> He was buried in a traditional indigenous funeral at the same location where his body had been found in August. His burial place was desecrated by farmers shortly after, leading to renewed calls for permanent protection of the land where he and his people had dwelled.
I just don’t understand such pettiness. It’s one of our worst traits.
I want to give the farmers some benefit of the doubt, and claim they were desperate for the land or their families would starve, but I don't even believe it as I'm typing it.
This is not pettiness, but typical behavior of settler-colonial landowners who view indigenous peoples as subhuman pests unworthy of their land for "using it unproductively." They have already committed genocide against his tribe and will try their best to erase his history to prevent him from becoming a symbol of indigenous resistance. We can currently observe the same behavior on the other side of the planet, with the genocidal settler force desecrating and razing to the ground everything they can find.
I remember trying to speak to my dad about the indigenous genocides committed by the American settlers and he said “that was a long time ago.” And while much can be said of such a response, it’s important to recognize that genocides of various groups and regions have occurred throughout the history of colonization, and before, for hundreds and for thousands of years, they have never stopped, and are ongoing to this day. Such things were not a long time ago. They were in the 1990’s, they are today. They can only be ended by a recognition of and reconciliation with the force inside of us that drives us to ignore the needs of others so that we may have what they possess. We must recognize the humanity in all people.
Carl Sagan said “It will not be we who reach Alpha Centauri and the other nearby stars. It will be a species very like us, but with more of our strengths and fewer of our weaknesses, more confident, farseeing, capable, and prudent.” [1]
Maybe reconciling with these beasts of our nature, growing up and becoming more far seeing and confident, will be a part of that process.
Yep, it's very important to recognize these things still happen today and are not remnants of the past. It was maybe a few ago that people were being sold into slavery somewhere in Africa. There's something like 30-40 million people trafficked worldwide, not sure how many are sex slaves or how many are children. I think we're all aware of what's happening in Ukraine and Palestine. For those of us living in the United States, it feels like we may be just months away from living in an fascist authorization dictatorship... of sorts.
The problems of the past are very much still with us today.
If you are interested in this topic I highly recommend you to read "Las venas abiertas de America Latina" by Eduardo Galeano. All the atrocities committed by the spanish crown, and how they literally emptied America of its richness (in all senses). And yet to this very day we teach kids a fairy tale about how Colombus with its ships discovered America. And I don't think it was that long ago.
Thank you for the recommendation! I also learned a lot about Columbus’s atrocities and greed from this apparently well-researched YouTube video on the subject:
Reminds me of the book I read “The Culture of Make Believe” about how we pretend the world is different than it really is. It has a chapter called “Holocausts” and notes that in US culture we tend to think there was just one, but there have been many.
It's very sad as it sounds like some organization built up trust with him and that probably led him to being less cautious and killed by other people (because how he would tell the difference).
To let be or to interfere I guess is always a lose lose choice...
Do you have any reasons to suspect he was killed? The article says:
> He was found "lying down in the hammock, and ornamented [with macaw feathers] as if waiting for death". There were no signs of violence or any other disturbance before his corpse had been discovered by FUNAI.
I just don’t understand such pettiness. It’s one of our worst traits.