Quote:
The Piru Indians used to believe that souls lived on after this life (…). For this purpose they put clothes on their descendants and offered sacrifices. (…) So on the day they died they killed the women they liked and servants and officials so that they would serve them in the next life . (…) The same superstition and inhumanity of killing men and women for the care and service of the deceased in the afterlife has been and is still being used by other barbaric nations.
Source:
Padre Joseph de Acosta (1589): Historia Natural y Moral de las Indias. Sevilla: Casa de Juan de Leon, p. 26.
Author Bio:
Padre José de Acosta (ca. 1539-1600) was a Spanish Jesuit. After teaching at the university in Spain, he travelled to the Americas as a missionary in 1570. He is the author of the Historia natural y moral de las Indias from which the quote is taken.
Context:

Further Reading:
*James Cockcroft (1983): Mexico: Class Formation, Capital Accumulation and the State. New York: Monthly Review Press, p. 19
*Silvia Federici (2014): Caliban und die Hexe. Frauen, der Körper und die ursprüngliche Akkumulation. Wien: Mandelbaum kritik & utopie, p. 267ff.
Year:
1589