Father Kino opposes the slavery and compulsory …

Years: 1703 - 1703

Father Kino opposes the slavery and compulsory hard labor in the silver mines that the Spaniards force on native people.

This stance causes great controversy among his fellow missionaries, many of whom act according to the laws imposed by Spain on their territory.

Kino is also a writer, authoring books on religion, astronomy and cartography.

He has built missions extending from present day states of Mexican Sonora, northeast for one hundred and fifty miles (two hundred and forty kilometers), into present-day Arizona, where the San Xavier del Bac mission, near Tucson, a popular National Historic Landmark, is still a functioning Franciscan parish church.

He has constructed nineteen rancherías (villages), which supply cattle to new settlements.

Kino practices other crafts and is reportedly an expert astronomer, mathematician and cartographer, who draws the first accurate maps of Pimería Alta, the Gulf of California and Baja California.

He enjoys making model ships out of wood.

His knowledge of maps and ships lead him to believe that Mexican Indians can easily access California by sea, a position viewed with skepticism by missionaries in Mexico City.

When Kino proposes and begins making a boat that will be pushed across the Sonoran Desert and to the Mexican west coast, a controversy arises, as many of his fellow missionaries begin to question Kino's faculties.

Kino possesses an unusual amount of wealth for his vocation, which he uses primarily to fund his missionary activities.

His contemporaries report on his wealth with suspicion.

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