Question In this excerpt from his “Report on the Destruction of the Indies,” the priest Bartolomé de Las Casas describes what happened to the American Indians on Hispaniola. Read the passage and then answer the question. “[T]hey assigned them [the American Indians] to each Christian, under the pretext [false reason] that the latter [the Christians] should train them in the catholic faith. . . . The care and thought these Spaniards took, was to send the men to the mines to dig gold, which is an intolerable labor; and they put the women into dwellings, which are huts, to dig and cultivate the land. . . . They gave food neither to the one, nor the other, except grass, and things that have no substance . . . the men died of fatigue and hunger in the mines and others perished in dwellings or huts, for the same reason. It was in this way that such multitudes of people were destroyed in this island, as indeed all those in the world might be destroyed by like means.” —Bartolomé de las Casas, 1552 According to Las Casas, how did the Spanish treat American Indians in the Caribbean? (1 point) Responses Spanish colonists concentrated on teaching them Christianity. Spanish colonists concentrated on teaching them Christianity. They forced the men to work in gold mines, supported by women who grew food for them. They forced the men to work in gold mines, supported by women who grew food for them. They enslaved both men and women and let most die from overwork and starvation. They enslaved both men and women and let most die from overwork and starvation. The Spanish were fair to them, but unfortunately many of them were not willing to work.

According to Las Casas, the Spanish enslaved both men and women and let most of them die from overwork and starvation.