The Prague Post - Indigenous writer Ailton Krenak, postponing the end of the world

EUR -
AED 4.198777
AFN 74.314377
ALL 93.808175
AMD 419.728889
ANG 2.046971
AOA 1049.551411
ARS 1700.683619
AUD 1.64729
AWG 2.060801
AZN 1.943672
BAM 1.957138
BBD 2.302112
BDT 140.870303
BGN 1.933187
BHD 0.431076
BIF 3407.039172
BMD 1.143302
BND 1.478743
BOB 7.916031
BRL 5.871309
BSD 1.143052
BTN 108.984995
BWP 15.523886
BYN 3.266862
BYR 22408.714019
BZD 2.299082
CAD 1.620127
CDF 2579.288445
CHF 0.922216
CLF 0.026942
CLP 1060.367056
CNY 7.766278
CNH 7.768804
COP 3768.24249
CRC 519.996422
CUC 1.143302
CUP 30.297496
CVE 110.728621
CZK 24.251145
DJF 203.187933
DKK 7.475133
DOP 67.169115
DZD 152.233905
EGP 56.721334
ERN 17.149526
ETB 182.213713
FJD 2.554371
FKP 0.855717
GBP 0.852486
GEL 3.018028
GGP 0.855717
GHS 13.073686
GIP 0.855717
GMD 83.461064
GNF 10038.188927
GTQ 8.720971
GYD 239.11768
HKD 8.959055
HNL 30.72619
HRK 7.534933
HTG 149.585271
HUF 357.240579
IDR 20755.95703
ILS 3.447455
IMP 0.855717
INR 109.283811
IQD 1498.296925
IRR 1572039.886512
ISK 143.404072
JEP 0.855717
JMD 181.824323
JOD 0.810604
JPY 185.631007
KES 147.782833
KGS 99.979474
KHR 4584.639938
KMF 492.762957
KPW 1028.971962
KRW 1723.525592
KWD 0.353943
KYD 0.952656
KZT 534.40774
LAK 25781.454428
LBP 102382.670766
LKR 383.328515
LRD 207.652194
LSL 18.659406
LTL 3.375873
LVL 0.691572
LYD 7.322848
MAD 10.695592
MDL 20.07908
MGA 4910.481026
MKD 61.650756
MMK 2400.568089
MNT 4100.636041
MOP 9.22693
MRU 45.817847
MUR 53.883636
MVR 17.675277
MWK 1984.771859
MXN 20.057571
MYR 4.658036
MZN 73.068037
NAD 18.658542
NGN 1575.069545
NIO 41.907755
NOK 11.112218
NPR 174.355391
NZD 1.985018
OMR 0.439605
PAB 1.143082
PEN 3.888409
PGK 5.007376
PHP 70.405094
PKR 318.037993
PLN 4.333051
PYG 6953.754649
QAR 4.169275
RON 5.235295
RSD 117.3588
RUB 87.176814
RWF 1676.651995
SAR 4.289298
SBD 9.220775
SCR 14.978433
SDG 686.550326
SEK 11.049016
SGD 1.477392
SHP 0.85359
SLE 27.839621
SLL 23974.469936
SOS 653.405322
SRD 42.989271
STD 23664.037611
STN 24.695317
SVC 10.002058
SYP 126.371539
SZL 18.670174
THB 38.138261
TJS 10.568126
TMT 4.012989
TND 3.365594
TOP 2.752797
TRY 53.691748
TTD 7.756422
TWD 36.713931
TZS 3008.024576
UAH 50.883292
UGX 4212.401267
USD 1.143302
UYU 45.962432
UZS 13736.770471
VES 799.567616
VND 30063.11914
VUV 136.9143
WST 3.173216
XAF 656.414437
XAG 0.019088
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.08983
XCG 2.060218
XDR 0.816287
XOF 654.536521
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.080709
ZAR 18.662056
ZMK 10291.093139
ZMW 20.605089
ZWL 368.142692
  • RBGPF

    -0.4600

    67.86

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.02

    +0.05%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    72.24

    +1.32%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.31

    -0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    21.32

    -0.61%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.03

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    19.25

    +1.25%

  • NGG

    -1.2100

    82.32

    -1.47%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    13.08

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    32.07

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    89.49

    +0.77%

  • BTI

    -0.5200

    60.87

    -0.85%

  • GSK

    -0.0500

    52.47

    -0.1%

  • BP

    -0.6600

    38.55

    -1.71%

  • AZN

    -10.7900

    178.49

    -6.05%

Indigenous writer Ailton Krenak, postponing the end of the world
Indigenous writer Ailton Krenak, postponing the end of the world / Photo: Nelson ALMEIDA - AFP

Indigenous writer Ailton Krenak, postponing the end of the world

The year was 1987, Brazil was just exiting a long military dictatorship, and Indigenous writer Ailton Krenak stood before the country's constitutional assembly in a pristine white suit, smearing black paint across his face.

Text size:

"Indigenous peoples have watered every scrap of Brazil's eight million square kilometers with their blood," the handsome young activist defiantly told the assembly, using a traditional mourning ritual to protest centuries of violence against native peoples.

Thirty-six years after that memorable protest, which helped ensure the nation's new constitution protected native land rights, Krenak achieved what he calls a new "historic reparation" last month, when he was chosen as the first Indigenous member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.

Founded in 1897, the Academy is the rough equivalent of France's hallowed Academie Francaise or Spain's Real Academia.

Seen as a standard-bearer of Brazilian language and literature, the Rio de Janeiro institution is made up of 40 members known as the "immortals," who hold their seats for life.

Known for its hushed halls and hallowed rituals -- its members convene for formal gatherings in gold-embroidered uniforms -- it is perhaps an unusual spot for life-long rabble-rouser Krenak, 70.

"We're going to bring a little noise to that century-old silence," the philosopher, writer and poet told AFP in an interview in Sao Paulo.

The Academy "has always been closed to native peoples and dominated by (Brazilian) Portuguese."

Krenak says he hopes to use his seat in the institution to help shine a spotlight on Brazil's nearly 200 Indigenous languages.

"Through language, literature and the arts, Indigenous cultures can be perceived as living things, not just something from the past," he says, speaking in calm but razor-sharp sentences.

Despite the horrors of the colonial past, "we are alive," he adds. "We won."

- In the flesh -

A member of the Krenak people of southeastern Brazil, whose surname he bears, the writer has lived the Indigenous struggle in the flesh.

His people were expelled from their land around 1970, during the dictatorship (1964-1985), forcing him and his family into exile.

At 18, he left for the southern state of Parana to study "the colonizer's language," earning a journalism degree. It is the language in which he writes his books.

After enduring torture and persecution by the military regime, the Krenak only partly recovered their lands with the return to democracy. Their 600 remaining members were scattered across several states.

Krenak's own fight is rooted in their suffering.

Considered one of Brazil's leading Indigenous intellectuals, he has written a highly regarded body of work criticizing colonialism and capitalism, including the critically acclaimed essay "Ideas to Postpone the End of the World" (2019), translated into more than 10 languages.

The Indigenous leader, who is discreet on his personal life, married fellow activist Irani Krenak in 2000. They had three children, one of whom died in an accident. Another daughter from a previous relationship also died.

- Different vision -

Krenak rejects the notion that European colonizers brought "civilization" to the Americas.

In fact, they brought a way of life that divorced humankind from nature, leading to a world where corporations "devour forests, mountains and rivers," he writes.

Krenak proposes a different way of life, akin to that of the native communities who resisted colonialism, fiercely clinging to their land.

About four years ago, he moved to his people's land on the banks of the Rio Doce river, home to around 350 Indigenous people.

But even there, what he calls the "corporate monster" is inescapable. A case in point: a notorious mine dam collapse in 2015 that caused an environmental disaster on the river, a vital source of water and food for his people.

The accelerating destruction of nature affects everyone, Krenak says.

"It's not just Indigenous peoples who are threatened by the damage anymore. Now white people are, too," he says, wearing a striped shirt and traditional feather necklace.

For now, he says, he is "biding (his) time" hoping for political and social change.

But in the end, he says, he expects the Earth to move beyond humankind.

"My hope is that we'll be discarded as quickly as possible so the planet can continue its magnificent journey."

W.Urban--TPP