Indigenous
peoples of the Upper Orinoco: the Yanomami
About 20
years ago I had the opportunity to tour the upper Orinoco and its
affluent-connection with the Amazon basin: Caño Casiquiare. In that place
inhabits one of the most numerous nations of the South American tropical
jungles. the Yanomami, whose villages I had the opportunity to visit ..
At that
time they were threatened by the "evangelization" of the "New
Tribes" and other evangelical sects. In recent years, this religious
colonization was considerably reduced both in Venezuela and in Brazil. We will
see how they are affected by the political changes in those two countries.
The world
of the Yanomami
For the
Yanomami, "urihi", the jungle land, is not a mere inert space of
economic exploitation (what we call "nature"). It is a living entity,
inserted in a complex cosmological dynamic of exchanges between humans and
non-humans. As such, it is currently in danger from the blind predation of
"whites". In the vision of the leader Davi Kopenawa Yanomami:
"The
forest-land can only die if it is destroyed by the whites, then the streams
will disappear, the earth will be burned, the trees will dry up and the stones
of the mountains will be broken by the heat." The spirits xapiripë, who
live in the sierras and they stay playing in the jungle will end up fleeing,
their parents, the shamans, will not be able to call them to protect them
anymore The earth-jungle will become dry and empty The shamans will not be able
to stop the smoke-epidemics and the beings evils that make us sick, in this
way, everyone will die. "
Yanomami village
The
Yanomami form a society of fishermen, slash-cultivators and, in addition,
gatherers and hunters of the rainforest of the north of the Amazon region whose
contact with the national society is, in most of its territory, relatively
recent.
Its
territory covers, approximately, 192,000 Km2, located on both margins of the
border of Brazil with Venezuela, in the Orinoco-Amazon interfluvial region
(tributaries of the right bank of the Branco River and left of the Negro
River). They constitute a cultural and linguistic group composed of, at least,
four adjacent subgroups that speak languages of the same family (Yanomae,
Yanõmami, Sanima and Ninam). The total Yanomami population, in Brazil and
Venezuela, was estimated at almost 26,000 people in 1999.
In Brazil, the Yanomami population was 12,795 people, spread
over 228 communities (census of the Fundação Nacional de Saúde-Fundación
Nacional de la Salud - 1999). The
Yanomami Indigenous Land, which covers 9,664,975 ha (96,650 km²) of tropical
forests, is recognized for its importance in terms of protection of Amazonian
biodiversity and was approved by a presidential decree on May 25, 1992.

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