Instead of reflecting piousness, the monks and monasteries in Benito Cereno most often highlight deception and hidden power dynamics. When Captain Delano first sees the San Dominick, he believes that the people on it are Dominican monks—monks whose costume consists of white and black material. In a situation in which it is unclear whether the white sailors or the black slaves are in power, the idea that everyone onboard is made of a mix of white and black is provocative. It suggests that slaves and their slave-owners are, to a certain extent, inseparable, since the existence of one requires the existence of the other. In addition, in light of the violence on the San Dominick, the association of the people onboard with peaceful monks is highly ironic, since there is nothing spiritual or righteous about the violence that opposes one faction against the other on the ship. Similarly, Delano later finds Babo so devoted and humble that he associates him with a monk, thus confusing outward appearances for sincerity, since Babo is in fact the leader of a brutal revolt. Therefore, at the end of the novella, Benito Cereno’s decision to enter a monastery proves ambiguous, given that the only monastery previously mentioned was an illusory one: the brutal world of the San Dominick. Cereno’s reclusion is thus not given a clear religious connotation, since his retirement can be seen as an effort to hide away from the cruelties of the world, rather than to fight for values such as justice, charity, and peace. Overall, therefore, in Benito Cereno the religious world of Spanish Catholic monasteries is not presented as a true alternative to the brutal system of slavery but, rather, in its unclear moral position, as an institution capable of disguising or ignoring oppression.
