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528 years ago today, Columbus and his fleet set foot on the Americas, on what is today known as the Bahamas. More than five centuries later, this event continues to generate discussion about how such a significant date should be commemorated. Currently, anti-racial discrimination movements are emerging in many parts of the world, questioning the historical role of colonizers, slavers and European explorers. It is necessary to reflect on what we remember today. The “discovery” of America, the arrival of Columbus, or International Day of the Race is what has generally been celebrated on this day. More progressive circles, however, have started decades ago to commemorate the date as the day of the original peoples and intercultural dialogue, day of the struggle of native Americans against the Spanish conquistadores, or simply as Indigenous Resistance Day.
A mural depicting smallpox in the oral tradition of the Kukama-Kukamiria people (Credit: Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
In 2020, in light of the Covid-19 pandemic, this reflection gains new importance. It is not the first time that indigenous communities in the Amazon are affected by an imported disease. Since the time of European conquest of the Americas, various waves of diseases introduced by the colonizers have had devastating effects on the indigenous populations, dramatically reducing their numbers in the Amazon region. Some of these traumatic encounters still survive in these peoples’ collective memory in the form of stories. The Kukama-Kukamiria people remember that smallpox, personified in white-hooded ghost-like creatures, came down the river in long canoes. When people saw them, they escaped into the jungle, leaving their houses and animals behind.
Today, in the 21st century, when humanity believes that we have reached unprecedented control over nature, thanks to technology and science, the Corona pandemic reminds us of our limits and fragility. The so-called “invisible enemy” has spread around the world at extraordinary velocity, taking advantage of the great mobility of a globalized world. Beyond its seductive promises of development and progress, the deep gaps, inequalities and contradictions of the socio-economic model that we have built are being exposed by the pandemic in all their magnitude. “The injustices have been revealed.”
Once again, indigenous peoples face an epidemic in a situation of extreme vulnerability. Basic health and other public services are almost non-existent in their communities. The pandemic hits them as health conditions are already precarious, due to the prevalence of childhood anaemia and widespread tropical diseases such as dengue or malaria. protección social.
A representative of the OEPIAP simulates a combination of traditional Tikuna and Awajun clothing, incorporating the iconic element of the pandemic, the mask. (Credits: Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
The impact of Covid-19 on Amazonian communities is potentially disastrous and, at the same time, difficult to assess. Taking into account that the disease seems to be most harmful to the elderly, there is a high risk of losing invaluable ancestral knowledge preserved and passed on by them. From the economic perspective, the increasing dependence on external products and trade means that many communities face serious difficulties in obtaining certain foods, fuel or essential tools. Another consequence is that families struggle to economically support the studies of their children.
Against this backdrop, without ceasing to claim their basic rights and demand support from the authorities, indigenous peoples have organized themselves to face the disease: they have closed access to their territories and have isolated themselves in their houses or on their farms (often some distance away from their homes), and have resorted to traditional medicine whose power resides in the “mothers” or protective spirits of the plants. Remedies based on the matico tree (Piper aduncum), ginger, a local variety of garlic, huito, lemongrass, lime, or onion, among others, are helping many people to cope with Covid-19, reduce symptoms and avoid worse conditions.
Representatives of the Organization of Students of the Indigenous Peoples of the Peruvian Amazon (OEPIAP) along with other indigenous federations protest in front of the Regional Government of Loreto due to the lack of health care during the worst moments of the pandemic. (Credits: Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
In indigenous worldviews, disease and healing processes take place in the spiritual world. The well-being and health of a person, or of a community, are not only matters of the physical body, but depend on the relationships between humans and other beings of nature, personified in what indigenous peoples may call “mothers” or “dueños” (translated as “owners”). For this reason, shamans and healers ask permission or help from these spirits, invoke their power, dialogue and negotiate with them to restore balance.
Modern science also generates more and more information about the deep interrelationships of natural processes and how the health of ecosystems effects our own well-being. The destruction of natural habitats, the confinement and indiscriminate consumption of animals, the use and abuse of nature without asking permission, without negotiation, without respecting life in its many forms, may be identified by many – in particular indigenous peoples – as the true origin of this pandemic and other global problems that threaten our existence.
The Covid-19 pandemic will pass, but others will follow. It is necessary to learn the lesson, to listen to the voices of elders, wisdom keepers and researchers, to indigenous cosmovisions and science. There are no excuses. It is not merely a question of medicines or vaccines; we have to rethink our relationship with the other beings that we share this planet with. Let us use this traumatic experience of the pandemic in our favour. Today we celebrate interculturality. We honour and value ancestral indigenous knowledge, which makes us remember our origin. An origin in symbiosis with the natural world that surrounds us, that we are a part of, and which provides what we need to live a good life.
By Daniel López, pictures by Alienor de Sas (Instituto Chaikuni)
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Trees are cut down and bushed are burned during the slash-and-burn technique to clear the forest in order to cultivate. Soil loses its natural nutrients and the micro and macro invertebrates disappear. (Photo by Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
Dear friends and supporters,
The Amazon is still on fire. As you have seen in the news, tens of thousands of forest fires are raging across the Amazon rainforest, and continue to spread through the region at an alarming pace. The fires have devastated immense areas in Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay.
In this picture, Silvia del Aguila, our Permaculture Coordinator, is working in our demonstration plot of a chacra integral. (Photo by Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
While some fires are attributed to increased drought (unnatural in its occurrence and directly linked to a changing climate) most are deliberately set by humans seeking to clear the forest to expand business. In Brazil in particular, agri-business interests and cattle ranchers continue to set fires across vast swaths of forest in order to clear land for soy monocultures and cattle farms, fueled by the predatory right wing policies of president Bolsonaro.
With your support, we at the Chaikuni Institute promote an alternative to harmful slash-and-burn agriculture – the method which is largely responsible for these fires. At Chaikuni we promote a regenerative and diverse agro-forestry system called the chacra integral. One of the main characteristics of the chacra integral is a technique which involves letting chopped vegetation remain on the ground, which maintains nutrients in the bio-mass and mimicks the natural cycles of the rainforest ecosystem. The chacra integral system is a sure way to avoid fires in the region, because no burning is included in this process. An intact tropical rainforest is so humid that it is far more resilient to the spread of fires. A chacra integral promises a healthy and intact piece of rainforest, producing food, medicine and timber, providing myriad ecological and economic benefits to local communities as well as the global community.
The participants of the Permaculture Design Course (local farmers and indigenous representatives) recognize the land to establish the best location of a chacra integral. (Photo by Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
Since we held our Permaculture Design Course (PDC) in May for local farmers from the surrounding communities of our permaculture center, we’ve continued to work on bringing these chacras integrales to their homes. By the end of the year, we set the goal to have installed 8 hectares of these rich agroforestry plots with participating communities.
The pioneers of this program are the local participants of the PDC, who we are working with to install these systems on their properties. We’ve started to visit them in their homes and on their land, collecting socio-economic data to build a solid baseline, which will later allow us to monitor the progress of this project. Just last week, we held a day-long course at our center to refresh the insights and techniques we learned from the PDC, focusing on the design of their properties, and in particular analyzing the best location for their agroforestry plots. In the case of one of the participants, we have already started implementing his chacra integral.
Opposite to the first picture, this is how a chacra integral looks like in its first stage, fire is never used to clear the space, edible and medicinal plants keep on growing and providing more livelihoods year by year. (Picture by Alienor de Sas / Chaikuni Institute)
The work is done through so-called mingas. A minga refers to a day of communal work, and is very common for our region of the Peruvian Amazon. The owner mobilizes her or his family and neighbors to lend a hand in the field and offers them food in return. Our qualified staff accompanies and guides the work, and we also chip in with some of the food offered for the working crowd. From here onwards, we will assist in many more mingas to help establish the chacras integrales in the communities.
We are as committed as ever to keep creating a movement to regenerate the Amazon, spreading awareness and know-how that will also contribute to prevent future fires. Any donation will help us to take our project a step further.
Click here to know more about our project Ayni and donate today to help us prevent this fires again.
Thank you so much for your support to local communities in the Peruvian Amazon and for being part of our movement.
With gratitude,
The Chaikuni Institute Team
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