The Prague Post - 'Let them live in peace': survivor's fight for uncontacted Amazon people

EUR -
AED 4.29779
AFN 76.646904
ALL 96.241675
AMD 443.635649
ANG 2.094592
AOA 1072.991758
ARS 1673.208683
AUD 1.731682
AWG 2.1062
AZN 1.990772
BAM 1.952514
BBD 2.355336
BDT 143.047447
BGN 1.965049
BHD 0.441146
BIF 3451.82728
BMD 1.170111
BND 1.500675
BOB 8.080747
BRL 6.233416
BSD 1.169432
BTN 107.104511
BWP 15.607403
BYN 3.364738
BYR 22934.174472
BZD 2.352042
CAD 1.617275
CDF 2521.588679
CHF 0.928325
CLF 0.02607
CLP 1029.369702
CNY 8.148533
CNH 8.144411
COP 4296.097428
CRC 572.736202
CUC 1.170111
CUP 31.00794
CVE 110.928431
CZK 24.33245
DJF 207.952238
DKK 7.470337
DOP 73.657979
DZD 151.940044
EGP 55.380767
ERN 17.551664
ETB 181.835328
FJD 2.652649
FKP 0.868717
GBP 0.871727
GEL 3.153466
GGP 0.868717
GHS 12.689822
GIP 0.868717
GMD 85.998332
GNF 10238.470596
GTQ 8.976894
GYD 244.678711
HKD 9.123998
HNL 30.949524
HRK 7.534693
HTG 153.12298
HUF 384.786322
IDR 19783.76777
ILS 3.688131
IMP 0.868717
INR 107.19088
IQD 1532.845335
IRR 49290.923634
ISK 146.204626
JEP 0.868717
JMD 183.850617
JOD 0.829585
JPY 185.074689
KES 150.885662
KGS 102.325944
KHR 4769.371972
KMF 491.446398
KPW 1053.136457
KRW 1715.932329
KWD 0.359505
KYD 0.974602
KZT 592.747724
LAK 25280.246667
LBP 100102.991059
LKR 362.120625
LRD 216.382742
LSL 19.224962
LTL 3.455034
LVL 0.707788
LYD 7.447791
MAD 10.744548
MDL 19.822321
MGA 5306.452487
MKD 61.51648
MMK 2456.872156
MNT 4172.39075
MOP 9.393095
MRU 46.524143
MUR 53.885905
MVR 18.078018
MWK 2028.386357
MXN 20.453112
MYR 4.735431
MZN 74.781182
NAD 19.225049
NGN 1659.895721
NIO 42.950461
NOK 11.651731
NPR 171.36848
NZD 2.00261
OMR 0.44982
PAB 1.169477
PEN 3.928651
PGK 4.901302
PHP 69.206791
PKR 327.601806
PLN 4.218794
PYG 7831.820647
QAR 4.260399
RON 5.093612
RSD 117.407788
RUB 90.098563
RWF 1699.001088
SAR 4.388216
SBD 9.513254
SCR 17.676353
SDG 703.816744
SEK 10.654386
SGD 1.502417
SHP 0.877886
SLE 28.843354
SLL 24536.64055
SOS 668.71408
SRD 44.710231
STD 24218.934064
STN 24.806352
SVC 10.232649
SYP 12940.929603
SZL 19.225675
THB 36.492225
TJS 10.905514
TMT 4.095388
TND 3.359974
TOP 2.817346
TRY 50.658549
TTD 7.93898
TWD 36.988408
TZS 2983.783142
UAH 50.469224
UGX 4046.191087
USD 1.170111
UYU 44.863737
UZS 14129.089947
VES 405.829601
VND 30732.963903
VUV 141.385009
WST 3.255689
XAF 654.88295
XAG 0.012607
XAU 0.000242
XCD 3.162284
XCG 2.107707
XDR 0.813853
XOF 655.848943
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.895603
ZAR 19.059943
ZMK 10532.387573
ZMW 23.536399
ZWL 376.775246
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0150

    23.475

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    0.0230

    24.043

    +0.1%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    57.2

    +1.54%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    16.9

    -1.18%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    80.25

    +0.31%

  • RIO

    3.3000

    88.98

    +3.71%

  • GSK

    0.3600

    48.01

    +0.75%

  • BP

    0.7550

    35.905

    +2.1%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    40.08

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    1.4600

    85.28

    +1.71%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    24.47

    +0.33%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    13.525

    +0.18%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.69

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    -0.5700

    89.37

    -0.64%

'Let them live in peace': survivor's fight for uncontacted Amazon people
'Let them live in peace': survivor's fight for uncontacted Amazon people / Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN - AFP

'Let them live in peace': survivor's fight for uncontacted Amazon people

Atxu Marima survived the flu that killed his family after a jaguar attack drove them from their Indigenous group in the Amazon -- but he cannot return for fear of endangering his people.

Text size:

Instead he has dedicated himself to campaigning for Brazil's isolated communities to be left alone.

"I am here to tell the story of my people," Marima told AFP during a trip to Paris to raise awareness.

Marima is only around 40 but has already had many lives. Born Atxu among the Hi-Merima people, a nomadic group in the south of Amazonas state, he became Romerito (Little Romero) as a child labourer after fleeing the forest. But now to his wife and three children, he is Artur.

Until about the age of seven or eight, he lived between the Purus and Jurua rivers with his father, mother, and siblings as part of one of Brazil's officially recognised "uncontacted" Indigenous communities.

The country is home to more such groups than any other, with 114 officially recognised as living with little or no contact with the outside world.

For decades Brazil encouraged contact with these communities, before reversing course in 1987 after recognising the devastation it brought.

Marima and his family experienced this firsthand when tragedy forced them to seek out what he called a "civilised community" -- a decision that cost him his family, home, language and culture.

- 'Everyone got sick' -

Marima's childhood in the Amazon had been idyllic —- singing to trees to encourage them to bear fruit, families gathering to dance and racing across the forest floor with his siblings.

Until one day a jaguar attacked his father. He survived the mauling but suffered a severe head wound and began hallucinating that his children were prey -- tapirs and pigs to hunt with his arrows.

His mother fled with them, leaving his father dying in his hammock above a grave they had prepared for him.

Marima never saw him again.

"My family, especially my mother, then decided to make contact with the 'civilised' world," he told AFP.

It soon exposed them to diseases for which they had no defences.

"Everyone got sick and died," he said, recalling how his mother, aunt and several brothers succumbed to what he called the flu.

Marima and four siblings were the only survivors, scattered among local families.

Renamed Romerito, his adoptive family forced him to work in "slave-like conditions" until he left around the age of 15.

He believes he is the last of the siblings still alive.

-'Afraid of being shot'-

In 1987 Brazil adopted a no-contact policy, allowing interaction only if initiated by the Indigenous people themselves. Otherwise, they must be left alone.

Prior to that, "it was normal for half of the population of uncontacted people to die within the first year of contact," mostly from disease, said Priscilla Schwarzenholz, a researcher at Survival International.

Today Marima said isolated groups also fear contact because they are "afraid of being shot, because the 'civilisers' have guns."

"It's not worth getting in touch with my people... I'll pass on an illness to them," he said.

"I am no longer that person from the forest."

-'Live in peace'-

Marima now works with Brazil's National Foundation for Indigenous Peoples (Funai), monitoring the Hi-Merima territory, which the government legally recognised in 2005.

He spoke with pride about his work preventing illegal fishing, saying those responsible try to "invade" and show "no respect for the area".

Forest fires and deforestation pose another risk to their survival, he warned, noting that last year's intense heat and drought endangered their homes and hunting.

"People lack the common sense to protect the Amazon rainforest," he said.

Despite those threats, the Hi-Merima appear to have grown over the last 20 years, since incursions into their territory became illegal.

"You can see that there are kids, there are babies... they are growing and they are healthy," Schwarzenholz said, putting their number at about 150, based on traces they leave in the forest.

"I know they (the Hi–Merima) don't know I exist," Marima said.

But he said sharing his story was his way of staying connected while advocating for isolated groups to decide if -- and when -- they make contact.

Until then, "let them live in peace," he said.

R.Krejci--TPP