The Lost Tribes of the Amazon
Often described as “uncontacted,” isolated groups living deep in the South American forest resist the ways of the modern world—at least for now
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Dominic Bracco II
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2013, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Today, however, Colombia continues to move into the vanguard of protecting indigenous peoples and their land. In December, the government announced a bold new plan to double the size of remote Chiribiquete Park, currently 3.2 million acres in southern Colombia; the biodiversity sanctuary is home to two isolated tribes.
Franco believes that governments must increase efforts to preserve indigenous cultures. “The Indians represent a special culture, and resistance to the world,” argues the historian, who has spent three decades researching isolated tribes in Colombia. Martínez says that the Indians have a unique view of the cosmos, stressing “the unity of human beings with nature, the interconnectedness of all things.” It is a philosophy that makes them natural environmentalists, since damage to the forest or to members of one tribe, the Indians believe, can reverberate across society and history with lasting consequences. “They are protecting the jungle by chasing off gold miners and whoever else goes in there,” Franco says. He adds: “We must respect their decision not to be our friends—even to hate us.”
***
Especially since the alternatives to isolation are often so bleak. This became clear to me one June morning, when I traveled up the Amazon River from the Colombian border town of Leticia. I climbed into a motorboat at the ramshackle harbor of this lively port city, founded by Peru in 1867 and ceded to Colombia following a border war in 1922. Joining me were Franco, Daniel Matapi—an activist from Colombia’s Matapi and Yukuna tribes—and Mark Plotkin, director of the Amazon Conservation Team, the Virginia-based nonprofit that sponsored Franco’s overflight. We chugged down a muddy channel and emerged into the mile-wide river. The sun beat down ferociously as we passed thick jungle hugging both banks. Pink dolphins followed in our wake, leaping from the water in perfect arcs.
After two hours, we docked at a pier at the Maloca Barú, a traditional longhouse belonging to the 30,000-strong Ticuna tribe, whose acculturation into the modern world has been fraught with difficulties. A dozen tourists sat on benches, while three elderly Indian women in traditional costume put on a desultory dance. “You have to sell yourself, make an exhibition of yourself. It’s not good,” Matapi muttered. Ticuna vendors beckoned us to tables covered with necklaces and other trinkets. In the 1960s, Colombia began luring the Ticuna from the jungle with schools and health clinics thrown up along the Amazon. But the population proved too large to sustain its subsistence agriculture-based economy, and “it was inevitable that they turned to tourism,” Franco said.
Not all Ticunas have embraced this way of life. In the nearby riverside settlement of Nazareth, the Ticuna voted in 2011 to ban tourism. Leaders cited the garbage left behind, the indignity of having cameras shoved in their faces, the prying questions of outsiders into the most secret aspects of Indian culture and heritage, and the uneven distribution of profits. “What we earn here is very little,” one Ticuna leader in Nazareth told the Agence France-Presse. “Tourists come here, they buy a few things, a few artisanal goods, and they go. It is the travel agencies that make the good money.” Foreigners can visit Nazareth on an invitation-only basis; guards armed with sticks chase away everyone else.
***
In contrast to the Ticuna, the Yuri and Passé tribes have been running from civilization since the first Europeans set foot in South America half a millennium ago. Franco theorizes that they originated near the Amazon River during pre-Columbian times. Spanish explorers in pursuit of El Dorado, such as Francisco de Orellana, recorded their encounters—sometimes hostile—with Yuri and Passé who dwelled in longhouses along the river. Later, most migrated 150 miles north to the Putumayo—the only fully navigable waterway in Colombia’s Amazon region—to escape Spanish and Portuguese slave traders.
Then, around 1900, came the rubber boom. Based in the port of Iquitos, a Peruvian company, Casa Arana, controlled much of what is now the Colombian Amazon region. Company representatives operating along the Putumayo press-ganged tens of thousands of Indians to gather rubber, or caucho, and flogged, starved and murdered those who resisted. Before the trade died out completely in the 1930s, the Uitoto tribe’s population fell from 40,000 to 10,000; the Andoke Indians dropped from 10,000 to 300. Other groups simply ceased to exist. “That was the time when most of the now-isolated groups opted for isolation,” says Franco. “The Yuri [and the Passé] moved a great distance to get away from the caucheros.” In 1905, Theodor Koch-Grünberg, a German ethnologist, traveled between the Caquetá and Putumayo rivers; he noted ominously the abandoned houses of Passé and Yuri along the Puré, a tributary of the Putumayo, evidence of a flight deeper into the rainforest to escape the depredations.
The Passé and Yuri peoples vanished, and many experts believed they had been driven into extinction. Then, in January 1969, a jaguar hunter and fur trader, Julian Gil, and his guide, Alberto Miraña, disappeared near the Río Bernardo, a tributary of the Caquetá. Two months later, the Colombian Navy organized a search party. Fifteen troops and 15 civilians traveled by canoes down the Caquetá, then hiked into the rainforest to the area where Gil and Miraña had last been seen.
Saul Polania was 17 when he participated in the search. As we ate river fish and drank açaí berry juice at an outdoor café in Leticia, the grizzled former soldier recalled stumbling upon “a huge longhouse” in a clearing. “I had never seen anything like it before. It was like a dream,” he told me. Soon, 100 Indian women and children emerged from the forest. “They were covered in body paint, like zebras,” Polania says.
The group spoke a language unknown to the search party’s Indian guides. Several Indian women wore buttons from Gil’s jacket on their necklaces; the hunter’s ax was found buried beneath a bed of leaves. “Once the Indians saw that, they began to cry, because they knew that they would be accused of killing him,” Polania told me. (No one knows the fate of Gil and Miraña. They may have been murdered by the Indians, although their bodies were never recovered.)
Afraid that the search party would be ambushed on its way back, the commander seized an Indian man and woman and four children as hostages and brought them back to the settlement of La Pedrera. The New York Times reported the discovery of a lost tribe in Colombia, and Robert Carneiro of the American Museum of Natural History in New York stated that based on a cursory study of the language spoken by the five hostages, the Indians could well be “survivors of the Yuri, a tribe thought to have become extinct for more than half a century.” The Indians were eventually escorted back home, and the tribe vanished into the mists of the forest—until Roberto Franco drew upon the memories of Polania in the months before his flyover in the jungle.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (15)
these indigenous peoples are not lost. the forest is their home. their cultures and values are preserved. the ones who are lost are the ones who have lost their values and do not know who they are anymore. what do you mean ways of the modern world. their world is modern and civilized but we are the uncivilized ones because we have lost our identity as a people. they don~t have to become like us to be modern.
Posted by paul Jonson on May 11,2013 | 12:07 AM
One of the most rambling articles I've waded through in Smithsonian. Full of inaccuracies as noted previously, and where is "Garcia"? There are pictures of his kids but no mention of him in the piece. We do learn from a caption that he is the son of Jitoma Safiama, so what? Maybe your next piece should be about the lost editors of North America. I also noticed many more, and more relevant photos on line than in the magazine. Maybe I should skip my subscription and just put my laptop in the bathroom.
Posted by Phillip Hagerty on March 18,2013 | 04:26 PM
Surely the irony is not lost on anyone of a tribe in an Amazonian village named 'Nazareth' eschewing (further) contact with the outside world? The mere fact of their village being named 'Nazareth' makes it seem like they've had more than their fair share outside influence already?
Posted by Peter Flint on March 15,2013 | 08:54 AM
the meek inheriting the earth will be the 'down to earth' peoples like this
Posted by Henry Griswold on March 7,2013 | 09:55 AM
Those interested in native peoples of South America may enjoy learning about the Aché people of Paraguay. Some of their stories about their last years in the forest as their lands were being taken by Paraguayans moving in are told in my ethnographic novel The Shrinking Jungle (University of Utah Press, 2012). See www.theshrinkingjungle.com for more information.
Posted by Kevin Jones on March 1,2013 | 03:59 PM
I don't know where the author of this article did his research, but our country isn't in South America.
Posted by A person from India on March 1,2013 | 10:30 AM
I sincerely hope Cecil Burrow's comment is satire.
Posted by christianity is a cancer on March 1,2013 | 10:28 AM
The article makes a significant point in making visible the ongoing efforts directed to protect isolated indigenous groups in Colombia. However, the abundance of errors, inaccuracies and superficial claims throughout the text is striking, especially considering Smithsonian magazine high scientific standards and international prestige. Any reader slightly familiarized with the Colombian Amazon will notice the author’s ignorance of the region, perhaps evidencing his lack of a true interest on the topic. These are some evident errors and inaccuracies that could have been easily checked by the author: -The isolated indigenous groups are not “Vestiges of the Stone Age in the 21st century”; for instance, they possess metal axes and machetes, tools obtained from numerous contacts with non-indigenous peoples during the last four hundred years. -The war with Peru did not take place in 1922 but in 1932 -The Puré River does not flow into the Putumayo but in the Caquetá River. The author’s claim that “The Casa Arana, controlled much of what is now the Colombian Amazon region” is not accurate. The Casa Arana actually dominated a large area between the Caquetá and Putumayo Rivers, comprising around 5 million hectares. Yet, the total area of the Colombian Amazon is 40 million hectares.
Posted by julián gil on February 28,2013 | 12:24 PM
This shows enlightened public policy. Wish we had practiced it with our own native americans.
Posted by on February 27,2013 | 03:09 PM
I think it would be good to contact them, if only to let them know that someone has died for their sins, and that through accepting the blood of Jesus Christ as their one true lord and savior can they be set free. Then they will have a chance of actually living, as opposed to the excrementual existence they have now.
Posted by Cecil Burrow on February 25,2013 | 07:15 AM
"Standing near the maloca, looking up at the plane, was an Indian woman..." Indian woman? Where's the evidence that this woman was from India?
Posted by Robert Halloway on February 24,2013 | 08:38 PM
Great article. Great photos too. Too bad someone can't do something about the timber companies. There's always greed to ruin something.
Posted by Pamella on February 24,2013 | 05:44 PM
Culture is not static for any group of people. But what is alarming is that 90% of the languages, which are classified as endangered, are languages of indigenous peoples. When these languages are lost, so is all the lore locked up inside of them. For when these people eventually become acculturated, they language will replaced by Spanish.
Posted by Tim Upham on February 24,2013 | 01:46 PM
Very nice news, congratulation about the work Eliana. Smithsonian Magazine this people are not "Vestiges of the Stone Age in the 21st century" they are only a diferente culture with diferente Knowledge. This evolutionary view dont get nice with a so good institution. Hilton Nascimento
Posted by Hilton Silva do Nascimento on February 22,2013 | 05:33 AM