‘The Dark Side of Skin’: race relations in modern Brazil
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
1d ago
Inspired and motivated by a moment of real-life police harassment, this novel is narrated in the second person by Pedro, who recounts the life of his father, Henrique, who was killed by police in an incident. This review was originally published by our partner, Sounds and Colours, here. A relatively recent interest in Black Brazilian writers has enabled what could be seen as a new wave of Afro-Brazilian writing, books that include The Sun on my Head by Geovani Martins, Ana Maria Gonçalves’ Um Defeito de Cor and Crooked Plow by Itamar Vieira Junior, all acclaimed ..read more
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Moira Millán: urgent situation of Indigenous people in Patagonia
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
1d ago
On a cold Sunday afternoon in February, around 20 activists, journalists, researchers, and community representatives in London gathered in a circle to listen to Mapuche weychafe (warrior) Moira Millán and Tehuelche elder Ñaña Vilma. Moira and Vilma had travelled from southern Patagonia to Europe to spread awareness of the urgent situation for Indigenous peoples in the south of Argentina, and to strengthen bonds of international solidarity.  The Mapuche and Tehuelche people are Indigenous to the southern cone, including parts of Chilean and Argentinian Patagonia. Moira lives in the provinc ..read more
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Kopenawa, Krenak, Kayapo
Latin America Bureau
by Mike Gatehouse
4d ago
Yanomami leader Davi Kopenawa received by Pope Francis at the Vatican. Video: Jornalismo TV Cultura, April 2024. São Paulo. 14 April 2024. A few days ago Yanomami leader and shaman Davi Kopenawa was received by Pope Francis, head of the Catholic church, in Rome, and Ailton Krenak, author, poet and environmentalist was elected to the Brazilian Academy of Letters in Rio, the first ever indigenous member of  what has until recently been an exclusively white club. During Carnival 2024, Brazil`s greatest expression of popular culture, one of the top Rio samba schools, Salgueiro, chose indigen ..read more
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FILM: The Future is in our Territories
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
6d ago
Activists from Indigenous and Afrodescendent organisations from 22 countries across the Americas gathered in the Ecuadorian Amazon last October to attend an urgent meeting in response to the rise in illegal mining. They were invited to the community of Serena by local leader Leo Cerda, the co-founder of the Americas-wide Black and Indigenous Liberation Movement (BILM), to forge a coalition to combat extractivism, structural racism, and the climate crisis. ‘A movement is built by many, not by one. We need to start thinking about local strategies with a global impact,’ Leo told us in an intervi ..read more
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Eliane Brum: contemplating the Amazon, the centre of the world, through writing
Latin America Bureau
by Mike Gatehouse
6d ago
This interview was first published (in Portuguese) on Amazônia Latitude, as a podcast and a text. It has been translated and reproduced with kind permission of Marcos Colón and Eliane Brum. The Amazon is the centre of the world, it is one of the most important regions on the planet and must be preserved and protected. This idea has been championed by the most awarded journalist in Brazil, Eliane Brum, also a documentary filmmaker and writer. She is the author of almost a dozen books, some of which have been published in other languages, such as English, Spanish, and Italian. Among her best-kno ..read more
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Paraguay: the Paĩ Tavyterã and the changing climate
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
2w ago
The Paĩ Tavyterã Indigenous people, whose ancestral territory is in the northeast of Paraguay, are taking concrete actions to combat the fierce impacts of climate change felt in their communities. They are adapting their agricultural practices to be more resilient and are learning to combat the wildfires that have devastated the region over recent years, employing traditional knowledge to recover forests lost to the fires and to avoid the incursion of invasive grass species used by neighbouring cattle ranchers, which are highly disruptive to native ecosystems. The final wafts of thick early-mo ..read more
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The Amazon: ‘Territory Languages’
Latin America Bureau
by Mike Gatehouse
1M ago
This interview was first published (in Portuguese) on Amazônia Latitude, as both text and podcast. It is reproduced with kind permission of Marcos Colón and Eliane Brum. ‘Literature is body in relationship’, says Eliane Brum How the Amazon reached the woman from Rio Grande do Sul who, today, is the most awarded journalist in Brazil and writes ‘so as not to die and so as not to kill’ The Amazon is the center of the world, it is one of the most important regions on the planet and must be preserved and protected. This idea was created by the most awarded journalist in Brazil, who is also a docume ..read more
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Ecuador: a haven no longer?
Latin America Bureau
by Mike Gatehouse
1M ago
Once regarded as an ‘island of peace’ in a troubled region, Ecuador sits at the heart of the complex migratory flows that dissect Latin America’s Andes. But the eruption of violence that has upended Ecuador since 2016 may have spun the country onto a path towards an exodus of its own. Main image: Deilys fled Venezuela to Ecuador with her family. Thanks to the Graduation Model courses, she has been able to build a business making and selling vegan desserts which has allowed her and her family a regular income and a way out of extreme poverty. © UNHCR/Jaime Giménez Sánchez de la Blanca Regional ..read more
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Bust of Berta Cáceres shows ‘lack of respect’
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
1M ago
A bust of Berta Cáceres was installed in a square in Tegucigalpa’s civic centre, next to a bank owned by the Atala family, who have been accused as one of the masterminds behind her murder. This piece was originally published in Spanish by Contracorriente. In the ‘Plaza de las Etnias’, a plaza dedicated to Honduras’ ethnic groups located within Tegucigalpa’s Government Civic Center (CCG), lies a resin bust covered in metallic paint, installed in homage to Honduran environmental defender Berta Cáceres. Cáceres was assassinated eight years ago on March 3, 2016 in La Esperanza, Intibucá (one day ..read more
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Mexico: guardians of the cenotes
Latin America Bureau
by Rebecca Wilson
1M ago
The Kanan Ts’ono’ot collective is making history in Mexico by demanding that cenotes be granted legal status and the Maya people named as their protectors against threats posed by industrial farming. This piece, translated for the Envrionmental Defenders series by Ruth Donnelly, was originally published by Mongabay in Spanish here. José Clemente May Echeverría has been working in the Mexican cenotes since 2015. He starts work in the first cenote at nine in the morning: following instructions passed down by his ancestors, he asks permission from the gods to enter these spaces, considered sacred ..read more
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