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Stephen Corry

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Amazon Indians Can Be Saved

Posted: 05/25/2012 11:12 am

May 2012 marks the twentieth birthday of Brazil's Yanomami Park. It's the largest area of protected rainforest in the world -- it's also the best reply to critics who say that efforts to protect tribal peoples are futile.

The park saved the Yanomami and was secured with modest resources: a handful of people with conviction and public support more than made up for their lack of big bucks. Similar victories can, indeed must, be grasped elsewhere with equally modest ingredients.

The Yanomami, who straddle the Brazil/Venezuela border, are a relatively typical Amazon people except in one respect -- their numerical size. Their many 'sub-groups' go by a variety of names ('Yanomami' is simply the most widely recognized by outsiders) and constitute about 19,000 individuals in Brazil and 13,000 in Venezuela. This is some fifty times bigger than most Amazon Indian tribes, and the Yanomami are amongst the largest of all South American peoples who live comparatively isolated from mainstream society.

The story of their 'park' starts in 1968 when an anthropologist couple, Alcida Ramos and Kenneth I. Taylor, began developing a succession of proposals for the government to protect Yanomami land. These proposals were supported by Survival International's Robin Hanbury-Tenison in Brazil in 1971, and by more Survival founders, John Hemming and Francis Huxley, in an Aborigines Protection Society mission the following year.

Ten years later, photographer Claudia Andujar, together with missionary Carlo Zacquini, and others, including anthropologist Bruce Albert, formed the Brazilian Committee for the Creation of the Yanomami Park (CCPY), whilst Survival International began linking with organizations in the USA and Europe to ensure the campaign grew as international as possible.

The tipping point came in 1989. That year, when Survival won the Right Livelihood Award, we asked the Yanomami to stand with us as representatives at the award ceremonies. The idea was not without risk. No Yanomami spokesperson had ever left the country, though there was one who had been articulating Indian demands internally for years: Davi Kopenawa, who was 33, had learnt Portuguese from missionaries and was well-travelled in Brazil. But how would he react to London's December and freezing Stockholm with its six hours of low, pale sun, and nights which fell at lunchtime? He would have hours of press, TV and radio interviews. With no experience outside Brazil, would he see the point? Indeed, how certain were we it would have an impact? We certainly knew it would not be easy.

The idea was unthinkable without Claudia Andujar. An in-depth photographer of Yanomami life, she knew Davi well and had lived in Yanomami communities over many years. She could easily translate into English, and was no stranger to problems and risk: having escaped Nazi-occupied Hungary as a teenager (her father was killed in Dachau), her anti-Nazi background was a driving force behind her involvement in the indigenous support movement.

On landing in Heathrow, I drove them first to the west of England for a few days' acclimatization. Davi seemed relaxed, though his thoughts were racing. As he wiped his finger along the frosted top of the car, he announced that he now understood why white people were that color: it was the cold and lack of sun. This was the first of a stream of observations as he enfolded each new experience into his shaman's perception. They have continued for years, through visits which have since taken in Stonehenge and Avebury (particularly important), Iron Age longbarrows (chilling), the Giotto frescoes in Padua (uninteresting), and the spectacular roof of Milan's Gothic cathedral (attractive, as opposed to the city in general). Like most Amazon Indians, Davi generally finds our cities savage and hostile.

There is no doubt that the excitement resulting from Davi's first international trip propelled the campaign onto a different level. Within a few months, the Brazilian government opened the Yanomami area to once-banned support organizations, and CCPY teams formally took over part of its official medical program. As a new Brazilian president embarked on a world tour, he was repeatedly met by Survival's orchestrated letter deliveries and petitions. His environment minister declared that the country was 'being crucified' on the international stage. Demonstrations and vigils grew. Prince Charles abandoned protocol, much to the British government's consternation, and caught the mood in a 1990 Kew Gardens speech, when he called the Yanomami situation a 'pattern of collective genocide.'

Two years later, the government finally capitulated and designated the Yanomami territory almost entirely as an Indian 'park.' It was an astonishing victory which few of those involved had ever dared to believe in.

Of course, the story will continue as long as there are Yanomami. During the 1980s, illegal gold miners began to invade their land, bringing in deadly cerebral malaria. One in every five Yanomami died in just seven years, some violently.

The year after the park's creation, miners attacked an Indian community at Haximu, killing men, women and children. Fortunately, the Brazilian network, and Survival's international one, responded loudly to each new atrocity. In any previous era, the killers would have gone on to kill again. Now, the government successfully convicted them of genocide, and evicted most of the miners.

The Yanomami will always need to remain vigilant and alert to protect their territory, and will always need effective outside voices to help. But, contrary to most predictions made in the 1970s and 80s, the Indians are still there today. Davi believes that without Survival International there would be no Yanomami left.

As I said, the idea that tribal peoples have no future is one of the principal obstacles they face. It's high time the doomsters looked at evidence from the great victories for human rights of the past, such as the end of the slave trade and apartheid: the future for tribal peoples also depends on public opinion insisting that the fundamental human right -- to life itself -- must no longer be sacrificed on the altar of money.

This fight is not about 'cultural preservation' or 'modernity.' The Yanomami will continue to change as time passes, as all peoples do. The fight is about whether or not we really believe in the rule of law and the right to life, or whether they are just lip-service to ease our acceptance of the widespread injustices and cruel divisions which increasingly characterise the twenty-first century.

Those who endlessly extol the benefits of 'our civilization' brush off the fact that good healthcare, education, jobs, and justice etc., are really only accessible by particular, often minority, sectors of the population, even in the richest countries. There is far more misery, violence, and early death in Brazilian slums and Mexican drug wars, and amongst dispossessed U.S. Indians and Australian Aboriginals, than there is in indigenous Amazonia.

The view that tribal peoples cannot be saved may be wrong, but it's certainly self-fulfilling. They won't be saved unless enough people believe it's possible, and are willing to lend their voices to the networks and campaigns which exist to help them. For the moment, the Yanomami are coping: the focus now is on the much smaller Awá tribe, where a similar history is being played out in the east of Brazil. Their lands are supposed to be protected already, but with no enforcement they are being killed by loggers. It's another genocide that can be stopped.

Stephen Corry has worked with Survival International since 1972. His introductory book 'Tribal peoples for tomorrow's world' was published last year. For information on the Awá see www.survivalinternational.org/awa.

 
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May 2012 marks the twentieth birthday of Brazil's Yanomami Park. It's the largest area of protected rainforest in the world -- it's also the best reply to critics who say that efforts to protect triba...
May 2012 marks the twentieth birthday of Brazil's Yanomami Park. It's the largest area of protected rainforest in the world -- it's also the best reply to critics who say that efforts to protect triba...
 
 
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03:36 PM on 05/29/2012
I'm so grateful that organizations like Survival International exist and am proud to be a member.
Without this there would only be grief and desperation, not only for the people who make up the First Nations but also for us who could do nothing to help them survive the relentless onslaught of modernday colonialism. Only if we stand together can we have hope that things will finally change for the better. We really are all connected, profoundly so. And not only to each other but to all of Life, all of Nature. The ancient ones still know how to live in harmony with their surroundings and will play an important role in teaching the rest of humanity how to find the balance again, how to be at peace with our Mother Earth. Blessings to all who Walk in Beauty.
06:54 AM on 05/26/2012
Everything’s in the ‘short term’ isn’t it? All healing is eventually futile because everyone eventually dies, but that’s not a reason not to get better! Isn’t the important point what we choose to DO about the world as we find it?
04:01 PM on 05/29/2012
Right you are! The short term is only that if you choose to look at it that way. Ultimately there is only here and now, that's all we have. And it's more than enough! If we do what this moment requires from us and live that way in each moment that's given to us, it will become the long term.
Isn't that the way the people we're trying to protect live? Generation after generation, from the beginning of humanity! And if it's up to them, for an eternity to come. We can learn so much from them, in fact we must learn or face extinction!
So with hope and determination I will continue to write letters, sign petitions, organize actions for a better world. What else is there to do?
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07:06 PM on 05/25/2012
Don't get out much?

There is good reason to believe that there are patches of squallor in almost every -- if not every city on earth -- some smaller, some larger -- mostly ignored by those that are not a part of it.

Getting the land set aside was the only way to potentially "save" these people in the short term.

Even though saving the environment in which they live is important to saving us all, with the earth's population already over 7billion, I suspect that, eventually, greed will win out.