three to five years, generally offer a course extending through seven years. The question of how better to bridge the gap between the liceo and the professional school is now giving much concern to educators. Another problem is the one of choice between two radically different theories of education or of making a happy combination of the two. North Americans are accustomed to a system which is designed to develop the freedom of the individual student, who is allowed to select his own courses very largely and choose his own way of mastering the required material, the theory being that liberty is so precious that it is worth while to risk failure or ill-proportioned development in order that each personality may develop along the line of its own na- ture. But in countries where the Jesuits have directed educa- tion for centuries and have stamped their theories and meth- ods so thoroughly upon the thinking of the people, as has 86 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM been the case in Latin America, the theory of rigid discipline rather than liberty prevails. Emphasis is put upon memory and tradition. It means a centralized system of schools conforming to the narrow, authorized curriculum for the masses, and specialized schools for the privileged classes. This results in culture of a kind and a wide range of facts, but a lamentable lack of initiative, self-reliance and original thinking. THE MORAL PROBLEM A greatly increasing number of Latin Americans are coming to the conclusion that the greatest of all their prob- lems are the moral and spiritual ones. Alfredo Colmo says : “These are the defects which I will show are found in the morality of individual Argentines : lack of initiative, lack of punctuality, a continual looking for ‘the turn’ — that is, how to evade contracts and agreements — and dodging all that places upon one an obligation and a duty.” He continues: “I will content myself with putting down two sins which seem to be of decisive importance. The first is the habit of lying. This is so general and so intensified that it seems to be a subconscious predisposition, so that there is nothing about which one does not lie. * * * “The second thing is more general. It is a lack of real men. I mean men who have sentiment, will, morality, character, all that makes the individual a force, an efficient driver with energy, honesty and a superiority of aims. “The work of developing honesty, of making it a religion of the masses and consolidating it with the work of form- ing men, is the great, I might say the one, national prob- lem. All the rest of our problems are simply a consequence of this one.” Agustin Alvarez says : “Sarmiento said that the evil which affects the Argen- tine Republic is its extension. Very well, the republicans have suppressed the extension and unified the country. Now the evil which affects Argentina is the lie. And it is nec- essary that she work without rest until she succeeds in PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 87 emancipating herself from this detestable South American institution, which is three-fourths Indian and four-fourths barbarian.” To quote Dr. Jose M. de la Rua: “The Latin is generally selfish and individualistic. He does not wish to form part of any society or organization in which he does not see some benefit or practical advantage more or less immediate for himself. He does not know or understand what it is to work for others, hence that class of association which asks his money, work or time without visible and practical returns to himself does not ordinarily get either his interest or his participation. Another defect of the majority of Latins is the lack of constancy. They are easily made enthusiastic over a good idea or a noble purpose, but soon lose their enthusiasm and fall into in- difference and apathy.” The following from a well-known Uruguayan author makes the essential connection between problems of morality and problems of religion which has too long failed of rec- ognition in Latin America : “If we doubt the advantages of Christianity for Latin America, a journey to the United States will do away with that doubt. The North American, though very independent, is yet most obedient to the essential principles of the social life. From the President to the most humble citizen, all recognize the power of the religious idea in the formation and stability of a people. An attentive analysis of Latin American society produces the most disagreeable impres- sion. In the moral and spiritual worlds everything remains to be done. We are distinguished for mental vivacity. We excel in linguistics and the power of assimilation. The upper classes give an example of singular versatility in all lines of knowledge and occupation. But this is not sufficient in a directing aristocracy, which thinks that there does not exist any authority except that of science and reason. “The Christian culture will always be necessary because 88 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM great thoughts come from the heart. But the majority of our notable men are free thinkers. There exists an abso- lute indifference to religion. This is true even among the young people, at the age most propitious for inculcating the ideals of life. “The Latin American child is brighter and more pre- cocious than his northern brother, but in the long run the robust virtues of self-domination, of sacrifice, of patience and will, conquer. Character asks only one aid — good cus- toms to oppose sensuality.” An article in El Sur, of Arequipa, Peru, in November of 1914, headed “Ruin,” states: “That which cannot be cured and which foreshadows death is moral failure. And this is the evil of this coun- try. * * * We breathe a fetid atmosphere and are not sickened. The life of the country is poisoned, and the country needs a life purification. In the state in which we are, the passing of the years does not change men, it only accentuates the evil. A purging and a struggle are abso- lutely necessary.” The Vice-Rector of La Plata University, Argentina, in his opening address of the college year, called upon the uni- versity to recognize its obligation to develop character in the young men who pass through its halls : “It is with great sadness that I witness the steady decrease in the number of unselfish, idealistic, genuine men; how engulfing the tide of selfishness, of rebellion, of indiscipline and of unsalable ambition; impunity so often supplants justice that I fear for the spiritual future of the land of my children, unless we make haste to remedy the great evil, which is disregard for the noble, and the great and unmeas- ured lust for material riches.” THE RELIGIOUS PROBLEM Whatever else visitors to Hispanic America may notice, they are practically unanimous in their observance of the PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 89 lack of religion in those countries. In former times this indifference or hostility to Christianity was noted only among the men of the more cultured classes; now it is spreading to the educated women and in a large degree to the workingmen in the cities. As Prof. G. H. Blakeslee says : “However the religious question is to be settled, it re- mains today the greatest problem of South America. Until it is solved every South American republic is likely to wit- ness from time to time such scenes as those recently enacted in Chile, where crowds of its best educated young men marched night after night through the streets of its capital city deriding, mocking and insulting the Church to which the nation belongs.” The demonstration to which reference is here made is that in Santiago and Valparaiso where the university stu- dents went on strike against the activities of the Papal Nuncio. For almost a week they kept those cities in a ferment, completely disorganizing university arrangements by their refusal to attend classes and by other acts of pro- test. The object of the agitation was to bring pressure on the government to send the Pope’s representative out of the country. Joining with the students, a crowd of citizens estimated as high as 50,000 gathered in Santiago and petitioned the President of Chile for the deportation of the Nuncio. Each night during this somewhat hectic week witnessed parades of protest or mock processions and ceremonials ridiculing religious rites. This extension of the people’s enmity from the person of the Nuncio to the Church itself was easily accomplished in the tense state of public feeling. In one of these mock processions two large figures were carried by the marchers representing in no flattering way a monk and a nun. Other processions were made up of students robed as priests, carrying swinging censers and followed by a crowd of young men dressed as penitents, with lighted tapers in their hands. So realistic was this latter feature that one observer reports seeing old women kneeling to them in the streets, unaware of the real character of the marchers. Banners and transparencies attacking the Papal representative, the local hierarchy and the Church itself were carried in most of these processions. 90 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM The public clamor over the matter reached into the Chil- ean Congress, where it was the subject of lively debate. Strange to say, one of the impelling causes of this outbreak lay in the economic strain under which the South Amer- ican countries have labored since the close of the war, the specific charge against the Nuncio being that he was send- ing money realized from the sale of Church property out of the country. Radicals in Chile claim that within the last five years Church officials in Chile have sent to Rome more than a million and a quarter dollars in anticipation of the possible separation of Church and State in that coun- try. This particular charge has precipitated a general scru- tiny of the wealth of the established Church. In Santiago alone its property is valued at more than ioo million dol- lars and there are some who claim that the income of the Church in Chile is greater than that of the government itself. While this outbreak came with considerable suddenness out of an atmosphere of almost complete subservience to ecclesiastical authority, it had long been brewing. For years there has been a latent hostility to the Church and the clergy in the minds of educated men in Chile, although it has always been politically and socially expedient to con- ceal this animosity as much as possible. With this recent agitation it has broken out into the open. If visitors to Hispanic American countries speak often of the lack of religion in those lands, their own writers almost universally condemn the established Church. Among the numerous references of Garcia Calderon to the subject the following may be cited from his book, “The Creation of a Continent” : “We do not find in Latin America either an elegant skep- ticism, a puritan religion, or even a mysticism like the Span- ish. Her Catholicism is a limited and official religion. We are witnessing the decadence of traditional religion. The Church is being converted into a bureaucratic institution. Its convents attract only those of the inferior classes. The robustness of creative convictions, which is the strength of the Biblical men of North America, the deep interest in human destiny, the stern sense of duty, the realization of PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 91 the seriousness of life, do not disturb Latin American Cath- olicism, sensual and lymphatic. * * * “In the political and economic order our religious in- difference is the cause of indecision in opinions, of hatred of ideas, and of immorality. * * * These different re- publics lack a creed. Their ancient life was linked to a severe religion. The abandonment of Catholicism in democ- racies without moral culture means retrogression to bar- barism. * * * In the United States puritanism is the perpetual defense against the plutocratic immorality. In the Latin South only a renovated and profound faith can give to accumulated riches a national sentiment. An Amer- ican servant of Caliban, without clear ideals, coldly atheistic because of mental laziness or indifference, would be an im- mense mediocre continent that could submerge, as did At- lantis, without leaving in human annals the memory of a secret unrest, a hymn to the gods, or even a passionate skepticism and tragic doubt.” In an interesting book, “The Plow, the Pen and the Sword,” Senor Huerta, of Paraguay, in discussing national problems, has this to say: “How distinct has been the role of religion in Spanish America from that it has played in North America! Since the time of the conquest, when the priests were in such a hurry to administer the sacrament of baptism to the Indians, until the present, religion has not exercised the amplitude of its noble mission outside of the Church building and the congregation. “Mixing in politics has brought about many evils in the Republic, which has had to suffer the acts and propaganda of the clericals whose fruit has been nothing more than the discrediting of worship and the skepticism of the masses, with grave injury to the young society and its government. It would be easy to cite many honorable and patriotic ac- tions of the Catholic Church and its many educational activ- ities, but as a moral entity it has not been able to escape the materialistic spirit of government with which it has been so closely associated. 92 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “In Ecuador or Colombia it is impossible to know whether the government is served by the clergy or the clergy is a model for the government. The religious influence has not the merit of aiding the development of these countries, pacifying the ardor of the political parties, but has the effect of exciting them with intolerance and exclusiveness. If, as is the case in the United States and as the psychologists believe, religion is a powerful force for the transformation of human groups into nationality, religion is destined to play a great part in the Spanish American republics.” That the student class is leading the attack on the Church signifies that it is in the college and university centers of South America that religious indifference is most marked and sentiment toward the Church most hostile. For the benefit of North Americans who may be inclined to dismiss the whole matter as a mere student agitation, it must be pointed out that in Latin America, as in continental Europe, the university students are an important political factor and nearly always form the backbone of progressive movements and are active politically. The students, too, have been di- rected to some extent by political leaders who preferred to remain in the background and not openly appear as lead- ers in an attack upon the clergy. A great religious reform is greatly needed in South America. Some of her keenest critics — several of them among her own sons — believe that lack of a strongly devel- oped moral sense is the main thing that stands between the South American and a great future of world leadership and world service. This vital lack shows itself not only in the realm of religion, but in the attitude of the people toward their work, in their political life, and in their social relationships, particularly in the relations between the sexes. A spiritualized Church should surely do something to bring to these peoples a stronger sense of duty and right and a greater stimulus toward allowing this sense to govern their lives. It remains, then, for these southern nations to discover a religion that is compatible with true democracy and mod- ern scientific knowledge, which will at the same time build PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 93 up personal and national character and furnish those spirit- ual ideals without which no permanent cultural edifice can be built. What form shall this religion take? Many be- lieve with Garcia Calderon that it must be a reformed Ca- tholicism. He says: “Protestantism is not, however, the religion suited to these democracies, submitted to a three-century Catholic discipline. The race has lost its ancient individualism which inclines toward Protestantism, and austere Calvinism or Puritanism is out of the realm of tropical imagination and Castilian sensuality. The religious renaissance can only be realized within Catholicism, a traditional religion, mother of ideas and customs, a powerful force that cannot be escaped by either the servile Indian or the Spanish hidalgo.” On the other hand, there are not lacking other great Latin Americans who believe that the simple, democratic Evangelical Christianity is the greatest need of the south. Agustin Alvarez says: “Thus liberal Protestantism, leaving to man his best aptitude and amplitude for lay progress, has formed the colonizing races which, by their greater resources dominat- ing nature and exploiting the soil, have enriched and ex- tended themselves to all continents. In the same way Ca- tholicism, repudiating profane science, and captured by atten- tion to public worship, has separated the best energies of man, has withdrawn him from improved methods of agri- culture, commerce and industry, from personal cleanliness and public sanitation, from earthly justice and civil mo- rality. “The mother country did us greater harm by prohibiting in America the cultivation of ideas and the sentiments of tolerance than it did by prohibiting the cultivation of the vine and the olive. If the primary cause of the progress of man is the thought which modifies his sentiments and forms his character, a man limits his progress to the degree to which he limits his thought. So the fundamental cause of the backwardness of Spanish America, and of Spain itself, is the restriction of thought by an absurd religion. “Thus narrow and superstitious Catholicism, the open 94 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM enemy of science and the advocate of lay ignorance, develops a spirit incapable of self-government because it is educated in dogmatic intolerance and spiritual slavery, which are the spiritual father and mother of this Spanish perverseness which we knew in 1810 and the Cubans knew in 1900. In the same way liberal Protestantism develops those spirits with self-rule, tolerant in action because they are educated to be tolerant in thought.” Alberdi, one of the greatest thinkers Argentina ever pro- duced, was firm in his conviction that Protestantism is the religion for republics. Juarez, the greatest of Mexicans, said that upon the development of Protestantism in Mexico largely depended the future of his country. President Alessandri, of Chile, recently said, on the occasion of being presented with a Bible by evangelical workers in that country : “I am a Christian. I believe in the doctrines of Christ. I accept the sound doctrines of the Bible and reject errors of the Roman Catholic Church. I raise the white flag to all truth. This book of yours which you present will remain by my side. It will be my guide and I shall know how to appreciate it at its true worth. If Congress confirms my election, when I come into the capitol I will work incessantly for complete and absolute liberty of conscience. I know of the cultural and moral work that you, the evangelicals, are doing in all the republics and I hold it in the highest esteem. If I enter the nation’s capital the doors will always be open to help every good work which you do and you will always occupy a place in my heart.” The presidents of Guatemala, Ecuador, Bolivia, Mexico and Argentina have officially invited North American evan- gelical missionaries to their countries. Evangelical schools are often patronized by the leading citizens of the commu- nity and government subsidies are frequently offered them. There now exist many self-supporting evangelical churches, entirely directed by nationals who are recognized as strong forces in their communities. In Rio de Janeiro one such church counts among its thousand members prom- inent lawyers, engineers and members of Congress, raises PROBLEMS OF LATIN AMERICA 95 an annual budget of $15,000 and is active in many com- munity philanthropies. The number of evangelicals who have taken prominent part in the Mexican Revolution and are now conspicuous in the reconstruction of the country, particularly along educational lines, is very large. The paper published unitedly by the evangelical churches in Porto Rico has the largest circulation of any periodical on the island. City-wide campaigns in which prominent busi- ness and professional men of the community furnished the leadership have recently raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Y. M. C. A. buildings in Montevideo and Rio de Janeiro. The problem of a vital religion for Hispanic America will probably be solved not by an unquestioned loyalty to either a cold New England Protestantism or a narrow, other-worldly Catholicism. In the short time since Prot- estantism was introduced into these countries it has had a liberalizing influence on the Catholic Church. On the other hand, Protestantism, as it establishes itself in the South, is being transformed by the warm, sympathetic temperament of the Latins into a much less rigorous and austere faith. No doubt these two divisions of Christianity will mutually react upon each other with a resultant gain to the people. The defeat of both would come, and sadder yet, the people would completely lose the fruits of real spirituality, if these two creeds should waste their energies in fighting one an- other instead of giving themselves to working out, as dis- cussed in this chapter, the great racial, moral, economic and social problems with which these lands of sunshine and shadow are so threateningly confronted. There is no doubt that the best elements of Latin Amer- ican life are seeking earnestly to solve these problems, which together make up the greater problem of providing an ade- quate religious dynamic for the peoples of the South. As Dr. Abel J. Perez of Montevideo says : “Another of the factors which in the most fundamental way can cooperate to secure to the American citizens an elevated culture as beautiful as it is sane, which would give a high and invariably moral ideal, making possible the soli- 96 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM darity which is pursued as a high purpose of its collective existence, is the adoption of a religious creed so pure that it can protect in its sanctuary all the most noble aspirations ; so ample that in it are found all creeds ; so tolerant that in it all the faithful may mix their prayers — an indispensable complement of popular education, a factor of resistance and energy that will bring to a realization the exalted objects of the young countries of America. “What I desire is to reserve for the child in the school this shield (religion). I wish to leave him this treasure of resistance which shall maintain his faith, tone up his enthu- siasm, give him absolute possession of himself, assure to the future warrior the harmonious integrity of his activities which the collective life of America imperatively demands.” Sources of Further Information on Problems of Latin America Alberdi : Bases para la Organization de la Republica Argentina. Alvarez, Agustin: iAdonde vamos ?, “La Cultura Argentina.” Arguedas, Alcides : El Pueblo Enfermo. Barrett, Rafael: El Dolor Paraguayo. Blakeslee, Geo.: The Outlook, Vol. 120, p. 379. Blanco-Fombona : Evolucion Politica y Social de America Espanola, El Hombre de Hierro. Bomfin, M. : A America Latina. Bulnes, Francisco: El Porvenir de las Naciones Hispano-Ameri- canas. Bunge : Nuestra America. Calderon, F. Garcia : La Creadon de un Continente, Latin America, Its Rise and Progress. Colmo, Alfredo : Los Paises Latino-Americanos. Galdames, Luis : Educacion, Economica e Intelectual. Garcia : La Ciudad Indiana. Huerta, Cardus: Harado, Pluma y Espada. Matto de Turner, Clorinda: Aves sin Nidos. Mendieta, Salvador: La Enfermidad de Centro America. Perez, Abel J. : “America.” Reports of the Panama Congress on Christian Work. Rodo, J. E. : Ariel. Ross, E. A. : South of Panama. Sarmiento: Fecundo (English translation). Speer, R. E. : South American Problems. Ugarte, M. : El Porvenir de la America Latina. ZbMETA, Cesar: El Continente Enfermo. Chapter III EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM THE BOLIVAR IDEA In the former chapters we have drawn up the balance sheet of Latin America. We have looked at her wonderful possibilities based on her physical, intellectual and spiritual resources. We have also taken into account, on her debit side, the great problems which she is facing, and which she must solve before taking a place of leadership among the nations of the world. With these considerations as a back- ground let us raise the question of how all of the Americas may develop among themselves close cooperation, and then build up a real continental solidarity. First of all let us look to the past, and examine the historic attitude toward one another of both the United States and the southern repub- lics. It is not necessary for us here to cover the historic differences in the origin and colonial life of North and Hispanic America. These are amply treated in many books. What we propose is to trace the spirit of unity which, in spite of all the divisive elements and selfish purposes pre- vailing in all the American countries, has been conspicuous since the beginning of the movement for independence of these countries from Europe. This insistence upon Amer- ican unity by the great leaders of Latin America runs like a thread of gold through all of the turbulent strug- gle of those nations towards the development of real democ- racy. Sentiment has played its part in keeping this idea in the foreground. We must admit, however, that the important reason for its persistence has been logical rather than psy- chological. The development of Pan Americanism today is peculiarly dependent, therefore, on scientific and historical 97 98 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM interpretation. The three big facts that caused great Amer- icans like Bolivar, and Clay, and Monroe to think on what we now call Pan Americanism were the geographical fact that all live on a common continent separated from the rest of the world by two oceans; the historical fact that all had emigrated from and been colonies of European nations, and the political fact that all, having gained their independence, had established republican forms of government — govern- ments which were more or less menaced by these European countries, which were as strongly monarchical as America was republican. We might as well frankly admit that there are two very different peoples living on the American continent, differing widely and profoundly in race, training and their interpreta- tion of life. If we are to trust simply to sentiment, these two peoples will not find themselves particularly drawn to one another. The punctiliously polite Latin depreciates the blunt Saxon, and the practical Saxon finds it hard to be patient with the idealistic Latin. But we must be willing each to allow the other his own place in the American sun, and his privilege to be himself, seeking a common friend- ship, not because we are especially “simpatico” to one an- other, but because the logic of our position leads to mutual relations. This is not to say at all that we must eliminate sentiment and forego any friendship but a selfish one. But it does mean that a Pan Americanism not based on well understood geographical, historical and political facts, is one that will not stand. There are three great policies that have guided the Amer- ican Republics in their international relations since they became independent from the mother countries. First, the Washington principle of no entangling alliances, which kept the United States out of European politics; second, the Monroe Doctrine, which kept the European countries out of America; third, the Bolivar idea, which has advocated the close cooperation of all American republics for mutual devel- opment and protection against Europe. While Bolivar and other great South American advocates of continental soli- darity have not always been consistent in their inclusion of the United States, nor indeed of Brazil in this unity, Bolivar EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 99 can well be called the father of Pan Americanism, or as it was called in his day, American Union. The most funda- mental historical fact, one which is often ignored, in the rise of Pan Americanism is that in the early development of American life, both Anglo-Saxon and Hispanic America were strongly in favor of continental solidarity. This policy of American Unity has been the ideal of the greatest South- ern statesmen since the beginning of their independence. We may call it the Bolivar Idea because he was its greatest exponent, not that it was peculiar to him any more than what we call the Monroe Doctrine was peculiar to Monroe. Let us look at the way this idea of unity prevailed in the early days of the Latin American republics. EARLIEST EXPRESSIONS OF THE IDEA OF PAN AMERICANISM IN HISPANIC AMERICA In another chapter we will deal with the early desires for continental solidarity as expressed by leaders in the United States. Here we are interested in a brief review of this idea of unity as advocated by Hispanic American leaders. In 1810 expressions of Pan Americanism were made by the Argentinian, Bemandino Rivadavia, and the Chilean, Juan Martinez de Rosas. Rivadavia in communicating the news of the installation of the first Junta at Buenos Aires, speaks of the union and harmony which should prevail among citizens of the same origin, dependence and inter- ests. In Rosas’ “Declaration of the Rights of the Chilean People” we find the following striking statement: “The people of Latin America cannot defend their sovereignty single-handed : in order to develop themselves they need to unite, not in an internal organization, but for literal secur- ity against the plans of Europe, and to avoid wars among themselves. * * * The American states must unite in a congress in order to organize and fortify themselves. * * * The day when America, united in a congress, whether of the two continents, or of the south, shall speak to the rest of the world, her voice will make itself respected and her resolve would be opposed with difficulty.” In 1811 Chile and Venezuela aspired to unite the two 100 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM countries, and in that year the Constitution of Chile declared that the American people ought to form an alliance to de- fend themselves against Europe and to avoid fratricidal wars. In 1818 O’Higgins, the Dictator of Chile, suggested a confederation of all Latin American republics and urged “the great federation of the American continent capable of maintaining its political and civil liberty.” The unity of the Spanish-American states was argued by the Guatemalan Ayos and others of Central America almost at the beginning of the movement for independence. Jose Cecilio del Valle conceived his beautiful “dream” concern- ing the necessity of a general federation of the new Amer- ican states in 1824. This received the approval of the National Assembly of Central America which named pleni- potentiaries to the governments of Colombia, Peru, Chile and Buenos Aires, to present this idea to them. Not know- ing of Bolivar’s movement along the same lines, their repre- sentative was directed to congratulate the liberator of Colombia on his heroic work for the independence of these countries and to solicit his help in the development of the proposed conference. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Central America, in his first message to the Federal Congress, in 1825, referred as follows to the Monroe Doctrine and to the friendly rela- tions between North and Central America: “The existence of the new republics of the continent does not interest these republics alone but also the United States of the north. In that country of liberty were born the institutions which have acted as a splendid example for others to imitate. Any armed intervention on the part of Europe would be directed toward the destruction of these same free institutions and the establishment in America of the principle of a hereditary monarchy, where constitutional acts are nothing more than the expression of their mon- archical will. Therefore the United States would find itself equally threatened, and it is for this reason that the Presi- dent declared in his message to Congress that they would look upon any intervention of a European power directed EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 101 toward violating the destinies of independent American governments as a manifestation of hostility towards the United States. This attitude makes the executive power hope that we shall find in the sons of Washington the most decided cooperators or supporters in case our independence should be threatened by European powers. This govern- ment, being influenced by these sentiments and desirous of manifesting to the said United States our sincere desires for a reciprocal consideration and mutual friendship and the establishment of commercial relations on bases that will be mutually helpful to each nation, appointed a Minister to the United States, charging him at the same time to carry out certain other useful projects which would be helpful to the cause of independence and the service of the Central American Republic.” Dr. Francisco Castaneda, after quoting this document in his splendid book recently issued, called “Nuevos Estudios,” continues as follows : “This was the predominant mode of thought at that time, and the more those statesmen studied the problems of the new American republics the greater was their effort to stimulate union and fraternity.” The idea of Pan Americanism was first suggested in Brazil in 1817 by Cruz Cabuga, plenipotentiary of the Per- nambucan Government in the United States. In 1819 another Brazilian, Rodrigo Pinto Guedes, presented to the Minister of War and Foreign Affairs of Brazil the idea that the only means Brazil possessed of safeguarding herself in the presence of the threats of Europe was an alliance with her neighbors to the north and south, by means of what he called an American League. In 1819 the Brazilian govern- ment, endeavoring to carry out this suggestion, sent the fol- lowing instruction to its political agent in Buenos Aires : “After you have constantly reminded them that the in- terests of the kingdom are identical with those of the other states of this hemisphere and that they should participate in our destinies, you will promise on behalf of his royal highness the solemn recognition of the political independ- ence of those governments, and you will explain the priceless 102 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM benefits that may result from their forming a confederation or offensive and defensive treaty with Brazil, in order that, with the other governments of Spanish America, they may bring to naught the crafty wiles of European politics.” In a proclamation to the Peruvians, November 13, 1818, San Martin expressed the conviction that only by a union between Argentina, Chile and Peru would they be able to inspire in Spain the feeling of her impotence and in the other European powers the proper consideration and re- spect. This idea was the basis of his sending, as Protector of Peru, envoys to Mexico, Guatemala, Colombia, Argen- tina and Chile. Colombia and Peru signed a treaty of alliance in 1822, which provided the basis of a future league of all the Span- ish-American republics, and for the meeting of an Assembly at Panama which would serve to develop intimate relations between the states, an advisor in conflicts and interpreter of treaties. Colombia and Mexico signed a like treaty. These treaties were the first formal expression of the unity shown in the struggle for independence, w T hich was a revela- tion of the interdependence of the various countries. An Argentine army helped liberate Chile and Peru. Sucre, the Venezuelan hero, won the final triumph of Peru at Aya- cucho. Bolivar advanced from Venezuela and freed Colom- bia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia and w T on the title of “the Father of Five Republics.” These treaties really laid the foundation for the calling of the Panama Congress in 1826. Bernardo Monteagudo wrote the first comprehensive “Plan for Federation” in Lima in 1825. This document has taken its place as one of the most remarkable state papers ever produced by a Spanish American. Monteagudo, who was not noted for his virtue, was assassinated soon after producing this document, but no doubt it influenced Bolivar in working out the plans for the Panama Con- gress. 1 1 The full text of this remarkable document, along with mo9t of the other documents concerning early attempts at American Union, will be found in a recent publication issued by the Mexican government, called “El Ideal Latino- Americano.” EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 103 bolivar’s initiative It is to Bolivar, as already indicated, that American unity owes its greatest advocacy. Even before independ- ence from Spain had been secured he began working on this problem, as the most important one before the young gov- ernments then in the midst of their birth pangs. In writing to the government concerning the campaign in Venezuela in 1813, he said: “Only an intimate and fraternal union of the sons of the New World and an unalterable harmony in the operation of their respective governments will be able to make them formidable to our enemies and respectable in the sight of other nations.” On September 6, 1815, he wrote his famous Prophetic Letter from Jamaica, where he was in exile, which is filled with this idea, as the follow- ing quotation shows : “The consolidation of the New World into a single nation with a single bond uniting all its parts is a grand conception. Since the different parts have the same language, customs and religion, they ought to be confederated into a single state; but this is not possible, because differences of climate, diverse conditions, opposing interests, and dissimilar charac- teristics divide America. How beautiful it would be if the Isthmus of Panama should become for us what the Isthmus of Corinth was for the Greeks ! Would to God that we may have the fortune some day of holding there some august congress of the representatives of the republics, kingdoms, and empires of America, to deliberate upon the high inter- ests of peace and of war not only between the American nations, but between them and the rest of the globe.” Three years later he wrote to Pueyrredon, Dictator of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata: “When more favorable circumstances afford us more fre- quent communications and closer relations, we shall hasten, with the liveliest interest, to set on foot, on our part, the American covenant which, by forming one political body of all our republics, shall present America to the world with an aspect of majesty and greatness without parallel among 104 . PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM the ancient nations. America, thus united, will be able to call herself the queen of nations, the mother of republics.” About the middle of 1819, the Liberator crossed the Andes and freed the viceroyalty of Nueva Granada. Im- mediately, before the close of the year, he united Nueva Granada and Venezuela in a single state, which he christ- ened Republica de Colombia. He was soon to incorporate Ecuador with the new republic. He was realizing, in his own way, his ideal of unifying the American peoples. In 1822, he invited the other republics of the continent, in the name of Colombia, to make treaties of alliance, as al- ready stated. He governed Venezuela, Nueva Granada, Panama, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. He exercised influ- ence upon the policy of the Argentine Republic, where there existed a strong party in opposition to the government, a party of opposition that sought to lean upon the Liberator; the Argentine government itself sought the aid of the vic- torious and powerful ruler against Brazil. He offered to Chile a contingent of troops to free the archipelago of Chiloe, still in possession of Spain. On the north he sought to extend his influence to Mexico, to liberate the Antilles, one of which, Santo Domingo, had already de- clared itself in 1821 an integral part of Colombia. In December, 1824, he wrote from Peru his memorable circular addressed to the governments of Buenos xAires, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Mexico and Central America, in which he insisted upon the immense benefits that would accrue to the young republics from a meeting of delegates at Panama to consider the protection of their institutions. Bolivar said : “After fifteen years of sacrifices, devoted to the liberation of America, in order to obtain a system of guarantees that, in peace or war, shall be the buckler of our destinies, it is now time that the interests and relations which unite among themselves the American republics, formerly Spanish col- onies, ought to have a fundamental basis that shall perpet- uate, if possible, the.duration of these governments. * * * So respectable an authority (as that which shall direct the EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 105 policy of these governments) can not exist, except in an assembly of plenipotentiaries, appointed by each of our re- publics, and gathered under the auspices of the victory obtained by our arms against the might of Spain. The Isthmus of Panama has been offered by the government of Colombia for this purpose by existing treaties.” Thus came about the first meeting in the world’s history to consider the formation of a League of Nations. Because it was not immediately successful, history has given far too little recognition to this remarkable gathering, the idea back of which has struggled for expression a hundred years and must soon triumph. The Congress was hurriedly called and only the delegates from Colombia, Peru, Mexico and Central America arrived in time to attend the sessions. There was also present a representative of Great Britain and Holland had an unofficial observer. Chile professed friendship for the Congress, but delegates were appointed too late to arrive. Bolivia’s dele- gates had the same fate. Brazil appointed delegates, but probably her fear that the congress might wish to side with Argentina in their dispute over Uruguay, caused them to stay away. Paraguay, under the dictator Francia, was maintaining a policy of isolation from all the world at that time, so refused all relations with the meeting. As the Chilean historian B. Vicuna Mackenna says : “As far as Chile and La Plata were concerned, they refused to send delegates to the assembly because of a petty suspicion con- cerning the designs for universal power attributed to Boli- var.” The Congress was to consider, according to a letter from the Colombian Government to its representative in Buenos Aires, the following matters : 1. “To renew the treaty of union, alliance, and perpetual confederacy against Spain or any other power which might attempt to dominate over us. 2. “To issue, in the name of their constituents, a suitable manifesto upon the justice of their cause, exposing the sinister views of Spain and declaring our system of politics with respect to the other powers of Christianity. 106 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM 3. “To consider the condition of the islands of Porto Rico and Cuba ; the expediency of a combined force to free them from the Spanish yoke ; and the proportion of troops which each state should contribute for that purpose; and to deter- mine whether the islands shall be united to either of the confederated states or be left at liberty to choose their own government. 4. “To conclude or renew a treaty of commerce between the new states as allies and confederates. 5. “To conclude a consular convention between all, which should clearly and distinctly lay down the functions and prerogatives of their respective consuls. 6. “To take into consideration the means of giving effect to the declarations of the President of the United States of America, in his message to the Congress of last year, with a view to frustrating any future idea of colonization on this continent by the powers of Europe, and to resist any prin- ciple of interference in our internal affairs. 7. “To establish in concert those principles of the rights of nations, which are of a controversial nature, and especially those which relate to two nations, one of which is engaged in war, whilst the other is neutral. 8. “Lastly, to declare on what footing the political and commercial relations of those parts of our hemisphere, which, like the island of Santo Domingo or Haiti, are sepa- rated from their ancient government, and have not yet been recognized by any European or American power, should be placed.” Bolivar’s first invitation did not include the United States, which was afterward invited by representatives of the Co- lombian and Mexican Governments. 2 President Santander 2 This has led some writers to assert that Bolivar was an enemy to the United States. But this is not borne out by the facts, as is shown in the excellent study of Prof. W. R. Shepherd, in his pamphlet, “Bolivar and the United States.’* While Bolivar did not believe that Colombia and other Latin American coun- tries were ready to follow the United States in her federal constitution, yet he spoke many times of the wonderful country toward the North. In his famous Jamaica letter he wrote: “As long as our compatriots do not acquire the political talent and virtues that distinguish our brothers of the North, systems entirely popular far from being advantageous to us, 1 fear greatly, may come to be our ruin. Unhappily these qualities in the requisite degrees seem very distant from us. On the con- trary we are dominated by the vices contracted under the rule of a nation like the Spanish, which has excelled only in pride, ambition, prejudice and avarice.” (Blanco Fombona. “Bolivar y la Liberacion de Sur America,” Vol. I, page 383.) Concerning Bolivar’s evident desire that the United States participate in the EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 107 of Colombia, referring to this matter, said: “In regard to the United States I have believed it important to invite them to the Assembly at Panama, being convinced that our allies would see with satisfaction the taking part in the delibera- tions concerning our common interests such sincere and illustrious friends.” President John Quincy Adams, although warmly espous- ing the cause of the young southern nations, yet hesitated at first to accept the invitation because the United States was neutral in the conflict with Spain, with whom we had been treating for the purchase of Florida. However, on Decem- ber 26, 1825, the President sent to the Senate the appoint- ment as plenipotentiaries of the United States of two emi- nent men, Richard C. Anderson of Kentucky, and John Sergeant of Pennsylvania. There was such determined opposition by the Senate that it looked as though the pro- posal would be defeated. The discussions concerning the invitation to join this first League of Nations make strangely interesting reading in view of the Senate’s debates concerning the Covenant of the Versailles League. Happily it only required five months in these early days to reach an affirmative vote and confirm the commissioner’s nomination. Their instructions, dated May 8, 1826, were drawn by Henry Clay and signed by him as Secretary of State. INSTRUCTIONS OF UNITED STATES DELEGATES Covering a wide range, they disclosed the broad and far- reaching views to which, in cooperation with President Adams, he sought to give effect. First the instructions de- clared that the President could not have declined the invita- tion to the Congress without subjecting the United States to the reproach of insensibility to the deepest concerns of the Panama Congress O’Leary, his secretary, writes on page 36 of “Brief Data for the Diplomatic History of Colombia,” as follows: “Colombia ordered Salazar, its Minister in Washington, to sound the intentions of that government regarding the great assembly and in case it were favorably disposed formally to invite it to send plenipotentiaries to Panama, who, in union with those from Colombia and allies, should concert efficacious means of re- sisting all foreign colonization on the American Continent and to the application of legitimate principles to the American states in general.” (“Bolivar y la Liberacion de Sur America,” Vol. II, p. 621.) 108 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM American hemisphere. Moreover, the assembling of a Con- gress would “form a new epoch in human affairs.” Not only would the fact itself challenge the attention of the civilized world, but it was confidently hoped that the Con- gress would “entitle itself to the affection and lasting grati- tude of all America, by the wisdom and liberality of its principles” and by the establishment of a new guarantee for the great interests which would engage its deliberations. At the same time the fact was emphasized that the Congress was to be regarded as a diplomatic body, without powers of ordinary legislation. It was not to be an amphictyonic coun- cil, invested with power finally to decide controversies be- tween the American states or to regulate in any respect their conduct, but was expected to afford opportunities for free and friendly conference and to facilitate the conclusion of treaties. After these preliminary explanations, the instructions pro- ceeded to point out that it was not the intention of the United States to change its pacific and neutral policy. While, there- fore, the Congress probably would consider the future prosecution of the war with Spain by the existing belliger- ents, the delegates of the United States were not to enter into a discussion of that subject, but were to confine them- selves strictly to subjects in which all the American nations, whether belligerent or neutral, might have an interest. One of these was the maintenance of peace, which was declared to be the greatest want of America. In regard to European wars, confidence was expressed that the policy of all America would be the same, that of peace and neutrality, which the United States had constantly labored to preserve. On this supposition, the greatest im- portance was, said the instructions, attached to questions of maritime neutrality. The delegates were to bring forward the proposition to abolish war against private property and non-combatants upon the ocean, as formerly proposed by Dr. Franklin; but as this might not be readily adopted, they were authorized to propose that free ships should make free goods and that enemy ships should make enemy goods, both rules being considered to operate in favor of neutrality. The EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 109 delegates were also to seek a definition of blockade, and were, besides, to deal with the subject of contraband. In regard to commercial intercourse, the instructions in* corporated the most liberal views. The delegates of the United States were not to seek exclusive privileges even as against the European powers. They were to observe the most-favored-nation principle, so that any favors in com- merce or in navigation granted by an American nation to any foreign power should extend to every other American nation ; and were to oppose the imposition of discriminating duties on importations or exportations on account of the flag. As for the Monroe Doctrine, the delegates of the United States, without committing the parties to the support of any particular boundaries or to a joint resistance in any future case, were desired to propose a joint declaration that each American state, acting for and binding only itself, would not allow a new European colony to be established within its territories. Concerning Cuba and Haiti, which the Congress might consider, the stating of a satisfactory position was much more difficult. As to Haiti (which, as a “negro republic,” was closely associated with the slavery question) the opinion was expressed that it was not necessary for all America to agree upon it. Respecting Cuba, the United States would like to see it free itself, but could not see its freedom guar- anteed by other powers, European or American, neither could it look with favor on its being conquered and ruled by Colombia and Mexico, which was reported to be the plan of those countries. The instructions further suggested that a joint declara- tion be made in favor of freedom of religious worship ; that concerning government, the United States preferred their own confederacy to all other forms, but as they allowed no foreign interference in their own government, they were “equally scrupulous in refraining from all interference in the original structure or subsequent interior movement of the governments of other independent nations.” Anderson, who was then Minister to Colombia, started to Panama, but died on the way at Puerto Bello. Sergeant saw 110 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM the uselessness of making the attempt but later went to Tacu- baya where the second session was scheduled to take place. Delegates from Colombia and Peru went early to the Isthmus and began their parleys almost a year before the formal opening of the Congress, which took place on June 22, 1826. THE CONGRESS IN ACTION In an inaugural address the Peruvian deputy Vidaurre spoke of two things that threatened peace in America — imperialism of certain states (not then referring to the United States) and the anarchy within other states. “Let us form one family, forgetting the names which distinguish each country and let us be brothers all,” said the distin- guished Peruvian. Panama proved to be anything but a propitious locality for the developing of such a brotherhood. Its unhealth fulness, connected with the small attendance, caused an early adjournment. The principles adopted at this Congress were : 1. Countries to aid one another with military and naval forces if attacked by foreign nations; 2. To settle all disputes by friendly arbitration (thus it is seen that arbitration originated in Latin America) ; 3. Extend the rights of citizenship in each country to citizens of other American countries; 4. Renounce the traffic in slaves ; and 5. Guarantee mutually the integrity of each American state. It was decided that an Assembly should be organized to meet every two years to : 1. Negotiate treaties to promote satisfactory relations be- tween the American countries ; 2. Contribute to maintenance of peace among the Ameri- can nations ; 3. Forward the habit of conciliation among allied and foreign powers ; 4. Offer its good offices to terminate wars. EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 111 FAILURE OF ADJOURNED SESSION The Congress adjourned on July 15th to meet at Tacu- baya, a suburb of the City of Mexico. One of the delegates from each country returned home to report to his govern- ment and secure the ratification of the agreements of the Congress, and the other proceeded to Tacubaya to await the opening of the second session. Only Colombia ap- proved the proposed agreement. Several representatives remained in Mexico for some time awaiting such approval, but not even the Mexican government itself would face the matter, since a revolution started about then that took all the officials’ time. So the representatives of the United States and other countries finally left for home, with nothing accomplished. As a Peruvian writer says : “These were platonic votes in an hour of grave dissension, noble ideals confronted by pre- mature wars.” Even Bolivar himself seemed to have lost confidence in the movement, before the meeting’s ad- journment. His power had already begun to wane, and about this time he left Peru, discredited, and returned to Colombia, with the hope of staying the movement against him there. Of the Congress he said : “The Panama Con- gress, which would have been admirable if it had been more efficacious, reminds me of that Greek madman, who, from the summit of a rock, pretended to direct the movement of vessels on the high seas.” The various ships of state went to pieces rapidly and Bolivar, everywhere discredited, died of a broken heart. The seed planted by him were, however, destined to grow, slowly it is true, through the years, with both North and Latin Americans working away at the problems that his far-seeing vision had realized must be solved before the American republics can attain their rightful place in world leadership. While much is yet to be accomplished, at least the following of Bolivar’s Panama program has been worked out : arbitration, abolition of slavery, settlement of most boundary disputes, standing together against European in- trusion, building of the Panama Canal, the uniting of all American nations in the Pan American Union. 112 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM SUCCESSORS TO BOLIVAR Soon after the Panama Congress Bolivar died, but it is most interesting to see how other Latin American leaders went on amid all kinds of discouragements, patiently work- ing at the problem of unity. The government of Mexico in March, 1831, invited all the republics of America to attend a conference to be held, at the option of a majority, either in Tacubaya, Panama or Lima. In the absence of tangible results, Mexico induced Venezuela to second it in the task of : “promoting the union and close alliance of the new states for defence against foreign invasion; for the acceptance of friendly mediation of the neutral states; for the settlement of all disagreements and disputes of whatever nature that might happen to arise between the sister republics ; and for the framing and promulgation of a code of public law regu- lating their mutual relations.” The Mexican statesman, Juan de Dios Canedo, as Min- ister to Peru and other South American states from 1831 to 1839, and later as Minister of Foreign Relations, worked assiduously at the task of union during this period. But, as Nunez Ortega points out, the work of Senor Canedo seemed to be lost because of the rivalries between Bolivia, Peru, Chile and Buenos Aires, and because of continued internal disturbances, the anarchy and extreme poverty of these states during this period. But the idea, like all true visions, would not down. Co- lombia and Mexico having failed as leaders to bring about desired unity, Peru now became the noble knight who was to do valiant sendee for many years for the ideal. The occasion for the calling of the next congress was the movement of Spain, encouraged by the Ecuadorian Juan Jose Flores, to reconquer her colonies on the Pacific. THE “AMERICAN CONGRESS” This was called the “American Congress” and met at Lima from Dec. 1, 1847, 1 ° March 10, 1848, on the initiative EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 113 of the republics of Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Nueva Granada and Peru. The fundamental ideas of this second assembly did not differ from those of the first : the territorial integrity and political independence of the federated states; defensive alliance against aggression of foreign powers ; unification of the rights of Americans; confirmation of agreements from 1810-1824 that fixed the frontiers of the new republics; solidarity in the repression of interior anarchy; defense of a democratic regime ; abolition of slavery, and an ideal fra- ternity. Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Nueva Granada and Peru sent delegates to the conference. These delegates recognized in the treaty signed Feb. 8, 1848, that “the American Republics joined together by the principles of origin, language, religion and customs ; by their geographical position ; by the common cause which they had defended ; by the analogy of their in- stitutions, and, above all, by their common necessities and reciprocal interests cannot consider themselves except as parts of one and the same nation.” The plenipotentiaries meeting in Lima, as those that met in Panama, resolved that a Congress formed by the min- isters of the contracting states should meet every three years, more or less, in extraordinary session. The zealous patriot- ism of these nations, however, thought it saw a danger to their autonomy in the permanency of this proposed con- gress. So they called it an Assembly, in order not to con- found it with the national congress. Its attributes, very much limited, consisted mainly in the interpretation of treaties that the interested parties might conclude among themselves and in the right of benevolent intervention in future conflicts in order to propose conciliatory measures. Thus it was that a moral power, a species of advisory board, “inefficient and solemn,” was proposed in this period of American evolution. This conference was distinguished, however, by a tenta- tive practical agreement providing that: “the natural prod- ucts and manufactured articles of any of the confederated republics that should be introduced in other republics in national bottoms would only be charged one-third part of the importation duties that were charged to outside nations.” 114 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Thus it was that the political discussions were converted into a practical resolution. A half century later Secretary of State Blaine adopted the same plan, as a necessary ante- cedent to Pan Americanism. While these States were sitting in council to devise means of uniting America to protect themselves from foreign invasion, the United States was at war with Mexico. So of course neither she nor Mexico had any part in the Congress. Unfortunately the decisions of this “American Congress” met with little more enthusiasm in the various national gov- ernments than had those of the Panama gathering. BEGINNING OF SUSPICION OF THE UNITED STATES The expeditions of the North American filibuster, Walker, against Central America led to the next movement for unity among the Spanish-American countries, which had now be- come fearful of the United States as well as of Europe. Peru, again leading, sent arms and money to her brothers in Central America and initiated a movement which resulted in the so-called “Continental Treaty” or Triple Alliance (Pacto Tripartito) which was signed September 15, 1856, in Santi- ago by the representatives of Peru, Ecuador and Chile. This treaty was more careful than previous ones to guard the rights of each country, to conserve its autonomy and the in- tegrity of its territory. The securing of the signatures of the other Hispanic American countries was left to Peru. In presenting the treaty to Argentina, in 1862, the Peruvian minister expressed the ideas behind it, as follows : “The government of Peru, witnessing what has recently taken place in Mexico and Santo Domingo, which signifies a general danger to independent America, believes that one of the first steps that ought to be taken to ward off this dan- ger is the unification, in the republics of this continent, of certain principles which should be made a part of their inter- national law, and the development of friendly relations and good understanding among these peoples and governments in order to eliminate in the future all kinds of war. * * * Because such hostile acts have even overtaken Anglo-Saxon EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 115 America, a just alarm intimates the arrival of an hour when we should proceed to an understanding concerning the bases of a general American peace and union, in order that the nations of this continent may form an alliance, if the same attacks should be made on their liberty that were made against Mexico.” Guatemala, in agreeing to sign the pact, said : “There has been an endeavor to impress all these states with the idea that the happiness of the whole continent, including the two Americas, depends on subjection to that republic (the United States of America) sustaining that the ‘Manifest Destiny’ of that republic is to make uniform her principles and interests with those of every other American nation.” DIFFERENCES BETWEEN VARIOUS COUNTRIES Colombia, in response to Peru’s invitation to sign the Triple Alliance agreement, accepted the invitation but pointed out to the Peruvian ministry that the Colombian government had already planned to invite the governments of both Amer- icas to send representatives to an International Congress of Republics, to be held in Panama as soon as it seemed neces- sary to meet the evidently hostile intentions of Europe. Co- lombia did shortly after issue a statement to the American governments which proposed an “American Decalogue,” consisting of ten articles looking toward united action of all America, to be discussed at the conference provided for in Article XX of the Triple Alliance agreement. In response to this note the government of Costa Rica proposed “a new treaty by which the United States would contract the solemn duty of respecting and cause to be respected the indepen- dence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of her sister re- publics of this continent.” The governments of Mexico, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Hon- duras, Colombia and Costa Rica either signed the Triple Alliance agreement or endorsed its ideas. Argentina chal- lenged the whole assumption of the treaty, saying through Minister Elisandre : “Independent America is a political en- tity that does not exist, nor is it possible to constitute it by diplomatic fulminations. America contains independent na- 116 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM tions with their own institutions and means of government and cannot form one political entity.” Argentina had now found out the advantages of her geo- graphical situation. She was to receive capital and immigra- tion from Europe. Indeed she already felt in her ports the rumbling of a tumultuous immigration and thought that there existed for the Spanish-American republics more ties, more interests, more harmony with Europe than with one another. She did not fear the aggressions of monarchical governments. Indeed such men as Alberdi argued that it was from Europe that Argentina might expect the most help. In international relations then she proposed to do away with antagonisms with the governments and the peo- ples of Europe and to bring together, on the contrary, all the forces and elements that were able to help in developing her national resources; to foment the reconstruction of the na- tionalities of America that imprudently had divided and subdivided ; not to place herself in opposition to other gov- ernments because they do not accept her form of govern- ment ; to look for harmony with the United States instead of excluding it and keeping it off at a distance ; to resist every aggression of American states to conquer them and to annul the form of republican government; to abandon the idea of an American Congress as impossible and to substitute the signing of treaties of alliance to guarantee the defense and common security of all America. “Facing this Colombian position of platonic congresses,” says Garcia Calderon, “we find the Argentinian belief in the utility of alliances. Neither in 1856 nor today is the Ameri- can continent unified. Deserts, undiscovered stretches of territory, geographical differences separate these peoples. To force a political unity on diverse nations without creating interests, without joining up territories, without reconstruct- ing sterile national division, was a utopian scheme.” The skepticism of the Argentine politicians threatened to destroy the noble Americanism of the liberators, thought the Peruvian statesmen, one of whom observed pessimistically : “This is the first time since our great Revolution that the voice of a government has arisen opposing what for the EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 117 Americans has come to be a principle and dogma founded in the glories of the past, in the hope of the future, and the fraternity of all times. The Argentine Republic was the first soldier of the independence of America. If today, when danger is near, the means of combating it is sought, she prefers to desert, denying the principal basis of her gran- deur, not recognizing in herself anything but a mixture of nationalities with isolated and diverse interests, she could not forget without hurting her deserved renown, that she was also the first in recognizing American unity through the acts of her greatest citizens and the sacrifice of her treasures and blood.” Whatever objections Argentina, more practical than her tropical neighbors, may have had to this merry round of meetings, that worked for a close federation of American nations, she was always a leader in advocating arbitration — compulsory arbitration at that. This position was clearly stated in a notable paper, written by Minister Irygoyen, in answer to Colombia’s invitation to the second Panama Con- gress. Senor Irygoyen said : “Arbitration is certainly a noble aspiration of the present day and the Argentine government can point with pride to its endorsement, from an early date, of that measure which wisely reconciles the requirements of justice with the gener- ous sentiment of mankind. It had occasion to stipulate for it with the most excellent government of Chile in 1856, to settle boundary disputes then existing and those which might thereafter arise. It declared in 1874, in official documents published to the world, that it was ‘resolved, with or without treaties, to settle all international controversies by arbitra- tion’ ; and, faithful to those declarations, it submitted in 1876 its differences with Paraguay to arbitration, after a long war pursued for reasons of honor and of security 'in which its arms and those of its allies completely repelled the advances of that nation.” Along with Argentina, Chile, the other most southern country, blessed with stable government and no doubt in- 118 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM fluenced with imperialistic ambitions, had in different ways shown inclinations to “throw the monkey wrench into the machinery” of a smooth-working American unity toward which the countries of the more tropical lands were con- tinuously working. Following her war with Peru and Bo- livia, when she added three rich northern provinces to her territory, she was naturally more careful than ever about entering into unions and blanket agreements concerning arbitration. But Peru continued her ardent support of the American Ideal and in 1864 again invited the American nations to a new Congress in order to give the continent “a peculiar form.” The special occasion for the Congress was of course the intervention of Spain in Santo Domingo and the inter- vention of France in Mexico. Peru also showed practically her sympathy for Mexico by sending a large amount of war material and money to Mexico, with a special salutation in the form of a gold medal to the intrepid little Indian, Juarez. The principles submitted to the assembly were not new: To formulate a new family of nations ; to maintain the integrity of their territory ; to oppose foreign domination ; to provide for compulsory arbitration and to discuss certain practical questions — commercial and postal conventions, a common currency and an exchange of products. SECOND “AMERICAN CONGRESS” This Second American Congress met in Lima, from No- vember 14, 1864, to March 13, 1865. In its sessions, as also in those of the previous one, fears were expressed of the way the United States was working out its “Manifest Des- tiny” program. One of the delegates said: “Liberty is not unknown either in monarchies or in republics ; it is enjoyed in monarchical England as also in the most advanced of the republics. The friendship of Europe should be sought. The natural preponderance of a powerful neighbor disturbed us all. The political policies of North America continue to be threatening and the enthusiasm for her statesmen during 1826 is now lost.” The Congress was attended by many eminent men: Paz EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 119 Soldan of Peru; Manuel Montt, founder of a political party and president of Chile; Antonio Leocadio Guzman, liberal politician of great influence in Venezuela; and finally, Sar- miento, leader of democracy in Argentina. The danger from Spain gave a tragic prestige to the deliberations of this assembly. Unanimously it rejected the claims of Spain. As in the times of the great Revolution, the international cords that bound them together were strengthened and an alliance between Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, Salvador, Bo- livia and Chile covenanting to defend their own political life and their national integrity, to agree to compulsory arbitra- tion, reciprocal commercial, navigation and postal exchange, was the final decision of this powerful gathering of peoples. But the governments seem to have paid no more heed to this congress than to the one at Panama and the first one at Lima, so that the proposals were not formally accepted by a single country. VARIOUS OTHER EFFORTS AT UNITY Peru and Chile entered into an offensive and defensive treaty in 1865, because of the threat of Spain to reconquer her Pacific colonies. Ecuador and Bolivia later joined in the pact, which found a practical application when Spain did actually attempt to reconquer these countries, and they were called to a common defense of their sovereignty. On May 18, 1867, while still at war with Spain, a treaty was signed at Lima between Chile, Ecuador and Bolivia relating to questions of international law. The unity of Central America was the object of many efforts during this period, as it has continued to be up to the present. In 1876 Guatemala convoked a Central-American congress for this purpose, but owing to an outbreak of war between that coun- try and Salvador the invitations were withdrawn and the congress was held on the 20th of January, 1887. As a result of that conference others were celebrated in Costa Rica in 1888, and in Salvador in 1889, when the idea of organizing the republics of Central America was further discussed. As the eminent jurist, Alejandro Alvarez, says : 120 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “The states of Latin America, in spite of the fact that they had abandoned by this time the idea of a confederation, continued to consider themselves as a family of nations, in which friendly relationships, close commercial intercourse and a consensus of agreement on external policy should exist.” In short, Senor Alvarez declares that the idea of solidar- ity did not disappear, but assumed a more practical aspect in conformity with the international life of these countries. This interpretation is confirmed by the fact that there as- sembled in Lima Dec. 9, 1877, by the invitation of the Peruvian government, an American congress of jurists to unify the principles of private international law. There were present representatives from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecua- dor, Peru, Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras and Venezuela. This congress agreed upon two conventions, one relating to private international law and the other to extradition. The meeting had a sad ending, when its sessions were interrupted by Chile’s forces capturing and sacking the city of Lima. From 1866 to 1872, which covered the period of the war between Spain and the republics of Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Ecuador, the remarkable and successful efforts at mediation of the United States between Spain and these republics form one of the most noteworthy events in the history of Pan Americanism. The final and definite conference, called for the purpose indicated, took place at Washington on October 29, 1870, under the presidency of Mr. Fish, then Secretary of State: On April 11, 1871, an armistice was signed, which “armistice or truce” was to “continue indefinitely.” Under the terms of this armistice hostilities might not be resumed by either of the belligerents “save three years after having expressly and explicitly notified the other.” In 1880 Colombia invited the republics of America to a congress to meet at Panama in 1881 for the purpose of secur- ing the adhesion of these republics to the principle of arbi- tration incorporated in a convention which Colombia had celebrated with Chile. All the countries invited, except Mexico and Argentina, accepted the invitation. Owing, however, to the fact .nat Chile interpreted the objects of the EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 121 conference as constituting a desire to intervene in that coun- try’s external policy, a campaign of opposition was begun, with the result that when the congress met, there were only present the representatives of three Central-American re- publics. In 1883, on the centenary of the birth of Bolivar, in the city of Caracas, the representatives of Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, Salvador, Mexico and Venezuela signed a convention recommending arbitration. In 1887-1888 there were convened respectively at Rio de Janeiro and Lima two sanitary congresses, Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay being represented at the first of these, and Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador and Peru at the second. In 1888-1889 a congress on private international law was held at Montevideo. The invitations were issued jointly by Argentina and Uruguay, and, besides those two countries there were representatives present from Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Peru. Equally important with these various conferences in show- ing the earnest desire of America for unity is the long list of authors and statesmen who have worked incessantly for this great idea. Vicuna Mackenna in his “Estudios His- toricos” gives a list of thirty well-known publicists, along with their contributions to the subject. These men differed very widely in their plans and in their inclusion or exclusion of the United States, Brazil and Europe in connection with the federation, but they all firmly believed in the necessity of American solidarity. Among the best of these studies was the thesis presented by the celebrated Argentine statesman, Juan Bautista Al- berdi, to the University of Santiago, Chile, as a requirement for the degree of Doctor of Laws. He outlined the follow- ing subjects as those which ought to be discussed by a Pan American Congress: 1. First, adjustment of boundaries between the Ameri- can states ; 2. The regulation of maritime and river traffic; 3. Protection of commerce; 4. Unifying customs duties; 122 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM 5. Uniformity in currency, weights and measures; 6. Uniformity in banking arrangements ; 7. Foundation of a bank for public credit for the con- tinent ; 8. Validation of incorporation; 9. Validation of scientific and professional diplomas; 10. Copyrights; 11. Construction of international railroads; 12. Postal unions; 13. Extradition of criminals; 14. Limitation of armies; 15. Establishment of an international court of peace; 16. Determination of American international law; 17. Prevention and control of war; 18. Development of colonization; 19. Construction of a Trans- Andean railroad. As Mackenna well says, as he refers to the lack of practical accomplishments favorable to unity: “One most consoling conclusion is clear, in this solemn hour, when this subject is agitated in parliament and in the press, and has become a never-ending study for youth — this movement for unity has been maintained without faltering from the first years of our independence until the present day (1862) when it has become a universal American agitation Ernesto Quesada of Argentina sums up these conferences as follows: “These conventions remain as a monument to the honor of Bolivar and Latin America as heralds of the lofty aspirations which they embody; and the republics of the New Continent, true to them, have generally followed the principle of arbitration for the settlement of interna- tional disputes.” Dr. Francisco Castaneda of Salvador, who has just made (1920) a most interesting study of these efforts at American unity, says : “Such has been the process by means of which in evolu- tionary growth across the years and under the influence of diverse elements and circumstances, American friendship has developed. Born because of natural desires, with a common perspective of fear, it has received a healthful expansion in EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD PAN AMERICANISM 123 searching for the realization of the ideals of modern inter- national law. That which in its origin was the aspiration of a race at present is the bond of union and obligatory pro- gram of all the countries of the continent without reference to the various ethnic factors nor to the distinct sociological conditions. “Pan Americanism has enlarged the political horizon and amplified its forms so that it now embraces every subject that refers to prosperity and the development of the peoples of the western hemisphere. Complying with that is the most far-reaching interpretation of Mr. James Blaine’s declara- tion at the inauguration of the first congress, so beautifully interpreted and broadened by Secretary of State Elihu Root, at the Third Pan American Conference in Rio de Janeiro, and a few days afterwards in Buenos Aires, when he said: ‘We do not make alliances. This is our traditional attitude which we received from George Washington and which his successors have respected always. But there are alliances which, although they are not derived from written docu- ments and treaties, are very formal ones. We have thus an alliance with our sister nations upon this continent, one of sentiment, of fraternity, of the common prosecution of the ideals of liberty and justice, one which seeks a common good for all.’ “Here is the synthesis of the new policy. Here is the new and important phase of the subject which should be consid- ered. Partial alliances have no reason for existing. Those that are necessary, those which duty imposes upon us and which must be fought for at all times, are those which unite in a strong embrace and by a common law all the peoples of the continent. This is the elevated point of view taken by thinkers and statesmen, and on the success of which depends the developmenl of continental policies and universal good will.” Sources of Further Information on Early Efforts Toward Pan Americanism Aranda, Ricardo: Congresos y Conferencias Internacionales en que ha tornado parte el Peru. 124 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Calderon, F. GarcIa: La Creacion de un Continente. Candler : Inter- American Acquaintances. Castaneda, Francisco: Nuevos Estudios. Lockey, Jos. : Pan Americanism, Its Beginnings. Maurtura, Anibal: La Idea Pan Americana y la Cuestion del Arbitraje. Moore, John B.: American Diplomacy, Chapter on Pan Ameri- canism. O’Leary, Daniel F. : El Congreso Internacional de Panama en 1S26. O’Leary, Daniel F. : Bolivar. Quesada, Ernesto: La Evolucion del Panamericanismo. Robertson, Wm. Spence: Rise of Spanish American Republics, Chap. VII. Urutia, Francisco Jose: Los Estados Unidos de America y las Republicas, Hispano Americanas, de 1810 a 1830. Files of “Inter-America” contain valuable material on this subject. Chapter IV EARLY EFFORTS OF THE UNITED STATES TOWARD AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP We have seen in former chapters that the leaders of His- panic America during their struggle for independence and the development of their national life thought much of con- tinental solidarity, and regarded so highly the United States that they modeled their governments after that of the re- public of the north. We now come to look at the other side of the shield and inquire concerning the attitude of the United States towards Hispanic America. It is of greatest importance to clear up this matter because many Latin American leaders, especially during the last twenty-five years when the prejudice toward the United States has been most largely developed, have claimed that the United States, if not hostile to Hispanic American in- dependence, at least did nothing to aid it. Such writers as President Saenz Pena of Argentina, Pardo of Brazil and Fombona of Venezuela have made much of this argument in their general program of opposition to this country. Some twenty years ago the Mexican Ambassador, Matias Romero, wrote an article in The North American Review that attracted wide attention. In it he took the ground that the United States did not render either material or moral as- sistance to the Spanish colonies in their struggle for inde- pendence. Senator Mooney, of Mississippi, answered the paper, expressing the feelings of most North Americans when he said that Romero’s contention left a disagreeable impression on the minds of North Americans, who gloried in the fact that their government had always sympathized with peoples struggling for liberty, and especially so in re- gard to the peoples on this continent. 125 126 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM PERIOD OF BENEVOLENT NEUTRALITY While it must be admitted that the young and compara- tively weak government of the United States found it wiser to declare officially her neutrality in the war between Spain and her colonies, this was not due to any lack of sympathy with the colonies but to the policy adopted on the advice of Washington concerning “entangling alliances,” which was from the first interpreted to include non-intervention in other nations’ affairs and non-participation in arrangements between other governments. The case of Great Britain, which some of the Latin American historians praise for her help as much as they condemn the United States for her lack of it, was entirely different. She was playing the game of world politics and she had her own purposes to fulfill in encouraging the patriotic cause in the Spanish colonies, as is well revealed by the boast of Canning, idle as it was, when he said that he had brought a new world into existence to redress the balance of the old. The United States was work- ing from just exactly the opposite motive — to keep America out of the eternal question of the balance of power in Europe and have it develop along its own distinct democratic lines. Time has shown that the young and weak government of the United States rendered its best service to its southern neigh- bors by saving its strength to protect all America from Europe, rather than by rendering some little ineffectual aid to the Spanish colonies, who, it was evident, would be able to gain their freedom unassisted. The neutrality declared was indeed a benevolent neutral- ity, similar to the one declared in the first part of the recent World War, when the liberal forces could count on much help from the United States. The various steps openly taken and the frank avowals of sympathy by the United States Government for the southern colonies, confirm the deep interest felt in their welfare and the hopes for success in their fight for independence. This sympathy was so clear to Spain that she made it the reason for delaying several years the signing of the treaty which conveyed Florida to the United States. Indeed President Monroe at one time con- fessed that, from the first, the struggle was regarded “not EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 127 in the light of an ordinary insurrection or rebellion, but as a civil war between parties nearly equal, having as to neutral powers, equal rights.” One of the first approaches toward the great subject oi American solidarity that history reveals to us was that of a Brazilian student named Maia, to Thomas Jefferson in 1787, when both were in Paris. Maia was one of a company of conspirators who were planning the independence of Brazil. In appealing to Jefferson to help Brazil, this young student struck the keynote of Pan Americanism, which in spite of many vicissitudes, was to ring through all time. The United States should be their natural friend, said Maia, “because nature in making us inhabitants of the same continent has in some way united us in the bonds of a common patriotism.” Even before this a Mexican had spoken to Jefferson about a possible revolution in Mexico, which drew from our repre- sentative the following, written to his friend Jay: “However distant we may be, both in condition and disposition, from taking an active part in any commotion in that country, nature has placed it too near to us to make its movements altogether indifferent to our interests.” This beginning of interest in Hispanic American affairs grew steadily with Jef- ferson until it became one of the outstanding interests of his life. The friendship of the people of the United States was shown by the help that Hamilton gave Miranda, the fore- runner of South American independence, when he came to the United States in 1805 to fit out an expedition to free the South American colonies. He received at least enough en- couragement from President Jefferson, who had already shown his strong faith in the great future of the American continent, to write the President, “If the happy prediction which you pronounced upon the future destinies of our dear Colombia is to be accomplished in our day, may Providence grant that it may be under your auspices.” Two years later Jefferson appointed a special agent, Gen. James Wilkinson, to visit at least Mexico and Cuba to thus demonstrate the interest of the United States in its southern neighbors. Writing about this same time to Governor Claiborne of Louisiana Jefferson said, “The truth is that the patriots of 128 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Spain have no warmer friends than the administration of the United States. * * * We consider their interests and ours as the same, and the object of both must be to exclude all European influence from this hemisphere.” It was the year 1810, the most memorable in the annals of Hispanic America, that brought a definite open movement by the Government of the United States to form closer relations with the Spanish colonies. In that year revolts from Spain were formally declared in Venezuela, Argentina and Mexico. When news of these reached Washington President Madi- son appointed Joel R. Poinsett, a brilliant politician of South Carolina who was destined to play a prominent part in inter- American relations for the next twenty years, to visit Buenos Aires and probably Chile and Peru on a friendly mission. Because this appointment marks a new departure in the for- eign policy of the United States, it seems well to give here his letter of instructions, dated June 28, 1810, and written by Secretary of State James Monroe as follows : “As a crisis is approaching which must produce great changes in the situation of Spanish America, and may dis- solve altogether its colonial relations to Europe, and as the geographical position of the United States, and other obvious considerations, give them an intimate interest in whatever may affect the destiny of that part of the American Conti- nent, it is our duty to turn our attention to this important subject, and to take such steps, not incompatible with the neutral character and honest policy of the United States, as the occasion renders proper. With this in view, you have been selected to proceed, without delay, to Buenos Aires. You will make it your object, whenever it may be proper, to diffuse the impression that the United States cherish the sincerest good will toward the people of Spanish America as neighbors, as belonging to the same portion of the globe and as having a mutual interest in cultivating friendly inter- course ; that this disposition will exist whatever may be their internal system or European relation, with respect to which no interference of any sort is pretended; and that, in the event of a political separation from the parent country, and of the establishment of an independent system of national EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 129 government, it will coincide with the sentiments and policy of the United States to promote the most friendly relations, and the most liberal intercourse, between the inhabitants of this hemisphere, as having all a common interest, and as lying under a common obligation to maintain that system of peace, justice and good will, which is the only source or hap- piness for nations. “Whilst you inculcate these as the principles and disposi- tions of the United States, it will be no less proper to ascer- tain those on the other side, not only toward the United States, but in reference to the great nations of Europe, and to the commercial and other connections with them, respec- tively ; and, generally, to inquire into the state, the character- istics, and the proportions, as to numbers, intelligence, and wealth, of the several parties, the amount of population, the extent and organization of the military force, and the pecu- niary resources of the country. “The real as well as ostensible object of your mission is to explain the mutual advantages of commerce with the United States, to promote liberal and stable regulations, and to trans- mit reasonable information on the subject. In order that you may render the more service in this respect, and that you may, at the same time, enjoy the greater protection and re- spectability, you will be furnished with a credential letter, such as is held by sundry agents of the United States in the West Indies, and as was lately held by one at Havana, and under the sanction of which you will give the requisite at- tention to commercial objects.” That the appointment of Poinsett was appreciated and remembered is seen in the following which appeared in La Prensa, of Buenos Aires, on the occasion of the visit of the United States battleships to that city in the critical days of 1917: “Economic relations, liberal and ample, were initiated in 1810 between the United States and the River Plate. Since then the Spanish colonies in their struggle for independence have not lacked the help and moral support of the Union, although at certain times the necessities of European poli- ISO PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM tics compelled the withholding of practical help. The per- severing work of eminent men always advanced the cause and culminated in the recognition of our independence, fol- lowed by the proclamation of the Monroe Doctrine. The attitude recently proclaimed by President Wilson in his im- mortal message in regard to Pan Americanism is the same that moved the Union to send an agent to Buenos Aires in 1810 to cut across the plans of the Holy Alliance and to prevent the invasion and conquest of America in 1823. Behold the hand of Argentina now extended in this crisis, marking her frank adhesion to the attitude of the great Republic of the North.” Poinsett also went to Chile, where he was received with the greatest enthusiasm, President Carrera welcoming him in a speech which was filled with admiration of the United States. Poinsett, in reply, said that the Americans of the North had the deepest interest in the events taking place in these countries and ardently desired the prosperity and hap- piness of their southern brethren, and that he would inform his government about the desire of his Excellency for friendly relations, considering it a great honor to be the first to establish relationships between these two nations, which should be united as friends and allies. Robert K. Lowry was sent about the same time to Vene- zuela, where he counseled the leaders of the incipient democ- racy in their first attempts in republican government. He remained in Venezuela until independence was secured, en- gaging in business afterward until his death. Thomas Sumter, a third agent, appointed by Madison at this time, was received at Petropolis by the Prince Regent, John VI, as United States Minister to Brazil. This marked the beginning of a century of close relations with Brazil. The Brazilian representative to Washington, Jose M. de Camara, was received May 13, 1810. Brazil was the first American power to endorse the Monroe Doctrine and on the other hand the United States was the first foreign power to recognize the Empire of Brazil, May 26, 1824, a year and a half after its independence was declared. EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 131 As the well-known Brazilian internationalist, Pereira Pinto, said in 1865 : “It was the North American Republic that first recognized the independence of Brazil. Great Britain was impelled to favor our freedom because of her liberal system of government and her tenacious aspirations to abolish slavery, but hesitated to do so because of her historic and faithful ally, Portugal. The United States consequently with that clear attitude which they had adopted toward all the American peoples that had separated them- selves from the metropolis, extended us a brotherly hand and invited us to take our place at the council table of the nations of the globe. Let us give, then, a vote of gratitude to this people, the most powerful nation of the New World.” On January 15, 1811, the Congress of the United States of America, acting in response to a secret message of Presi- dent Madison regarding the occupation of the Floridas, passed in secret session the following resolution which was one of the numerous forerunners of the Monroe Doctrine : “Taking into view the peculiar situation of Spain and of her American provinces ; and considering the influence which the destiny of the territory adjoining the southern border of the United States may have on their security, tranquillity, and commerce, — “Resolved, That the United States, under the peculiar circumstances of the existing crises cannot, without serious inquietude, see any part of the said territory pass into the hands of any foreign power ; and that a due regard to their own safety compels them to provide, under certain contin- gencies, for the temporary occupation of the said territory.” President Madison was always friendly toward his south- ern neighbors. In determining his attitude toward the in- creasingly difficult international questions he seemed always to take into his perspective the whole continent. In his annual message to Congress on November 5, 1811, Presi- dent Madison declared that attention must be given to the scenes “developing themselves among the great communities which occupy the southern portion of our own hemisphere 132 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM and extend into our own neighborhood. An enlarged phi- lanthropy and an enlightened forecast concur in imposing on the national councils an obligation to take a deep interest in their destinies, to cherish reciprocal sentiments of good will, to regard the progress of events and not to be unpre- pared for whatever order of things may be ultimately estab- lished.” As a result of President Madison’s message the first reso- lution of sympathy for Latin America ever offered in a foreign legislature was passed by the United States Congress on December io, 1811. It was as follows: “Whereas, Several of the American Spanish Provinces have represented to the United States that it has been found expedient for them to associate and form federal govern- ments upon the elective and representative plan, and to de- clare themselves free and independent ; Therefore be it “Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That they behold with friendly interest, the establishment of in- dependent sovereignties by the Spanish Provinces in Amer- ica, consequent upon the actual state of monarchy to which they belong; that as neighbors and inhabitants of the same hemisphere, the United States feel great solicitude for their welfare; and that, when these Provinces shall have attained the conditions of nations, by the just exercise of their rights, the Senate and the House will unite with the Executive in establishing with them, as sovereign and independent states, such amicable relations and commercial intercourse as may require their legislative authority.” Throughout all the fluctuations of the patriot cause in Spanish America, in the years immediately following, in spite of its own severe difficulties, the government of the United States maintained a keen interest in the struggle. In 1817 a commission composed of Messrs. Rodney, Graham and Bland went to Buenos Aires under instructions which appropriately described the policy of the United States at that time. These instructions were: EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 133 “It is by success that the colonies acquire new claims on other powers which it may comport neither with their in- terest nor duty to disregard. Several of the colonies having declared their independence and enjoyed it for some years, and the authority of Spain being shaken in others, it seems probable that, if the parties be left to themselves, the most permanent political changes will be effected. It therefore seems incumbent on the United States to watch the move- ment in its subsequent steps with particular attention, with a view to pursue such course as a just regard for all those considerations which they are bound to respect may dictate.” In spite of her deep sympathies the United States Gov- ernment did not recognize the new Republics until 1822. The matter of recognition of the struggling colonies by a country which was itself cordially hated by the reactionary monarchical governments of Europe was not the simple question it would be today. While after a hundred years it is easy to criticise the United States for slowness in action, yet a careful study of all sides of the case seems to give no evidence to question the friendship for Hispanic America, even if wise caution were used, caution which no doubt in the long run strengthened all America in maintaining its in- dependence of Europe. The first agent to visit the United States to seek recogni- tion for a Latin American nation which had declared its independence was Teles foro de Orea. He was appointed by the new Venezuelan government on July 24, 181 1, its special agent to the United States to inform that government of the declaration of independence by the “United Provinces of Venezuela” and to solicit the recognition of the new state. This action by Venezuela served to place more promi- nently before the government and people of the United States the struggle for independence of their Southern neighbors and brought out many expressions of sympathy. Notwithstanding the deep appreciation of her heroic strug- gles, Orea’s note of November 6, 1811, to the Secretary of State expressing the hope that the United States would acknowledge the independence of Venezuela did not meet with an immediate response. Monroe, who was then the 134 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Secretary of State, realized that it would cause an unfavor- able reaction, both on his own government and the Venezue- lan cause if after a premature recognition Spain should later succeed in reconquering her territory. His cautious policy was soon justified for in July, 1812, Miranda met a decided defeat at the hands of the royalist commander, Monteverde, and Venezuela again was ruled by Spain until Bolivar organized a new revolution and by his astounding success gained the title of Liberator. The next country, following Venezuela, to ask recognition was the United Provinces of La Plata. Secretary of State Adams, fresh from an extended diplomatic experience in Europe, where he had learned much of Europe’s designs on all America, felt it was not expedient for the President to acknowledge their independence at that time and induced him on several occasions to assume a conservative attitude toward the new states of Latin America. In a letter to President Monroe in August, 1818, Adams expresses his idea of the principles upon which the government should act, in these words : “But there is a stage in such contests when the parties struggling for independence have, as I conceive, a right to demand its acknowledgment by neutral parties, and when the acknowledgment may be granted without departure from the obligations of neutrality. It is the stage when in- dependence is established as a matter of fact so as to leave the chance of the opposite party to recover their dominion utterly desperate. The neutral nation must, of course, judge for itself when this period has arrived; and as the belligerent nation has the same right to judge for itself, it is very likely to judge differently from the neutral and to make it a cause or pretext for war. * * * If war thus results in point of fact from the measure of recognizing a contested independence, the moral right or wrong of the war depends upon the justice, and sincerity, and prudence with which the recognizing nation took the step. I am satisfied that the cause of the South Americans, so far as It consists in the assertion of independence against Spain, is just. But the justice of a cause, however it may enlist individual feelings EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 135 in its favor, is not sufficient to justify third parties in siding with it. The fact and the right combined can alone authorize a neutral to acknowledge a new and disputed sovereignty.” THE FIGHT FOR RECOGNITION If Adams can be charged with being too cautious, because of his European experience, the United States held another great soul, sufficiently daring, sufficiently far-seeing to vie with the great Bolivar himself in his faith in the great future before the Spanish and Portuguese colonies, and willing to stake his all and that of his country in backing their struggle for independence. That man was the idol of the western frontier state of Kentucky, Henry Clay. The work of that great man for Pan American friendship and solidarity must ever be one of the glories of the early history of the United States and the inspiration of all who strive for common understandings and common ideals for all America. For ten years he labored incessantly for recognition by the United States and European governments of the cause of the Spanish- American patriots. As early as 1816, while the struggle for freedom was at its height in several of the Spanish colonies, Clay, who was at the time Speaker of the House of Representatives, opposed the reduction of certain taxes which had been levied by the United States Govern- ment as a result of the War of 1812, on the ground that “The United States might have openly to take part with the patriots of South America.” In an eloquent speech on March 25, 1818, in the debate upon his proposal to appropriate money for a minister to the United Provinces of La Plata, he called attention to the “immensity and character of the country which Spain was attempting to subjugate: “Stretching on the Pacific Ocean from about the 40th degree of north latitude to about the 55th degree of south latitude, and extending from the mouth of the Rio del Norte (exclusive of East Florida) around the Gulf of Mexico, and along the South Atlantic to near Cape Horn, it is about 5,000 miles in length, and in some places near 3,000 in 136 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM breadth. Within this vast region, we behold the most sublime and interesting objects of creation; the loftiest mountains, the most majestic rivers in the world; the richest mines of the precious metals, and the choicest productions of the earth. We behold there a spectacle still more inter- esting and sublime — the glorious spectacle of 18 millions of people, struggling to burst their chains and to be free. “In the establishment of the independence of Spanish America, the United States have the deepest interest. I have no hesitation in asserting my firm belief that there is no question in the foreign policy of this country which has ever arisen, or which I can conceive as ever occurring, in the decision of which we have had or can have so much at stake. This interest concerns our politics, our commerce, our navi- gation. There cannot be a doubt that, Spanish America once independent, whatever may be the form of the governments established in its several parts, these governments will be animated by an American feeling and guided by an Ameri- can policy. They will obey the laws of the New World, of which they will form a part. * * * “We are their great example. Of us they constantly speak as of brothers, having a similar origin. They adopt our principles, copy our institutions, and in many instances em- ploy the very language and sentiments of our revolutionary papers. “But it is sometimes said that they are too ignorant and too superstitious to admit of the existence of free govern- ment. This charge of ignorance is often urged by persons themselves actually ignorant of the real condition of the people. I deny the alleged fact of ignorance ; I deny the inference from that fact, if it were true, that they want capacity for free government; and I refuse assent to the further conclusion, if the fact were true, and the inference just, that we are to be indifferent to their fate. All the writers of the most established authority, Depons, Hum- boldt, and others, concur in assigning to the people of South America, great quickness, genius, and particular aptitude for the acquisition of the exact sciences, and others which they have been allowed to cultivate. In astronomy, geology, EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 137 mineralogy, chemistry, botany, and so forth, they are al- lowed to make distinguished proficiency. They justly boast of their Abzate, Velasques and Gama, and other illustrious contributors to science. They have nine universities, and in the City of Mexico, it is affirmed by Humboldt that there are more solid scientific establishments than in any other city even in North America. I would refer to the message of the Supreme Director of La Plata (Pueyrredon) as a model of composition of a State paper, challenging the com- parison with any, the most celebrated, that ever issued from the pens of Jefferson or Madison. * * * “We may safely trust to the daring enterprise of our mer- chants. The precious metals are in South America, and they will command the articles wanted in South America, which will purchase them. Our navigation will be bene- fited by the transportation, and our country will realize the mercantile profits. Already the item in our exports of American manufacture is respectable. They go chiefly to the West Indies and to South America, and this item is con- stantly augmenting.” On May io, 1820, Clay submitted in the House a reso- lution declaring it to be expedient to provide by law for the sending of ministers to any of the governments of South America that had established and were maintaining their independence of Spain. In the eloquent speech with which he supported this proposal he did not hesitate to examine the subject in all its phases. Even the question of slavery, which had persistently disturbed the debates of the session, he did not forbear to discuss. Adverting to an intimation that the people of South America were “unfit for freedom,” he affirmed that they were in some particulars “in advance of us.” In one particular they were indeed “greatly in ad- vance of us” ; that was that “Granada, Venezuela and Buenos Aires had all emancipated their slaves.” He “rejoiced that circumstances were such as to permit them to do it.” Nor had they, he said, neglected education. They had “fostered schools.” Newspapers were numerous. He had, he af- firmed, never seen a “question discussed with more ability than in a newspaper of Buenos Aires, whether a federative 138 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM or consolidated form of government was best.” Rising then to the height of his argument, he exclaimed : “It is in our power to create a system of which we shall be the center, and in which all South America will act with us. In respect to commerce, we should be most benefited. * * * We should become the center of a system which would con- stitute the rallying point of human wisdom against all the despotism of the Old World. * * * In spite of our coldness towards them, * * * I have no earthly doubt, if our govern- ment would take the lead and recognize them, that they would become yet more anxious to imitate our institutions, and to secure to themselves and to their posterity the same freedom which we enjoy.” The opinion of the friends of freedom in Europe was, he declared, that the policy of the United States had been “cold, heartless, and indifferent towards the greatest cause which could possibly engage our affections and enlist our feelings in its behalf.” He would no longer justify this impression. He would break the commercial and political fetters by which the New World had so long been confined. “Let us,” he exclaimed, “become real and true Americans, and place ourselves at the head of the American system.” Clay’s resolution was carried by a vote of 80 to 75. The resolution, however, only expressed an opinion in favor of diplomatic representation, but did not actually provide for it. A year later, on February 9, 1821, a motion for a suit- able appropriation was lost by only seven votes. On the following day, however, he presented a resolution that the House “participates with the people of the United States in the deep interest which they feel for the success of the Span- ish provinces of South America, which are struggling to establish their liberty and independence ; and that it will give its Constitutional support to the President whenever he shall deem it expedient to recognize the sovereignty and independence of any of the said provinces.” This resolution was finally carried and a committee ap- pointed to lay the matter before the President. EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 139 The long struggle was ended and victory was won by this moderate champion of Pan Americanism! Monroe considered this action as an endorsement of the policy which his administration had followed and stated that “The object of the executive has been to throw the moral weight of the United States into the scale of the revolution- ary movement, without such a deep compromitment as to make them a party on that side. With that view the mis- sion to Buenos Aires was adopted, all the messages to Con- gress were drawn, and other measures have been since pursued.” RECOGNITION AND THE PERIOD OF GOOD WILL In a special message to Congress on March 8, 1822, Presi- dent Monroe reviewed the policy of the United States toward the Latin American revolution. He declared that the countries of La Plata, Chile, Peru, Colombia and Mexico were in the full enjoyment of their independence ; that there was not the most remote prospect of their being deprived of it ; and that the new governments had now a claim to recog- nition by other powers, which ought not to be resisted. “When we regard, then, the great length of time which this war has been prosecuted, the complete success which has at- tended it in favor of the provinces, the present condition of the parties, and the utter inability of Spain to produce any change in it, we are compelled to conclude that its fate is settled and that the provinces which have declared their in- dependence, and are in the enjoyment of it, ought to be rec- ognized.” The Committee on Foreign Relations, to which the President’s message was referred, reported on March 19, 1822, that the Spanish American nations were, in fact, in- dependent, and proposed two resolutions: first, that the House should concur with the President that the American provinces of Spain which had declared and were enjoying their independence “ought to be recognized by the United States as independent nations”; and, second, that the Com- mittee on Ways and Means should report a bill appropriat- ing a sum to enable the President “to give due effect to such recognition.” 140 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM This report provoked an animated debate in the House. David Trimble of Kentucky enthusiastically declared that the proposal for the acknowledgment of Spanish American independence was “a message of good tidings to twenty millions of freemen. * * * Shall the last of the revolution- ary heroes leave the high station which he fills, without officiating, in his robes of office, at the baptism * * * of all the new Republics in America? * * * Let us boldly fill up our page of destiny, and leave no blank for after-time to write an execration of our memory. Let us make acknowl- edgment at once * * * and laugh the fear of despots into scorn.” May 4, 1822, President Monroe signed a bill which ap- propriated $100,000 to defray the expenses of “such mis- sions to the independent nations of the American continent” as the President may deem proper, which was, in effect, an announcement that the Government of the United States in- tended to acknowledge the independence of the revolting colonies of Spain in America. Thus she became the first gov- ernment, with the exception of Brazil, to extend the hand of welcome to these young countries as members of the so- ciety of nations. The storm of protest with which this an- nouncement was greeted in Europe was sufficient to show what the United States was willing to risk in order to en- courage the young southern neighbors and to act as their sponsors before an unsympathetic world. The first step in formal recognition was the presentation to President Monroe by Secretary Adams of Manuel Torres as charge d’affaires of Colombia on June 19, 1822. Torres was in very poor health at the time, scarcely having strength to walk alone, and was greatly affected by his reception. He spoke on the great importance of the event to the Republic of Colombia and of his assurance that it would give extraor- dinary gratification to Bolivar. President Monroe sat down beside Torres, “and spoke to him with kindness which moved him even to tears. The President assured him of the great interest taken by the United States in the welfare and success of his country, and of the peculiar satisfaction with which he received him as its first representative.” About the same time that President Monroe had signi- EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 141 fied to Secretary Adams his intention to receive Torres offi- cially, Adams wrote to Jose M. de Herrera, the Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs, of the President’s willingness to receive an envoy from Mexico. A change in Mexican af- fairs, ensuing shortly afterward and which resulted in the proclamation of Iturbide as Emperor in May, 1822, made the United States somewhat reluctant to carry out the pro- posal, and Joel R. Poinsett was sent to Mexico City to in- vestigate conditions. Recognition could not be long delayed, however, for in September Iturbide appointed Jose Manuel Zozaya as Minister Plenipotentiary to Washington, under instructions to propose treaties of friendship, alliance, com- merce and adjustment of boundaries. Arriving in Wash- ington on December 10, 1822, he was presented to Presi- dent Monroe two days later as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary from the Mexican Empire. On June 27, 1823, the United States Senate confirmed the nomination of Richard C. Anderson as Minister to Co- lombia, C. A. Rodney as Minister to Argentina and Her- man Allen as Minister to Chile. On June 1, 1825, Joel R. Poinsett was relieved as Minister at Mexico City. A few months later charges d’affaires were sent to Lima and Cen- tral America. Thus were begun in those critical days the formal diplomatic relations with the young American de- mocracies which for more than a century have remained unbroken, with the single unfortunate exception of the Mex- ican War of 1846-47. It is thus seen that just as in His- panic America the great leaders had thought much of con- tinental solidarity, so also the leading statesmen, as well as the common people, of the United States were in the early days most sympathetic toward their southern neighbors. In these first days there was neither suspicion on the part of the South nor designs on the part of the North. The con- stitutions of all the Latin American republics were modeled upon that of the United States, which country was gener- ally referred to by some such term as “our great sister of the North,” the “model republic,” etc. After the southern republics secured their freedom and we, by means of the Monroe Doctrine, succeeded in keeping Europe from encroaching on American territory, we more 142 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM or less forgot the rest of America in our intense desire to round out and develop our own great territory. The only other American country with which we had any particular dealings in that period was our next-door neigh- bor, with whom we came in contact in expanding our own national life. Our relations with Mexico started out splen- didly. On November 30, 1821, the Mexican Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jose M. de Herrera, sent the first diplo- matic commission to the Washington government, and among other things said : “The people of Mexico are desirous of being united to all governments by means of friendly alliances and connec- tions. The United States of North America have a prefer- able right to demand of the Mexican Empire these consid- erations, the more just and reasonable because they are sup- ported by well-known maxims of policy. Even nature her- self has separated these nations from Europe by immense seas and placed them upon the same continent that they might make common cause in reciprocally supplying their necessities and cooperating for their mutual felicity.” THE DISASTROUS WAR WITH MEXICO Unfortunately these cordial words did not prove pro- phetic of future relations between the two countries. Minis- ter Poinsett got mixed up in internal politics in Mexico and came to be cordially hated by many Mexicans who resented his seeming endeavor to conduct their government for them. The second American Minister, Anthony Butler, was even more objectionable, because of his continued insistence upon buying Texas after Mexico had told him it was not for sale. Border claims early came to be a troublesome issue. The independence of Texas and its later annexation to the L T nited States widened the breach and prepared for the war declared by the United States on May 13, 1846. Most his- torians of the United States agree that this was an unjust war largely caused by the selfish designs of American poli- ticians. Latin Americans who, justly so, criticize this war EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 143 should remember that the best elements in the United States have equally condemned it. General Grant called it an “unholy war,” saying: “For myself, I was bitterly opposed to the measure (the annexation of Texas) and to this day regard the war which resulted as one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation. It was an instance of a republic following the bad example of European monarchies, in not considering justice in their desire to acquire additional territory.” It was Abraham Lincoln, the great defender of weak peoples, who led the fight in Congress itself against the war. Lincoln argued that the war was unnecessarily and uncon- stitutionally begun by the President of the United States for the following reasons : That the President had sent General Taylor into an in- habited part of the country belonging to Mexico and not to the United States and had thereby provoked the first act of hostility, in fact, the commencement of the war; that the place, being the country bordering on the east bank of the Rio Grande, was inhabited by native Mexicans born under the Mexican government and had never submitted to or been conquered by either Texas or the United States, nor transferred to either of them by treaty ; that although Texas claimed the Rio Grande as her boundary, Mexico had never recognized it and neither Texas nor the United States had ever enforced it and there was a broad desert between that and the country over which Texas had actual control; that the country where hostilities commenced having once be- longed to Mexico must remain so until it was somehow legally transferred, which had never been done. Mr. Lincoln thought the act of sending an armed force among the Mexicans was unnecessary inasmuch as Mexico was in no way molesting or menacing the United States, and that it was ’unconstitutional because the power of levying war is vested in Congress and not in the Executive. He thought the principal motive for the act was to divert public attention from the surrender of “fifty-four forty or fight” to 144 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Great Britain in the Oregon boundary controversy. In ad- dressing Congress Lincoln said: “Now, sir, for the purpose of obtaining the very best evi- dence as to whether Texas had actually carried her revolu- tion to the place where the hostilities of the present war commenced, let the President answer the interrogatories I proposed, or some similar ones. Let him answer, fully, fairly, and candidly. Let him answer with facts, and not with arguments. Let him remember he sits where Wash- ington sat, and so remembering, let him answer as Washing- ton would answer. As a nation should not, and the Almighty will not, be evaded, so let him attempt no evasion — no equiv- ocation. And if, so answering, he can show that the soil was ours where the first blood of the war was shed — that it was not within an inhabited country, or, if within such, that the inhabitants had submitted themselves to the civil author- ity of Texas or of the United States, and that the same is true of the site of Fort Brown, then I am with him for his justification. * * * But if he cannot or will not do this — if on any pretense or no pretense he shall refuse or omit it — then I shall be fully convinced of what I more than suspect already — that he is deeply conscious of being in the wrong; that he feels the blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to Heaven against him ; that originally having some strong motive — what, I will not stop now to give my opinion concerning — to involve the two countries in a war, and trusting to escape scrutiny by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness of military glory — that attractive rain- bow that arises in showers of blood — that serpent’s eye that charms to destroy — he plunged into it, and has swept on and on till, disappointed in his calculation of the ease with which Mexico might be subdued, he now finds himself he knows not where. How like the insane mumblings of a fever dream is the whole war part of his last message! At one time urging the national honor, the security of the fu- ture, the prevention of foreign interference, and even the good of Mexico herself as among the objects of the war; at another telling us that ‘to reject indemnity, by refusing to accept a cession of territory would be to abandon all our EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 145 just demands, and to wage the war bearing all its expenses, without a purpose or definite object.’ “* * * Again, it is a singular omission in this message that it nowhere intimates when the President expects the war to terminate. At its beginning, General Scott was by this same President driven into disfavor, if not disgrace, for intimating that peace could not be conquered in less than three or four months. But now, at the end of about twenty months * * * this same President gives us a long message, without showing us that as to the end he himself has even an imaginary conception. As I have said before, he knows not where he is. He is a bewildered, confounded, and mis- erably perplexed man. God grant he may be able to show there is not something about his conscience more painful than all his mental perplexity.” CONSEQUENCE OF THE WAR WITH MEXICO The war between the United States and Mexico marks the dividing of the ways between North and Hispanic Amer- ica. From that time on, the southerners began to be afraid of the nation that was not only greater than they, but now seemed to be willing to use its strength to exploit its weaker neighbors. This change of sentiment is widely rec- ognized by Hispanic American writers. Ex-President Bo- nillas, of Honduras, says : “Ever since the Mexican War, the Monroe Doctrine, in- stead of being considered as a guarantee of American in- dependence by the Latin American countries, has been re- garded as a menace to their existence.” The Venezuelan historian, Blanco Fombona, says: “The United States were, until their war with Mexico, a people without militaristic or imperialistic ambitions, the model and the home of civil liberty. All South America ad- mired her with the same ardor with which today they hate her.” Manuel Ugarte in a lecture in Columbia University a short time ago said : 146 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “During the early times, from the eve of the eighteenth to the middle of the nineteenth century, the two groups (Latin Americans and Anglo-Saxon Americans) main- tained themselves in a spirit of fraternity and mutual re- spect. * * * It was in these times of austerity and strict logic when we Latin Americans began to admire the United States. The vital breath of equity that seemed to animate the young nation inspired our fullest and most sincere ad- miration. When the L T nited States obtained from Spain the sale of Florida and from France the cession of Louisiana we did not picture in that aggrandizement anything more formidable than a just desire to preserve collective inde- pendence, barring from the Continent the last vestige of European domination. But in the victory of yesterday is discernible a tendency to become the executioner of today and the emancipated subject, the freed colony, once fortified, forgot the declarations of its heroes and began in turn to abuse its powers. The annexation of Mexican territory in 1845-48 was the revelation of a policy which was afterward to extend itself in a lamentable manner. A specter of dom- ination and despoilment appeared to float over our unde- fended countries. Several countries succumbed, and injus- tice has lately become so accentuated that we turn to the United States today to cry out: ‘The same injustice which the mother country perpetrated against you, you are now committing against us ; and we have no fault save that which you had even yesterday, our weakness.’ ” It was not simply the Mexican War itself that brought about this change of sentiment toward the United States, but it was the development and boastful use of the term “Manifest Destiny” which North American politicians and editors began at that time to flout to the world. There was at that period, and continues to be, far too much of the jingo spirit illustrated by the following words attributed by Eduardo Prado of Brazil to Mr. Everetts, spoken at a dinner presided over by General Grant: “America for the Americans! Yes. But we understand it means America for the North Americans. Let us begin EARLY EFFORTS TOWARD FRIENDSHIP 147 with Mexico, of which we have already taken a part. We must now take her entirely. Central America will follow, whetting our appetites for South America. Looking at the map we see that South America has the. shape of a ham. Uncle Sam’s favorite dish is ham. Our starry banners are sufficient to reach from one glorious ocean to another. Some day it will float alone and triumphant from the North Pole to the South.” Dr. Ernesto Quesada, in recent lectures before the Uni- versity of Buenos Aires, has brought together a long series of quotations from eminent North Americans in the ad- ministrations of Polk, Taylor, Pierce and Buchanan, which spread alarm through Latin America, such as the following, uttered in a notable session of the United States Congress in 1857 by Senator Douglas: “Whatever the interests of the United States dictate should be considered the law of the land, and other nations must accept it, for the conditions, limitations and restrictions of former days cannot prevail in view of the manifest des- tiny of our nation.” President Pierce, who had a scheme to take over Yucatan, said : “The policy of my administration will not be controlled by any timid forebodings of evil from expansion. Indeed, it is not doubted that our attitude as a nation and our posi- tion on the globe render the acquisition of certain territory, not within our jurisdiction, eminently important for our pro- tection.” Since this book is not a historical study, but the presenta- tion of certain outstanding developments related to prob- lems of American unity, time will not be taken to consider in detail the history of the United States’ relations to Latin America between the Mexican War and the First Pan Amer- ican Congress in 1889. The most significant events in Inter- American relations, from the standpoint of the United States, were the Walker Expedition to Central America, the 148 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM diplomatic intervention of the United States in the War be- tween Chile and Peru and Bolivia, the development of the idea of Manifest Destiny, the demand on Napoleon to with- draw his troops from Mexico, and the mediation of the United States between Spain and South America in their war of the sixties, which events, except the latter two, aug- mented the fear of the growing power of the United States. Summarizing we may say that in the early days the Americas, both North and South, had great interest in one another, and a common desire for friendship and helpful relations ; but that the Mexican War started a suspicion and fear of the United States among the Hispanic American countries, which grew to such proportions that it became the outstanding phenomenon in American international rela- tions. If fact as well as appearance has sometimes justified this suspicion, we at least must realize that there have always been great men in the United States, who, just as Lincoln protested against the Mexican War, have raised their voices against anything that looked like taking advantage of a weaker people. In fact, all through our history we have been fortunate enough to have great outstanding souls like Henry Clay who in the broadest continental sense have been “animated by an American feeling and guided by an Ameri- can policy.” Sources of Further Information on Early Efforts of the United States Toward American Friendship Blanco-Fombona, R. : Grandes Escritores de America. Latane: The United States and Latin America, Chapters II and VIII. Lima, M. de Oliveira : Relations of Brazil with the United States. Lobo, Helio : Cousas Diplomaticas. Lockey, Jos. B. : Pan-Americanism, Its Beginnings. Manning: Early Diplomatic Relations with Mexico. Moore, John B.: Henry Clay and Pan Americanism, Bulletin American Association of International Conciliation. Prado, Eduardo: A Illusao Americana. Robinson, James Spence: Recognition of Hispanic America by the United States. Chapter V THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA The Monroe Doctrine has been for the American conti- nent at once the most powerful unifying force and the great- est cause of division and misunderstanding. From the standpoint of the United States it might be called “the American fetish.” Along with the Washington doctrine of no entangling alliances it has been the cardinal principle of our foreign policy. As Jefferson said, “It is the offspring of the American Revolution and the most momentous ques- tion offered to my contemplation since the Independence.” Like many an important principle, it has through the pas- sage of time come to be more of a sentiment than a principle or a policy. And like every sentiment it has as many inter- pretations as there are kinds of persons who deal with it. To the average North American it means the divine right — as sacred and clear as was ever such right to any monarch — to act as the big brother of all the other American nations. This means first to protect them from all outside interfer- ence, and, second, to help them in their own difficulties when they seem to have lost their way politically, financially or economically. It makes no difference what question con- cerning Latin America may arise in this country or what difficulty may arise in the South which affects the life of the United States, many immediately call out the Monroe Doctrine as arbiter. “Why has General Crowder gone to Cuba?” was the question appearing recently from a reader of one of our prominent dailies. “It is due to the Monroe Doctrine, which makes us responsible for fair elections in Cuba,” answered the all-wise editor. And no doubt the questioner was en- tirely satisfied with this simple answer. Because we North Americans are so sure of our generous desire to help all who 149 150 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM are in need, and so sure of our superiority to all the rest of America, many of us suppose that all Latin American gov- ernments must be highly appreciative of the help which the Monroe Doctrine makes us in honor bound to give. Of course, if the young sinner proves recalcitrant, we, as the unselfish and more experienced brother, desirous only of the other’s improvement, must compel him to be good. If anyone questions at all whether this is the right procedure he is met with “We do not discuss the Monroe Doctrine, we enforce it.” It is this attitude of the North American toward the Doc- trine, rather than the Doctrine itself, that explains why it has been such a cause of division and misunderstanding. In other words, it is a certain interpretation of the Doctrine (a false interpretation, I believe) and not the Doctrine itself, that is so much opposed in Latin America. Indeed, the original Monroe Doctrine was well received in the South, and from that time until today the declaration in its original sense has been approved by the best minds of Hispanic America. In these days when all international relations are in flux and when every principle of life is being stripped of its ac- cretions and thoroughly examined, we need a fresh study of the original purposes of the Doctrine, which has been the basis of more discussion and more varied interpretation than any other document ever issued by the president of a republic. ORIGIN OF THE DOCTRINE The substance of this Doctrine, which calls for the ex- clusion of European colonization and interference in Amer- ican affairs, had often been stated before the Monroe pro- nouncement both by North American and South American statesmen. But in 1822 it seemed probable that the efforts of the Holy Alliance to strangle all democratic development in Europe might be extended to the western hemisphere. So Monroe and his advisors felt it necessary to take steps to forestall any such movement. Great Britain was also opposed to the extension of the influence of the Holy Alii- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 151 ance to America, for with the reconquest of Spanish Amer- ica large part of the conquered territory might be turned over to France and the large commerce which had been di- verted to Great Britain on account of the revolt of the colonies would be seriously affected. At this time the British Foreign Secretary was the cele- brated Canning, one of the most astute men that ever held that office, a man who exercised almost a charmed influence over Latin American statesmen of those days, as well as an exaggerated place in the judgments of later Latin Amer- ican historians. His proposal to the United States of an agreement that would checkmate the influence of the Alli- ance (and incidentally that of the United States) in His- panic America, has led many historians to erroneously credit him with originating the Monroe Doctrine. At least two strong proofs of the falsity of the “Canning myth,” as it has rightly been called, are these: First, the doctrine that Europe must not meddle in American affairs had been stated many times, both in North and South America, before it was formally announced by Monroe. Second, the Doctrine had no more strenuous opponent than Canning himself. He later said, “It is not easy to say how much the previous British propositions influenced the message, but the doc- trine, if such it can be called, of the presidential message prohibiting all future colonization on the American conti- nent, is absolutely unacceptable to my government and to France. This extraordinary principle will be combated by my government with all its force.” The private correspond- ence of Canning with some of his friends shows that he did everything possible to combat the doctrine. In fact, Great Britain has generally been its strong opponent, Lord Salis- bury writing to Secretary Olney during the Venezuelan con- troversy that the Monroe Doctrine was not entitled to any- one’s respect. When Canning was asked why he had not sought to pre- vent the French invasion of Spain, he said, “I sought for compensation in another hemisphere. * * * I resolved that if France had Spain it should not be Spain with the Indies. I called the new world into existence to redress the balance of the old.” This, of course, was nonsense, as the Spanish 152 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM American colonies had won their independence by their own efforts and had been recognized by the United States as independent governments two years before Great Britain took any action in the matter. Canning was so irritated by the Monroe Doctrine that he did not permit the United States to participate with Great Britain and Russia in the settlement of the Alaskan boundary question. As long as he remained in public life he opposed the Monroe Doctrine in every possible way, and continually impressed upon the Latin American republics the advantage to them of an alli- ance with Great Britain over an alliance with the United States. And yet, with all this evidence to the contrary, great stu- dents like Alberdi have believed this Canning myth and at- tribute the success of the colonies’ struggle for independence to the friendship of Great Britain. Many Latin Americans erroneously hold this to be a very important point in show- ing what they claim was the indifference of the United States to Hispanic America’s struggle for independence. Canning did send to Minister Rush of the United States, who was in London at the time, five proposals concerning the recognition of the independence of the Spanish colonies and their protection from the schemes of the Holy Alliance, which he suggested the two governments might jointly an- nounce. But Monroe, advised by his Secretary, Adams, chose rather to announce a purely American doctrine that would be sustained by American authority. This is a most important matter for Latin Americans to understand. And for North America it is imperative to realize that the cir- cumstances surrounding the announcement of the Doctrine all point to the fact that our statesmen did not have the least idea that we were providing for ourselves any special privileges in America. As John Quincy Adams, the man who historians believe worded the Doctrine itself, wrote in his diary, “Considering the South Americans as independent nations, they themselves, and no other nation, had the right to dispose of their condition. We have no right to dispose of them, either alone or in conjunction with other nations. Neither have any other nations the right to dispose of them without their consent.” THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 153 ITS CONTENTS The most salient features of the famous Doctrine, which was contained in President Monroe’s annual message to Congress on December 2, 1823, are the following: “The occasion has been judged proper for asserting as a principle in which the rights and interests of the United States are involved, that the American constituents, by the free and independent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as sub- jects for future colonization by an European power. “The citizens of the United States cherish sentiments the most friendly in favor of the liberty and happiness of their fellow-men on that side of the Atlantic. In the wars of the European in matters relating to themselves we have never taken any part, nor does it comport with our policy to do so. It is only when our rights are invaded or seriously menaced that we resent injuries or make preparation for our defense. With the movements in this hemisphere we are, of neces- sity, more immediately connected, and by causes which must be obvious to all enlightened and impartial observers. The political system of the allied powers is essentially different in this respect from that of America. This difference pro- ceeds from that which exists in their respective Govern- ments. And to the defense of our own, which has been achieved by the loss of so much blood and treasure, and ma- tured by the wisdom of their most enlightened citizens, and under which we have enjoyed unexampled felicity, this whole nation is devoted. We owe it, therefore, to candor, and to the amicable relations existing between the United States and those powers, to declare that we should consider any attempt on their part to extend their system to any por- tion of this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety. With the existing colonies or dependencies of any European power we have not interfered and shall not interfere. But with the Governments who have declared their independ- ence, and maintained it, and whose independence we have, on great consideration and on just principles, acknowledged, we could not view any interposition for the purpose of op- 154 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM pressing them, or controlling in any other manner their des- tiny, by any European power, in any other light than as the manifestation of an unfriendly disposition toward the United States. “The late events in Spain and Portugal show that Europe is still unsettled. Of this important fact no stronger proof can be adduced than that the allied powers should have thought it proper, on any principle satisfactory to them- selves, to have interposed, by force, in the internal concerns of Spain. To what extent such interposition may be car- ried, on the same principle, is a question in which all inde- pendent powers whose Governments differ from theirs are interested, even those most remote, and surely more so than the United States.” HOW THE DOCTRINE WAS RECEIVED IN LATIN AMERICA What was Latin America’s attitude to this new Doctrine? Bolivar seems not to have heard of it for quite a while. He never really made any long pronouncement upon it. He did, however, applaud the declaration, and in a letter to the Spanish general whom he was endeavoring to persuade to join the liberal cause, said : “England and the United States protect us. These two nations which form today the only two powers in the world, will not permit that help be given to Spain.” The Brazilian government, through its Minister, Rebello, proposed an alliance between the United States and Brazil which the other Hispanic American republics 'were invited to join. She invoked the message of Monroe and the ne- cessity of making impossible any tendency of the mother countries to reconquer their old colonies, observing that “the United States is obliged to place in practice the prin- ciple announced in the message (Monroe) giving proof of the generosity and the consistency which animates that gov- ernment, without counting the eventual sacrifice of men and money.” On April 6, 1824, Vice-President Santander sent a mes- sage to the Colombian Congress in which he referred to the Monroe Doctrine as follows: THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 155 “The President of the United States has lately signalized his administration by an act eminently just and worthy of the classic land of liberty; in his last message to the Con- gress he has declared that he will regard every interference of any European power directed to oppress or violate the destinies of the independent governments of America as a manifestation of hostile disposition toward the United States. That government considers every attempt on the part of the Allied Powers to extend their system to any por- tion of the American hemisphere as perilous to the peace and safety of the United States. This policy, consolatory to human nature, would secure to Colombia a powerful ally should its independence and liberty be menaced by the Allied Powers. As the Executive cannot regard with indifference the march which the policy of the United States has taken, it is sedulously occupied in reducing the question to decisive and conclusive points.” About the same time Santander addressed a note to Sec- retary Adams in which he said : “My Government has received with the greatest pleasure the message, worthy of its author, which expresses the senti- ment of the country over which he presides.” He even went so far as to propose an alliance between the United States and Colombia to sustain the principles of the Monroe Doctrine. From Buenos Aires United States Minister Rodney wrote on February io, 1824, to President Monroe that his message had been received two days before, that it had in- spired the Argentine people, and that it would have the “happiest effect throughout the whole Spanish provinces.” On May 22nd he wrote Secretary Adams that the frank and firm message of the President had been productive of happy effects; but that he looked not so much to its temporary influence as to its permanent operation. “We had it imme- diately translated,” he wrote, “into the Spanish language, printed and generally circulated in this quarter, Peru and Chile.” 156 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM On December 1 6, 1824, the congress of the United Prov- inces of Rio de la Plata opened its sessions at Buenos Aires. In a message of the government of Buenos Aires, laid before that body on the same date, the American policy of the United States was referred to in the following terms : “We have fulfilled a great national duty toward the re- public of the United States of North America. That re- public, which, from its origin, presides over the civilization of the New World, has solemnly acknowledged our inde- pendence. It has at the same time made an appeal to our national honor by supposing us capable of contending single- handed with Spain ; but it has constituted itself the guardian of the field of battle in order to prevent any foreign assist- ance from being introduced to the aid of our rival.” Governor Las Heras, of Buenos Aires, on receiving United States Minister Forbes a little later, said : “The Governor of the United Provinces recognizes the importance of the two principles which the President of the United States has announced in his message to Congress and, convinced of the usefulness of their adoption by each of the states of this continent, will consider it his duty to back them, and for this purpose will accept any opportunity that is presented.” Chile gave a most genuine response to President Monroe’s message. The papers of Santiago seemed to discover in the Monroe Doctrine a frank and explicit promise of effec- tive protection for the Spanish American republics against the political combinations and military projects of European monarchs. A delegate of the Chief Executive, upon the oc- casion of receiving Mr. Allen, the newly-appointed Minister of the United States to Chile, expressed the gratitude of his government for the recognition of the independence of the new states and for the recent declaration of President Monroe which placed them beyond the reach of the coalitions of European monarchs. The cordial declarations of the Foreign Office of the Cen- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 1ST tral American Government in 1825, which heartily approved the Doctrine, have been cited in another chapter. It would be easy to present other indorsements of the Monroe Doctrine by the Latin American countries in those early days, but these are sufficient to show that at that time they had no idea of anything being involved in the doctrine which made it dangerous to Latin America. It will be re- membered that in the call for the Panama Congress it was proposed to make the Monroe declaration a common prin- ciple of all the American governments. This is one of the strongest indications that the correct interpretation of the Doctrine rejects the inference that the United States re- serves to itself the privilege of doing the things she will not suffer Europe to do. If this earlier interpretation had been retained in practice the present bitterness against the Doc- trine would never have developed in Latin America. The Monroe message states very clearly the three follow- ing propositions : first, that there shall be no future coloniza- tion in America by European powers; second, that there shall be no extension of the monarchical system to republi- can America; third, that the United States will defend the independence of these American countries against European aggression. During the years that followed we seem to have added two corollaries to these three propositions : that Euro- pean governments must not acquire any of the American governments’ territory, even with the consent of the nation involved or by the adjustment of boundaries ; and that non- American governments cannot occupy any portion of the American republics even temporarily for the satisfaction of any kind of claims against these republics. The first three of these proposals are the original Doctrine. The latter two are interpretations allowed by the Doctrine and which have developed out of recent experience in dealing with the Carib- bean countries. INTERPRETATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE One of the greatest questions most often debated concern- ing the Doctrine is whether or not it is a purely selfish one, announced merely to protect the United States, or designed 158 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM as one of those altruistic services which we North Ameri- cans like to think we are doing to help smaller nations. Let us listen to what some present North Americans say about that phase of the subject. Mr. Root says: “The Doctrine is not international law, but it rests upon the right of self-protection and that right is recognized by international law. The right is a necessary corollary of in- dependent sovereignty. It is well understood that the exer- cise of the right of self-protection may and frequently does extend in its effect beyond the limits of territorial jurisdic- tion of the state exercising it. * * * The most common exer- cise of the right of self-protection outside of a state’s own territory, and in time of peace, is the interposition of ob- jection to the occupation of territory, of points of strategic military or maritime advantage, or to indirect accomplish- ment of this effect by dynastic arrangement. * * * Of course each state must judge for itself when a threatened act will create such a situation. If any state objects to a threatened act and the reasonableness of its objection is not assented to, the efficacy of the objection will depend upon the power be- hind it. “It is doubtless true that in the adherence of the American people to the original declaration there was a great element of sentiment and sympathy for the people of South America who were struggling for freedom, and it has been a source of great satisfaction to the United States that the course which it took in 1823 concurrently with the action of Great Britain played so great a part in assuring the right of self- government to the countries of South America. Yet is it to be observed that in reference to the South American Govern- ments, as in all other respects, the international right upon which the declaration expressly rests is not sentiment or sympathy or a claim to dictate what kind of government any other country shall have, but the safety of the United States.” Mr. John Bassett Moore says: “The Monroe Doctrine was in its origin a defiance to THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 159 those who would suppress independent governments and re- store the system of commercial monopoly and political ab- solutism on the American continents. It was in this sense that it found an enthusiastic response in popular opinion ” Ex-President Taft has seen this point very clearly and says : “The Monroe Doctrine was proclaimed for the purpose of upholding the territorial dignity and political independ- ence of the nations of South and Central America. It binds the United States to the exact course which the League of Nations demands of all nations.” Mr. Henry W. Taft says : “The Monroe Doctrine is not a principle of international law. It is a national policy based on the right of every na- tion to protect itself against acts tending to embarrass it in preserving its own national interests or political institu- tions. It is founded upon the same right as the familiar concert of European powers, except that it affects a greater number of nations more widely separated geographically, and is asserted by a single powerful nation, able, without the sanction of treaty stipulations, to maintain it. It does not become effective so much by the acquiescence of the American nations subject to its operation as from its recog- nition by nations of other parts of the world as a political policy which cannot be disregarded by them except at the risk of war with the United States.” Mr. John Bigelow says : “In order properly to appreciate the significance of the Monroe Doctrine it must be clearly recognized that it was designed primarily for the protection of the United States, the safeguarding of its territory and political institutions, the effect of which would be, indirectly, to work to the advantage of the Latin American countries by affording 160 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM them the opportunity to work out their problems without interference from European powers.” Secretary of State Lansing gave the Senate the following account of the conversations which led to the Lansing-Ishii agreement : “Then it was during the same interview that we men- tioned ‘paramount interests,’ and he (Ishii) made a refer- ence to the Monroe Doctrine of the Far East; and I told him that there seemed to be a misconception as to the un- derlying principle of the Monroe Doctrine; that it was not an assertion of primary or paramount interest by the United States in its relation to other American republics; that its purpose was to prevent foreign powers from inter- fering with the separate rights of any nation in this hemi- sphere and that the whole aim was to preserve to each re- public the power of self-development. I said further that so far as aiding in this development the United States claimed no special privileges over other countries.” Rear-Admiral Chester says : “The first principle of the Monroe Doctrine — self-pres- ervation — is axiomatic and immutable, and all other consid- erations must give way to it. The second principle, like the constitution of a country, is amenable to changes and amendments that will bring it into accord with new condi- tions that may arise in the country. The question now, therefore, is, do the same conditions prevail on the western continent today as in 1823? * * * Many of the twenty other American Republics are no longer the weaklings they were when the policy was formulated, but are now strong enough to share the common defense of the continent. We cannot, however, with propriety form an alliance, for that word has been tabooed by an unwritten law of the land, but we can engage in an ‘entente,’ as foreigners call it, with the republics of South America that will give them a share in the responsibility of maintaining a policy which looks to the good of all parties concerned.” As Admiral Chester says, the Doctrine is partly selfish THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 161 and partly altruistic, as every natural principle should be. It seems very natural to suppose that the United States, being a weak nation in the early days, was particularly interested in protecting herself and also in advancing the great idea of democracy of which she was the pathfinder. Democratic government she selfishly and unselfishly desired to see grow — selfishly in that the development of such government on the American continent would tend to strengthen her own life, unselfishly in that she wished to encourage and assist other small nations to realize the same ideal. A more practical question concerning the application of the Monroe Doctrine is the extent to which the United States assumes responsibility before the world for the short- comings of the other American nations. If we say to Eu- rope, “You are to keep completely out of this continent,” how far do we expect to see to the just settlement of Euro- pean complaints against those countries? Consider, for example, the matter of the collection of debts. If we will not let France enter Santo Domingo and take a couple of ports in payment of a $10,000,000 debt, how far shall we interfere to make Santo Domingo pay? If an English subject is killed in Mexico and we do not allow England to obtain satisfaction by seizing Mexican territory, how far are we to assume the authority to punish Mexico and force her to deal fairly with England? We have stated (Roosevelt said it, and it has been inti- mated many times by our government) that we will not keep European governments from collecting their debts in the American republics. In fact we have permitted them to take measures to enforce payment of such debts as long as this did not mean territorial acquisition by them. At the time when intervention in Mexico was begun, with the an- nounced purpose of collecting debts which she owed Great Britain, France and Spain, the United States was invited to join with them. The situation was tried out to ascertain our attitude, and Secretary Seward wrote that the United States had no objection to these countries collecting their debts from Mexico. When it came to the establishment of a monarchy in Mexico, however, our attitude was very dif- ferent. 162 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM We have never agreed with certain Latin American statesmen that debts should never be collected forcibly. We have adopted the Hague agreement that the question of debts of this kind shall be arbitrated, but we have under- taken to use moral suasion and more recently have actually assumed responsibility for managing the finances of certain republics in order to save them from a foreign foreclosure. We have thus assumed a protectorate over both Santo Do- mingo and Haiti because it was claimed that these coun- tries were likely to be seized by European countries for non- payment of debt. But we have still to determine how far we will go in straightening out the financial difficulties of Latin American countries that seem to be in danger from European creditors. The precedent of Santo Domingo, Haiti and Nicaragua seems to indicate pretty clearly that, at least in the Carib- bean, or what Admiral Chester calls the “larger Panama Canal Zone,” we will take action before risking that of any foreign country. Indeed, diplomatic aid in resuscitat- ing the finances of Honduras, Cuba, Costa Rica and pos- sibly Mexico is now being extended by the United States, although in the case of Mexico the proceedings are still in the formative stage. It is interesting to note that the shift in world credit due to the war makes it altogether prob- able that the United States will itself more and more as- sume the role of creditor to these republics and that prob- lems in connection with payment of debts will be given an entirely new turn. European nations are not in position to finance foreign governments to any great extent, however profitable it might be. It has been suggested by some thoughtful students that the Monroe Doctrine should be limited to Caribbean coun- tries or at least those north of the Amazon, for the reason that the zone of defense of the Canal and of the continental United States extends no further than that, and also for the reason that the countries further south have grown strong in their own power and neither need nor appreciate our proffered protection. While a formal pronouncement of any such limitation of the Doctrine will probably never be made, it is almost certain that its application will be limited THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 163 to this northern zone, as has been the case in the past. It may well be recalled in this connection that even when Eng- land and France intervened in Argentina and Spain in Chile and Peru, the United States did no more than express sym- pathy to these countries. In this connection Dr. Estanislao Zaballos, of Buenos Aires, has said: “What other countries of America have the same world problems as Panama or Mexico, the latter on the frontier of the United States and the former at the throat of the conti- nent itself? They have nothing in common with the prob- lems of the La Plata or the shores of Brazil or the coasts of Chile. The Monroe Doctrine is necessary today to the United States. The Caribbean washes the shores of the richest part of the United States and it is necessary that it be dominated by them in order to guarantee the independ- ence and security of the United States.” The most important question concerning the Doctrine is whether it means that Europe must stay out of Hispanic American affairs and that the United States may go in, or simply that Europe shall stay out. It is difficult to see any- thing in the Monroe Doctrine to justify the assumption of an aggressive policy on the part of the United States toward Latin America. The original doctrine claims nothing for the United States that it does not concede to every other American nation. If in the Monroe Doctrine the United States arrogates to itself supremacy in the western hemi- sphere, it is only with respect to non-American powers, and with respect to them it wishes every American nation to be supreme. There is nothing in it that makes its provisions a monopoly by the United States. The proclamation of a similar doctrine by each of the other American nations would strengthen rather than impair the force of the Monroe declaration. In his address at the unveiling of the Bolivar statue in New York President Harding clearly emphasized that the United States reserves no special privileges to itself under the Mon- roe Doctrine. Speaking to the entire Latin American diplo- matic corps he said : 164 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM "There have been times when the meaning of Monroeism was misunderstood by some, perverted by others and made the subject of distorting propaganda by those who saw in it an obstacle to the realization of their own ambitions. * * * They have falsely charged that we sought to hold the nations of the Old World at arm’s length in order that we might monopolize the privilege of exploitation for ourselves. Others have protested that the Doctrine would never be enforced if to enforce it should involve us in actual hos- tilities. "The history of the generations since that Doctrine was proclaimed has proved that we never intended it selfishly; that we had no dream of exploitation. On the other side, the history of the last decade certainly must have convinced all the world that we stand willing to fight, if necessary, to protect these continents, these sturdy young democracies, from oppression and tyranny.” Nevertheless the Monroe Doctrine has been a continual source of irritation to the Latin American nations. At first they accepted it gladly, as we have seen, as protecting them from Europe, but later we see it becoming in their eyes an instrument through which the United States presumed to dictate to them. "America for the Americans,” they say, means "America for the North Americans.” In the early days no such talk was heard as this of Senor Jose de Astorga, writing in La Revista de America: “ * * * The importance of securing concerted movement and unanimity of action among the countries of Latin America in order to offset the imperialistic ambitions of the United States is urgent and of extreme importance. The protests of con- fraternity, of disinterestedness and of re- spect for the political sovereignty and the commercial inde- pendence of Latin America which the Government of the United States sets forth so freely on every occasion, are not able to counteract or to lessen the eloquence of deeds, and these are the deeds: Tutelage over Cuba; the abduction of Panama; the embargo on the custom houses of Santo Do- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 165 mingo; economic and military intervention in Central America; the ‘big stick,’ ‘dollar diplomacy’ and the Lodge declaration.” The Latin Americans, however, are not alone in interpret- ing the Monroe Doctrine as meaning that the United States retains the right to control the western hemisphere. There are not a few North Americans who hold this view. These extracts from “America Among the Nations” by Prof. H. H. Powers, are certainly disquieting: “It is difficult to follow the expansion of America in the Caribbean without feeling that it will go farther. Whether it should go farther is not the question. This is neither an indictment nor a propaganda, but a study. No more is as- sumed than that national character shows a certain continu- ity, and that incentives which have been potent in the past are likely to be potent in the future. If so much be con- ceded, then the further development of Caribbean domina- tion seems assured. If the considerations which have im- pelled us to restrict the liberty of Cuba, to take over the financial problems of Santo Domingo and to assume the management of Haiti, are legitimate, then there is more work of this kind for us to do. Conditions were no worse in Haiti than in other Caribbean countries. Utter reckless- ness and incompetency have characterized the management of every one of these pseudo-states which the preoccupations of the real nations have temporarily abandoned to independ- ence. It was a matter of chance which one of the dancers should first pay the piper, but all have danced and all must pay. As each faces in turn the inevitable crisis, the same problem presents itself. What reason is there to believe that we shall not meet it in the same way?” “To the independence party Central America is its own little world. To the imperialistic party it is but a pawn on the mighty chessboard of world empire. We may sympa- thize with the one or the other but we must not judge the one by the standards of the other. The United States plays the vaster game, must play it and play it well, for the stake is its existence.” 166 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “We have learned subtler ways of winning - , more varied ways of ruling. We have found new reasons for old im- pulses, and old impulses have renewed their youth. “Finally, we are still confronted with opportunity. More than any other people we have prizes within our grasp. And we are grasping them. Never was our frontier more alive than it is today. Acquisition of new territory has become a commonplace and passes unnoticed. Not one American in a hundred realizes that we have a protectorate over Haiti and that our control is creeping out through all these south- ern seas. If he knew, his only reaction would probably be a slightly increased complacency. The door is thus opened wide for a government, embarrassed by the mischievous ir- responsibility of these petty make-believe states, to take refuge in an ever-broadening imperialism. Unless the leop- ard changes his spots this must carry our frontier to the limits we have mentioned.” “Nor is the call of the tropics the only one. The war upon which we have now embarked has incalculable possi- bilities. We are committed not merely to the redressing of our grievances to date, but to the vastly larger program of settling such difficulties as the war itself may create. With- out taking too seriously the fascinating program of ‘mak- ing the world safe for democracy,’ it is well to remember that the war is to be fought on European soil and in con- junction with nations having possessions in every part of the world. When the peace conference meets we shall hear very little of the sonorous slogans which heralded the war’s beginning and much of the concrete problems for which these phrases suggest no very tangible solution.” Such arguments as these certainly do not represent the best North American thought, yet they are common enough to spread wide alarm in Latin America. Probably the most illuminating discussion of the present Latin American attitude toward the Monroe Doctrine was the debate in 1914 in the columns of the Atlantic Monthly between Professor Hiram Bingham and Senor F. Garcia Calderon. Professor Bingham’s article was entitled “The Monroe Doctrine, an Obsolete Shibboleth.” He argues for THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 167 the abandonment of the Monroe Doctrine on the following grounds : 1. The Doctrine was proclaimed under a false conception of (a) geographical proximity, for the great centers of South American life are nearer to Europe than to the United States, and (b) the existence of natural sympathy, which is difficult to encounter in Latin America. 2. Latin America resents our attitude of being “practi- cally sovereign on the continent” and opposed our war with Spain, our interference in Panama, Santo Domingo, etc. 3. It places the United States in the false position of being the collector of Europe’s debts, bringing our interven- tion in these states on many false grounds and thus multi- plying the prejudice of Latin America against us. 4. The great growth of some of the South American states in recent years is ignored in the application of the Doctrine. As Viscount Bryce represents them as saying, “Since there are no longer rain clouds coming up from the East, why should our friend, however well-intentioned, in- sist on holding an umbrella over us?” Professor Bingham concludes: “Let us face clearly the fact that the maintenance of the Monroe Doctrine is going to cost the United States an im- mense amount of trouble, men and money. Carried out to its logical conclusion it means a policy of suzerainty and in- terference which will earn us the increased hatred of our neighbors, the dissatisfaction of Europe, the loss of com- mercial opportunity and the forfeit of time and attention which would better be given to settling our own difficult in- ternal problems. The continuance of adherence to the Mon- roe Doctrine offers opportunity to scheming statesmen to distract public opinion from the necessity of concentrated attention at home by arousing mingled feelings of jingo- ism and self-importance in attempting to correct the errors of our neighbors.” Senor Calderon, whom readers of his “Latin America, Its 168 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Rise and Progress,” would certainly not accuse of being par- tial to the United States, strongly maintained the usefulness of the Doctrine and its acceptability to Latin America if properly interpreted. He said: “If the United States would affirm that it also is in ac- cord with the sovereign republics of the south, that it re- spects the territorial status quo in this American continent which its own triumphant expansion seems to threaten, an American system of law would be established, and the union of the two races which govern this huge continent would become a political fact of most far-reaching consequence. We should be face to face, then, with a new Monroeism as the doctrine of American autonomy, accepted and pro- claimed by all the peoples oversea, who would agree to protect one another against all future attempts at con- quest, and then, in place of this vexing and harassing tute- lage, we should have a sturdy declaration of American solidarity. “Even by 1911 these generous plans showed signs of de- velopment. The United States, Brazil and Argentina, through friendly intervention, averted an imminent war be- tween Peru and Ecuador. When they pacified Central America, Mexico came to their aid, and thenceforward their action no longer bore any resemblance to the intrusion of foreigners. It was in the name of a doctrine not only North American but Pan American that the peoples of the New World addressed the powerful nations which stood ready to tear them in pieces. No one then criticised this intervention of the great countries of the New World, of North Saxon and South Latin. The United States played its part also — ■ which made its moral influence acceptable to the Spanish American nations. “In principle the Monroe Doctrine is an essential article in the public code of the New World. Two newspapers of Buenos Aires, La Argentina and La Razon, have come to recognize it as such. In them we read that the L'nited States is the ‘safeguard of American interests,’ and they praise the North American republic for the paternal protection which it offers. It is only the brutal expression of the Doctrine, THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 169 the cynical imperialism which is deduced from it, which be- comes dangerous to the moral unity of the continent. “The wisest statesmen have no thought of divorcing this doctrine from the future history of America, even when they criticise its excesses most severely. “The men of the North have a civilizing function to fulfill in a continent wherein they exercise supreme power. If their behavior is disinterested, if they prevent war, if they fertilize these new countries abundantly with the gold of their banks, if they become apostles of peace and interna- tional justice, no one will ever forget the grandeur of their political role in the world’s politics. “In considering the behavior of the United States toward its neighbors, we must distinguish quite clearly between its attitude regarding Panama and its policy toward countries south of the Isthmus. Toward South America its interven- tion deserves only respect. The purely selfish interest of the United States evidently lay in the acceptance of war and an- archy, in accordance with the classical formula ‘divide and rule’; yet the United States has kept the peace. From Pan- ama to the La Plata it is working for the union of the peo- ples and for civilization. “Here, then, is an aspect of the Monroe Doctrine of per- petual usefulness : the struggle against the wars which threat- en to ruin the New World, still poor and thinly populated — intervention with the olive branch. In stimulating the union of South American republics the United States is at the same time protecting its own commercial interests, menaced by this perpetual turmoil. If its action were to halt there, if it renounced all territorial acquisition and set its face against all interference with the internal affairs of every state, the doctrine so often condemned would seem born anew and no one would dare to criticize its efficacy. Most of all, it is on the score of irregular political practices, of fomenting revo- lution, that the excessive tutelage of the United States comes in for most widespread condemnation. An Argentine writ- er, Manuel Ugarte, has summarized this sentiment in the phrase, ‘We wish to be brothers of the North Americans, not their slaves.’ Even if this tutelage were designed to prepare democracies without democratic tradition for self- 170 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM government after the Saxon method; even if, as in the case of Cuba, it is granted partial liberty and provisional privi- leges, the passionate feeling for independence which is so widespread throughout America would be exceedingly irri- tated by this rather contemptuous method of education. Great Britain pays more respect to the autonomy of her col- onies than the new Saxon democracy is willing to bestow upon the still fragile independence of some American repub- lics. What would be thought of the attitude of a Conserva- tive minister of Great Britain who put a veto on the action of the Socialist government of Australia by dissolving the colonial Parliament and criticizing the laws of the free ‘Commonwealth’ ? One cannot comprehend the policy which American peoples are often obliged to endure in their rela- tions with Washington. “In Latin America people do not understand the United States. A few offhand judgments often control the decision which leads Latin America to antagonism or to unreflecting infatuation. The Americans of the North are thought to be ‘practical people.’ Men say that they are intensely covet- ous of riches. They have no morality. The business man, always hard and arrogant in mind and brutal in method, is the symbol of the nation. Ideals, dreams, noble ambitions, never stir their breasts. These characteristics of the North American the men of the South, according to their indi- vidual ideas, admire or despise. “They forget how austere is the grandeur that Ameri- cans of the North acquire from their superb idealism, from their strong Puritan tradition, from the lust of gold made subservient to ambition for power and for influence over men. They are ignorant of the mysticism which forever flourishes in the L T nited States, continually creating new sects, the perpetual Christian Renaissance whose energy was so greatly admired by William James. We must admit that in South American countries, with their narrow and super- ficial religiosity, we do not find this great concern regard- ing the line which divides the ideal from the fact. The ex- ample of the United States, the reading of its poets, the study of Emerson, the influence of its universities, an ex- amination of the part which wealth has played in this de- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 171 mocracy, would, I conceive, go far toward reforming the bad manners of the South and make it appreciate the true fundamentals of the grandeur of North America. “In my book on the Latin democracies I have set forth the contrasts which may easily be established between the Catholicism of the Spanish Americans, the state religion, uniform and formal, and the restless and active Protestant- ism of the United States ; between the mixture of races in the South and that racial pride, ‘the white man’s burden,’ which controls northern opinion. It would be very easy to push this analysis further and to set forth the strength of aristocratic prejudices among the Spaniards and the very democratic spirit which exists among the Saxons ; to con- trast the idealism of the North with the less vast, less gen- erous ambition of the South; or the stanch, puritanical do- mestic life among the South Americans with a certain license of morals which exists in North America. But, in spite of this sharp contrast, there are resemblances not less evident than the divergent traits, an Americanism which gives a certain unity to the entire New World. All evidence points to the conclusion that if the United States acts in accord with Latin America, if the Monroe Doctrine loses its ag- gressive character, the influence of these twenty nations will be a force in the world’s progress which cannot be de- spised.” That is the serious judgment of one of the great Latin American writers and diplomats, a man who becomes most indignant when he discusses North American imperialism. CONFUSION OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE WITH OTHER POLICIES With the passing of the years the Monroe Doctrine has been confused with at least three new ideas that have grown up during the period of our relations with the rest of the American continent. In the first place, we have confused it with the headship of the United States in America. The United States has developed a hundred times more rapidly than any other country in America, and as a nat- 172 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM ural outgrowth of that development it has necessarily as- sumed the headship of the American nations. It is more or less the story of all history. The process is similar to that by which the Bishop of Rome became the Pope — the smaller bishoprics sent their problems to the great man in the city and thus his influence developed until he became supreme. In the same way the United States has grown very nat- urally into a position of leadership on the American conti- nent. Whether we like it or whether Latin America likes it, there is no way of preventing the most advanced and most powerful nation in the group from exercising the greatest influence. This headship signified, among other things, that we must lead in the building of the Panama Canal, though of course it did not prescribe the method. It likewise meant that we must acquire naval stations and zones of influence for the protection of the Canal and all that that implies. But the Monroe Doctrine has nothing whatever to do with this. These things came about from the position we necessarily assumed as the greatest nation on the continent. Perhaps we did not have to do it in quite the way we did ; better ways could have been found. Nevertheless the burden was laid upon us and we could not get away from it, so we took the lead just as other great nations have done in other parts of the world where their influence was dominant. Thus the various “Pan American Congresses” met with little success until the greatest American nation entered and lent its over- powering influence to their promotion. The second principle with which the Monroe Doctrine is confused is that of imperialism. Imperialism has nothing to do with the Monroe Doctrine, but is merely one of those tendencies of modern nations to take over smaller and more poorly organized countries. We have been following other peoples in doing that, for the tendency is not only world- wide but is a factor in the economic as well as the political field today. Most of our territory has really been gained at the expense of other nations. Let it be said to our credit, however, that, in contrast with most modern imperialistic nations, we bought most of the territory acquired. This is our imperialistic policy, a thing apart from the Monroe Doc- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 173 trine. Let us remind our Latin American friends that Chile, Brazil and Argentina have done like things. The big na- tions in South America have done as the big nation in North America. Of course it is easy to think the United States is the only sinner in the world, but every big nation is im- perialistic. It is not the Monroe Doctrine that prompts us to do these things, it is the great and prepossessing idea of empire building. We are not nearly as guilty on this score as Great Britain. The third point of confusion is with the idea of Pan Americanism. By Pan Americanism we understand the recognition of a community of interests among all Ameri- can countries and a determination to work these out coop- eratively to the best advantage of all concerned. The pres- ent tendency is to create a concert of American powers to act together for mutual protection and help, the maintenance of peace and the promotion of better commercial, political and intellectual relations. And this is not the Monroe Doc- trine. These three matters of headship, imperialism and Pan Americanism have all exerted an appreciable influence in our relations with Latin America, but they should not be confounded with Monroeism. We will clarify our action and our understanding of all inter-American relations as soon as we cease lumping everything related to Latin Amer- ica under the one conception of Monroeism, which, after all, is to the average citizen of the United States largely a sentiment. The address of President Wilson to the Mexican editors probably delighted Latin America more than any other offi- cial utterance with the exception of Mr. Root’s famous speech at Rio de Janeiro. Mr. Wilson said: “The famous Monroe Doctrine was adopted without your consent, without the consent of any of the Central or South American states. If I may express it in the terms that we so often use in this country, we said, ‘We are going to be your big brother whether you want us to be or not.’ We did not ask whether it was agreeable to you that we should be your big brother. We said we were going to be. Now that 174 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM was all very well so far as protecting you from aggression from the other side of the water was concerned, but there was nothing in it that protected you from aggression from us, and I have repeatedly seen the uneasy feeling on the part of representatives of the states of Central and South Amer- ica that our self-appointed protection might be for our own benefit and our own interests and not for the interests of our neighbors. So I said, ‘Very well, let us make some ar- rangement by which we will give bond. Let us have a com- mon guarantee, that all of us will sign, of political independ- ence and territorial integrity. Let us agree that if any one of us, the United States included, violates the political in- dependence or the territorial integrity of any of the others, all the others will jump on her.’ ” THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS What effect has the World War, which has affected all international relations, had on the Monroe Doctrine? In answering this question one is again confronted with the basic question of the meaning of the Doctrine. President Wilson said, in addressing the Senate on June 22, 1917, that “The nations should with one accord adopt the doctrine of President Monroe as the doctrine of the world.” He ex- plained that under this world doctrine no nation should seek to extend its policy over any other nation or people, but that every people should be left free to determine its own policy, its own way of development, unhindered, unthreat- ened, unafraid, the weak along with the great and powerful. President Wilson’s understanding of the Monroe Doc- trine is here clearly revealed. It is certainly not the same as Professor Bingham had when he advocated its abandonment because it kept us from being well regarded in Hispanic America. The simple Monroe and Wilson insistence that each nation shall have the right to develop along its own lines, without interference from the outside, that “good faith and justice toward all nations” shall prevail, represents an entirely different conception. While Monroe’s proposal was that no European nation should seek to extend its au- thority over an American nation, Wilson proposed that no THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 175 nation in any part of the world should seek to extend its polity over any other nation or people. This interpretation of the Doctrine was the one given it by President Cleveland in dealing with the Venezuelan boundary dispute, when he said that the Doctrine found its basis “in the theory that every nation shall have its rights protected and its just cLims enforced.” At the same time Secretary Olney pointed out to Great Britain that “the peo- ple of the United States had a vital interest in the cause of self-governmer'” and that the British attitude toward Vene- zuela so threatened the American policy that if the power of the United States was adequate to prevent the carrying out of British purposes it would be done. It is natural that this Doctrine, maintained for a century and resulting in giving weaker nations in America a chance to develop without outside interference, should be of value in developing a world policy that would protect small na- tions. That the efficacy of the Monroe Doctrine has de- pended on the force the United States could bring to its support, suggests of course the need of force to support any world application of the same principle — the principle which has been recognized in the formation of the League of Nations. Just as the Latin American peoples had favored the original Monroe Doctrine and appreciated its protection from Europe, so they immediately welcomed the extension of the Doctrine to the whole world as embodied in the League of Nations. For strangely enough our southern neighbors, believing that the United States has shifted from the origi- nal purpose of the Doctrine and is now using it merely for its own selfish purposes, saw in the proposal to bring the world into the agreement a guarantee that Hispanic America would not only be protected from Europe but from the United States itself. The League of Nations was received with the greatest enthusiasm by all the southern countries. Here was the movement that would get the American nations beyond the impasse which had been reached in the much talked-of Pan Americanism. For, on the one hand the United States could not give up the historic Monroe Doctrine and on the 176 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM other the Hispanic Americans could never come into free relations with their northern neighbor if that Doctrine meant, as it seemed to have come to mean, the hegemony of the United States in the Pan American family. But here was the way out of the dilemma — make the Doctrine world wide. The United States would surrender nothing of her historic insistence that European nations must not project themselves into American life, and Latin America would have her fears and her implied inferiority removed, since the United States would thus assume the same obligation to respect the independence of the small American states as did all other nations. Thus the greatest difficulty in the way of continental solidarity would disap- pear without embarrassment to any of the parties. This feeling was well expressed by the Cuban, Orestes Ferrara, in his review, LaReforma Social, as follows: “When Mr. Wilson and Mr. Taft refer to the declara- tions of President Monroe and insist that the detachment of American nations will not receive a blow but on the con- trary will be more absolute because the Doctrine is univer- sally accepted by the establishment of the League, they say something that reveals very clearly how their minds turn to the past when the principle of the independence of Ameri- can nations was threatened by the transference of the conse- quences of another great European conflict to American soil. Evidently Wilson and Taft regard the Monroe Doctrine in its original sense, the most just to other rights. It is not so with Senators Knox and Lodge. They think of the Doc- trine as it has been practised for the last twenty-five years, which seems to have justified the relations with Panama, Nicaragua, Santo Domingo, Plaiti, etc., and which has estab- lished the absolute dominion of the United States over the Americas. The difference is therefore paramount, being on the one hand a principle and on the other a selfish interest. “The truth is that there has never been a declaration in the international life of the world with purer ideas and more noble purposes than the Monroe Doctrine. The North American statesmen of that time had the most unselfish ideas about it. Jefferson, from his retirement, gave to it THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 177 the whole endorsement of his serene mind and tranquil soul. But in the course of time the formula ‘The United States standing before Europe in defense of the Americas’ nat- urally brought the predominance of the United States in America. And if the United States had not practised in her international relations the Anglo-Saxon principle that the rights of others shall not be interfered with unless one’s own interests are clearly threatened, a situation of this kind would have been fatal to the rest of America. “To be more specific, we may affirm that if any other nation than the United States had had her hands free in America as she has, with power to make or unmake the map south of the Rio Grande and even to do so with the blessings of Europe, the rights of Latin America would have suffered profoundly. “But this relative prudence has not vitiated the change of form of the Monroe Doctrine which makes it not the old powerful and unilateral declaration of the early days, but a real program of action which permitted the Presidents of the United States to dictate rules for American international politics and even national political rules to apply to other countries. Thus the Caribbean has come to be considered as a mare nostrum. The United States has come to regard the Monroe Doctrine, thus transformed, as backing those other policies — trade follows the flag and dollar diplomacy. “Thus Wilson and Taft on the one hand and Lodge and Knox on the other, since they speak of different periods of the Monroe Doctrine, are both right when one maintains that the League of Nations will maintain the Doctrine intact and the others contend that the opposite is true. “Discussing the question of the League, if the United States, having helped to break the balance of power in Europe by defeating Germany, should remain outside the alliance of the victorious nations, her isolation will not mean her strength but her weakness. The obligations of the Mon- roe Doctrine would not then be carried against a divided Europe, but before an alliance of states victorious on sea and land. It is not easy to prophesy the difficulties of the future, but it can be seen that the mission assumed by the United States will be full of difficulties, as it has in the past. 178 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM To share jointly these responsibilities would mean the obvi- ating of conflicts or diminishing the possibility of conflicts which may take place not in Europe but in the tranquil Americas. “On abandoning the rights of exclusive protection, she would be free of multiplied responsibilities and know that if a conflict occurred, it would be concerning matters that af- fected her directly and not remotely. The principles of Washington and Monroe would have passed through a com- plete evolution and become the admitted principles of all humanity, not simply the canons of American law. “The Monroe Doctrine could thus become the doctrine of the world. Only the aspirations of conquest which make of the doctrine of defense of the small nations of this conti- nent an excuse for continual aggression approaching an American Prussianism, will have died forever.” But this wise and just solution of the Pan American impasse was not to be. A group of North Americans who appreciated the necessity of protecting their own preroga- tives but not those of any other nations, insisted on the covenant of the League making specific acknowledgment that, while all the nations of the world would surrender all special privileges and rights of interference with their neigh- bors, the United States must still have the special privilege of determining the course of national development in the western hemisphere. So the following was inserted as Article XXI of the covenant : “Nothing in this covenant shall be deemed to affect the validity of international engagements such as treaties of arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe Doc- trine, for securing the maintenance of peace.” If this article had gone further and defined the Monroe Doctrine as not giving the United States any special privi- leges on the American continent, but meaning, as President Wilson had intimated, that every people should be left free to determine its own policy, there could have been no objec- tion. But this was not done. And so at one stroke the old THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 179 situation was continued and made worse. For it looked as if this was a move to have the whole world agree to leave with the United States the determination of all American questions. And, of course, if the Latin American nations signed the covenant, they themselves became guarantors of an arrangement which those who insisted on the inclusion of this reservation stated to mean that the United States would have the right to interfere in the national life of the other American nations whenever it deemed such a course ex- pedient. Here was Latin America’s dilemma: If she stayed out of the League she lost the opportunity of being linked up with the only organization that offered to help the small nation. If she went in she signed a document which might mean her agreement to complete domination by her great northern neighbor. She was much in the position of a man who is forced to borrow a certain sum of money to escape ruin, but who is asked to sign a note for an unknown amount in order to get the money. It leaves him in doubt as to whether he is to be ruined now or later. FURTHER DEFINITION DESIRABLE This was what led little El Salvador to direct a note to our Department of State asking for a definition of the Monroe Doctrine. This note, in the first place, recites that despite its neutrality in the war, El Salvador manifested “its sympathy on every occasion for the ideals which animated the Govern- ment of the United States in entering the war,” praises President Wilson for “having crystallized the legitimate hopes of a fruitful peace by submitting the draft of a League of Nations covenant,” says El Salvador, “manifests the desire to adhere to this treaty which sanctions arbitra- tion as the only method of settling disputes between nations,” and continues : “The whole text of the treaty is both suggestive and at- tractive. In it there is a return to those principles of life long awaited by sociologists and publicists. And indeed it seems as if from the ruins of war there have arisen with 180 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM greater strength and potency the beautiful gospels which in a moment of folly were relegated to the discard by those who through the immutable laws of international interdepen- dence were especially charged with sustaining and upholding them. “The text of the treaty contains, however, one article which has awakened warm discussions throughout the whole American continent including the United States, due no doubt to its brevity and lack of clearness. I refer to Article XXI, drafted, in the following terms : ‘Nothing in this covenant shall be deemed to affect the validity of interna- tional engagements, such as treaties of arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe Doctrine, for securing the maintenance of peace.’ “The legal scope of this provision from an international viewpoint is open to differing interpretations, since in the vast scheme of the League of Nations treaties of arbitration and regional understandings, such as the Monroe Doctrine, are recognized and sanctioned, despite the fact that as to the highly peaceful purpose of the latter doctrine there does not exist harmonious meeting of minds nor an absolute criterion. “From the year 1823, in which the distinguished James Monroe rejected all intervention by European nations in the affairs of the American continent to the present day, this doctrine has undergone different applications depending upon the diverse political tendencies prevailing at that particular time in the United States. “It would be unnecessary, Mr. Secretary, to undertake any detailed exposition of the various views of prominent think- ers and public men of the United States as to the genuine and correct interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine, which former Secretary of State Elihu Root regarded as ‘a dec- laration based on the right of the people of the United States to protect itself as a nation, and which could not be trans- formed into a declaration, joint or common, to all the nations of America or even to a limited number of them.’ “My Government recognizes that the Monroe Doctrine consolidated the independence of the Continental States of Latin America, and saved them from the great danger of a European intervention. It realizes that it is a powerful fac- THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 181 tor in the existence of the democratic form of government on this continent and that it raises a barrier to European colonization. “Since, however, the covenant of the League of Nations does not set forth nor determine the purposes nor fix a definite criterion of international relationship in America, and since, on the other hand, the Doctrine will be forthwith transformed — in view of the full sanction of the nations of the world — into a principle of universal public law, juris et de jure, I request that your Excellency will be good enough to give the authentic interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine as it is understood in the present historical moment and in its future application by the Government of the United States, which must realize that my Government is keenly desirous of securing a statement which shall put an end to the divergence of views now prevailing on the subject,- which it is recognized by all is not the most propitious in stimulat- ing the ideals of true Pan Americanism. “Contrary to the authorized and respected view of former Secretary of State Root, the Monroe Doctrine through its inclusion in the covenant of the League of Nations will be converted without doubt into a genesis of American interna- tional law. “Since any amendment to the text of the treaty and even the rejection of all of its provisions by the American Senate would still leave intact the various points which this inter- national agreement covers as to the other signatory nations, by virtue of their general and expressed acceptance, the principle embraced in the League of Nations, and therefore the Monroe Doctrine, would be virtually accepted as a funda- mental principle of public American law by all those coun- tries that signed or manifested their adherence to the Peace T reaty . “The necessity of an interpretation of the genesis and scope of the Monroe Doctrine not only in the development of the lofty purpose of Pan Americanism, but in order that that Doctrine may maintain its original purity and prestige, is rendered all the more urgent.” Even before El Salvador had written her now famous note 182 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM to the Department of State, ex-President Bonilla of Hon- duras, who represented his country at the Peace Confer- ence, presented to that body the following communication : “In this covenant all peoples represented in this Confer- ence are directly interested; the smaller nations, like that which I represent, more if possible than the greater ones. Its bases, as expressed by the Commission, are not known ; but the public press has asserted that amendments have been proposed : among these a proposal by the delegation of North America to declare that ‘the pact shall not affect the validity of other international conventions such as the arbitration treaties or regional understandings, like the Monroe Doc- trine, to assure the maintenance of peace.’ “The Monroe Doctrine affects the Latin American repub- lics directly. As it has never been written into an interna- tional document, nor been expressly accepted by the nations of the Old Continent, nor of the New World; and as it has been defined and applied in different manners by presi- dents and other statesmen of the United States of America, I believe that it is necessary that in the pact about to be sub- scribed it should be defined with entire clearness, in such way that it may be incorporated in the written international law. “The North American delegation is presided over by the Honorable Woodrow Wilson, and it is certain that if the Monroe Doctrine was not defined the delegation had in mind the definition or interpretation that Mr. Wilson, as Presi- dent of the United States, has given to it in his various addresses from that which he voiced at Mobile in 1913 to the last in the current year. In these he declared that the Doctrine is not a menace, but is a guaranty for the feeblest of the nations of America; and he repudiated expressly the interpretations that had been made to signify that the United States had a right to exercise a kind of tutelage over the other republics of America. “Especially in his discourse with the Mexican journalists on June 7, 1919, he declared that the guaranty that this Doctrine implied in favor of the feeble countries is not with relation to the powers of the Old World only, but relates to THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 183 the United States also ; and that he spoke of the celebration of a Pan American pact that might be realized and might include this point. Such declarations have made President Wilson the best of the exponents of the ideals of the peoples of Latin America. “All these facts induce me to present the accompanying proposition, which I hope will merit a favorable reception by the delegation of the United States, and will be sup- ported by the Latin American republics, which with it will pay their tribute of admiration and respect to the First Magistrate of the North American republic, that has given such proofs of its love of justice. “If the American amendment to which I referred is phrased in the terms published, or in others like them, the pact of the League of Nations will be no obstacle to a union or confederation of other form, by the peoples of Latin America, that will tend to a realization of the dream of the immortal Bolivar.” The clause which Dr. Bonilla offered as an addition to the proposed compact of the League of Nations may be trans- lated as follows : “This Doctrine, that the United States of America have maintained since the year 1823, when it was proclaimed by President Monroe, signifies that : All the republics of Amer- ica have a right to independent existence ; that no nation may acquire by conquest any part of the territory of any of these nations, nor interfere with its internal government or administration, nor do any other act to impair its auton- omy or to wound its national dignity. It is not to hinder the ‘Latin’ American countries from confederating or in other forms uniting themselves, seeking the best way to realize their destiny.” The view taken generally in Latin America of the Salva- dorean note is well illustrated by the following editorial ut- terance of El Universal, of Mexico City: “We published yesterday the Note addressed by the repub- 184 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM lie of El Salvador to the Secretary of State of the North American Union asking for an exact interpretation of the 2 ist article of the protocol of the League of Nations, refer- ring to the recognition of the Monroe Doctrine by the Latin American nations. It is a document of far-reaching im- portance. “On the appearance in 1823 of the Monroe Doctrine, it had the character, as has been expressed by the eminent Chilean statesman, Don Alejandro Alvarez, of a sort of gospel of the New World. President Monroe, according to Alvarez, though taking his stand exclusively on the interests of his own country, in his famous message to Congress, sum- marized and expressed admirably and clearly the political situation and aspirations of the whole New World. Cir- cumstances then obtaining in Europe made some such dec- laration urgent. There was a controversy on between Russia and England over the boundaries of their possessions in America ; and besides — and graver still — the countries sig- natory to the Holy Alliance were suspected of the purpose of coming to the help of Spain for reconquering her lost American colonies. When, therefore, the United States proclaimed its affirmation that the New World ought to be governed by republican organizations, and that all the coun- tries on this side are free and equal, as relates to Europe, the independence of the budding republics was assured — an attitude on the part of the Northern Republic which cannot fail to meet with the goodwill of the other coun- tries. “Up to that point, and for the reasons set forth, the Mon- roe Doctrine could not be considered a particular expression of the sentiments of the United States ; it was rather the crystallization in international relations of the aspirations of all America. But since then, as the various countries of the continent have gone forward in their evolution, the Latin republics have not always moved harmoniously with the United States — nor even with one another. Thus it has come about that while some publicists consider the Monroe Doctrine as a sort of tacit agreement among all the Ameri- can nations for warding off the occupation of territory by Europe, or its active intervention in American affairs, there THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 185 are others who have come to believe that the only thing the United States had in view in promulgating the Doctrine was to substitute their own intervention for that of Europe in the affairs of the other nations of this continent, and, in that connection, it has not yet been settled whether acts of imperialism, deliberately engaged in by the United States against the sovereignty of Latin American republics, are or are not subject to regulation by the Monroe Doctrine. “It is a state of things which has resulted in many mis- understandings. We do not know, really, what to think; as, in view of diverse and even contrary interpretations by different statesmen, the Monroe Doctrine or ‘Monroeism’ has become something extremely foggy and obscure. It is to this fact that is due the lack of confidence in it on the part of the Latin republics ; to this, and to nothing else, was due the statement on the part of our Government recently that it did not recognize that Doctrine. “President Wilson himself seemed to justify that want of confidence when he suggested in his address to the Mexican editors in June, 1919, that all the Latin American countries should undertake a revision of that Doctrine and should come to an agreement that would put the question of their independence outside the danger of any imperialistic en- croachment. If thus the very author of the League of Na- tions admitted less than a year before that it was only natural that the Monroe Doctrine should inspire in Latin America some want of confidence as not being a real com- munity pact, how can those nations which have not yet been called into the consultation adhere to the League of Nations, in which the Monroe Doctrine is explicitly recog- nized? “As we see the matter, El Salvador has put a finger on the sore spot, as the saying goes, in this most complicated matter of American politics. Will its note bring about a general revision, a Pan American revision such as Wilson intimated, of the Monroe Doctrine? Unless some such thing happens, we do not see how the Latin American nations can sign a compact, such as that of the League of Nations, unless some lieht can be thrown on a matter that so pro- foundly concerns their interests.” 186 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM The framing of a reply to El Salvador taxed the ingenuity of our Department of State. But a way out was happily found by a simple citation of the address of President Wil- son before the Second Pan American Scientific Congress, where the President had discussed the Monroe Doctrine as follows : “The Monroe Doctrine was proclaimed by the United States on her own authority. It has always been main- tained, and always will be maintained, upon her own respon- sibility. But the Monroe Doctrine demanded merely that European governments should not attempt to extend their political systems to this side of the Atlantic. It did not dis- close the use which the United States intended to make of her power on this side of the Atlantic. It was a hand held up in warning, but there was no promise in it of what America was going to do with the implied and partial pro- tectorate which she apparently was trying to set up on this side of the water, and I believe you will sustain me in the statement that it has been fears and suspicions on this score which have hitherto prevented the greater intimacy and con- fidence and trust between the Americas. The states of America have not been certain what the United States would do with her power. That doubt must be removed. And latterly there has been a very frank interchange of views between the authorities in W ashington and those who repre- sented the other states of this hemisphere, an interchange of views charming and hopeful, because based upon an increas- ingly sure appreciation of the spirit in which they were undertaken. These gentlemen have seen that, if America is to come into her own, into her legitimate own, in a world of peace and order, she must establish the foundations of amity, so that no one will hereafter doubt them. “I hope and believe that this can be accomplished. These conferences have enabled me to foresee how it will be ac- complished. It will be accomplished, in the first place, by the states of America uniting in guaranteeing to each other abso- lute political independence and territorial integrity. In the second place, and as a necessary corollary to that, guarantee- ing the agreement to settle all pending boundary disputes as THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 187 soon as possible and by amicable process; by agreeing that all disputes among themselves, should they unhappily arise, will be handled by patient, impartial investigation and set- tled by arbitration ; and the agreement necessary to the peace of the Americas, that no state of either continent will permit revolutionary expeditions against another state to be fitted out on its territory, and that they will prohibit the exporta- tions of munitions of war for the purpose of supplying revolutionists against neighboring governments.” This reply was received by El Salvador with diplomatic expressions of appreciation, but her leaders, as well as those of other Latin American countries, recognize that the senti- ments expressed by one of our presidents before a scientific gathering cannot be considered as an authoritative and bind- ing definition of any fundamental policy like the Monroe Doctrine. They want rather a declaration in which the executive and legislative branches of the Government, after a discussion which allowed public opinion to express itself, would officially state the position of the nation. The following words of Senor A. de Manos-Albas, writ- ten a few years ago in the English Review of Reviews, still remain true: “The means to accomplish unity of sentiment and to dis- pel the misgivings between the United States and Latin America is not far to seek. It is only required to amplify the Monroe Doctrine to the full extent of its logical develop- ment. * * * If the United States should declare that the era of conquest on the American continent has been closed to all and forever, beginning with themselves, the brooding storm of distrust will disappear from the Latin American mind, and an international cordiality of incalculable possibilities will ensue, not only for the welfare of the American nations, but universally for the cause of freedom and democracy.” At this writing the United States is in a most peculiar position. Having insisted upon inserting the Monroe Doc- trine clause into the Covenant, a clause in which no other nation in the world was interested and to which many were 188 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM opposed, the United States finds itself the only nation of consequence out of the League. The Latin American coun- tries were so enthusiastic for the League idea that fourteen out of twenty of them signed, with the Monroe Doctrine clause and all, almost without debate. The L T nited States was expected to join as well. Most of these countries fol- lowed the United States into the war and they all thought they were going with her into the League. Now they are awakening to the fact that their supposed leader is not with them, and the situation is a bit disconcerting to some of them. The situation reminds one of an incident in the French Revolution when a group of politicians sat discussing mat- ters of state when a great mob rushed by the building. One of the group jumped to his feet, ran to the door and ex- claimed, “There go my people. I must hurry and follow them, for I am their leader !” The complaisant North American may smile at the men- tion of the possibility of our losing our position of domi- nance on this continent, but the present situation at least suggests the development of a condition which will unite the rest of America with Europe rather than with us. It is easy to note that among Latin Americans there is great confusion over the situation, and some frankly say that the present division may mean a final separation of the Latin American countries from North America. Commenting on the presi- dential election in the United States, La Nation, of Buenos Aires, a paper which all during the war ardently supported the United States, said: “Confronted with the dilemma of abandoning either the League of Nations or the Monroe Doctrine, the Latin Amer- ican countries probably would choose to abandon the latter. Many people in the United States have believed that the various South American countries, members of the League, would withdraw in order to follow the policy inspired by the United States, and contrary, naturally, to the League. * * * “The declaration on the Monroe Doctrine Senator Hard- ing made to the correspondent of La Nation hardly seems an THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 189 adequate cause for the South American members of the League to abandon it. In effect Senator Harding told our correspondent that the Monroe Doctrine was not an inter- national pact or agreement but a declaration of policy by the United States which promised protection against abuses or aggressions by European nations, precisely an interpreta- tion which causes the greatest resistance from most, if not all, of these countries, and which is contrary to the interpre- tation President Wilson has given, according to which the Doctrine established among the American nations a most perfect equality — an equality that cannot exist if the question of protection that is not asked is the product entirely of the one-sided resolution of a power declaring itself the protector against dangers in which no one believes.” If the United States does not form part of the League, these southern countries will find themselves in a different camp from the United States, having acquired a special status in relation to other members of the League, and will be forced to consider the L’nited States as a factor to some extent foreign to the development of their peaceful policy. This surely will not be satisfactory either to them or to us, in view of the sincere desire of both parties that an accord shall exist between the two sections of the continent. This reported interview with President Harding raises an important question concerning the Monroe Doctrine about which there is absolute difference of opinion. The President is reported as intimating that the Doctrine is not to be considered as an international agreement, but solely as a declaration of the United States, maintained by the power of the United States. Secretary Root, already quoted, also said that it could under no circumstances become a joint agreement. But President Roosevelt said, in an address at Rio de Janeiro : “All the nations which are sufficiently advanced, such as Brazil and the United States, should participate on an abso- lute equality in the responsibilities and development of this doctrine so far as the interests of the western hemisphere 190 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM as a whole are concerned. It must be made a continental and not a unilateral doctrine. * * * If ever, as regards any country, intervention does unfortunately become necessary, I hope that wherever possible it will be a joint intervention by such powers as Brazil and the United States, without the thought of self-aggrandizement by any of them, and for the common good of the western world.” As has already been shown, President Wilson accepted the same idea of the Monroe Doctrine being extendable not only to all America but to the whole world. In this same spirit were his words in addressing Congress December 7, 1915, when he said: “There was a time in the early days of our great nation and of the republics fighting their way to independence in Central and South America, when the government of the United States looked upon itself as in some sort the guar- dian of the republics to the south of her as against any en- croachments or efforts at political control from the other side of the water; felt it its duty to play the part even with- out invitation from them; and I think that we can claim that the task was undertaken with a true and disinterested enthusiasm for the freedom of the Americas and the unmo- lested self-government of her independent peoples. But it was always difficult to maintain such a role without offense to the pride of the peoples whose freedom of action we sought to protect, and without provoking serious miscon- ceptions of our motives, and every thoughtful man of affairs must welcome the altered circumstances of the new day in whose light we now stand, when there is no claim of guar- dianship or thought of wards but, instead, a full and honorable association as of partners between ourselves and our neighbors, in the interest of all America, north and south.” It is this spirit faithfully carried out that will make all Latin America join with us in the support of the Monroe Doctrine and be at one with us in building a continental THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 191 solidarity. The following comment by La Prensa, of Bue- nos Aires, on this message is expressive of the way all Hispanic America responds to such sentiment : “There has been a gradual and continuous change in the American policy toward the republics of this continent. These changes have been coincident with the visits of promi- nent Americans to South America, with the result that a better knowledge of the state of civilization which has been reached by South Americans has become more general. This has been the principal cause of the gradual transforma- tion. The Monroe Doctrine is now essentially modified. It is necessary that it should no longer have the character of tutelage that it had at the time of its origin, but it must undergo an evolution toward Pan Americanism. “No higher, more fundamental, more authoritative utter- ance has been made on the subject than that embodied in President Wilson’s message. President Wilson made his statement without reserve and with sincerity, showing that it was the result of serene reflection. According to Presi- dent Wilson, Monroeism will be a means of defense of this continent, but all the American states will be members of the international community, the United States having the same sovereign rank as the others. “President Wilson’s message will be as transcendent as was President Monroe’s, both being in accord with regard to solidarity, but differing in regard to the conception of circumstances. President Wilson’s program does not lack anything necessary to the high development of ideals.” Let all America then unite in supporting the Monroe Doc- trine, and when all have gone into a World League of Na- tions, let a subdivision of that League act as the American League, suggested by Bolivar in 1826 and by Wilson and Brum in 1917, to promote peace and mutual prosperity among all American nations. Dr. Baltasar Brum, President of Uruguay, in an address before the university students of the capital of his country, advocated this League of American Nations in the following important declarations: 192 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “Owing to the state in which European countries remain after the struggle, it may be said that fear of invasion by them in America has been removed for many years. But is that sufficient reason for us to take no interest in the future and turn away from the Monroe Doctrine with the pretext that it is now unnecessary ? I believe that today, more than ever, we should use foresight in searching for formulas that may assure forever the peace and full independence of American countries. “The principle of American solidarity, based on the constitution of a continental league, is more ample than the Monroe Doctrine, because it will not only defend the coun- tries of America against foreign invaders but also against imperialistic tendencies which might arise among them- selves. “The formation of this League, in my opinion, would be a logical consequence of the Treaty of Versailles, which, in recognizing and expressly accepting the Monroe Doctrine, seems to be desirous of limiting its field of action, so far as American affairs are concerned. On the other hand, the Supreme Council of the League of Nations is composed principally of the delegates of the Great Powers, nearly all the American countries having been excluded. These coun- tries need, therefore, to create a powerful organization to look after their interests in the decisions arrived at by the League of Nations. Harmonious and joint action by the ‘American League’ would avoid European intervention in our affairs.” Some have objected to this League of American Nations because they fear it would become a rival to the World League. But there seems to be no reason why such a League would not really strengthen the World League by assuring its unanimous support by all American nations. These na- tions would naturally discuss beforehand the questions to come before the League and decide upon the attitude of all the American nations. Indeed it could easily and profitably develop into a kind of sub-committee of the committee of the whole, to consider purely American matters. By such a relationship the American nations could settle their own THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND LATIN AMERICA 193 questions, but with the double advantage that these smaller nations would have some final appeal in case of absolute injustice by the one American power that is easily able to impose its will on all the rest of the continent ; also the trans- Atlantic nations would be enabled to have direct touch with the American nations in working toward the peace and prosperity of the world at large. We are today in the midst of one of those great world epochs when all relations with and inheritances from the past are in flux. The best of the past must be readjusted, reformed, redefined to contribute to the future — the new day, which, whether we like it or not, is different from the old. The Monroe Doctrine has been the greatest influence on the American continent for preserving the republican form of government. It is today neither an “obsolete shibboleth” nor an “international impertinence,” if understood in the original and true sense. There is no question that the Doc- trine has been made to cover a multitude of sins, political and commercial, and is abused by North American jingoes. The wrong appeal to and interpretation of the Doctrine has developed among the Hispanic American peoples a prejudice against it, and among the statesmen of the South an in- sistent demand for a definition of its present application. If we can be big enough to put ourselves in the place of our southern neighbors we must acknowledge that they have a right to a clear understanding of how far the Doctrine means “America for the Americans” and how far it means “America for the North Americans.” If we are to retain our leadership in America and in the world in this new age when the rights of the small nation and the common man are the concern of all, and when a righteous peace in the world is tne pearl of great price for which all else may be sacrificed, we will turn toward world friendship rather than shrivel into a Prussian nationalism. And if we are honest, as we believe we are, in our con- tention that, as Secretary Root said, “We wish for no vic- tories but those of peace, for no territory except our own,” and as Roosevelt said, “This Doctrine has nothing to do with the commercial relations of any American powers save 194 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM that it in truth allows each of them to form such as it de- sires,” and, as President Wilson said, “Let us have a com- mon guarantee that all of us will sign, an agreement of political independence and territorial integrity,” — if we really mean these things, let us make them so clear and so authoritative that our worst enemies cannot but admit that our relations with Latin America are guided, as John Hay said they were with China, by the open door and the Golden Rule, and that the Monroe Doctrine is the simple expression of our commitment to the principles of American democracy, developed without outside interference, and of our willing- ness to give the last drop of our blood for its defense. Sources of Further Information on the Monroe Doctrine and Latin America Articles on Present Status of Monroe Doctrine, Annals of Ameri- can Academy of Political and Social Sciences, 1914. Atlantic Monthly: Discussion between Hiram Bingham and F. Garcia Calderon, 1914. Bigelow: The American Policy. Brum, Baltasar : Solidaridad Americana. Calderon, F. Garcia : Latin America, Its Rise and Progress. Hart, Albert Bushnell: Monroe Doctrine, An Interpretation. Leuchsenring, Emelio Roig de: La Doctrina de Monroe y el Pacto de la Liga de las Naciones, Cuba Contemporanea, 1920. Lobo, Helio: Causas Diplomaticas. Moore, J. B.: American Diplomacy, Chapter VI. Pereyra, Carlos: El Mito de Monroe. Powers, H. H. : America Among the Nations. Proceedings of the American Society of International Law, 1914. Quesada, Ernesto : La Doctrina Monroe, Su Evolucion Historica. Richardson, James Daniel: A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Shepherd, William R. : New Light on the Monroe Doctrine, Political Science Quarterly, 1916. Sherrill, C. H. : Modernizing the Monroe Doctrine. Wilson, George Grafton: The Monroe Doctrine After the War. Zeballos, E. S. : La Republica Argentina en la Liga de Naciones (Reprint of Editorials in La Prensa ). Chapter VI PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES The movement for American unity may be divided into two periods. The first period embraces the first two-thirds of the nineteenth century, during which the movement was led by Hispanic America, especially by Colombia and Peru, fostered also by Mexico, Central America and Venezuela. The idea generally revolved around a plan for a congress, with more or less power, which should meet at regular periods. The emphasis was placed on unity among the Spanish-American countries, the United States and Brazil sometimes being included and sometimes left out. We have considered the first of these periods and noted that “the spirit was willing” — nay, anxious — “but the flesh was weak.” The failure of the second Panama Congress called by Colombia in 1881 seemed to finally convince even the most utopian of the Spanish-Americans that they had too many problems in their own separate countries to actu- ally get together. They were ready therefore to try some other way. Everything pointed to the new way consisting in new leadership and in working toward a less rigid unity with a freer course for each separate country. So the second period set in under the leadership of the United States and the loosely organized Pan American Congresses, the first of which met in Washington in 1889 and the last one in Buenos Aires in 1910. The Civil War in the United States brought about in this country a decided change toward Hispanic America. The bravado of Manifest Destiny and the depreciation of the southern republics because of their frequent internal troubles was greatly reduced by our own sad experience which almost disrupted our nation and left us considerably humbled. Lin- coln, in direct contrast to the bluster of Polk and Pierce, 195 196 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM sent a minister to the Mexican government with instructions to show an attitude of cordiality, frankness, friendship and even magnanimity. Napoleon was informed that he must get his troops out of Mexico, and Juarez was thus enabled to win his fight against a foreign invader, who had all but destroyed Mexican sovereignty. As the United States re- covered a bit more from her awful struggle and lifted her eyes a little beyond Mexico, she found a bad situation in South America, which offered another opportunity to show this new sympathy. For five years a state of war had existed between Spain on the one hand and Chile, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia on the other. While the exhausted state of the United States Government did not seem to make it wise to invoke the Monroe Doctrine and make peremptory demands on Spain, Secretary of State Hamilton Fish did bring about a conference at Washington in 1870, at which a “perpetual armistice” was signed. THE FIRST PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCE The attention of the United States was again turned to South America by the War of the Pacific, with Chile on one side and Peru and Bolivia on the other, which continued from 1879 to 1881. In the latter year James G. Blaine became Secretary of State. He held to the same ideas of American Unity advocated by his distinguished predecessor, Henry Clay. Such a statesman had no trouble in realizing that the time had arrived for the United States to take the lead in the movement for continental solidarity. On No- vember 29, 1881, the Secretary of State issued in the name of the President an invitation to all the American inde- pendent nations to take part in a conference “for the pur- pose of considering and discussing the methods of preventing war between the nations of America.” Because of the continuance of the War of the Pacific, it was not possible for the Congress to be held at the date set. But the idea persisted. In 1888, largely through the efforts of James G. Blaine, who had again become Secretary of State, the first Pan American Conference was called under Act of Congress (May 24, 1888), to meet in Washington. PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 197 The first session was held on October 2, 1889. All the inde- pendent American states were represented. The conference continued until April 19, 1890. The commercial aspect of Pan American relations had been first discussed in the United States Congress in 1884, when an act was passed creating a commission of three to make a careful study of commercial relations between the different American republics; and Secretary Frelinghuysen advocated a policy of reciprocity treaties with the Latin American countries. Added to the commercial motives were those of a desire for peace among the American countries, as already pointed out. The following words, appearing in Secretary Blaine’s call, show his carefulness not to offend any or to assume any attitude of superiority : “The delegates will be able to show to the world an hon- orable, pacific Conference of eighteen independent American states where all are united in terms of absolute equality; a Conference in which there will be no effort to coerce any delegate against his own conception of the interests of his nation; a Conference that will not permit secret machina- tions concerning any question, but will frankly give to the world all its conclusions ; a Conference that will not tolerate any spirit of conquest, but that will cultivate an American sympathy as vast as the continent; a Conference that will not form selfish alliances against the old nations of which we are proud to call ourselves descendants; a Conference, finally, that will not look for anything, nor tolerate anything that is not according to the general sentiment of the dele- gates, opportune, prudent and pacific.” That Secretary Blaine had not misjudged the opportune- ness of the United States taking the lead in the movement of American Congresses is indicated by the replies received from the invitation for a Pan American Congress to meet in Washington. Several of the South American states ex- pressed very deep appreciation of this step taken by the United States to bring America closer together. Venezuela replied : “The future of South America may be considered as secure under the guardianship of the great 198 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM republic which is both our teacher and our model.” Guate- mala adhered to the probability that “under the auspices and by the initiative of such a powerful and marvelous nation peace would be realized practically among the peoples of this beautiful continent.” Salvador accepted with enthusiasm “the generous proposals of the government of the United States, congratulating it on becoming the common guide in this work of civilization and peace, being destined to exalt the good name and secure the progress of these republics.” Nicaragua approved the “philanthropic proposal that your Government has in view.” Honduras accepted the idea of a peace congress which “for the good of Latin America and the United States would solve questions of the greatest inter- est for the future of the American nations.” The resolutions and recommendations of the conference were very general since the territory was too new, the prin- ciple of cooperation untried and the questions too compli- cated to allow them to undertake the elaboration of definite projects for treaties or laws with any assurance as to their results. Also the mutual relations of the powers involved were not sufficiently well defined to allow for more definite treatment of the subjects under discussion. The matter of compulsory arbitration, which was to be- come the “eternal question” of these conferences, as it had been before in the first series, was discussed and a majority of the members of the Congress voted for its recommenda- tion. The delegates from Mexico and Chile, however, were opposed to this convention. Recommendations were also made relating to reciprocity treaties, postal communications, customs regulations, port duties, the free navigation of American rivers, sanitary regulations, a monetary union, weights and measures, patents and trademarks, an interna- tional American bank, an intercontinental railway, the ex- tradition of criminals, and several other matters. No definite results were achieved, however, except the establishment of an International Bureau of American Re- publics in Washington, for the collection and publication of information relating to the commerce, products, laws and customs of the countries represented. It was decided that it should operate under the supervision of the Secretary of PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 199 State of the United States. It was established in 1890 with an annual budget of $36,000 to be furnished by the different countries in proportion to their populations. This was the beginning of that most useful institution that is now known as the Pan American Union. Secretary Blaine, in summing up the work of the Con- gress, said: “If this Congress had only one of its acts to be proud of, we should call the world’s attention to the reasoned, confid- ing and solemn consecration by the two vast continents of the maintenance of peace and prosperity, the offspring of peace. We look upon this new Magna Charta which sup- presses war and substitutes arbitration among American governments in its place, as the first result and most impor- tant one of the International American Congress.” This conference differed from most others in that it was not convened for the settlement of a specific diplomatic problem nor did it confine itself to the discussion of any definite interest. It had the character of a general advisory meeting of the representatives of neighboring countries sum- moned for the purpose of bringing these countries into closer touch with one another and of arriving at a better mutual understanding. Definite results could not be hoped for, but the discussion it was felt would be beneficial to all the nations concerned. THE SECOND PAN AMERICAN CONGRESS President McKinley was favorable to the Pan American movement but shortly after his accession to the presidency the United States became involved in a war with Spain, during and after which it was doubtful as to what influence might be exerted by it on the relations between the United States and Spanish America. But in his message of Dec. 5, 1899, he suggested the holding of another Pan American Congress. The Mexican government which under Diaz was staying very close to the United States, gave the invitation to all the American Republics. On October 22, 1901, the 200 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM congress opened its sessions in Mexico City, and continued in session until January 31, 1902. Representatives of all the American nations were present. The chief subject of discussion was obligatory arbitration. During the first few weeks of the sessions relations were somewhat strained, since Chile was ready to withdraw if the subject was brought up, on account of her troubles with Peru over Tacna and Arica. Brazil also was strongly op- posed to the discussion on account of boundary questions w r ith her western neighbors. The Argentine delegation to the Congress presented a brilliant document in which an exhaustive review was given of that country’s treaties of arbitration and of its references to arbitrable justice and arbitrable jurisdiction in America. It was added that “the day will arrive when all the arbitrable jurisdiction will be inclosed within a single article of univer- sal positive law, compiled in analogous wording to that of the treaty celebrated between Argentina and the kingdom of Italy on June 23, 1898.” That treaty provides that : The high contracting parties obligate themselves to sub- mit to arbitrable judgment all disputes of whatever nature that from any cause whatsoever may arise between them during the existence of the present treaty in regard to which no friendly solution may have been attained as the result of direct negotiation. It matters not that such controversies may have originated in circumstances which may have sprung from facts anterior to this stipulation in the present treaty. After much wrangling a majority of the delegations signed a project whereby their countries should become parties to the Hague Conventions of 1899, which provide for volun- tary arbitration. At the same time ten delegations signed a proposal for a treaty providing for compulsory arbitration. These were the delegations from Argentina, Bolivia, Guate- mala, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Salvador, Santo Domingo, Uruguay and Venezuela. The conference also approved a project for a treaty whereby controversies arising from pecuniary claims of in- dividuals of one country against the government of another should be submitted to the arbitration court established by PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 201 the Hague Convention. The conference requested the United States and Mexico to negotiate for the admission of the other American republics to the Hague Conference. The application to the Hague Tribunal to regulate controversies between American states rising out of private claims may be well considered an important milestone in the progress of the world toward a normal and continuous application of international law. This conference ratified a resolution of the First Confer- ence recommending the construction of complementary lines of the proposed Pan American railway and adopted resolu- tions approving many steps calculated to bring about closer commercial relations. In the matter of international sani- tation the successful work of the United States in Havana, Santiago and other Cuban cities had created a general de- mand for the extension of such methods for the suppression of epidemics throughout both continents. Although by 1906, date of the Third Conference, neither Argentina, Chile nor Brazil had adopted any of the treaties proposed by the conference, and the United States had only accepted the convention concerning pecuniary claims, the Second Conference represents a decided progress in the de- velopment of American international relations. For the second time it had been possible in the presence of radical differences of opinion to find a basis for mutual understand- ing and for cooperation in a number of important matters. THIRD PAN AMERICAN CONGRESS The Third Pan American Conference was held at Rio de Janeiro, July 2ist-August 26th, 1906. The United States and all the Latin American countries, with the exceptions of Haiti and Venezuela, were represented. The conference met in Monroe Palace under most auspicious circumstances, since it had behind it the long record of peace and goodwill between Brazil and the United States. A notable contribu- tion to this conference was the address of Elihu Root, then Secretary of State of the United States, who was at the time making his memorable visit to South America. He said, in part : 202 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “I bring from my country a special greeting to her elder sisters in the civilization of America. * * * Unlike as we are in many respects, we are alike in this, that we are all en- gaged under new conditions, and free from the traditional forms and limitations of the Old World, in working out the same problem of popular self-government. * * * Nowhere in the world has this progress (that of the world towards more perfect popular self-government) been more marked than in Latin America. Out of the wrack of Indian fighting and race conflicts and civil wars, strong and stable govern- ments have arisen. Peaceful succession in accord with the people’s will has replaced the forcible seizure of power per- mitted by the people’s indifference. Loyalty to country, its peace, its dignity, its honor, has risen above partisanship for individual leaders. “It is not by national isolation that these results have been accomplished, or that this progress can be continued. No nation can live unto itself alone and continue to live. Each nation’s growth is a part of the development of the race. There may be leaders and there may be laggards, but no nation can long continue very far in advance of the gen- eral progress of mankind, and no nation that is not doomed to extinction can remain very far behind. It is with nations as it is with individual men ; intercourse, association, correc- tion of egotism by the influence of others’ judgment, broad- ening of views by the experience and thought of equals, ac- ceptance of the moral standards of a community the desire for whose good opinion lends a sanction to the rules of right conduct — these are the conditions of growth in civilization. “To promote this mutual interchange and assistance be- tween the American Republics, engaged in the same great task, inspired by the same purpose, and professing the same principles, I understand to be the function of the American Conference now in session. There is not one of all our countries that cannot benefit the others ; there is not one that cannot receive benefit from the others ; there is not one that will not gain by the prosperity, the peace, the happiness of all. These beneficent results, the Government and the people of the United States of America greatly desire. We wish for no victories but those of peace; for no territory except PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 203 our own; for no sovereignty except the sovereignty over ourselves. We deem the independence and equal rights of the smallest and weakest member of the family of nations entitled to as much respect as those of the greatest empire, and we deem the observance of that respect the chief guar- anty of the weak against the oppression of the strong. We neither claim nor desire any rights, or privileges, or powers that we do not freely concede to every American Republic. We wish to increase our prosperity, to expand our trade, to grow in wealth, in wisdom, and in spirit, but our conception of the true way to accomplish this is not to pull down others and profit by their ruin, but to help all friends to a common prosperity and a common growth, that we may all become greater and stronger together.” The subjects considered at this Third Congress were much the same as at the two preceding. With respect to arbitra- tion this conference passed a -resolution that the delegates from the American republics to the Second Conference at the Hague be instructed to endeavor to secure there “the celebration of a general arbitration convention SO' effective and definite that, meriting the approval of the .civilized world, it shall be accepted and put in force by every nation.” It was considered unwise to pass any resolutions concern- ing the collection of debts by force of arms, since the nations represented were chiefly debtor nations. It was therefore recommended that the “Governments represented therein consider the point of inviting the Second Peace Conference at the Hague to consider the question of compulsory collec- tion of public debts, and, in general, means tending to dimin- ish between nations conflicts having an exclusive pecuniary origin.” With respect to copyrights, patents and trademarks this conference reaffirmed the convention of the Second Confer- ence, with some modifications : two international bureaus, one in Havana and one in Rio, were established for the registration of patents and trademarks, etc. ; provision was also made for a center of sanitary information in Monte- video; with respect to naturalization it recommended that whenever a native of one country who has been naturalized 204 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM in another again takes up his residence in his native country without intending to return to his adopted country he should be considered as having reassumed his original citizenship. The Bureau of the American Republics was reorganized at this conference. Its duties were defined as follows : to assist in securing ratification of resolutions and conventions adopted by the conferences ; to prepare complete reports upon problems especially committed to it by any conference to be subjects of discussion at later meetings; and to act as a bureau of educational information. Each country was called upon to appoint a permanent commission on Pan American affairs. With the cooperation of these commissions the Bureau of American Republics was directed to make special investigation into the conditions of internal improvements and the laws governing mining and forest conserves in the various American states, and make the bureau an efficient agent in the internal development of the American republics. Most of these countries were in need of capital and immi- grants and it was believed that by the diffusion of correct information concerning industrial conditions a valuable service might be rendered. The Third Conference was distinguished from its pred- ecessors by the fact that the plans for the regulation and arrangement of it and its discussions had been made by the governing body of the Bureau of American Republics, and the time allowed for its sessions was not to exceed six weeks. The feeling was general among those who arranged it and those who composed its membership that it would not be advisable to inaugurate sweeping policies or attempt radical changes. It sought to improve conventions already existing and devote itself to detailed structural changes and adminis- trative arrangements. Its action was mainly suggestive, calling attention to new lines of international activity, new possibilities of development, and charging the Bureau of American Republics to make preliminary investigations. The debates took place within committees and the resolu- tions there adopted were accepted without dissension on the part of the*conference. Its predecessors had been charac- terized by serious debates. The conventions adopted by the Rio de Janeiro Conference have received much attention PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 205 from the American governments and have been quite gen- erally ratified. THE FOURTH PAN AMERICAN CONGRESS The Fourth Conference, held at Buenos Aires, July- Au- gust, 1910, commemorated the independence of the Ameri- can nations and their willingness to continue to act upon the basis of a common American policy. It was carried on under rules and regulations laid down by the governing board, so that it was possible for it to confine itself to the task of work- ing out treaties and resolutions on the subjects of the pro- gram. The business of the conference was distributed among fourteen committees, on six of which every delega- tion was represented. These committees considered the various questions, which included the matter of improve- ments in the organization of the Pan American Union; the completion of the Pan American Railway; the establishment of a more rapid steamship service between the . republics ; uniformity in consular documents and customs regulations; international sanitation; treaties on arrangements concern- ing copyrights, patents and trademarks ; treaties on the arbi- tration of pecuniary claims and the interchange of profes- sors and students among the American universities. In the matter of copyrights, etc., it was agreed that rights of literary property obtained in one state, in conformity with its laws, were to be of full effect in all others without the necessity of fulfilling any further formality, whenever there appears in the record some statement indicating the reservation of the property right. Measures regulating the rules of procedure of the confer- ence were passed. A regulation was established that sub- jects not included in the program should not be introduced unless by a favorable vote of two-thirds of the members. This rule found its basis in the important fact that interna- tional conferences are not composed of legislators but rather of delegates working under instruction of their govern- ments. It is therefore necessary that the subjects to be dis- cussed shall be known to the governments beforehand in order that they may instruct their delegates how to act. It was also decided that a government which has broken 206 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM off diplomatic relations with the government acting as host to the conference is entitled nevertheless to send a delega- tion. Republics not having diplomatic representatives in Washington may entrust their representation to other mem- bers of the body who then have a vote for each country represented. Full enjoyment of the rights of membership is based upon the maintenance of a stable and undivided government. The organization and duties of the existing Bureau of American Republics were still more clearly defined at this conference. The presidency of this institution was accorded to the Secretary of State of the United States, according to the common international practice of giving similar positions to the minister of foreign relations of the country in which the union has its seat. It was also felt that the dignity and efficiency of the Bureau would be increased in this way. The name of the organization was changed to “The Pan Ameri- can Union.” Its functions were enlarged : to compile and distribute data and information regarding commerce, industry, agriculture, education and general progress in the American countries; to collect and classify information concerning treaties, etc., between the American republics ; to contribute to the develop- ment of commerce and intellectual relations between the American republics ; to act as the permanent commission on international American conferences ; to present to the vari- ous governments a report on the institution’s work, before the meeting of each conference. Its meetings shall be held monthly and be composed of representatives of American states which maintain diplomatic representation at Washing- ton. Five members form a quorum. Any government has the right to withdraw from the Union upon giving two years’ notice to the Secretary of State of the United States. Only the essential bases of the organization were laid down, leaving to the director and the governing board the power to determine all details concerning the performance of the mission of this union. It is a truly international agency. Its action is based upon the unanimous consent of all the states composing it and no power or group of powers claims for itself a determining influence. PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 207 The committees during the Buenos Aires conference were given time and opportunity for a thorough discussion of their respective subjects. The manner in which the con- ference proceeded was exceedingly businesslike. It did not spend its efforts in spectacular oratory, somewhat to the disappointment of the local press, but directed itself quietly and persistently to the accomplishment of the purposes be- fore it — that is to improve, in general bearing and detail, the relations between the republics along the lines determined by the program of the conference. One of the most interesting happenings in the conference related to the discussion concerning the Monroe Doctrine which was carried on privately between several delegations but never brought on the floor of the conference itself. Since it is an interesting side light on our general subject as well as on the workings of these conferences, we will follow the discussion as reported by the Chilean diplomat, Alejan- dro Alvarez. It seems that the late Ambassador of Brazil to the United States, his Excellency Senor Juaquin Nabuco, had cherished the idea of presenting to the conference at Buenos Aires a motion which would register the recognition by all the countries of America of the fact that the Monroe Doctrine had been beneficial to them. Nabuco, at his death, had left in writing a formal declaration, which the Govern- ment of Brazil, out of respect to the memory of the great statesman, desired to have presented to the conference with- out change. His Excellency, Senor Da Gama, Brazilian ambassador to Argentina, presented the matter previously to Argentina and Chile, saying that his government was desir- ous of counting in this move on the cooperation of Argentina and Chile. The proposition, furthermore, was to be pre- sented only in case the acquiescence of all the other delega- tions could be counted on beforehand, so that it would be approved without criticism. The resolution of Nabuco, endorsed by the Brazilian dele- gation, was in these words : “The long period which has transpired since the declaration of the Monroe Doctrine per- mits us to recognize in it a permanent factor making for international peace upon the American Continent. For this reason, while celebrating the centenary of her first efforts 208 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM towards independence, Latin America sends to her Great Sister Nation of the North, an expression of her thanks for that noble and unselfish action which has been of so great benefit to the entire New World.” Chile did not feel, however, that she could indorse such a resolution, and proposed the following as a substitute : “Since their independence the nations of America have proclaimed the right thereby acquired of excluding European intervention in their internal affairs, and, also, the principle that the territory of the New World cannot be made the object of future colonization. These principles, clearly for- mulated and solemnly expressed by President Monroe in 1823, constitute a factor which has contributed towards guaranteeing the sovereignty of the nations of this conti- nent. Wherefore Latin America, celebrating the one hun- dredth anniversary of her independence, sends now to the Great Sister Nation of the North the expression of her adhesion to that idea of solidarity, as in the past she joined her in proclaiming those principles and upholding them for the benefit of the entire New World.” Senor Alvarez of Chile and Senor Da Gama of Brazil then got together and agreed on the following compromise resolution : “The long period which has transpired since the declara- tion of the Monroe Doctrine permits us to recognize in it a permanent factor making for external peace upon the Ameri- can Continent. It gave concrete and solemn expression to the aims of Latin America from the commencement of her political independence. For this reason, while celebrating the centennial of their first efforts towards independence, the nations represented in the Fourth Pan American Confer- ence send to their Great Sister Nation of the North the ex- pression of their adhesion to that noble and unselfish action, of such beneficial consequence for the New World.” This was presented to the delegations of Argentina (all but two members of which approved it as drawn up) and PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 209 Chile, the members of which believed that another formula must be sought which would not lend itself to false interpre- tations by Europe, the United States and the rest of America. Their proposal was in the following terms : “Upon celebrating the centennial of their first efforts to- wards political independence the nations represented in the Fourth Pan American Conference send to their Great Sister Nation of the North the expression of their thanks, and record the conviction that the declarations contained in the message of President Monroe met the aims of all America and contributed effectively to guarantee its independence.” By now the situation was complicated. The delegation of the United States, consulted in regard to the whole matter, made it clear that while it would be very acceptable for Latin America to make the Monroe Doctrine hers, if in do- ing this she was going to create dissensions in the assembly, it was preferable to make no presentation of the subject at all. The Brazilian delegation thus realized that a unanimous assent to its views was not easy to obtain ; for though every- one agreed as to the basic factors of the resolution it was very difficult to reduce it to a brief form satisfactory to everybody. In view of this the delegation did not further push its project. So, while all the countries of America there represented were agreed that the Monroe Doctrine, as it was formulated in 1823, is in accord with the aims of the New World and forms a part of its public law, yet it was very difficult to find a wording, which, without exciting the susceptibility of Europe, would be satisfactory to all the countries of Amer- ica. There were some states which desired to see incor- porated with the principles of that Doctrine other principles limiting the hegemony of the United States. Such conferences as those held at Washington, Mexico, Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires are by nature informatory rather than administrative. They determine the bases for unanimous or almost unanimous international treaties. But they have been highly appreciated by the public and the press of Latin America. The indications are that an in- 210 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM creasing number of their proposals will be ratified by the nations concerned. They have done much to develop a de- sire for the solidarity of America. The concrete results of these conferences have not been much greater than the series formerly held in South Amer- ica, but the fact that the Pan American Union exists and has the opportunity to do a really constructive work means that, as the American nations grow to realize their com- munity of interests, the importance of its services and the weight of its decisions will increase and it will form a bond among the American states. As Don Alejandro Alvarez says: “The happiest results of the Pan American Confer- ences are that they harmonize all the states of America and that they contribute powerfully in developing and forming upon its true basis the American Conscience, a conscience which is one of the characteristics of the contemporary po- litical life of the States of the New World.” VARIOUS ASPECTS OF PAN AMERICANISM Pan Americanism has two aspects, the relations of all America to non-American powers and the relations of the various American nations to one another. The first aspect of the matter has been looked at with much unanimity, the United States announcing it through the Monroe Doctrine and the other governments taking practically the same atti- tude individually, if not always in specific pronounce- ments. As to the second aspect, the relations of American Govern- ments with one another, there are five questions that stand out prominently — commercial intercourse, arbitration, boundary questions, intervention, and mediation. We have seen that commercial intercourse and arbitration 'were thor- oughly treated in Pan American Congresses. The last three matters, boundaries, intervention and mediation, are more delicate and more difficult and have had less frank and open discussion. It must be said to the credit of the American nations that, while there have been a great many international differences among them concerning boundary lines, these problems have PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 211 almost always been settled by arbitration. For example, the question of boundaries between Argentina and Chile, which first arose in 1843, had brought about quite a serious situa- tion in 1881. The ministers of the United States in San- tiago and Buenos Aires brought about the signing of a treaty by these two nations, which it was hoped would settle the matter. Among other things this treaty stipulated a resort to arbitration should the question be brought forward again, as it was in 1896. It was upon this occasion that W. I. Buchanan performed an outstanding service as a Pan American, in his capacity as Minister of the United States to the Argentine. Through the satisfactory decision of the King of England, as arbitrator, in 1902, the dispute was finally settled. In commemoration of the happy termination of the controversy a statue of Christ, the Prince of Peace, was erected on the crest of the mountains which form the boundary between Argentina and Chile. It is known as “El Cristo de los Andes,” and appropriately bears witness to the noble spirit and idealism to which it is a monument. On the base of this most unique monument are written these impressive words : “Sooner shall these mountains become dust than that the peoples of Argentina and Chile shall break the peace which they have pledged at the feet of their Re- deemer.” INTERVENTION The governments of Latin America have continually op- posed the policy of outside intervention in the internal af- fairs of any of the American republics. Alberdi is the one outstanding statesman who was willing to admit interven- tion and even recommended the inclusion of the principle in the public law of the continent. Calvo, on the other hand, who claimed that the independence of the states, with all the corresponding rights, must be absolute, represents the general position of Latin America on the subject. Interven- tion may be diplomatic, pacific, armed, official or unofficial, but the term is generally understood to mean armed inter- vention. The French intervention in the Rio de la Plata from 1838 until 1840, the Anglo-French from 1848 to 1850, and the joint action of England, France and Spain against 212 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Mexico, in 1861, and the intervention of Germany, France and England in Venezuela in 1902 are the outstanding armed interventions in American affairs by European nations. Armed intervention in Latin America, or at least in the Caribbean district, by the United States has lately become rather frequent. As pointed out in a later chapter, it has included sending armed forces into Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti and Santo Domingo. Some classify the capture of Vera Cruz and the Pershing Expedition as intervention in Mexico. But these had specific objects of punishing par- ticular deeds and did not extend to taking over the country. Some also claim that non-recognition of a government, in the case of the LTnited States and the rest of America, where the former has so preponderant an influence, is equivalent to intervention. Theoretically the United States has always stood for the doctrine of non-intervention in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation. That was clearly involved in Washington’s doctrine of no entangling alliances. General Grant said in his Message to Congress, December 6, 1869 : “As the United States is the freest of all nations, so, too, its people sympathize with all people struggling for liberty and self-government, but while so sympathizing it is due to our honor that we shall abstain from enforcing our views upon unwilling nations and from taking an interested part, 'without invitation, in the quarrels between different nations or between governments and their subjects.” Our statesmen still talk that way, as a usual thing, but a different practice has been followed in the Caribbean, and' the jingoes are continually urging intervention in Mexico and other countries where commercial interests are dis- turbed. Other reasons, such as the protection of nationals, may be alleged, but the supreme reason for intervention is almost universally financial. The right and the justice of such intervention continues to be a much debated subject. While the practice of states is quite well established in dealing with two of the three kinds of claims that citizens of one country may hold against the government of another PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 213 — those for injury to person, the destruction or confiscation of property, or pecuniary obligations — claims of the third class have received little attention from 'writers of interna- tional law because states have, in the past, usually drawn a sharp distinction between contractual and other claims, largely disregarding the former. In 1848 Lord Palmerston stated that the government of Great Britain has usually considered it undesirable that its subjects should invest their capital in loans to foreign gov- ernments, instead of employing it in profitable undertak- ings at home ; and that with a view to discouraging hazard- ous loans to foreign governments the British government had hitherto thought it best to abstain from taking up as in- ternational questions complaints made by British subjects against foreign states. This policy was reaffirmed by Lord Salisbury in 1880. The policy of the United States, which is substantially in accord with the above, is well summarized in a dispatch of Secretary Bayard, dated June 24, 1885: “(1) All that our Government undertakes, when the claim is merely contrac- tual, is to interpose its good offices; in other words, to ask the attention of the foreign sovereign to the claim ; and this is only done when the claim is one susceptible of strong and clear proof. (2) If the sovereign appealed to denies the validity of the claim or refuses its payment, the matter drops, since it is not consistent with the dignity of the United States to press, after such a refusal or denial, a con- tractual claim for the repudiation of which, by the law of nations, there is no redress.” President Roosevelt in an address given on December 6, 1904, said: “Any country whose people conduct themselves well can count on our hearty friendship. If a nation shows that it knows how to actjwith reasonable efficiency and decency in social and political matters, if it keeps order and pays its obligations, it need fear no interference from the United States. Chronic wrongdoing, or an impotence which re- sults in a general loosening of the ties of civilized society, may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require interven- 214 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM tion by some civilized nation, and, in the western hemisphere, the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may force the United States, however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international police power.” The last clause of this message contains the principle upon which arrangements were made with Santo Domingo to collect her customs and pay her debts. The most important case involving collection of debts owed Europeans by an American republic was that of Ger- many, Great Britain and Italy against Venezuela in 1902. The nature of these claims and their collection raised all kinds of questions. The German claims may be taken as typical; one was for dividends guaranteed by the Venezuelan government on railroad stock of a line built by German sub- jects at a cost of nearly $20,000,000 and for the recovery of interest in arrears on public bonds issued to cover the above; another of $400,000 was for the recovery of forced loans made during the civil wars of 1898-1900. The Eng- lish and Italian claims were similar. The German goyernment secured the permission of the United States, by assurance that no violation of the Monroe Doctrine was intended, to ask V enezuela to acknowledge her claims and that a mixed commission be appointed to fur- ther consider the matter. Secretary Hay called attention to President Roosevelt’s message of December 3, 1901, wherein he proposed that the United States act as an “inter- national police power” or agent of collection in such cases. The matter dragged on for a year, when on December 20, 1902, Germany, Great Britain and Italy established a war- like blockade of Venezuelan harbors, without declaring war. This met with strenuous objection from the United States and through her insistence, an agreement was reached where- by Venezuela recognized the justice of a part of the claims, promising to set aside 30 per cent, of her customs receipts for the payment. It was agreed that the claims be sub- mitted to a mixed commission. The blockading powers de- manded payment of their claims before those of the peace powers. Venezuela insisted that all creditors be treated PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 215 alike. The demand for preferential treatment was submitted to the Hague Tribunal and was allowed in a decision ren- dered February 22, 1904. One of the results of the Venezuelan Claims Case was the pronouncement of the Drago Doctrine. Briefly, this means that public debts give no right to armed intervention or the occupation of territory of a debtor state. This was a long stride ahead of the old position taken by the countries which intervened in Mexico in 1862, in which intervention in its initial stages the United States acquiesced. President Roosevelt also declared that the Monroe Doc- trine would not be stretched to protect the Latin American countries in evading the payment of debts. With the ques- tion of the Venezuelan claims of Germany in mind, he said in a message to Congress on December 3, 1901 : “This (Monroe) Doctrine has nothing to do with the commercial relations of any American power, save that it in truth allows each of them to form such as it desires. In other words, it is really a guarantee of the commercial in- dependence of the Americas. We do not ask under this Doctrine for any exclusive commercial dealings with any other American state. We do not guarantee any state against punishment, if it misconducts itself, provided that punishment does not take the form of the acquisition of territory by any non-American power.” It was this declaration that brought the vigorous protest from the Argentine Minister of Foreign Affairs, whose po- sition that nations did not have the right to intervene for the collection of debts became known by his name. In this message Drago contended that the “collection of loans by military means implies territorial occupation to make them effective, and territorial occupation signifies the suppression or subordination of the governments of the countries on which it is imposed.” The Second Hague Conference received the Drago Doc- trine with the utmost sympathy. While the Conference did not go the entire length of the Drago Doctrine, it did, in adopting the Porter Proposition, provide for obligatory ar- 216 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM bitration in the collection of contractual indebtedness before a resort to arms. By the Calvo Doctrine, announced a little later, the Ar- gentine statesman of that name pushed still further the ob- jection to allowing foreign claims to threaten a nation’s sov- ereignty. The Calvo Doctrine claims that governments are not responsible for losses and injuries received by foreigners during internal disturbances. Calvo says : “To admit the principle of indemnity would be to create an exorbitant and pernicious privilege, essentially favorable to strong states and injurious to feebler nations and to estab- lish an unjustifiable inequality between nationals and for- eigners. * * * To sanction such indemnity, we should do, although indirectly, a deep injury to one of the constituent elements of the independence of nations, that of territorial jurisdiction.” It is interesting to note that this advanced position was taken in the treaty signed by Peru and Argentina on March 9, 1874. MEDIATION As to mediation, the three outstanding cases where prof- fered good offices were freely accepted by both sides were : Mediation by Mexico and the United States in the Central American Question in 1907, when, because of the succession of attempts at union and separation among the five Central American Republics, Mexico and the United States in a sin- cere desire to help those unhappy countries to bring about peace, offered jointly their good offices. A great achieve- ment was accomplished by the conference which followed, in the establishment of a Central American Court of Jus- tice “For the purpose of efficaciously guaranteeing their rights and maintaining peace and harmony inalterably in their relations, without being obliged to resort in any case to the employment of force.” There followed, in 1910, the successful mediation of the United States, Argentina and Brazil in the settlement of a serious boundary dispute be- PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 217 tween Peru and Ecuador, which threatened to involve Bo- livia, Chile and Colombia; and finally that of Argentina, Brazil and Chile in the difference between the United States and Mexico in 1914. The successful Central American mediation will be treat- ed in the chapter on the Caribbean. The “Mexican Media- tion” of 1914 had a profound effect all over Latin America, as indicating the willingness of the great Northern Repub- lic to submit its American relations to the friendly consid- eration of other American countries, in the same way it had advocated others doing. It marked a new day in Pan Ameri- can friendship when the United States and Mexico accepted the following proposal of the Ambassadors of the ABC countries : “With the purpose of serving the interests of peace and civilization on our continent and with the earnest desire to prevent any further bloodshed, to the prejudice of the cordiality and union which has always surrounded the relations of the governments, and peoples of America, we, the plenipotentiaries of Brazil, Argentina and Chile, duly authorized hereto, have the honor to tender to your Excel- lency’s government our good offices for the peaceful and friendly settlement of the conflict between the United States and Mexico.” I happened to be in Argentina at the time the mediation was announced. There was a tremendous change in public sentiment. Student demonstrations in favor of Mexico and public meetings to protest against Yankee invasion of Latin America were called off and the public press radically changed its tone. As Dr. Francisco Castaneda of El Sal- vador says : “A most important happening, one which the political and the sociological world must take seriously into account, has just taken place, based on the unfortunate situation in Mexico and the international conflict which seemed immi- nent between that convulsed nation and the United States. The fact to which I refer is the generous attitude assumed by the three most important nations in South America, Ar- gentina, Brazil and Chile, by means of which their repre- sentatives in the city of Washington have offered their good 218 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM offices to the contending countries in order to find a solu- tion of the difficulties and to eliminate a conflict which would have such disastrous results. The conferences of Niagara Falls have held during three months the interests of the whole continent and the debate of such an illustrious assembly has interested the press everywhere, coming to a climax when the resolutions were adopted which eliminated the war between the United States and Mexico. The ABC powers will from now on, because of these results, be a moral and political entity which will have great influence in the whole continent.” THE RESULTING PAN AMERICANISM Pan Americanism has come to be of much greater im- portance of recent years because of the growing recognition by the rest of the world of the importance of the Ibero- American countries. At the opening of the twentieth cen- tury those countries were an unrecognized power in the coun- cil of the nations, in international commerce and world peace. As Ugarte said, they were standing on the margin of the horizon of international life at the opening of the present century. Their advance into a position of impor- tance in world affairs has been most remarkable. In 1906 Secretarv Root made his remarkable journey through the South and attracted the attention of the world to these coun- tries whose history and potential resources he so faithfully interpreted in a series of remarkable addresses. In 1907 the Latin American delegates for the first time took their place at the Council table of the nations and astounded the world by the brilliancy of their representatives at the Hague Conference. In 1910 the beautiful building of the Pan American Union, due to the munificence of Andrew Car- negie, was dedicated as the impressive shrine of American Unity and the workshop of practical American cooperation. In 1915 the Panama Canal was opened and sent forth a flood of compelling motives for world interest in Latin America. In 1916 there was held at Panama the Congress on Christian Work in Latin America, which brought to- gether representatives of more than fifty religious organi- PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 219 zations from twenty-two nations to study the spiritual, edu- cational and social problems of these southern lands, and aroused a widespread interest in the churches and educa- tional circles of the United States in their southern neigh- bors. In iot c there was held in Washington the first Pan American Financial Congress, which began the movement of American capital and ships toward the South. The fol- lowing year the Second Pan American Scientific Congress met in Washington and brought to the attention of the cultural world the notable circle of intellectuals of the Latin American countries. In the meantime a remarkable number of well-known men from Europe and North America were making visits to the South and telling the world about the great physical and in- tellectual riches which they there discovered. Among those visitors were such makers of public opinion as Clemenceau, Bryce, Altamira, Prince Henry, Blasco Ibanez, Bryan and Roosevelt, all of whom wrote material reporting their visits, which was read in all parts of the world. Add to all these things the great progress which has been made in Latin America in the last twenty years and the hurl- ing together of all the nations by the World War, and we have the principal reasons why these lands, so long isolated, have now come to occupy a prominent place in the thought of the world. And their prominent place gives added im- portance to the question of Pan Americanism. What is Pan Americanism? Some will think this ques- tion should have been asked and answered much earlier in this discussion. But Pan Americanism is more of a senti- ment and an aspiration than a tangible svstem which can be confined within certain limitations of definition. The term itself is comparatively modern. It was first used in connection with the first Pan American Conference which met in Washington in 1889-1890. The New York Evening Post seems to have been the first to employ the term, in its edition of the 27th of September, 1889. Follow- ing that the term was used in the Washington Conference, though the official title of that gathering was International American Conference. It is only since the beginning of the twentieth century that the term has come into popular use. 220 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM It recognizes that the American states form in the world an independent political factor and possess a political sys- tem of their own. It emphasizes the principles of political action created by the American states in the course of their mutual relations and stresses the moral union of these states based on a body of principles developed during their struggle for independence and for a real democracy. Lockey, who has made one of the most careful studies of the ques- tion, says that these principles are independence, unity of political idealism, territorial integrity, predominance of right over force, non-intervention, equality, cooperation. The new International Encyclopedia defines Pan Amer- icanism as the principle of an alliance or a political union of the various states of the western hemisphere; also the life of the American people expressed in the republican form of government and tending toward such a union. Murray calls it the idea or sentiment of an alliance or political union of all the states of North and South America. The His- panic-American Encyclopedia defines it as the aspiration or tendency of the people of the New World to establish be- tween themselves a bond of union, to promote a good un- derstanding and harmonious fraternity between the states of the continents and to work always together against the domination and the influences of European powers in Amer- ican territory. Blaine, who called the first Pan American Conference, said that the Garfield government had two purposes in its international policy : “First, to develop peace and to pre- vent future wars in North and South America; second, to cultivate such relations of friendship and commerce with all the American countries as would develop a considerable commerce of exportation from the United States and fur- nish to the Latin American nations those articles with which we are amply able to compete with the manufacturing na- tions of Europe. In place of friendly intervention here and there, bringing about a treaty between two countries, set- tling some dispute between two others tomorrow, it was evident that a more comprehensive plan should be adopted if these wars were to cease on the Western hemisphere.” Pan Americanism, then, signified to Blaine peace and com- PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 221 merce, as a result of friendly advice and the cooperation of all the American states for the benefit of all. President Roosevelt, in his instructions to the delegates of the United States to the Second International Confer- ence, meeting in Mexico in 1901, declared: “The principal interest of the United States in respect to the other republics of the American continent is the security and permanence of the political system in which they find their existence and the existence of our own nation, the system of govern- ment by the people themselves. It is therefore to be desired that all the American republics enjoy completely the bene- fits of perfect liberty under just laws, each sovereign nation pursuing its own course of ordinary development without limitations or intervention from the outside. Nothing is of greater importance from the political point of view than the understanding that the United States are the friends of all the Latin American republics and are not the enemy of any. For this purpose it will be prudent not to propose any- thing radical, to favor a free expression of opinion among all the delegates of the other countries and to submit only those propositions that have the weight of general expecta- tion and clearly tend to promote the common good.” John Bassett Moore declared before the Pan American Financial Congress in 1915: “The idea that America is not simply a geographical term, but a term representing a unity of interests, has existed so long that it may be presumed that it is not a false term, but one that carries us absolutely and persistently along the right road. The word ‘America’ since the beginning of the last century during the struggle of our neighbors for independence, represented the idea of a community of political interests. As Henry Clay said : ‘We ought to be looked upon as united in the purpose of establishing a league of human liberties.’ This idea has advanced gradually until today we are beginning the estab- lishment of a community of interests we have had for many years ; we proceed now to complete this circuit, installing the identity of material interests upon the ample bases of jus- tice, contentment and fraternity.” Such outstanding Latin Americans as Baron de Rio Branco of Brazil, Luis M. Drago of Buenos Aires, Senor 222 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Casasus of Mexico have used the same expressions of ap- proval of Pan Americanism. In the Third International Conference Senor Cornejo of Peru said: “These con- gresses, gentlemen, are the symbol of that solidarity which in spite of the ephemeral passions of men constitutes by the invincible force of circumstances the essence of our conti- nental system. These conferences were conceived by the organizing intelligence of the statesmen of Washington to exalt the sentiment of American patriotism. Liberating it from national egotism which might be justified in the diffi- cult moments of the beginnings of states, but which would today be an obstacle in the development of the American idea, destined to demonstrate that as the democratic prin- ciple has been the combination of liberty and order in the constitution of the state, it will combine, also the govern- ments of the nations and fraternity in the relations of peoples.” On the occasion of the laying of the corner-stone of the new Pan American Building in Washington, May n, 1908, some notable speeches were made concerning Pan Ameri- canism, among them that of the Minister of Brazil to the United States, Senor Nabuco. He said: “Gentlemen, there has never been a parallel for the sight which this ceremony presents — that of twenty-one nations of different languages building together a house for their common deliberations. The more imnressive is the scene as these countries, with all possible differences between them in size and population, have established their union on the basis of the most absolute equality. Here the vote of the smallest balances the vote of the greatest. So many sov- ereign states would not have been drawn so spontaneously and so strongly together, as if by an irresistible force, if there did not exist throughout them, at the bottom or at the top of each national conscience, the feeling of a destiny com- mon to all America. It seems, indeed, that a decree of Providence made the western shore of the Atlantic appear late in history as the chosen land for a great renewal of mankind. From the early days of its colonization the senti- ment sprung in the hearts of all its children that this is really PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 223 a new world. That is the sentiment which unites us to- gether on this auspicious day. We feel we are all sons of Columbus.” The eternal negative is voiced in the following words of Jacinto Lopez of Venezuela: “A system contrary to that of Europe, not of violation but of adhesion and fidelity to principle, is the one supposed to rule in America, and from this system there naturally develops Pan Americanism as an expression of solidarity and fraternity — of a numerous family of nations united in sincere love of justice and right and in its just practices in all mutual relationships. “But is this true? Unfortunately, no. It is as untrue in America as in Europe. History tells us that since 1846, that is since the Mexican War, an open war of conquest, the United States has continued to violate the principles of what is known as Pan Americanism. “There has not been, nor is there, nor can there be a real Pan Americanism until the United States abandons its terri- torial expansion and domination in America. Pan Ameri- canism and imperialism are mutually exclusive and incom- patible. The one destroys the other. Panama, the Bryan- Chamorro treaty and its antecedents, the military occupa- tion of Santo Domingo and its history, say clearly that Pan Americanism does not exist, or exists as an abstract con- ception. Until the United States respects other American nations Pan Americanism will be simply the mask of im- perialism.” In spite of this sentiment of the Pan Latinists, the fact is that the definition of Pan Americanism that has carried the greatest hope to and won the largest acceptance in Latin America has been the one given in his Message to Congress in 1916 by President Wilson, when he said: “The moral is, that the states of America are not hostile rivals but cooperating friends, and that their growing sense of community of interests, alike in matters political and in 224 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM matters economic, is likely to give them a new significance as factors in international affairs and in the political history of the world. It presents them as in a very deep and true sense a unit in world affairs, spiritual partners, standing to- gether because thinking together, quick with common sym- pathies and common ideals. Separated, they are subject to all the cross-currents of the confused politics of a world of hostile rivalries ; united in spirit and purpose, they cannot be disappointed of their peaceful destiny. This is Pan Americanism. It has none of the spirit of empire in it. It is the embodiment, the effectual embodiment of the new spirit of law and independence and liberty and mutual service.” As we come to the close of this section of our study in which we have reviewed the historical development of Amer- ican unity with all the conferences and movements of both North and South America which have striven toward such solidarity, the words of B. Vicuna Mackenna, written a half century ago, seem to be peculiarly appropriate : “The work of the Panama Congress was sterile because it was the daughter of fear of Alexander of Russia; as was also the failure of the Congress of 1848, due to fear of the Spanish Queen Cristina ; that of the Triple Alliance of 1856, due to fear of Walker. All these federations have been simply between governments themselves and they have been based on selfishness and immediate need. There has not been up to the present a proposal for a real American Fed- eration, an alliance of peoples, fraternity of nations, league of Republics. The people should raise their voices in uni- son and send to one another their fraternal embrace. Love will then rule, not fear. And thus and only thus will the American Federation be a fact. Then will the destiny of this our common fatherland be assured, the most magnifi- cent of the five great continents which the hand of the Eternal One formed in the mold of His Omnipotence and which a sublime pilot called “The New World” because in its dimensions it was like unto a second marvelous Creation.” PAN AMERICAN CONFERENCES 225 Sources of Further Information on Pan American Conferences Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, Number 124, Articles on Fourth Pan American Congress by Henry White, Paul S. Reinsch, Alejandro Alvarez. Barrett, John: The Pan American Union. Calderon, F. Garcia: Ideas y Impresiones, Chapter on Pan Americanism. Gil, Enrique : Pan Americanism and International Policy of Argentina. Latane: The United States and Latin America, Chapters V and VI. Lima, M. de Oliveira : Pan Americanismo, Bolivar, Monroe, Roosevelt. Lockey, Jos. B. : Pan Americanism, Its Beginnings, Chapter I. Lopez, Jacinto: El Panamericanismo, La Reforma Social, Sep- tember, 1919. Moore, John Bassett: Digest of International Law, American Diplomacy. Quesada, Ernesto: El Nuevo Pan Americanismo. Reinsch, Paul S. : Public International Unions. Reports of Four Pan American Conferences. Report of Second Pan American Scientific Congress. Root, Elihu: Latin America and the United States. Shepherd, William R. : Hispanic Nations of the New World. World Peace Foundation, The New Pan Americanism. Chapter VII LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR To say that Hispanic America along with all other na- tions and peoples of the world has been profoundly affected by the World War is only to state a commonplace. How- ever, since these nations saw no fighting and sent no organ- ized military forces to the front, there are few who recog- nize how profound a change the war really brought to them. And it is doubtful if anywhere in the world the good results were so preponderant over the evil as here. These nations, said by Ugarte a few years ago to be on “the margin of in- ternational life,” have gained by the war a definite place at the council table of the nations. The world at large has a new appreciation of them, both for what they are and what they may become. With a new choice of suitors from Eu- rope, Asia and North America, and an opportunity to play the one against the other, with a fresh recognition of their own powers and their duty to develop these, with a new appreciation of the seriousness of right decisions when fac- ing moral and spiritual problems in international as well as national life, with a revelation of their own impotency in a world crisis and of the weakness of their educational and social systems — Latin American nations have indeed en- tered a new epoch. If they do not overstep themselves in playing international politics but modestly build more firmly their present advantages into permanent friendships, and faithfully devote themselves to the development of their remarkable economic and spiritual resources, a few decades will see changes that will astound and delight the world. This conviction has increasingly grown on the author as he has visited seventeen out of the twenty southern republics since the United States entered the war. 226 LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 227 I. ECONOMIC CHANGES The first changes to be felt in Latin America consequent upon the war were economic. South America had depended chiefly upon European capital for its development. England had invested in Argentina alone some five hundred million pounds sterling. Railroads, port works, street railways, mines, telephones and extensive land projects were owned by Europeans. Latin America had been selling her enor- mous resources to the foreigner and living in ease on the proceeds, with no thought that in this modern world of science and commerce and wealth such conditions could ever change. If a nation desired a new loan for some pet project or for the reward of a political party, a concession to a for- eigner would bring it. If the rich estanciero desired a new palace, the foreigner was ready with the money in exchange for some of his valuable land. If native labor was scarce or indolent, immigrants from Spain and Italy would come to reap the crops and build public works. When the European war began all of this order of things, which had come to seem most natural, was suddenly changed. Countries which were not only accustomed to borrow extra funds but to receive money for their raw materials from the foreigner, found both processes stopped because the European kept both his capital and his ships at home. For the same reasons that made foreign money unavailable, for- eign goods and foreign labor were unobtainable. In an endeavor to extricate herself from this trying sit- uation Latin America did two things which are making a profound and permanent change in her life. The first was to turn to the United States for aid. The American Gov- ernment, answering the appeal, called the first Pan Ameri- can Financial Conference, which met in Washington in May, 1915. The Ministers of Finance and prominent bank- ers of practically every one of the twenty southern coun- tries, as well as the leading financiers of the United States, attended the conference. By it was established the Inter- national High Commission, a composite body with official representatives from each American republic. The program of the Commission, as laid down, covered 228 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM a wide but well-considered range, embracing : ( i ) The estab- lishment of a gold standard of value; (2) uniform customs regulations; (3) the international protection of trade- marks, copyrights and patents; (4) the establishment of a uniform low rate of postage and the improvement of the money order and parcels post facilities between the coun- tries of the Americas; and (5) the extension of the prin- ciple of arbitration to include the adjustment of commercial disputes. In addition to these subjects the International High Com- mission, at a later meeting in Buenos Aires, dealt with the extension of banking facilities and credits, international agreements for uniform labor legislation, and improved tele- graph and transportation facilities between the American republics, including the use of wireless telegraphy for com- mercial purposes. The work of this Commission and other influences have had remarkable results in developing Inter- American commercial relations. At the beginning of the war there was not one North American bank operating in South America and not a North American steamship line maintaining passenger service be- tween the two continents. At the beginning of 1921 there were some fifty North American branch banks in South America, besides an equal number in the Caribbean section, a district which is now doing two billion dollars’ worth of foreign commerce annually. The National City Bank of New York controls some forty-two of these banks and the Mercantile Bank of the Americas about twenty-five. The American dollar is everywhere substituting the English pound, and a number of governments have recently made the dollar legal tender, and in other countries it freely circulates, so that a visitor need not bother with exchange in Cuba, Santo Domingo, Haiti, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama. In the prov- inces of Lima and Callao, Peru, it was decreed that the ad- ministrators of public revenues should receive as payments only checks lithographed in the United States. The Depart- ment of Cauca, Colombia, negotiated a loan of 1,000,000 pesos gold with a New York firm recently. Within the past half-dozen months the Bolivian Government has LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 229 contracted for a loan of io million dollars with a New York investment house. The State of Santa Catharina, Brazil, has arranged a loan of 5 million dollars in the United States for the construction of railways and for public utilities. Among the other loans that are being increasingly arranged in North America the most important one recently is that placed by Chile in February of 1921 for 20 million dollars. Half a dozen years ago, out of a thousand vessels enter- ing Latin American ports, scarcely any flew the American flag. In 1913, according to the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, “not a single American vessel arrived at Buenos Aires. In 1914 there were 6; in 1915,73; in i 9 i 6, 140; and in 1917, 151 ” In 1919, 335 American vessels carrying 822,609 tons arrived in the Ar- gentine. In the first four months of 1920 American ton- nage at Buenos Aires exceeded by 3 per cent, the total Amer- ican tonnage at that port for the whole year 1919, in which year it stood second to British tonnage only. In 1914, the limit reached by American tonnage for the foreign trade was 1,076,000 gross tons; in March, 1920, it was 9 million tons, or more than the total tonnage of all classes for 1916; and the entire tonnage is, in 1921, approximately 16 million tons. Though working under stupendous pressure, British shipping, always immeasurably superior to other shipping, can now barely keep ahead of American production. This, too, like the banking development, is an entirely new eco- nomic fact, and is bound to modify the current of foreign relations in Latin America. What the ultimate outcome will be, since Great Britain, the United States, and Japan are all in a frenzy of ship-building and have their eyes on the Latin American trade, probably nobody can say today. The total value of commerce between Latin America and the United States has shown an enormous increase since the beginning of the war. In 1913 that commerce amounted to 743 million dollars. In 1919 it had grown to practically 3 billion dollars. In 1918 our trade with the West Indies amounted to four times what we did with Great Britain in 1913, and Argentina’s business with us was five times as much as we did with France in 1913. In 1919, in spite of disturbed conditions in Mexico, we sold her more farming 230 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM implements than we did France, at that period supposed to be in greatest need of such material. Our commerce with Uruguay grew from 51 million dollars in 1918 to 81 million in 1919, or 58 per cent. ; our trade with Colombia reached the record value of 67 million dollars, showing a gain of 90 per cent, over the 1918 trade; imports from Venezuela in 1919 increased 170 per cent, over the 1918 figure, and ex- ports to that country showed an equal gain. DEVELOPMENT OF HER OWN RESOURCES Besides Latin America’s endeavor to arrange for new credits and supplies in the United States, she did a second thing which is destined to have a very large effect on all her life. She began to make a most determined effort to develop her own resources and to manufacture her own goods. This movement was most notable in Brazil, the one big country in South America that actually declared war. The federal government took up systematically the whole ques- tion of increasing agricultural products and cattle raising and the manufacturing of goods formerly imported. Pre- viously her export had been largely coffee, with the pro- ceeds of which she had bought many staples which could have been easily raised at home. In the new effort toward development, a North American missionary was called upon to help in planning a corn exhibit and other methods of in- creasing production like those used in the United States, and several thousand Japanese colonists were brought in to teach the people to grow rice cheaply. The methods of pro- ducing rubber began to be reformed. The coal mines in the south were again opened. An official campaign around the world was initiated to promote the sale of Brazilian tea, mate. Manufacturing has grown to an astounding ex- tent. Brazil is now almost entirely shod with nationally made shoes. The importation of hats in Sao Paulo has practically ceased because of the nineteen hat factories now in that city. Native textile products are rapidly replacing the foreign makes. Brazil’s shipping industry has profited enormously by the taking over of nearly fifty interned Ger- LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 231 man ships, with which it is planned to establish lines be- tween Brazil and many other countries, including Chile and China. The demand in the warring nations for beef and wheat, and the high prices paid, caused a great increase in their production. Argentina has now become the leader of the world in the exportation of beef, surpassing the United States and Australia. She has also come to occupy first place in the export of wool and third place in the export of wheat. She has begun the use of native petroleum and fire- wood, and to search for her own coal deposits and exploit her own forests since denied these necessities by Europe. Argentina’s total foreign commerce for 1920 approximated the remarkable figure of 2 billion American dollars. Ar- gentina’s trade balance in her favor for 1919 was 375 million dollars. Her per capita foreign business amounts to more than $200 per capita, whereas that of the United States is estimated at $86. Chile has learned her lesson as did Brazil, not to depend entirely on one product for her national com- mercial existence. Heretofore about 85 per cent, of her national revenue had been derived from an export tax on nitrate, but during the war taxation was distributed in a more scientific way, including a land tax which Chile had never had before. As one Chilean has said, “The war has brought us a cer- tain prosperity and also something that is worth more than prosperity — common sense.” Chile had already encour- aged manufacturing to some extent, there being some 8,000 factories employing 90,000 persons in 1914. This number has been greatly augmented since that time. Chile now gets practically all of her coal from her own mines. Peru has also been led to stimulate greatly her production of sugar and cotton, the high price of these articles during the war having brought producers of these products great prosperity. Her inability to get needed food supplies and manufactured goods has caused this country also to make a splendid endeavor to supply her own needs. The smaller countries in the Caribbean have been less able to develop their own resources and as a rule have greatly suffered economically. Cuba is a marked exception. That 232 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM country’s foreign commerce has been multiplied by three during the war on account of her giving herself almost en- tirely, backed by American capital, to the production of sugar. Cuba now produces about one-quarter of the world’s supply of sugar. Her foreign commerce in 1918 amounted to 718 million dollars and in 1920 to about one billion dol- lars. Her per capita wealth is now more than that of the United States, and her foreign commerce about equal to that of China. “The imagination is almost overpowered in attempting to comprehend the vast proportions of the sugar industry of the island as it exists this year. “The cane produced is of such tremendous volume that a procession of bull teams, four abreast, reaching around the earth, would be required to move it. The crop would suffice to build a solid wall around the entire 2,000 miles of the island’s coast line as high as an ordinary dwelling house and thick enough for a file of four men to walk abreast on it. “The sugar extracted from this cane would load a fleet of steamers reaching from Havana to New York, with a ship for every mile of the 1,200 that stretch between the two ports. The great pyramid of Cheops, before whose awe-inspiring proportions millions of people have stood and gazed in open-mouthed amazement, remains, after 5,000 years, unrivaled as a monumental pile ; but Cuba’s sugar output this year would make two pyramids, each outbasing and overtopping Cheops. “The wealth the outgoing sugar crop brings in is not less remarkable in its proportions. Four hundred dollars out of a single crop for every human being who lives on the island — a sum almost as great as the per capita wealth pro- duced by all the farms, all the factories and all the mines of the United States! “What wonder, then, that Cuba today is a land of gold and gems, richer than Midas ever was, converting Croesus, by contrast, into a beggar!” 1 All this prosperity means that Hispanic America is not 1 Of course Cuba and all Latin America have been deeply affected by the post war financial crisis. But this is no doubt only temporary. LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 233 only a market for our manufactured goods, but also a great source of energy and economic strength in the rehabilitation of the world. It is sometimes said that the only source of credit for the current needs of Europe is in North America. The United States may be the only place where very large issues of bonds could be floated, but international banking and mercantile organization is even now drawing upon the surplus credit-strength of the rich overseas parts of the world. The basic sources of credit in South America are furnishing now the means of supplying Europe on a basis of deferred payment. Moreover, the new financial position of South America is being consolidated in a movement of those republics whose money has been on a fluctuating basis to put their currency and banking systems upon a sound and stable footing, backed by gold. Within five years all South America south of the equator will be on the “gold basis.” The premier industries of South America in all probabil- ity will always be the former ones, that produced vast quan- tities of raw materials. Meat, wool, wheat, linseed, hides, tanning extract, coffee, cocoa, rubber, copper, tin, nitrate, will always be the great “money makers” and the South American contribution to the world’s manufacturing. Lum- ber and beautiful woods are to be added and there may come a great development of cotton production. South America has all along furnished some good cotton and sugar. To these products, moving in heavy volume, there is now being added a very respectable total of minor ones, such as rice, beans, canned vegetables and fruits, butter and cheese, and wines. There is some prospect of South America develop- ing a tanning industry that may eventually export leather in place of hides. The South American growth of manu- facturing is important, but it is only complementary to the premier industries of the “camps” and the forests. It is therefore of great significance that the agricultural industries and the country life of Brazil, Uruguay, and Ar- gentina are waking up to something absolutely new to them. A progressive element among the farmers is absolutely hungry for new ideas of “scientific” production. The third change in economic conditions during the war has been the development of the labor movement. Labor in 234 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM these countries in the past has had little opportunity to as- sert itself. The formation of the Pan American Federation of Labor in 1918, which is fostered by the American Fed- eration of Labor, has served to organize labor in several Latin American countries. Three Pan American confer- ences on labor have been held, resulting in an understanding between workmen of different countries and helping them to study more closely the economic, social and political im- provements of the laboring classes. The objects of the Pan American Federation of Labor, organized at the first of these conferences, are stated as follows : First. The establishment of better conditions for the working people who emigrate from one country to another. Second. The establishment of a better understanding and relationship between the peoples of the Pan American Re- publics. Third. To utilize every lawful and honorable means for the protection and promotion of the rights, the interests, and the welfare of the peoples of the Pan American Republics. Fourth. To utilize every lawful and honorable means for the purpose of cultivating the most favorable and friendly relations between the labor movements and peoples of the Pan American Republics. At the Second Pan American Congress it was brought out that the offices of the federation had acted as an informa- tion bureau for the labor movements of the Pan American Republics, and had collected considerable data concerning labor conditions in the Western Hemisphere, especially in connection with the state of organization of the workers. It was found that the labor movement had been organized into a national federation or body, outside of the United States and Mexico, in Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Guatemala, Salvador, Chile, Peru, and the Dominican Re- public. In those countries not mentioned there are quite a LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 235 number of labor unions, but they have not formed into a national organization. In the three conventions of the Pan American Federa- tion and in the work of ad interim committees delicate in- ternational questions have been courageously faced. As the then secretary of the Federation, Senor Luis Marones, said: “It is time the workers of the world found a way to remedy the mistakes of government. It is their duty to deal with international differences, when governments do not care to settle them, and try to prevent conflicts among workers.” Mr. Samuel Gompers in his second inaugural address said : “Anything that makes for international unity and the pre- vention of international strife and war is the proper work of the labor unions of the world.” The Federation has already, acting on this principle, taken up three problems that affect American peace. The first was that of relations between Mexico and the United States. The inside story of the influence of labor in pre- venting an armed conflict between the two countries would reveal an important contribution in this regard. At the Second Annual Convention, held in New York, July, 1919, a resolution was adopted under which the Federation prom- ised to use its good offices toward effecting a settlement of the boundary dispute between Chile and Peru. Delegates said it was the duty of labor to end this controversy of many years’ standing, as there was danger of war in which the workers would be the chief sufferers. Objection was made by the delegates from Ecuador that the resolution was of a political character, but Mr. Gompers said that if the workers of Germany and Austria had had the courage and intelligence to set themselves against the action of their governments the war of the past five years would not have occurred. The most instructive work done toward establishing right relations between the United States and Santo Domingo is being carried out by this Federation. The Dominican dele- gates to the first conference presented complaints concern- ing some injustices to labor practiced by the American forces in occupation. This led to President Gompers writ- ing to President Wilson, setting forth at length the whole 236 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM question of American occupation. Later the American Fed- eration of Labor appointed a commission, which in January of 1920 visited Santo Domingo and made a careful study of the labor conditions and the question of the military occu- pation. This commission submitted thirty-four proposals to the government for the betterment of the conditions of the people, a number of which were immediately carried out by the officials. No doubt this work has had much to do with bringing about of the recent announcement of the United States Government that the marines are soon to be withdrawn from the Dominican Republic. The Third Convention of the Federation, which was held in Mexico City in January, 1921, witnessed a very severe test of the organization when radicals and extreme nation- alists made a strenuous effort to disrupt the organization. But the saner element prevailed, and passed the following resolution, which sums up the purposes of the Federation : “Whereas, it is the aim and purpose of the Pan American Federation to use every proper and legitimate means to advance the interests of the working people ; be it “Resolved, That the following is expressive of our de- sires and purposes and sets forth principles which we con- sider fundamental : “Political freedom, the right of the workers to have a voice and vote equal to that of every other citizen is the first practical step toward those individual rights that are essen- tialfto liberty. But political liberty, working through legis- lative, executive and judicial departments of the organized government of a free people does not, and should not be permitted to enter into that personal (non-governmental) relationship between wage-earner and employer through which the terms of employment are determined by the rec- ognition of equality of rights, and the joint agreement of both parties. “The trades union movement holds that the principle of self-government by free peoples and the principle that in industry and commerce the wage-earners through their or- ganization should freely and fully participate in determining the terms of employment, are identical. The principle that LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 237 governments should only exist with the consent of the gov- erned is identical with the principle that the terms of em- ployment, conditions of labor and the rules and regulations of employment should only exist with the consent of the employed. “We regard it as essential to the success of our movement that there be a clear and definite statement as to the attitude of this federation toward questions subject to controversy and honest difference, not only because of our desire to pro- mote understanding among those now affiliated to the Fed- eration, but so that those not yet affiliated may the more readily understand the character of our Federation and the more quickly assume their proper responsibilities by seeking affiliation. “We, the delegates assembled in this congress, regard it as essential that it be established as a foundation principle that progress can be achieved only through agreement. The aim of our federation must be to find those programs, principles and tactics upon which agreement can be had. This feder- ation has a right to life only because it is of service to the workers and there is no service in disunity and disharmony. Those matters regarded as essential by some, but not by all, should be held in abeyance until the processes of education, understanding and experience develop agreement among all. Any effort to force upon minorities principles or tactics to which they cannot give consent, must, in an international Federation such as this, lead to destruction. In like manner any effort of minorities, through strategy or otherwise, to thrust their decisions upon majorities must be equally fatal. “We call the attention of all workers to the vital need of education as a prime requisite of intelligent progress. We set it down as a fundamental fact that a high state of demo- cratic civilization and enlightenment cannot be founded upon ignorance. The more highly our civilization is developed, the more complete must be the degree of education, enlight- enment and understanding of the workers if democracy is to be preserved and its opportunities kept open to those who do the useful work of all nations. “We urge upon all affiliated organizations, and upon labor movements everywhere, the prime necessity of encouraging 238 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM education, of insisting upon education and of securing the just right to participation in the development and adminis- tration of education. “Our movement is a movement of protest against wrong and injustice and a movement of constructive progress. We cannot develop beyond the understanding of the working people everywhere. Without an intelligent and understand- ing labor movement, capable of receiving and transmitting thought and capable of a proper appraisal of facts, condi- tions and theories, there can be only chaos or tyranny. Proper education is a first requisite of democratic constructive progress. “One of the primary conditions essential to the success of our movement in our respective countries as well as that of the Pan American Federation of Labor is the organiza- tion of the yet unorganized wage workers, whether skilled or unskilled, into unions of their trades, callings or indus- tries and the unity of these organizations for the cultivation of the spirit and action of fraternity and solidarity. “We regard as essential the extension of democracy in in- dustry and we declare our unalterable opposition to inter- ference in the processes of industry by forces outside of the industrial field and therefore incompetent to deal with its problems. We urge upon the labor movement everywhere the extension of the practice of negotiation between the em- ployers and the workers and the making of trade agreements. We hold this to be the first great step in the development of democracy in industry and we hold that in no other way can such democracy be developed. There is no democracy while the workers are inarticulate and the workers can have no effective voice except through organization in the in- dustrial field.” Labor disturbances have occurred all over Latin America during the last two years. Just how far these have been due to the efforts of foreign agitators and how much to the growing spirit of independence among the workers themselves, it is difficult to say. The most serious strike took place in Buenos Aires dur- ing 1919. That city of a million and a half people has suf- LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 239 fered probably more than any other since the close of the war by the continuous strikes which blocked all ocean traf- fic, closed all the great daily" papers for two weeks and brought on what was practically a political revolution. Ex- tensive labor troubles were also registered in Brazil, espe- cially around Sao Paulo. Strikes in the mines and ports of Peru served to bring about serious conditions in that country. Strikes in Havana, Cuba, and in Oriziba, Mexico, among the tobacco workers in Porto Rico, the stevedores in Chile, and others of more or less importance, have served to bring to the front the tense situation of the laborers in all these countries. Socialistic and labor representatives are found exercis- ing large influence at the present time in the national con- gresses of Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Porto Rico, Mexico and Cuba. Several governments have recently de- ported large numbers of aliens who have taken part in labor disturbances, Argentina during July, 1919, having deported about 900 on a special ship chartered for that purpose. Since the war has brought to the fore the questions of socialism and unionism, they promise to be among the most vexing of all the problems facing these countries for the next few years. FIGHT FOR COMMERCIAL AND CULTURAL SUPREMACY BY OTHER WORLD POWERS Finally, in discussing economic changes in Latin America during the war there must be mentioned the attention com- manded from the rest of the world by these nations because of their enormous resources. Careful students are now re- garding this as the most promising field for furnishing the three great demands of the world today: food, room for overcrowded populations, and a market for surplus goods and capital. Beginning at the Rio Grande and stretching down through Mexico, Central America and through the untold riches of South America to the Straits of Magellan, is the largest area of undeveloped fertile land in the world. Capitalists, manufacturers, steamship directors, food econo- mists and political leaders in North America, Europe and 240 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM even Japan, are intently fixing their attention on these fal- low lands. A German observer has lately described Latin America as the “Fair Helen” of the business world. Her charms are admired and her favors sought by all industrial nations. It is interesting to glance at what a few nations are doing to woo this fair maiden. The French, who have always had a profound influence on the Latin American republics, seemingly without any particular effort on their part, have recently organized a French-American Committee which is to direct a movement to unite France and Latin America; to develop economic, intellectual and artistic relations; to attract students and travelers to France, and to encourage every means of bringing these countries together. A good deal is being said about the necessity of the Latin races uniting. All of this has its advantages in the development of commercial relations. A Latin American Week has re- cently been celebrated in France. The visits of such men as Clemenceau to Latin America have been a strong means of cultivating these relations during the past, and it is pro- posed that these visits shall be continued on a much larger scale. An article by George Lafon, recently appearing in the Revue Minerva, says : “One of the inevitable consequences of the European War will be a most terrible competition in the markets of Latin America. This contest will not be limited to commerce but will extend itself to all of the fields of human activities. There will be a political, financial, in- dustrial and intellectual contest. It is necessary to prepare for it. Only a few years ago South America was of little importance in the world : immense territory and small popu- lation; weak nations agitated by internal disorders; a civi- lization in evolution but far removed from us. Today, on the other hand, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay and other nationalities have a homogeneous people, numerous popula- tion and stable and strong government. The world impor- tance of these young American republics consists in their agricultural and mineral wealth, which has scarcely been touched. LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 241 “There are two competitors, Europe and the United States. The United States displays the Monroe Doctrine to exclude, if possible, from the southern markets European capital and production. That political doctrine includes also an economic domination. But the South prefers her liberty to a purely geographical union. Her points of contact with North America are few; neither language nor race, nor re- ligion, nor customs are included. She will gain little if she enters into the orbit of the United States, but on the con- trary will lose much. “The most active elements in South America today are European emigrants that have maintained close relationships with their fatherland, and the sons and descendants of emi- grants who feel and call themselves ‘sons of the country’ but who do not wish to deny that they are Latins : latinity is not a vague and literary phrase, it is a real thing in many economic and political problems. The Latin republics of America feel their affinity of race for the Latins of Europe. We must prepare promptly an army of young men for this new struggle, an army that does not need to be so numerous but well chosen. Only thus shall we be able to conquer the place which the Latins deserve in South America.” England discovered Latin America more than a hundred years ago. Her relationships have been largely commer- cial. She is now not only endeavoring to recapture her trade lost largely to the United States during the recent hostilities, but also to establish it on a firmer basis of cul- tural relations than existed before the war. Many books on the Latin American countries are published in England by English authors. Her schools are founding professorships in the Spanish and Portuguese languages and are studying Latin American history as never before. An Anglo-Span- ish society has recently been formed, and other movements are noted which show her earnestness in the matter. Germany has for many years made South America one of her chief points of commercial attack. Her large colo- nies in the different countries and her merchants in every commercial center in Latin America have not lost as much as might be supposed during the war. Germany is pre- 242 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM pared to make the greatest fight of her life for trade in all parts of Latin America. Directly connected with this move- ment is the promotion of emigration to these countries in large numbers through a semi-official emigration bureau. Japan has recently developed steamship lines to Peru, Chile, Argentina, Brazil and Mexico. She has also estab- lished emigration to Brazil and her people have been enter- ing Peru in large numbers. To be reckoned with as local competitors are the large numbers of Syrians and other near-eastern nationalities who are increasingly becoming the leading merchants, especially in the Caribbean countries. All are developing their shipping interests. Of British efforts, nothing need be said. It is a foregone conclusion that Great Britain will meet every advance put forth by competitors. The French Compagnie Generale de Transports Mari- times has instituted a regular service between France and the Caribbean and Mexican ports and San Francisco via the Panama Canal. The Transatlantica Italiana and the Na- cional de Navegacion have already sent steamers to Chile by way of Panama and expect to add ten more vessels, receiv- ing a substantial subsidy from the Chilean Government. Suarez and Company, of Havana, have established a line be- tween Havana, the United States, and the Argentine. The Compagnie Generale Transatlantique began last December monthly sailings to the West Coast of South America by the Panama route. Ex-German vessels seized by Portugal have been assigned to Portugal-Brazil service. The firm of Henry Frank and Co. has initiated steamship service be- tween the Argentine and southern Brazil ; the New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Co. plans a monthly service be- tween European and Mexican ports and has added new pas- senger and freight service between New York and Mexico; the Pacific Steamship Co. now connects San Francisco with Corinto, Nicaragua, by boat, has inaugurated a direct line of steamers between New York and Callao-Valparaiso, and is expecting soon to replace smaller vessels serving San Francisco and Central American cities by 5,000-ton vessels; the Companhia Minas e Viacao de Matto Grosso of Brazil has let contracts in the United States for the construction LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 243 of twenty ships; the Compahia Viajera Antillana has been formed in Havana with a capital of $4,000,000 and is hav- ing seven steamships built in England and in the United States; the Hollancl-American Line is to establish service between Valparaiso and other Chilean ports and Panama; the Latin American Line has begun to run between New York and Santo Domingo and Colombia. The European nations are using especially the power of the friendly visitor to capture the sympathy of Hispanic America, whose temperament makes her particularly sus- ceptible to this kind of approach. Since the war closed Bel- gium has sent her hero King, France has sent Premier Viviani, and Italy Premier Orlando. The most notable re- ception seems to have been given to distinguished Spanish visitors, such as Ferdinando, Prince of Bavaria, thus show- ing the remarkable revival of close relations with the moth- er country, Spain, which has come to be particularly notice- able during the last year. In order to promote further these relations King Alfonso himself is now planning an inclusive visit. Besides these men distinguished in political life there have been any number of less known men touring these coun- tries as individuals or members of commercial, scientific, literary or diplomatic commissions. As to the activities of the United States for developing closer contacts with Latin America reference has already been made to the Pan American Financial Congress and the activities growing out of it, as also to the Pan American Federation of Labor. The Second Pan American Scientific Congress, held in Washington in 1916, and the movements growing out of it, did much to remove the complaint of the Latin Americans that the United States was interested in them chiefly from the commercial side, failing to appreciate their contribution to science, literature and art. Besides the continual activities of the Pan American Union, with head- quarters in Washington, there have been developed a large number of societies and innumerable publications for the promotion of various phases of inter-American relations. The Committee on Cooperation in Latin America repre- sents a large movement among the churches of the United States to cultivate friendly relations with their Southern 244 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM neighbors and help them to solve their problems by sending ministers, teachers, physicians and social workers who will share with them the best of North American life. The Com- mittee is especially devoted to the production of literature, particularly the translation into Spanish and Portuguese of some of the best North American books. It publishes a re- view, La Nueva Democratic, which is probably the only publication in the Spanish language that offers a common platform on which all the Americas may discuss their spir- itual problems. Universities and colleges of the United States have or- ganized special courses in the languages and history of Latin America, and have made the attendance of Latin American students much easier. Latin America has come to be an increasingly popular subject to discuss with commercial or- ganizations and chautauqua audiences. Banks, factories, steamship companies and engineers have made elaborate plans to extend trade toward the south. It may be said that for the first time in its history the United States is awake to the need of developing close relations with her southern neighbors. During the war, then, and partly on its account, all the principal industrial nations of the world have come to ap- preciate in a new way the importance of Latin America, and have resolved to win commercial and cultural supremacy in these twenty young and rich republics, where the struggle for such supremacy will be keener than in any other part of the world. 2. POLITICAL CHANGES The technical attitude of the Latin American countries in the world war was as follows : Eight of the twenty nations actually declared war on Ger- many. These were Brazil, Costa Rica, Cuba, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama. Five other Latin American states broke off diplomatic relations with Ger- many, namely, Bolivia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay. Salvador declared herself in favor of benevolent neutrality toward the United States, which per- LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 245 mitted the use of her ports and territorial waters by the warships of the United States and the Allies. The six re- maining neutral nations, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Mex- ico, Paraguay and Venezuela, either by the statements of the executives or by resolutions passed by their congresses, or again by the pro-Ally tone of the majority of their lead- ing newspapers and finally by the utterances of their most representative statesmen, also expressed themselves in favor of Pan American solidarity. 1 The outstanding change in the political life of Latin America brought about by the war, was its new attitude of friendliness toward the United States. It is not necessary here to refer to the well-known suspicion of the United States which has existed in all Latin American countries for years. This prejudice and the change of sentiment are well described in the following editorial published in a leading Buenos Aires daily on July 4, 1917: “The circumstances in which we find ourselves today on this anniversary of the North American nation serve to define a double principle of Americanism and democracy. This celebration in other years has been an occasion for re« joicing only for the United States. She could, with patriotic joy, stop in her march and contemplate with satisfaction the road traveled since the days of that memorable declaration. Other people joined the celebration with a cordiality more official and diplomatic than real. “Today all is different. The United States, by the power of that great republican virtue which is the supporter of the right, is for the whole world not only a nation engaged in a knightly war, but an apostle in action. Some four years ago the Latin author, Ruben Dario, was able to say, led astray by superficial observation, that the United States, which had everything, lacked but one thing — God. “Today this cannot be said, for the crusade of the United States and the serene and eloquent words of Wilson have a religious character, now that they intimate the abandonment 1 The causes of the various attitudes assumed by the different Latin American nations have been the subject of much treatment in current literature to which reference is made at the end of this chapter. 246 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM and disregard of material interests in the face of the defense of the ideal. “Quietly, without the sound of trumpets or noise, the United States has entered the contest, and thus it returns to noble France the generous contribution of that great French- man, Lafayette, the American national hero. If America stands for anything in the world and in history it is liberty. Other peoples have been formed by reason of conquest, or of religion, but the Americans were born out of the idea of liberty. “In this sentiment is found the unity of San Martin, Boli- var and Washington. It matters little that history registers this or that disturbance and this or that variation. That is the sentiment, and that is the thing that, after conquering all cruel tyrannies and retrogressive desitions, has overcome all. “So, in the awful conflict which today is shaking the world, the United States is bearing the burden of all Amer- ica, because she is on the side of liberty. She is the big sis- ter in years and in power among the American nations. This place belongs to her and worthily has she taken it.” Dr. Ernesto Quesada, of Argentina, speaking of the need of all America standing together, said: “Never more than at the present moment, while Europe is in the great con- flict of nations, has America been confronted with a more vital necessity to stand together.’’ Senor Ignacio Calderon, of Bolivia, put it this way: “Freedom is a gift that is only given to nations who know how and are ready to defend it. America is destined to lead the world. Let us work together for the principle of right and justice, of liberty and happi- ness.” Dr. Edward J. Pinto of Costa Rica was even more emphatic : “It would seem,” he said, “that by a natural re- flex action Americans, having witnessed the result of up- heaval and conflict across the Atlantic, have banded together in order that the bonds of their security and peace may be strengthened and assured.” Many volumes could be filled with such quotations. A Latin American writer, discussing the effect of the arrival of the United States Army at the front,, says : LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 247 “The Americans arrived in time ! It was because they had a pure ideal. Benignant Destiny willed that those who had least material interest involved in it should decide the war. The dominating word of the President explained to the New Men that the future of Liberty and of Democracy was in peril, and they marched bravely to the field of battle. Ancient Britain defended her Empire and her maritime pow- er; France and Italy their integrity; the New Men defended their ideal, the dictates of their consciences, the good of all, the spiritual heritage, the right of coming men to breathe with sovereign lungs in the atmosphere of the earth. Be- cause they were building a dwelling worthy of the future humanity, they had been called materialists. * * * But when the deceptive mist fades away, our eyes, filled with the lim- pid grace of comprehension, behold the Uncle of the Big Stick transfigured into an heroic paladin.” Just as the United States entered the war the writer be- gan an extended trip through the southern hemisphere. All throughout my tour, beginning at Mexico, I felt this change in sentiment. But not until I arrived in Chile did it come over me with full force. On my visit three years before I felt like leaving Chile on the first train, for I heard on every hand unpleasant references to the United States. The stu- dents of the universities were particularly hostile. This time, when I called upon a professor in the National Univer- sity, I was asked to address one of his classes ; later on, an- other; till I found myself giving a whole morning of talks. These led to a conference at one of the big theaters, secured for the occasion by the university students. The theme they wanted me to discuss was, “How to Develop Closer Rela- tions between the United States and Chile.” At the close of the lecture a full hour was spent answering their eager and pointed questions. I spoke very frankly, analyzing the good and bad in the Anglo-Saxon and the Latin, pointing out why each had failed to understand the other in the past. That session with these brilliant young people was a most delight- ful experience. Their hunger for knowledge about North American life, particularly concerning our universities, was amazing and refreshing. 248 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM For the first time in the history of a South American na- tion Brazil has openly declared that the prime reason for her taking a serious political step was to follow the leadership of the United States. In her note to the other South Amer- ican powers, announcing the breaking of relationships with Germany, she said: “Brazil has never had, nor has it now, warlike ambitions. If it has heretofore abstained from taking sides in the Euro- pean conflict, it has not been able to continue indifferent since the United States has been drawn into the war without any further motives than simply those of action in the name of international justice and order. * * * If up to the present the relative lack of reciprocity on the part of the American re- publics has deprived the Monroe Doctrine of its real char- acter, permitting an interpretation scarcely founded on the prerogative of sovereignty, the present conditions place Brazil at the side of the United States of America at this critical moment in the history of the world, and continue to give our political relationships a practical form of con- tinental solidarity.” In the same way Panama, in its declaration of war, says that, “Neutrality is impossible in a conflict where the vital interests of the United States are involved.” The visit of the North American fleet under the command of Admiral Caperton to South American waters in 1917 promoted these friendly relations in a remarkable way. In order that the fleet might visit Montevideo when Uruguay had not yet broken relations with the Central Powers, the government promulgated the following special decree, which will no doubt be of great weight in future international re- lationships in America : “Whereas the Government of Uruguay has proclaimed the principle of American solidarity as a criterion of its in- ternational policy, it hereby decrees that no American coun- try, which in defense of its own rights should find itself in a state of war with nations of other continents will be treat- ed as a belligerent.” LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 249 In Montevideo the whole program and reception were practically directed by the Young Men’s Christian Associa- tion, to which the government turned over a large building near the wharf. In this building there were opened a read- ing-room, a writing-room, a reception hall, and a bureau of information. Ten thousand dollars American gold was ex- changed for the visitors in one day. In this same building the Salvation Army conducted a restaurant in which nearly one thousand men were fed daily. Every night there were entertainments of different kinds, furnished largely by the young people of the churches and social organizations. The last Sunday night of the visit at Montevideo a re- markable meeting was held in this hall, lasting about four hours. The dean of the literati of Uruguay, Dr. Juan Zo- rilla de San Martin, who is known wherever the Spanish language is read, said, in speaking to the boys : “It is the breath, indeed, of that great lady of ours, De- mocracy, my friends, which waves those glorious banners that you unfurl on your mastheads; it is her breath which carries them into this war that America has not provoked but that has struck her to the heart with its mailed fist and has aroused her in the name of her duty toward humanity ; it is, in a word, that which now welds in a great embrace your ensigns filled with the light of the stars and ours filled with the splendor of the sun and makes of them one benefi- cent constellation. “But this moment has come in which I find myself in re- lation not with a great multitude or a gigantic collective per- son but in immediate and affectionate contact with men whom we love individually, with spirits that are to us real favorites ; with each and all of you, valiant and good sea- men of our great sister, toward whom I feel an irresistible impulse of genuine affection. “And this constitutes, my friends, the most intimate of brotherhoods. If the fraternity of our countries comes from the common mother, Democracy, this of which I now speak, this which inspires in me such warmth of affection and interest in each and every one of you, this comes from something higher and more enduring — our common uni- 250 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM versal Father, our Father which is in Heaven, and who is one with the Son whom we all worship, Jesus Christ the Divine Redeemer of men. “I wish to speak to you of Him on this occasion, my friends and brothers, because I wish to leave in your souls as the most precious remembrance of my country, living and eternal words. Cherish them as precious jewels, in the depths, in the most intimate and hidden recesses of the se- cret places of your hearts. “This house that we have specially prepared for you in order that you might pass here in innocent and pleasant occupation your leisure time, in order that you might here find a reflection of your faraway home, in order that you might here renew the memory of your fathers, of your mothers, of your sweethearts, who are now thinking of you; of your native land in which your absence is felt while you are away on the call of your country; this house and this meeting which we offer you show that we Uruguayans have been thinking of you all individually, that we have seen in the crews of your formidable warships not only the units of an army which is passing, but the members of a family, with whom we share our home ; not an anonymous group o? beings destined to die, but a handful of beloved brothers for whose life we raise our prayer to our common Father and whom we would wish to embrace one by one, to save one by one from the dangers and hidden enemies, not only material but moral as well, which may rise to meet them in their un- selfish journeying to and fro by sea and land. “I see now before me that fair young sailor, almost a child, who looks at me with his large blue eyes full of memories * * * and that other * * * yes, hundreds of others. * * * A profound feeling of personal affection, I was going to say fatherly affection, is awakened in my heart and surges up to irritate my eyes. I am thinking of the pure and lovely things which bind men closest together; I feel that the strongest of ties is being knit between my soul and yours, my brave lads, joyous heralds of Mother America, soldiers of justice, of right, and of peace ! Many, and most happy, are the memories left in Montevideo by the notable and gracious visit of the United States fleet to which you LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 251 belong, but, my valiant sailors, of all these memories the most gratifying and lasting is that of your own conduct among us ; we have seen you in our streets and even in our churches as models of democratic culture; you have left us the example of an army of gentlemen above reproach, of men truly free and, what is more, of citizens worthy of that freedom, masters of themselves. “Farewell then, brave soldiers of our free and republican America. I have given you in my words the most precious thing which I have been able to find for you in the depths of my soul, the best that as a parting gift, I believe is to be found among the riches of this my country of Uruguay : paternal inspirations, sincere love for your souls. Every- thing else passes away, this alone remains to, and through- out, eternity. “Continue then, with valor and with unwavering faith in victory, your glorious journeyings on the great deep in the beneficent shadow of your spotless banner. Cherish with affection the remembrance of this land of Uruguay, whose fraternal embrace your very hearts have felt.” These remarkable words show not only how the hearts of Americans, North and South, have been opened to one an- other recently. They show also the significant spiritual cur- rents which have been set in motion recently in the Southern countries. 3. SPIRITUAL CHANGES The outstanding spiritual change brought about by the war is an increased open-mindedness. The people of Latin America are doing more fundamental thinking than ever before in their history. They have hitherto been ruled more by sentiment than by reason. They have rested on the glori- ous past of the Latin race, have magnified the differences between Latin Catholics and Anglo-Saxon Protestants, and have minimized the great economic and moral bases of American solidarity. They had ceased to regard religion as a real factor in a modern life. But this World War, with its rude shock to their economic progress and to many of 252 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM their philosophic theories, supposedly beyond attack, com- pelled them to re-examine their individual and national rela- tionships and to restate their theories. The spirit of inquiry, the willingness to listen, the new readiness to seek after God, if perchance they might find Him, impresses one pro- foundly as traveling in those countries he talks with men of every status from university professors to laboring men. Not since the struggle for independence a century ago has all Latin America been so stirred with the need of de- cision on a moral question as during the war. Some of the most dramatic scenes ever enacted in her history took place in the legislative halls and public assemblies when the ques- tions concerning the nation’s attitude toward the war were debated. In Peru, Dr. Mariano H. Cornejo, in a brilliant address before Congress September 7, 1917, thus stated the moral issues involved: “Gentlemen, I do not exaggerate when I say that never has Peru had in her past history, never will she have in the future, a greater problem than to decide her attitude toward the world conflict, whose issues illumine the human conscience, bringing to judgment all religious and scientific dogmas, all moral values, all the utopias that man has conceived through the centuries. In the universe reality consists not simply in the material which is temporal. Reality also consists in the intangible light. He does not know reality who does not take into account the unseen energy. * * * Do you know in what consists the supreme science of statesmanship? It consists in knowing which is the hour of ideals and which the hour of personal interest. Lost are the peoples who misread the great pendulum of History. * * * The peoples of America are called upon to enlist themselves on the side of the Ideal. How unfortunate that at this time the ideal is so confounded with personal interest!” Dr. Leopoldo Lugones, one of the outstanding men of Ar- gentina, in arguing for a visit of the United States fleet to Buenos Aires, said: “In Argentina neutrality is a desertion. This is true be- cause, in spite of all that is said today, there is no neutrality. Here as in the entire world, there are two powers that com- LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 253 pete with one another — despotism and liberty. And the object of such a gigantic struggle is the right to live with honor, without which even the life of a dog is too sad. This has received since the beginning of the war a sublime rati- fication. Belgium, only a little atom in relation to colossal Germany, preferred her honor to her life. She gained with this her place of equality among the great. Did I say equal- ity? Historical grandeur has nothing that goes beyond itD The following are extracts from an address delivered in the Brazilian Senate on Armistice Day by the well-known Brazilian statesman, Dr. Ruy Barbosa, who was called from his home to address the Senate upon the receipt of the news of peace: “I have spent the entire morning, until eleven o’clock, in writing at considerable length a reply in the name of Bra- zilian charity to the appeal of American charity, which is now carrying on a campaign, both there and here, under the auspices of the President of the United States, to provide spiritual, moral and social aid and comfort to the soldiers of democracy, whose mission has not yet been concluded upon the battle-fields of Europe, silent today under the shadow of peace, but agitated still by the birth of the new problems which have followed the war, and which will not be lighter than those of the war itself as a test of the ability and talents of the great statesmen of the period, of the resources and powers of the great nations now crowned with the recent victory. “I desire to lift up my heart in praise to God for not havr ing permitted me to deceive myself, when, in the conference at Buenos Aires, I counseled our nation, I counseled the other Latin American republics, I counseled the great repub- lic of the north, I counseled all America, I counseled all the neutral countries of the world, to break this unbearable neutrality between crime and right, between falsehood and truth, between infamy and justice. I desire only to say: ‘Glory to God in the highest, peace on earth among men of good will,’ whose faith, whose perseverance, whose heroism, 254 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM took this cause upon their shoulders and bore it to the final victory of this present hour. “However, gentlemen, there is still another lesson of the war just ended, and we must not forget to make use of it for ourselves, for the salvation of our own country. “The world moves toward other laws, toward other goals, toward a future of illimitable extent. Crowns have disap- peared, democracy seems to be extending its vast dominion over the whole world. All human relationships are changed, transformed, recast, even those between the sexes. The older conditions of life are being swept away in a revolution that may have incalculable results. “Will it be possible for Brazil in the midst of all these revolutions and upheavals, not to suffer its meed of change in the character of its politics, its institutions, the pro- cedures of its statesmen? “But, gentlemen, we must be taught by these events, and we ought to realize that our republic must accommodate herself to the new modes of thought, that our government must set its people a different example from the wonted one, or days perhaps tempestuous will be in store for us.” A new humility has come over Hispanic Americans. Countries that have heretofore considered themselves as comparing favorably with some of the big nations of the world have come to realize how utterly inadequate their re- sources in men and money would be in entering into a con- test of the magnitude of the world war. If they have been disillusioned concerning their own strength they have been also concerning the supposed military weakness of the United States. A fable has drifted about that Mexicans believed that if Texas was taken out, she should whip the United States. Certainly Mexico has been entirely convinced by the World War that so far as military force is concerned she would stand no show against the United States. Thus one of the arguments at least of the interventionists is removed, namely, that we ought to whip Mexico because she believed we could not do it. This realization of the weakness of their national re- sources and life is causing the leaders in several countries LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 255 to make in a spirit of humility a new study of their economic, educational and social life. These Southerners have been forced to face many de- cisions that involved an analysis of moral purposes. They have lived, during the past, rather in isolation, believing that science had solved their problems for them, that nature had given them all that could be desired of riches and pros- perity, and that religion had been practically eliminated. But they were suddenly confronted with the necessity of deciding which side they would take in a world struggle, realizing that they were being watched by the whole world as they made this decision. They were thus compelled to think of other things than the economic interests in which they had trusted almost entirely in the past. These conditions also made them take life more seri- ously. Stopped from over-borrowing, both in public and in private, they were compelled to think of saving money as well as food and materials. A family which ordinarily had several automobiles for its different members now had to be content with one. Even if they had the money to buy automobiles or sugar or coal, they were often forced to realize that there were times when not even money could buy the things desired. The effect was something like a spoilt child losing his parents and being cut off from all of the things he had naturally supposed would come to him for- ever. Moreover the stories of the sacrifices and the heroism of the peoples of Europe had large effect. Whether their par- ticular nation declared war or not people were compelled to wake up to the meaning of war. The organization in their own homes of the work of such enterprises as the Red Cross, carried on at first by the British and French, later by the Americans, and still later joined in by the nationals of the various countries themselves, had a widespread effect in awakening the people to the need for sacrifice and service. Even the investment in Liberty Bonds has had a good effect in bringing about these closer relations and in em- phasizing the lessons of thrift and responsibility of different peoples to help one another. The campaigns for the various war funds for the Allies were carried on in practically every 256 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM Latin American country and yielded large results. Even little Santo Domingo gave some $85,000 in one campaign to the Red Cross. The Young Men’s Christian Association was able to raise large sums of money for its buildings in Montevideo and Rio de Janeiro, when the war was at its height. Thus a new spirit of giving was developed by the war. This new spirit will be favorable to a large support of those philanthropic projects which are for the development of the community. It is impressive to note the large number of individuals and organizations that are now beginning to engage in efforts to serve the people. The Temperance So- ciety of Peru, which is composed of some of the leading men of the country, is doing a remarkable work. In Chile and Uruguay there are a large number of societies promoting educational and charitable work which are quite independent of the government. In Argentina there are large groups, ranging in their activities from discussions in university halls to socialistic meetings among workmen on the street corners, which indicate spiritual hunger and initiative. The Child Welfare Congress is an illustration of this new spirit. The second such Congress held in June, 1919, in Montevideo was an outstanding success, and denotes a new day for the neglected child in South America. The discus- sions were frank and fundamental. It is impossible to imagine a physician saying in public a few years ago, as one did at this recent Congress, such words as the following: “With relative frequency, and in the case of women who are neither ignorant nor poverty-stricken, I have been able to observe another cause of the abandonment of the child, something comparable to that which has been the result of the barbarous violations of women by the soldiers and offi- cers of the German army in Belgium and France. Seduced by individuals of a higher social class than their own, which fact drives away from their minds all thought of legal reparation — marriage or the legitimation of the child — or betrayed by specimens of that impudent class of young sports who abound, particularly in the country districts, and who keep account of their conquests with the same cold-blooded- ness and pleasure that a hunter calculates the number of LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR £57 trophies fallen to his gun — these poor young mothers aban- don their child in despair.” The most remarkable of all reform movements are the two which in the United States have led to additional amend- ments to our Constitution — Prohibition and Feminism. Leading statesmen of these Southern countries have recently given voice to utterances which clearly show that they rec- ognize the probability that both these movements -will grow very rapidly. An illustration of the eagerness of women to enter into a larger life is found in the recent organization of a Young Women’s Christian Association in Rio de Janeiro. Within one year it had 1,200 members. There is an encouraging demand for light on spiritual questions. A course of lectures, which proved to be most popular recently in Buenos Aires, was given on Emerson and the significance of the Puritan and Unitarian move- ments in New England. The professor who gave these is profoundly concerned for his country as he says it makes no difference how far Argentina may advance materially, unless she finds a spirit-basis for her development, she cannot be- come a strong nation. He has been considering recently the organization of a conference on religion, with representa- tives from all the faiths of Argentina, to face up to this question, which he says is the most important now before his people. Leaders in various countries also realize more deeply than before the necessity of practical and moral education for their children, and so impressed are they by the work of the North American mission schools that they are anxious to have the number increased. There is scarcely one of these schools in all Latin America that is not greatly overcrowded. The President of Paraguay, in discussing education with a group of North American missionaries who recently went to Asuncion to plan for a new station, was so eager to co- operate, that he offered public lands for an agricultural school, and mentioned an experimental station, already be- gun, which could be turned over, equipment and all. He also promised his own children and those of the most prominent families as pupils. A most remarkable proposition was 258 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM made recently to North American missionaries by one of the states of Brazil which offered them the free use of a well equipped agricultural school, with some 10,000 acres of land, agreeing to back the school for a period of fifty years, if the mission would provide the leaders in the teaching force. Moreover, the management was to have entire free- dom in the matter of religious instruction. The Government of Brazil has selected a former teacher in one of the mis- sion schools there to head a modern school of domestic science and paid her expenses to the United States to secure seven other young women teachers, specifying that they, like herself, should have the missionary spirit. Many prominent Latin Americans claim that the Roman Catholic Church has lost prestige in South America because of the general recognition that the Roman hierarchy in prac- tically all of these countries as well as in Europe favored Germany. The following words of Senor Vildosola, Editor of El Mercurio of Santiago, are generally applicable to other Latin American countries : “Perhaps the most of those who in Chile are still friendly to the German cause are to be found among the clergy and the militant Catholics, although indeed they are not the more cultured and better informed. At the beginning of the war many members of the Chilean clergy suffered the same per- turbation of judgment as that in w r hich the Spanish clergy still remains ; they believed that in this war the German Em- pire was an instrument of Providence to chastise France for having expelled the religious orders.” F. B. Luquiers, writing in The Century, refers to the same fact, as follows: “The last common factor is very hard for us to under- stand, for there is nothing similar in the United States. I refer to the pro-German influence of the Latin American clergy. The attitude of the church in Latin American coun- tries is perhaps to be explained by the fact that a majority of the priests are merely following the lead of Spain, for a tendency to look to Spain in matters of religion is the single LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 259 exception to the rule that France is Latin America’s coun- selor in all things material. It is very possible, in other words, that the first cause of the pro-Germanism of the Latin American clergy is to be found in the Napoleonic invasion of Spain more than a hundred years ago. In any case, it is certain that the lowest classes in Latin America, who feel no love for France, because they have no artistic impulses, and who do not abhor anything except starvation, have been easily pro-Germanized by their clerical advisers.” A radical writer in The Review of Philosophy, Culture, Science and Education of Buenos Aires takes advantage of the situation to say the following : “And that which is even a greater anachronism, that which reveals the absolute lack of moral value in religion — since being religious does not signify being a lover of justice — is the fact that has been proved all over the world, and that is the sympathy of the Catholics for Germany, and the estab- lished principle that everyone under clerical influence is also a Germanophile. This is an aberration, an absurdity, an inadmissible incongruity, — inadmissible but nevertheless real. And the Spanish people, dominated by a retrograde and rancid clergy, is that which has struck the highest note in this matter, reaching extremes of tolerance for the Kaiser that is truly inexplicable.” This spirit of revolt against religion and society, as already pointed out, is growing. A number of ultra-socialistic, anar- chistic and Bolshevist periodicals are now being published in Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and other countries. We must remember that this seed falls in prepared soil. The laboring classes have been greatly abused and controlled by super- stitions and they will not stop at any extreme when they find that they have the power, unless Christian leadership sanely guides these movements among the laborers. The Catholic Church in Buenos Aires has recently assigned some of its priests to join the street meetings of the laborers and counteract the influence of the agitators. “Evangelical Christianity is all that can save Chile from a bloody revolu- 260 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM tion,” said a student of social affairs not long ago. In Mexico evangelical ministers, many of whom have taken a prominent part in the recent revolution, have already had a quieting influence on such agitation. The writer recently addressed a questionnaire concerning the new conditions of education and religion in their coun- tries to a number of Latin Americans. The following are some answers: “Applied Christianity must be made a factor in national, political and social thought.” “The church must be put to work. Make it a business and men will care for it. Its activities will help to save it in this era of industrial iconoclasm. There is no medium like the Christian religion for the overcoming of prejudice. Racial, class and linguistic barriers are set aside and the political honesty of Wilson wins response from the sensitive Latins. It is self-evident that we must have this international moral rapprochement.” “The religious organization must be no less democratized than the political organization of human society.” “On every hand there is a clamor for a higher type of Christianity. Most men shrink from the mere thought of religion in forms or in creedal symbols or theological terms. The average man is repelled by conversations in which there is frequent reference to the church as the representative of Jesus Christ. There exists in the popular mind a clear dis- tinction between the Christianity of Jesus and that of the ec- clesiastics. The robust and virile type of discipleship is commended. For the man in the street contemplative Chris- tianity has been largely sacrificed to the more practical type. Service is more important than services. Tolerance is as necessary as conviction.” There is pretty universal testimony that all the religious work must for the best results tend toward educational methods. As to education, it must recognize: “That science is not necessarily benign unless informed by humane ideals — efficiency is not an end in itself — Liberty LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 261 is. That the State should exist for persons, not persons for the State. That if strong national government tends to molestation of one’s neighbors, anarchy, of the peaceful type (the extreme of individualism), is preferable.” ‘‘That real education en masse is impossible, just as char- acter building en masse is likewise impossible. We need to teach and practice the privilege of the trained individual to interpret the duty and destiny of others to them, by unan- swerable example.” ‘‘The urgent necessity of an educational system organized to use public funds in public education for the training of public-spirited citizens, competent and eager to render ser- vice. This, of course, involves academic and practical training, but this should be made subordinate to the prime goal of public service as distinguished from private gain. There must be a reorganization of courses of study and of general school activities with this in view. The educational system is in danger of developing along two lines, inconsis- tent with the general principle suggested above : first, an exceedingly narrow, superficial and excessive nationalism, and second, a selfish and narrow vocational training not de- signed to cultivate public spirit.” ‘‘All educational factors must be so organized as to train for world citizenship. Public sentiment must be educated to frown upon and refuse to tolerate the exploitation of the people in industrial, social or political fields; or jingoistic activities; or narrow, selfish nationalism.” Educators and religious leaders, some correspondents say, must with renewed vigor and from the modern viewpoint, show the falsity of the materialistic and economic theories of life. By new methods the people must be shown that strong nationality can only be developed through love and service and sacrifice. The spiritual leader must find new ways of identifying himself with the social, philanthropic organizations that are seeking outside of the church to do the same things that he is seeking to do in the church. He must realize that the church itself, as long as it is composed of human beings, is not a perfect organization, that besides there are many honest, spiritually minded people outside the 262 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM church who are doing much for the Kingdom. He must seek fellowship with these men and work shoulder to shoul- der with them. Rightly guiding the rising spirit of nation- alism is mentioned as an important task. Ricardo Rojas defines nationalism as patriotism which has as its terri- torial and political base the nation. Its elements are soli- darity, the consciousness of tradition and of language. He regards as “active factors of national dissolution Jewish schools where lessons are given in Hebrew, or colleges of religious congregations, Protestant establishments and Ger- man and Italian educational institutions which obey for- eign governments.” Discouragingly he describes a growing “cosmopolitanism in men and ideas, the dissolution of the old moral nuclei, indifference concerning the public busi- ness, and increasing forgetfulness of traditions, the popular corruption of language, ignorance of our own territory, lack of national solidarity, anxiety for riches without scruple, the worship of the most ignoble hierarchies, the disdain of higher accomplishments, the lack of passion in struggle, the lowering of suffrage, superstitious regard for exotic names, and blasting individualism and depreciation of ideals.” The school is for Rojas the protector of nationalism, “as the church confronts a crisis and the family is not yet a pow- erful factor.” The spiritual leader should guide this na- tionalism in sane channels and lead it into internationalism, showing that Christianity needs the peculiar emphasis of Latin America and North America, the Orient and of all peoples to make it a perfect whole. It seems well to close these quotations with a letter just received from Dr. Jose Ingenieros of Buenos Aires, well known author and critic, which reveals both the difficult so- cial problem and the most unfortunate reaction that has in the last few months set in against the United States, espe- cially in Argentina, where commercial difficulties have col- ored all our relations. He writes : “The religious and moral problem is today subordinated in all parts of the world to the social problem; until the in- iquitous action of capital is done away with, it is impossible to look for justice and the solidarity of the people. LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 263 “We who believed three years ago in the famous proposi- tions of Wilson are now undeceived in face of the immoral avarice of the Allied governments ; the peace of V ersailles has been simply a business arrangement, carried out with the spirit of commercialism. “The industrial reconstruction of the world cannot be carried forward under the same economic principles that ruled before the war; in order that the producing classes give themselves to work it will be necessary to emancipate them from the parasitism of the unproductive classes. It seems to me that this is today the only problem that interests humanity : the suppressing of the parasites of work. Until this is done, with all good faith, the world will continue in civil war. Peace will only come with the triumph of justice. “I know that these ideas are somewhat radical, but I have much faith in them, and I believe that they interpret his- torically the social reality. On the other hand I consider that the past economic regime has contributed to lowering the morality of men, placing the desire to enrich themselves above all ideals of moral perfection. As a consequence we ought to expect the greatest benefits from those ideas which tend to eliminate from society speculators, jugglers in finance, and parasites of all classes. “In this city all of the churches, either by conviction or on account of fear, take the side of injustice and social para- sitism; the progressive part of the youth and of the people themselves do not take any interest in the churches, being convinced that they are instruments of the past against the future. “It has seemed to me well to give these ideas to you. Here everything North American is looked upon with doubt because it is believed that the only object is commercial con- quest and capitalistic exploitation of South America. In order to rectify this belief it will be necessary to show an active sympathy for the new social ideas which are agitating all classes of people.” Notwithstanding Dr. Ingenieros’ words, the following from one who travels all over South America and comes 264 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM into contact especially with the cultured classes, should be given due consideration: “With the present spiritual unrest, that signifies a deep longing for something morally and spiritually better, and with the United States standing today beside France in the affections of the South American peoples, one longs to see every North American agency that can, make a genuine contribution to the moral and spiritual progress of South America, give itself whole-heartedly to this opportunity. No such time has existed since the days following the gain- ing of their political independence.” SOME DANGERS GROWING OUT OF THE WORLD WAR One of the first dangers to world peace to be found in Latin America would seem to be that involved in the trade war to which reference has already been made. This trade war will be liveliest as between England, the United States, Germany and Japan. It is not pleasant to refer to the bitter feeling often generated by trade rivalry between Americans and Englishmen in Latin America. Observers who live in South America, however, realize the keenness and serious- ness of this rivalry. In connection with foreign trade another evil should be pointed out, namely, a lowering of moral standards by those who engage in this keen commercial competition. Many report as having a baneful influence on North America’s moral influence the practice of some merchants in the United States of deceiving Latin American customers by furnishing goods inferior to those promised, and in some instances prac- ticing well planned deception. Many “war baby” export enterprises gave North American business a bad name in South America. The inexperience of many of our mer- chants — stupidity, Latin Americans call it — in export trade has been at the bottom of much misunderstanding. One result was to pile up, in the port of Buenos Aires alone, up to February, 1921, 45 million dollars of North American goods undelivered because of disputes and the financial crisis. LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 265 Since, owing to world conditions, it is the investors of the United States who are most free to extend their holdings and to make new investments in these countries of the South, there is danger of the domination of American financial interests in the affairs of these nations. Already there have been upon the part of our investors several instances of successful interference in Latin Ameri- can affairs, an outstanding illustration being the recent revo- lution in Costa Rica, where a progressive president was ousted largely through the influence of certain American financial interests who resented his refusal to grant conces- sions and special privileges to them. In Cuba, American investors control the economic life almost entirely, through their investments in sugar. If Cuba is not to become the American Ireland, careful consideration must be given to the obligation of the American people for the development of her spiritual and educational life. Certain financial interests have united in the organization of a propaganda bureau to discredit the Mexican Govern- ment in the United States. This organization may claim, as it has declared, that it is not in favor of armed interven- tion, which could only mean a war of invasion, but the effect of its propaganda is to persuade the American people that it is their Christian duty to take charge of the affairs of Mexico. A superficial view makes the average man, inter- ested in “a moral clean-up” compare Mexico with Cuba and the Philippines, forgetting the vast differences not only in the size of the countries, but in the development of their na- tionality, and, above all, the fact that Mexico is against our intervening, whereas Cuba welcomed it very warmly since she needed help in her struggle for independence. The Philippines are composed of many separate peoples, speaking different languages, who have never yet developed a real national life or spirit. There rests upon the friends of Mex- ico a responsibility not only to make known all the facts in the case but also to take the part of their comparatively weak people when the strong materialistic and militaristic forces are united against it. If we fail to do this in all such cases, where because of our present outstanding power we have much to do with deciding the fate of the smaller nations, 266 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM they will have little confidence in our protestations of friend- ship. The third danger growing out of the war is the fear that the United States will use her military power developed in the World War for imperialistic purposes in Latin America. A former president of Colombia said recently in a public address : “We glory in the wonderful idealistic program of the United States as carried out in the World War. We ad- mire all of her accomplishments. We pay tribute to her wonderful organization and the unselfishness with which she has thrown herself into the fight for democracy which is a fight for all of America. Yet we cannot fail to realize that the United States is building up a powerful war machine which might very easily be turned upon her weaker neigh- bors to the South.” Unfortunately there is enough talk of “America First” these days to explain why our southern neighbors should at times have such fears. As President Lowell says : “Some Americans, while professing a faith in the right of all peoples to independence and self-government, are really imperialists at heart. They believe in the right and manifest destiny of the United States to expand by overrunning its weaker neighbors. They appeal to a spirit of patriotism that sees no object, holds no ideals, and acknowledges no rights or duties, but the national welfare and aggrandize- ment. In the name of that principle Germany sinned and fell. The ideas of these American imperialists are less grandiose, but at bottom they differ little from hers. It would be a calamity if we should have helped to overcome Germany only to be conquered by her theories and her errors. “According to that view Central and South America are a game preserve, from which poachers are excluded, but where the proprietor may hunt as he pleases. Naturally the proprietor is anxious not only to keep away the poachers but to oppose game laws that would interfere with his own sport. With their professed principles about protecting the integrity and independence of small countries, the nations that have drawn up the Covenant of Paris can hardly con- LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 267 sent to a claim of this kind. Nor ought we to demand it. A suspicion that this is the real meaning of the Monroe Doctrine is the specter that has prevented the great South American states from accepting the Doctrine. It has been the chief obstacle to mutual confidence and cordial relations with them, and the sooner it is definitely rejected the better.” A fourth danger in the present situation is the new em- phasis on militarism and materialism, which in spite of all that has been said concerning new desire for spiritual life, has been felt by many Latin Americans. Many Latin Amer- ican nations who have had practically no army or navy are now considering it imperative to spend the larger part of their national income on militarism. The following is a summary of a reply to several ques- tions addressed to a prominent lawyer and educator in Chile : “First of all the war’s lessons is that all nations and prin- cipally the small ones must be prepared for war on the Swiss model, so that every man and woman and factory would be a factor in war. The school must be the first step in war preparation. Rights must be supported by force, as force has proved, once more, that it is the best defender of rights. Had it not been for their perfect military organizations Holland and Switzerland would have been invaded. If in- ternational wars come to an end, they are going to be re- placed by internal wars headed by the working classes against capitalism, and mankind will suffer more by these than by the former.” This feeling of materialism is further illustrated by the following published words of a prominent Argentine : “The uselessness of the exaggerated religious spirit of our times is revealed by its own inefficiency. What use has religion been in the present world conflict? * * * Religion has not been able to avert the war. On the field of battle peoples are being massacred by those of their own belief, and they march hand in hand with those whom they be- lieved to be heretics but yesterday. * * * But there must 268 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM come out of it all, as a logical consequence of the struggle, the universal decadence of religious morality, and, with the strengthening of democracy, there will come the implantation of a human morality.” Summing up, the influence of the war in Latin America has been very marked in industrial, political and spiritual ways. It has brought new economic independence, an awakening of labor, and a new attention to these countries from the rest of the world. A new friendship for the United States has been fostered and a new open-mindedness and spiritual hunger have been created. There have also been certain imminent dangers created — trade rivalries, impe- rialistic possibilities, and strengthening of materialism and militarism. A correspondent aptly puts the whole matter as follows: “The war has generated a vortex of questions which have never presented themselves to a great many before the out- break of hostilities. The employment of force, the doctrine of the universal brotherhood, the ancient problem of ram- pant evil, the baffling mystery of sacrifice, the inevitability of war, the relation of woman to nationhood, etc., have been forced upon them.” The Latin American nations have ceased to be children. Formerly they have been looked after by outside nations, their finances have been provided for them, their national resources exploited, their intellectual life dominated. The war has changed all this. Just as the child who has been protected by others comes to be thrown on his own re- sources and is forced to make his own choices, so these young nations are beginning to face life with new seriousness and new responsibilities. As with all young people this will not be an unmixed evil. They will yield to many temptations unless they have the strongest possible help from their matured friends. It is not only a fight for supremacy in the world of commerce that we shall see taking place in Latin America, but a fight for supremacy in the world of culture and morals. LATIN AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 269 Sources of Further Information on Latin America and the World War Ingenieros, Jose: Los Tiempos Nuevos. Inman, Samuel G. : Intervention in Mexico, Social and Religious Conditions in South America. Kirkpatrick, F. A. : South America and the War. Lugones, Leopoldo: Mi Beligirancia. Martin, Percy A.: Latin America and the War, World Peace Foundation. South American Opinions of the War, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The best material is found in the files of the following magazines : Inter-America, The South American, Pan American Bulletin, Hispanic American, Historic Review, Current History, La Nueva Democracia, La Reforma Social. Chapter VIII PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES Few North Americans realize how extensively and with what rapidity our “far-flung battle-line” is growing. Our conception of our native land is generally limited to the forty-eight states represented in our national congress. It is a positive shock therefore for the ordinary North Ameri- can to travel through the various Caribbean countries, as I have during the last year, and come face to face with the pre- dominance of the influence of the United States in these little Caribbean republics (so-called). This influence has in- creased gradually but very steadily. As the result of the Spanish- American War we came into complete possession of Porto Rico. While Cuba was turned back to her own peo- ple, by means of the Platt Amendment, we still maintain virtually a protectorate in that country and own outright a naval station at Guantanamo. The war with Spain showed the necessity of building the Panama Canal and the United States forced its control over the Isthmian territory — as President Roosevelt said : “I took Panama.” The Canal Zone became entirely ours, with the Panamanian Re- public itself under our influence. In 1912 we sent marines into Nicaragua to restore order and since that time we have maintained a garrison of at least a hundred marines in the capital city, Managua. In 1915, after one of the worst of Haiti’s many distur- bances, we landed marines on that island, directed new elec- tions and proposed a treaty which gives us practical control of the country. A year later a revolution in Santo Domingo was the cause for our landing marines there and when the government then in power would not agree to the kind of a treaty that the United States desired, martial law was de- clared and Admiral Knapp was made Military Governor. 270 PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 271 Since that time the government of the Dominican Re- public has been carried on by decrees of the Military Gov- ernor. In 1916 the United States government purchased for 25 million dollars the Virgin Islands in order that our strategic position in the West Indies might be still more secure. The influence of the United States has also been extended over most of the other countries of this area by the new Caribbean policy begun during the Roosevelt administration and continued and developed during that of Taft and Wil- son. This policy is marked by a tendency to force peace and order by establishing fiscal and police control, by denying recognition to revolutionary governments and by blocking the securing of financial aid from abroad. These means were used to restrain violence and irregularities and to main- tain progress, as the United States understood that word. It amounted to the establishment of protectorates over these small, disturbed lands, although that term has been, as far as possible, avoided. In subjecting them to guardianship or tutelage, the aim was not to deprive them of their sover- eignty or independence, but to extend needed help in insur- ing stability, solvency, sanitation, protection from foreign creditors and general welfare. This altruism has not been altogether appreciated by the Caribbean countries. They seem to think they had rather be rowdy children in their own house than orderly children in that of someone else. On the other hand the United States believes that we have come to a time in the world’s life when continued disorder cannot be allowed, both because of its dangers to the peace of the United States and to the equili- brium of all international relations, economic as well as political. STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE The two most important trade routes in the world are the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. The former has seen the greatest play of the world’s forces of any body of water in the world up to the present time. The two great twin seas, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, are destined pos- 272 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM sibly to become more vital even than the Mediterranean in their effect upon the commerce and civilization of the world. The strategic importance of the West Indies has been recognized by the political leaders of the United States ever since the beginning of the Republic. The story of our endeavors to secure the control of Cuba extends back to the beginning of the Nineteenth Century. President Madison in 1810 declared the deep interest of the United States. It was feared that when he became possessed of Florida, Great Britain would secure Cuba, but this did not come to pass. There was some sentiment in the United States in favor of its annexation and John Quincy Adams in 1823 said : “In looking forward to the probable course of events * * * it seems scarcely possible to resist the conviction that the annexation of Cuba to the Federal Republic will be indispensable to the continuance and integrity of the Union itself.” Jefferson said in 1823 : “Cuba alone seems to hold up a speck of war to us. Its possession by Great Britain would indeed be a calamity to us.” He advocated procuring possession of it. Mexico and Colombia determined to seize Cuba for de- fense if war continued with Spain, and in 1825 the United States undertook to get Spain to acknowledge the inde- pendence of these colonies, and, in order that these attempts might not be thwarted, at the same time endeavored to in- duce Mexico and Colombia to withhold attack on Cuba. The Cuban question was prominent in debate about send- ing delegates to Panama Congress in 1826. Sending of delegates would imply a change of attitude toward Cuba and Porto Rico, which the United States had said she wished to remain part of Spain. The southern members of Congress were opposed to re- lations with the southern republics because they had adopted the principle of emancipation and their influence would jeopardize slavery in the United States. For the same rea- son they were opposed to the transfer of Cuba to any Euro- pean country. Spain was assured of the help of the United States in case other nations should attack Cuba. After the Mexican War the idea of natural expansion and “Manifest Destiny” took hold of the United States, PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 273 and many bold schemes were advanced for securing Cuba and extending our territory southward. With the same idea of strategy, President Grant proposed to the Senate the annexation of Santo Domingo at the bar- gain price of $1,500,000. Among his arguments submitted to Congress were the following: “The acquisition of Santo Domingo is desirable because of its geographical position. It commands the entrance to the Caribbean Sea and the Isthmus transit of commerce. It possesses the richest soil, the most capacious harbors, most salubrious climate and the most valuable products of the forests, mines and soil of all the West Indian Islands. Its possession by us will in a few years build up a coastwise commerce of immense magnitude, which will go far toward restoring to us our lost merchant marine. It will give to us these articles which we consume so largely and do not produce, thus equalizing our imports and exports. In case of foreign war it will give us command of all the islands re- ferred to and thus prevent an enemy from ever possessing himself of rendezvous on our very coast. At present our coast trade on the Atlantic is cut by the Bahamas and Antilles. Twice we must, as it were, pass through foreign countries to get by sea from Georgia to the west coast of Florida. “Santo Domingo, with a stable government under which her immense resources can be developed, will give remunera- tive wages for tens of thousands of laborers not now on the island. This labor will take advantage of every means of transportation to maintain the adjacent islands and seek the blessings of freedom and its sequence — each inhabitant re- ceiving the reward of his own labor.” When the treaty was opposed by Sumner, Grant said: “If we abandon the project I now firmly believe that a free port will be negotiated for by European nations in the Bay of Samana.” In the same way the deciding argument that was said to weigh with President Wilson in the purchase of the Danish Islands was the report that Germany was ready to buy them, even in the midst of the World War. 274 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM In the same way the United States has seen the impor- tance of Central America, especially Panama and Nicaragua, and, since the discovery of gold in California when these two routes were used by American travelers, has kept a care- ful eye on these canal routes as being imperative for us to control. ECONOMIC REASONS In recent years the economic importance of the Caribbean countries has become increasingly evident. The land area, consisting of the West Indian Islands, the Guianas, Vene- zuela, Colombia, Central America and Mexico, has already an annual commerce of approximately $2,000,000,000. And this is only the beginning of the producing power of this wonderful area. The area of the thirty islands and countries lying within or adjacent to the waters of the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico is about 2,000,000 square miles, its present population approximately 40,000,000, its 1918 im- ports $700,000,000, and its exports $900,000,000 in value. The growth of trade between the United States and the land area fronting upon the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico has been rapid, especially in recent years. It totalled in 1900, $195,000,000, in 1910, $392,000,000, in 1919, $1,005,- 000,000. The imports from the countries in question were in 1900, $100,000,000, in 1910, $223,000,000, in 1919, $520,000,000, and the exports to those countries and islands in 1900, $95,000,000, in 1910, $169,000,000, and in 1919, $485,000,000. Not only is our trade with the countries in question grow- ing rapidly, but the share which we supply of their imports is steadily increasing in practically all cases. The share sup- plied by the United States of the imports of Cuba, as shown by the official figures of that government, was in 1914, 58%, in 1918, 76%; of Santo Domingo in 1913, 62%, in 1918, 93%; of Haiti in 1913, 59%, in 1919, 90%; of Mexico in 1913, 48%, in 1919, 85 %; of Colombia in 1913, 28%, in 1919, 49% ; of Venezuela, in 1914, 43 %, in 1918, 50% ; of Costa Rica, in 1914, 53 %, in 1918, 61%; of Guatemala, in 1913, 50%, in 1918, 66%; of Honduras, in 1914, 7 9%, in 1918, 82% ; of Nicaragua, in 1914, 62%, in 1918, 71% ; of PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 275 Panama in 1914, 41%, in 1918, 87%; of Salvador (which, w T hile not fronting upon the Caribbean, is so closely associ- ated with the other Central American countries as to justify its inclusion in this discussion), in 1914, 41%, in 1918, 65%. These facts as to the producing power, present and pros- pective, of the land area touching the waters of the Carib- bean and the Gulf of Mexico are especially important to the United States, both as to the present and to the future. All of this area just described — the islands of these tropical waters and the lands fronting upon it — produces, almost exclusively, tropical growths : — sugar, coffee, cacao, tobacco, fruits, nuts, sisal, cotton, rubber, balata, cabinet woods, dye woods, cocoanuts, and many other oil nuts and seeds, as well as many other articles which the temperate zone de- mands — must have, in fact. In exchange they must have certain temperate zone products, meats, breadstuffs, cloth- ing, and manufactures of all kinds, for the manufacturing industries do not thrive in the tropics. As a consequence of this condition, the Caribbean countries must look to some part of the temperate zone as a market for their products and also as a market in which to buy their requirements of food and clothing and manufactures, and they naturally prefer to sell their goods on the nearest possible markets and to purchase their requirements in the nearest possible markets. CUBA We have already referred to the interest that the United States had in Cuba since the beginning of the Spanish-Amer- ican struggle for liberty. After the Civil War the main object of our Cuban diplomacy was the extension of com- mercial relations with the island and the protection of Amer- ican interests. The “Ten Years’ War” in Cuba, from 1868 to 1878, was characterized by great cruelty, destruction of property, and irregular methods of warfare, and imposed grave responsibilities upon the United States. President Grant seriously considered, and even threatened, interven- tion, and intervention at this time would probably have meant annexation ; but such action was postponed, and peace was finally restored as a result of the exhaustion of both parties 276 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM and the promise of definite reforms by Spain. The prom- ised reforms were not carried out in good faith; the old policy of exploitation was continued. Finally in February, 1895, the last insurrection against Spanish rule began, and soon developed the same features as the “Ten Years’ War.” Both sides were guilty of out- rages, and conditions became so distressing that the United States was led to intervene in 1898 and secure Cuba’s inde- pendence. Unquestionably one of the finest chapters in United States history is that dealing with the liberation and modernizing of Cuba. While we may frankly admit that we have had a selfish interest in Cuba, because of its strategic position, yet this does not take away the glory of the service rendered that country. For no one who knows the North American people can fail to appreciate their altruistic motives in free- ing oppressed neighbors. Unfortunately the rest of the world has not however generally appreciated this service, often alleging that, while partial political liberty was granted, commercial advantages, the real thing desired, have not been attained and Cuba has been abused. There is necessity for North Americans, while priding themselves on their service to Cuba, to look carefully to the use of our influence over the island, that it may be for her good and not for our self-aggrandizement. By means of the Platt Amendment, we hold large power over the political life of Cuba. This has been generally a blessing, but it could easily become a power to help the few exploit the many. As regards economic life, Cuba is held in the hollow of our hand. Her two great crops of sugar and tobacco are so vital to us that we have come to control them. Since she' produces so few things and sells them practically all to us, she must depend on us not only for manufactured goods but very largely for foodstuffs also. The extensive develop- ment of an absentee landlord system could easily produce an American Ireland for the United States. To prevent this we must bend our energies to help Cuba develop the education of her people so that strong character will work out the prob- lems of self-government, diversified crops, honesty in ad- ministration, — and personal sacrifice for national good. PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 277 The key to the relationships between the United States and Cuba is found in the famous “Platt Amendment,” which, at the urgency of the United States government, was adopted by the Cuban Convention as follows : “( i ) That the Government of Cuba shall never enter into any treaty or other compact with any foreign Power or Powers which will impair or tend to impair the independence of Cuba, nor in any manner authorize or permit any foreign power or powers to obtain by colonization or for military or naval purposes, or otherwise, lodgment in or control over any portion of said island. “(2) That said Government shall not assume or contract any public debt, to pay the interest upon which and to make reasonable sinking-fund provision for the ultimate discharge of which, the ordinary revenues of the island, after defray- ing the current expenses of government, shall be inadequate. “(3) That the Government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of life, property, and individual liberty, for discharging the obligations with respect to Cuba imposed by the Treaty of Paris on the United States, now to be assumed and undertaken by the Government of Cuba. “(4) That all acts of the United States in Cuba during its military occupation thereof are ratified and validated, and all lawful rights acquired thereunder shall be maintained and protected. “(5) That the Government of Cuba will execute, and as far as necessary extend, the plans already devised or other plans to be mutually agreed upon, for the sanitation of the cities of the island, to the end that a recurrence of epidemic and infectious diseases may be prevented, thereby assuring protection to the people and commerce of Cuba, as well as to the commerce of the southern ports of the United States and the people residing therein. “(6) That the Isle of Pines shall be omitted from the proposed constitutional boundaries of Cuba, the title thereto left to future adjustment by treaty. 278 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “(7) That to enable the United States to maintain the independence of Cuba, and to protect the people thereof, as well as for its own defence, the Government of Cuba will sell or lease to the United States lands necessary for coaling or naval stations at certain specified points to be agreed upon with the President of the United States. “(8) That by way of further assurance the Government of Cuba will embody the foregoing provisions in a perma- nent treaty with the United States.” PANAMA The digging of a canal across Panama was first planned by the Spaniards in early colonial history. The United States early entered into discussion of the project with Co- lombia and Great Britain. The Clayton-Bulwer convention of 1850 provided for a canal constructed by private capital and under the political control of Great Britain and the United States, and such other powers as might unite with them in guaranteeing its complete neutralization. The or- ganization of a French company by De Lesseps, and the prospect of the speedy construction of a canal at Panama under French auspices, led to the change of policy announced by President Flayes, when he declared in 1880 that any canal that might be constructed between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans should be under American control; and that the line of such canal should be considered “a part of the coast line of the United States.” But Great Britain refused to waive her rights provided by treaty and Secretary Olney declared in 1896 that the only way to modify the stipulations of 1850 was through a direct appeal to Great Britain for a reconsideration of the whole matter. This was done by Secretary Hay, who undertook, in 1899, to negotiate a new arrangement with Great Britain, resulting in the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. After many strug- gles and changes this treaty was ratified December 16, 1901. The new treaty abrogated in express terms the Clayton- Bulwer agreement and provided that the United States might construct a canal under its own auspices and under its exclusive management. PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 279 Senator Hanna was largely responsible for the selection of the Panama route over Nicaragua. After an investiga- tion of the affairs of the Panama Canal Company, Attorney- General Knox reported that it could give a clear title. Nego- tiations between Secretary Hay and Mr. Herran, the Co- lombian charge d’affaires, resulted, after considerable delay, in the signature, January 22, 1903, of the Hay-Herran con- vention, by the terms of which the United States agreed to pay Colombia 10 million dollars cash and an annuity of 250 thousand dollars for the lease of a strip of land six miles wide across the isthmus. The United States was so anxious for the immediate building of the canal that Colombia was warned that the treaty must be passed “without amendment whatever,” and that rejection or delay might seriously com- promise the friendly feelings between the two countries. The Colombian Congress met in extra session June 20 mainly for the purpose of considering this treaty. When the vote was finally taken August 12 the treaty was rejected by the unanimous vote of all the senators present. President Roosevelt later declared that this action was due to the “anti-social spirit” of Colombia and to the cupidity of the government leaders, who proposed to wait until they could confiscate the 40 million dollars worth of property belonging to the French company and then sell it to the United States. However, Mr. Beaupre, the American Minister, repeatedly warned Secretary Hay that there was a “tremendous tide of public opinion against the canal treaty,” which even the Colombian government could not ignore. The people of Colombia felt that Panama was their greatest asset. They knew perfectly well that, in spite of threats to the contrary, President Roosevelt was determined not to adopt the alterna- tive of the Spooner amendment and go to Nicaragua; con- sequently they opposed the treaty with the expectation that they could get better terms, and particularly that they might reserve a fuller measure of sovereignty over the isthmus. The difficulty in securing the assent of the Colombian Senate to a treaty arranged by the Department of Foreign Relations should be well understood by those North Americans who remember the opposition of their own Senate to almost every treaty prepared by the Executive Department. 280 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM The people of Panama considered that the failure of Co- lombia to sign the treaty was a sacrifice of their interests. Dr. Manuel Amador visited the United States and had con- ference with William Nelson Cromwell and with Secretary Hay concerning the advisability of Panama’s revolting. The latter was of course guarded in his replies, but outlined what he considered the rights and duties of the United States under the treaty of 1846. Dr. Amador was greatly encour- aged at this time by the sudden arrival in New York of Philippe Bunau-Varilla, the former chief engineer of the French company, who entered with enthusiasm into the revolutionary project. Soon after Amador returned to Panama the gun-boat Nashville arrived off Colon. The Boston, Dixie and Atlanta had also received orders to proceed “within easy distance of the isthmus, in the event of need arising.” Two days after the Colombian Congress had adjourned orders were cabled to the American naval commanders to keep the transit open and to “prevent the landing of any armed force with hostile intent, either government or insurgent, at any point within 50 miles of Panama.” It can hardly be denied that this was creating a situation very favorable to revolution. The revolutionists were slow in taking advantage of their opportunities, seemingly causing impatience in Washington. At 3 140 p.m., November 3, the following dispatch was sent to the American consuls at Panama and Colon : “Uprising on Isthmus reported. Keep Department promptly and fully informed. Loomis, Acting.” At 8:15 p.m. a reply was received from Consul Ehrman at Panama: “No uprising yet. Reported will be in the night. Situation is critical.” At 9:50 p.m. a second dispatch was received from the same source: “Uprising occurred to-night, 6; no bloodshed. Army and Navy officials taken prisoners. Government will be or- ganized to-night.” The few Colombian troops on the Isthmus were reem- barked after their officers had received a generous bribe, and the marines, landed from the United States gun-boat Nash- ville, maintained order. Just four days later the United States government recognized the Republic of Panama, and a week later the Minister of the Panama Republic, being in PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 281 Washington when appointed, was received by President Roosevelt. This unprecedented haste tended to give color to the rumors that the whole affair had been prearranged. An interesting discussion of the Panama question ap- peared in the Review of Reviews for November, 1903. Dr. Albert Shaw, a close personal friend of President Roose- velt, published an article entitled, “What If Panama Should Revolt?” and outlined with remarkable prophetic insight what actually took place later. It transpired afterward that this editorial had been inspired by the following letter which he had received from the President, dated October 10th: “My dear Dr. Shaw : I enclose you, purely for your own in- formation, a copy of a letter from our Minister to Colombia. I think it might interest you to see that there was absolutely not the slightest chance of securing by treaty any more than we endeavored to secure. The alternatives were to go to Nicaragua, against the advice of the great majority of competent engineers — some of the most competent saying that we had better have no canal at any time than go there — or else to take the territory by force without any attempt at getting a treaty. I cast aside the proposition at this time to foment the secession of Panama. Whatever other govern- ments can do, the United States can not go into the securing, by such underhand means, the cession. Privately, I freely say to you that I should be delighted if Panama were an independent state, or if it made itself so at this moment ; but for me to say so publicly would amount to an instigation of a revolt and therefore I cannot say it.” President Roosevelt justified the course of the adminis- tration by showing the ingratitude of Colombia for the work of the United States in maintaining order on the isthmus for over fifty years under the treaty of 1846, and her utter inability to control the situation and prevent riot and revo- lution. In a special message to Congress on January 4, 1904, the President held that Colombia was not entitled “to bar the transit of the world’s traffic across the isthmus,” and that the intervention of the United States was justified — (1) by our treaty rights, (2) by our national interests, and (3) by the interests of collective civilization. The majority of the people of the United States, as well 282 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM as those of Latin America, have undoubtedly felt that all was not right with the way the Panama Canal Zone was secured. So, after an agitation of many years, a treaty with Colombia, which had been held in the Foreign Relations Committee since 1914, was finally passed by the United States Senate, April 19, 1921, which agrees to pay Co- lombia the sum of 25 million dollars for the Panama strip, said sum to be invested in certain public works. Thus, let us hope, the world may see that, whether or not there was justification for taking by high-handed means a piece of land for the service of humanity, at least we are ready to pay a money value to the original owners for that which was expropriated. Without doing so the United States could never have stood right in the minds of her Hispanic American neighbors. The writer was in South America when the treaty was passed and was able to ob- serve the universal satisfaction with which the report of the Senate’s action was received. SANTO DOMINGO It is in Santo Domingo that the United States Government has taken more complete control of the government than in any other Caribbean country. Reference has already been made to the request of the people of Santo Domingo for annexation to the United States and President Grant’s efforts toward the same end. In 1904 relations with Santo Do- mingo again became critical, because of the demands of European creditors. Protocols for the settlement of debts had been signed with Germany, Spain and Italy and these governments were about to make effective by force the col- lection of these debts. The government of Santo Domingo appealed to the United States for assistance and a plan was worked out whereby North American agents were to take charge of the customs and finances of the country. In spite of the refusal of the United States Senate to approve the plan, President Roosevelt, as Commander of the Navy, put it into effect. Two years later the Senate, seeing that the matter was being carried out anyway, decided that it would be better to make it formal and a treaty was signed by the PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 283 two governments authorizing the arrangements. The results were most satisfactory in that the interest on the debts, which had been funded together, was paid and a fixed sink- ing fund was augmented annually by which the principal was to be covered. It was hoped that this arrangement would also entirely do away with revolutionary movements, the theory being that revolutions all revolved around the custom houses, which held the country’s revenues. These hopes were not to be realized for disturbances broke out to such an extent in May of 1916, that some 1,800 United States marines were landed in two divisions. Those of the north fought their way across the island until they joined their companions at the capital in the south, who had been able to take charge with less difficulty. The United States Naval authorities came into conflict with the Dominican civil authorities and, in order to break the deadlock, Rear-Admiral Knapp declared the country under military rule of the United States in a proclamation dated November 29, 1916. The following is a part of the proclamation: “Whereas a treaty was concluded between the United States and the Republic of Santo Domingo on February 8, 1907, article 3 of which reads : “ ‘III. Until the Dominican Republic has paid the whole amount of the bonds of the debt, its public debt shall not be increased, except by previous agreement between the Dominican Government and the United States. A like agreement shall be necessary to modify the import duties, it being an indispensable condition for the modification of such duties that the Dominican Executive demonstrate and that the President of the United States recognize that, on the basis of exportations and importations to the like amount and the like character during the two years preceding that in which it is desired to make such modification, the total net customs receipts would at such altered rates of duties have been for each of such two years in excess of the sum of $2,000,000 United States gold.’ “Whereas the government of Santo Domingo has violated article 3 on more than one occasion and 284 - PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM “Whereas the Government of Santo Domingo has from time to time explained the violation by the necessity of in- curring expenses incident to the repression of revolution, and “Whereas the United States Government, with great for- bearance and a friendly desire to enable Santo Domingo to maintain domestic tranquillity and to observe the terms of the aforesaid treaty, has urged upon the Government of Santo Domingo certain necessary measures which that Government has been unwilling or unable to adopt, and “Whereas the Government of the United States has deter- mined that the time has come to take measures to assure the observance of the aforesaid treaty by the Santo Do- mingan Republic and to maintain the domestic tranquillity in the said Republic of Santo Domingo necessary thereto. “Now, therefore, I, H. S. Knapp, Captain of United States Navy, Commander of the cruiser force of the United States Atlantic fleet and the armed forces of the United States stationed in various places within the territory of the Republic of Santo Domingo, acting under the authority and by the direction of the Government of the United States, declare and announce to all concerned that the Republic of Santo Domingo is hereby placed in a state of military oc- cupancy by the forces under my command, is made subject to military government and to the exercise of military law applicable to such occupation. “The military occupation is undertaken with no immediate or ulterior object of destroying the sovereignty of the Re- public of Santo Domingo, but, on the contrary, is designed to give aid to that country in returning to a condition of internal order that will enable it to observe the terms of the treaty aforesaid and the obligations resting upon it as one of the family of nations.” There follow five other paragraphs, stating that the courts will not be disturbed, revenues will be paid by the Receiver to the military government (to be held in trust for the Re- public), calling on all to cooperate in restoring order, and stating that the United States would act under military law governing their conduct, all signed by Commander H. S. PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 285 Knapp, on the U. S. S. Olympia, flagship, November 29, 1916. Since that date the government of Santo Domingo has been absolutely in the hands of the military forces of the United States. How absolutely one is not prepared to ap- preciate until he goes to the country. A Rear-Admiral of the United States Navy is the President of the Republic and his cabinet is made up of officers of the United States Marine Corps. There is not a semblance of a Dominican legislative body. The following is the Executive Order of December 26, 1916, suspending the Congress: “1. That the sessions of the Dominican Congress are suspended until after elections shall have been ordered and held to fill vacancies now existing. “2. That the senators and deputies whose terms have not expired are likewise expelled from office until the full Con- gress shall have been called into session, and that their emoluments shall cease.” The laws are proclamations by the military authorities and are enforced by the 1,500 marines in the country and the national gendarmerie, made up of natives officered by en- listed men of the Marine Corps. These American military forces, many of whom are fac- ing an entirely new experience with honest purpose of help- ing the people, have a difficult task before them. Since Columbus was imprisoned in the fort of her capital city, the history of Santo Domingo has been a sad one. Nowhere is the rise, decline and fall of Spanish colonial power so vividly exemplified as in Santo Domingo with its history teeming with great names and with deeds now bloody, now paltry, with conquest and quarrels, discovery and piracy, with ex- ploits and exploitation, slavery and revolution. Nowhere was there builded into the foundations of the civil structure that love of home, of popular education and of equality before the law that have given to the United States what- ever of stability its institutions may boast. Religious zeal was there, but it was exotic and misguided, seeking its finest expression in a monasticism that contributed little more than 286 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM faint intermittent protests against the general decay of popu- lar morals caused largely by the brutal exploiting of subject peoples in the general greed for riches without labor. There is an utter absence of all the facilities and forces that we associate with modern civilization. The capital has no street cars, no sewers, water or telephone systems, only a few private electric light plants and no building ever erected entirely for school purposes. Illiteracy on the island is calculated at 90 to 95 per cent, of persons over ten years of age. Many country people have no sense of numbers above five. There are practically no roads, and the northern and southern parts of the island are like two different coun- tries. Venereal diseases, hookworm, malaria and tubercu- losis have run riot without anyone knowing how to treat them. These things must be taken into consideration when we examine the accomplishments of the forces of American occupation. In the summer of 1919 I visited Santo Domingo to make a survey of social conditions and suggest a united program of service which could be undertaken to help in the island’s development. Practically every person I asked as to what the people particularly needed, replied, “Everything.” If I suggested this or that or the other institution or activity, the reply was “Yes, anything you can do for these people will be worth while. Don’t be afraid of duplicating or doing too much. That would be impossible.” A program was drawn up which was approved by the principal Dominican and North American residents of the capital. This program is now being put into operation through a newly organized Board for Christian Work in Santo Domingo, which is beginning a system of industrial * schools, hospitals, community centers and institutional churches. One of the most notable things about this work is that it is to be entirely non-sectarian, the use of denomi- national names as found in the United States is to be elimi- nated and the workers are to be employed because of their ability to render the particular service needed, without refer- ence to their ecclesiastical connections. As to the good results of the military government, they are seen in the elimination of revolution — the bane of the PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 287 country for a century — the building of roads and port works, gradual paying off of the national debt, improved sanitary conditions, providing stable conditions for business and the improvement of the educational system. It must be recognized that these improvements are made at the expense of much bad feeling between the governors and the governed. A military government is not designed to develop a people into self-expression or prepare them for self-government. In the first place, there is too much gov- ernment. Martial law always means regulation of every de- tail of life. People cannot meet in public gatherings to dis- cuss their problems. The newspapers cannot discuss politi- cal questions, and criticisms of the military government are not to be thought of. Individuals talk mostly in whispers if they answer adversely your inquiries as to how they like the present order. In the second place, a foreign military government conducted largely by people who cannot speak the language of the people and who have no idea of their history or national psychology must necessarily be an un- just government. Some of the American officials do their work in as fine a spirit as any missionary who ever went to serve on a foreign mission station. But this does not keep them from making great mistakes when they arbitrarily determine problems of taxation, education and economic and social life. The United States Navy has not had suffi- cient experience in colonization to have built up a body of experts in such matters. Officers are changed too often to acquire experience, and enlisted men are too anxious to get home to take any interest in the people. In the matter of education a wonderful showing has been made in the primary schools, which have grown from an enrollment of some 30,000 four years ago to 120,000 at present, due to the efforts of Colonel Lane, of the United States Marine Corps, the Minister of Education. Unfortu- nately Colonel Lane has recently left the island, illustrating the too-prevailing custom of changing officials just when they are beginning to get into these problems. His efforts were centered upon combating illiteracy. There are no permanent educational foundations laid for building up an adequate teaching force or training the children along in- 288 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM dustrial lines, which is the great need of the country. Higher education is almost wholly lacking and the provision of former governments to send a number of students to foreign countries has been discontinued by the military government because of these students making certain politi- cal problems. The governors and the governed live entirely apart from each other with practically no means of intercourse. While a few of the Dominicans have been employed to assist the Americans, these have thus largely cut themselves ofif from their own people. The Americans generally remain to them- selves and the Dominicans do likewise, if for no other rea- son than the simple one that 99% of each party is unfa- miliar with the language of the other. This was brought home to me by a visit to Senor Federico Garcia Godoy, one of the most noted literary men in Latin America. American Army men in La Vega, his home, did not even know where he lived. When he found out that I was not, as he supposed all American visitors were, a com- mercial traveler, and that I had read his books and knew some of his friends in the literary world of Latin America, he was simply overjoyed. To meet an American who could talk of something in his world and not simply commercial topics was a new experience for him. Thus all the time I was meeting choice spirits among both Dominicans and Americans who knew nothing of one another. The situa- tion which shuts out entirely from the molding of the na- tional life some of these splendid Dominicans who are well known for their ability in other parts of the world, is an impossible situation. The Dominicans recognize that they have made a mess of governing themselves during the hundred years they have tried it. They are not unmindful of the benefits that have come from peace and increased prosperity enjoyed under American rule. Few ever expect to be entirely out from under American influence. Strange to say, I found most of them preferring their present situation to that of Haiti. They seem to reason about as follows: “The present mili- tary government is temporary. Public opinion of the world will not allow it to continue once the situation here becomes PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 289 understood by the outside world. If we should sign a treaty like that signed by Haiti, then we ourselves should be to blame for the loss of our sovereignty. Give us a treaty like the arrangement with Cuba. Then the United States can protect its commercial interests and help us to restore order if we return to political turmoil. But if we are good, then we can direct our own affairs.” The greatest difficulty with such a situation as the present, however, is that the people are not prepared for self-gov- ernment. The Dominicans have no responsibility placed upon them. They have no incentive toward progress except material prosperity. More of their children may be taught to read and write and more may enjoy automobile rides on good roads, but the present military government by its very nature cannot give itself to the development of the nobler things of life. Indeed in the interior of the country de- velopment is still held back by serious disorder, which in five years the marines have been unable to suppress. The continuance of a severe press censorship probably does more to cause dissatisfaction than anything else. Not long ago three Dominican newspaper men were arrested for criticising the military government and their cases were transferred from the provost court to a military court mar- tial. This news leaked out and was cabled all over Latin America, causing intense indignation. Telegrams from press organizations in many different countries reached President Wilson, asking him to spare the lives of these men, which was done. Two of these men were authors well known wherever the Spanish language is read. One of them, who has formed a part of the literary circles of Paris, London and New York, was a delegate to the Third Pan American Conference and heard Mr. Root make his famous declara- tion, “We wish for no victories but those of peace, for no territory except our own, for no sovereignty except over ourselves, we neither claim, nor desire any rights, privileges or powers we do not freely concede to every American re- public.” Americans who not only believe that Mr. Root here truly represented his people but who are also anxious that the rest of the world believe this will rejoice in the announcement 290 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM issued just before the close of the Wilson Administration, that the marines were to be withdrawn from Santo Do- mingo, a commission of Dominicans being appointed to work out with the North American government the relation- ships that should exist between the two governments. It will not be an easy problem to protect the Dominican people from their own worse selves and to aid them in building a government that will assure peace and progress and the exer- cising of that sovereignty to which they are, by the law of nations, entitled. HAITI If the visitor to Santo Domingo has come to believe that he is in the most backward of all the world’s districts, he is soon led to change his mind on arriving in Haiti. In the in- terior one is constantly reminded of the heart of Africa, with the latter sometimes having the place of preference. While the country is only half as large as Santo Domingo, it lias more than three times the population, about two and a half million, making it one of the most thickly populated districts in the western hemisphere. It is the black man’s paradise. In 1795 Spain transferred the island to France and thus it became the only country in Latin America where French is spoken. The country people speak a patois which is a mixture of French, English and their native tribal tongue. Not over five per cent, of the people are able to read and write. Haiti, like Santo Domingo, is one of the richest countries on earth and, like her neighbor also, has had one of the most turbulent histories. Of the twenty-five presidents from 1816 to 1903, three were assassinated, one died from wounds received in his palace, one committed suicide, fifteen were driven out by revolution, three died in office and one lived out his term and died a natural death in his own country. As a result of one of the worst of these revolutions Ad- miral Caperton, on July 29, 1915, landed marines. A few days later elections were held, and the officials who were elected under American supervision signed a treaty with the PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 291 United States which made that country supreme in the Haitian government except in the Department of Educa- tion — the one department where it would seem help could best have been given. While the reading of the treaty does not seem to indicate such a contemplation, a military gov- ernment has since that time been maintained by the United States. But, unlike Santo Domingo, Haiti has a President, Cabinet and sometimes a Congress, with governors and local officials who function in certain matters when they are will- ing to cooperate with the American authorities. There is a dual government in Haiti, one the native gov- ernment and the other the American marines, headed by the general in command. If the native gendarmerie is counted, and it has large authority, there may be said to be three governments. Frankly, this three-cornered arrange- ment has created conditions that leave all parties confused and disgusted. The man of most power is the Financial Advisor, an American who has practically absolute authority over the various items of expenditure by the national treasury. He recently withheld the salaries of the president and his cabi- net for several months because they would not sign certain concessions desired by his government. The American in charge of education complains that it is most difficult to get the Financial Advisor to allow funds for education. In matters like sanitation the usual practice is to detail an officer from the Navy or Marine Corps to serve under the Haitian Government. The gendarmerie, like the Guardia National of Santo Domingo, is composed of native soldiers officered by American Marines, privates or non-commis- sioned officers who have been detailed by the Marine Corps for this work after they have stood examination in ele- mentary French and in Haitian law. Marines are only sta- tioned permanently in the larger towns, but the gendarmes are found scattered all over the country as well as in all the cities. Where both forces are found, their barracks are in different parts of the town. As the officers of the gen- darmes are only enlisted men in the Marine Corps and the private gendarmes are Haitians, there is naturally little relation between the personnel of the two organizations. 292 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM The marine who becomes an officer in the gendarmerie finds himself clothed with almost unlimited power in the district where he serves. He is the judge of practically all civil and criminal cases, settling everything from a family fight to a murder. He is the paymaster of all funds ex- pended by the national government, he is ex-officio director of the schools, inasmuch as he pays the teachers. He con- trols the mayor and the city council, since they can spend no funds without his O. K. As collector of taxes he exer- cises a strong influence on all individuals of the community. It is no wonder that an ordinary private in the Marine Corps, with a few months’ residence in a foreign country, where people are at a very low stage of civilization and he himself has little or no preparation for such varied respon- sibilities as are thrust upon him, is often charged with many abuses and mistakes. When one sees the awful conditions under which these gendarmes officers are called to live he wonders if he himself would do any better under the same circumstances. But the fact remains that it is impossible to get forward in reforming a people who see nothing to admire in the reformer, who too seldom tempers justice with mercy, and at times even inflicts punishments more severe than the crimes merit. It is with great hesitancy that one passes criticism upon our American marines. No man knows but that he might act the same way under similar conditions. It is the ma- chine, not the man, that is to blame. Frorfi the military standpoint it is natural to regard all life as cheap; especially if one is stationed in a country where people are little above the animal, where you are hated and your life is sought, if not by all, at least by organized bands who compel you to sleep with your hands on your weapons, and where if ever caught, you know you will be subject to unmentionable tortures before you meet a horrible death. Under such conditions it is easy to live up to the rule of “take no prisoners” and to show small respect for the rights and property of those who have no respect for you and little for themselves. Military life, moreover, does not lend itself to civil re- forms, for it is based on caste. Discipline is only maintained PROBLEMS OF THE CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES 293 by obeying your superior without question. The private is subject to the ire of the sergeant, the sergeant to the lieu- tenant, the lieutenant to the captain, and so on. And very likely the ire of all is visited on the civilian. As a young editor, who had to take his paper to the military authorities for their censorship before it could be published, said, “We want a civil government so we can approach them. You go to one of the military authorities. You know he is a very fine man. But he has a guard at the door who unceremo- niously tells you, ‘Get out, and do it quick !’ ” Is it any won- der that the bandit situation does not improve under such treatment or that the American soldier acts as he does under the conditions described, when he has never had any training for administrative or democratizing work? The same thing applies to moral life. Who will throw the first stone at the man who is compelled to live away from all that is pure and ennobling, without religious or moral influences of any kind, often without books or recrea- tion, without even a baseball or a Victrola, in the midst of the vilest native life, where men have little virtue and women small sense of shame? The whole thing is absolutely un- natural. If necessary for a few months under extraordi- nary conditions, it should certainly not be allowed to exist through the years — years during which men do not get into a pure atmosphere or see good women of their own race or hear a moral exhortation, as happens with some of our marines here. Such men have their whole moral make-up changed. The best of the officers in Haiti realize that the situation is not satisfactory and are doing what they can to correct it. “So far we have done little for Haiti except stop the graft, and that has not made the people like us. It is time we were doing some constructive service for these people. I should like to see you begin the program of schools and hospitals you have outlined.” Thus spoke the commander of the American marines in Haiti, Brigadier-General Cat- lin, who was wounded at Chateau-Thierry. Of course he did not mean to be taken literally, because already much has been accomplished in the building of roads, sanitation of cities, improvement of the postal sendee and other public 294 PROBLEMS IN PAN AMERICANISM activities. The national debt, which threatened the inde- pendent life of the nation, is being gradually liquidated, and revolution, which stifled all economic development, has been suppressed. If our Government is to go forward satisfactorily with the tremendous job it has begun, there must be in every case the most careful selection of the men who are sent to deal with these people. When we began our work in the Philip- pines we sent a man like Chief Justice Taft to begin the de- velopment of the people into a democracy. He found much the same conditions as now exist in Haiti. When he began to talk about “our little brown brother” it took strong meas- ures to repress the sarcasm of the soldiers, who sang, “He may be a brother of William H. T., But he ain’t no kin to me.” But the new spirit prevailed and to-day the develop- ment of the Filipino toward democracy is the pride of every American. The job in Haiti is a harder one, but it can be accomplished by a combination of the highest type of admin- istrative and moral leadership. The following extracts from the letter of a naval officer emphasize the duty of the United States to render an un- selfish service to the backward people of this island: “In 1914, when I was on duty in Haiti and Santo Do- mingo, the thought occurred to me how the natives of this island had been neglected by the various philanthropic and religious societies of the United States. “After five years in Europe I have once more returned to Santo Domingo. Meanwhile we Have actually taken over the government of this island and our moral responsibility for the improvement and progress of the natives has been greatly increased, while I note the same indifference on the part of the various philanthropic and welfare organizations of the United States toward this work.