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 3 of 3)
***
A couple of days after my boat journey, I’m hiking through the rainforest outside Leticia. I’m bound for a maloca belonging to the Uitoto tribe, one of many groups of Indians forced to abandon their territories in the Colombian Amazon during the rubber atrocities early in the past century. Unlike the Yuri and the Passé, however, who fled deeper into the forest, the Uitotos relocated to the Amazon River. Here, despite enormous pressure to give up their traditional ways or sell themselves as tourist attractions, a handful have managed, against the odds, to keep their ancient culture alive. They offer a glimpse of what life must look like deeper in the jungle, the domain of the isolated Yuri.
Half an hour from the main road, we reach a clearing. In front of us stands a handsome longhouse built of woven palm leaves. Four slender pillars in the center of the interior and a network of crossbeams support the A-frame roof. The house is empty, except for a middle-aged woman, peeling the fruits of the peach palm, and an elderly man wearing a soiled white shirt, ancient khaki pants and tattered Converse sneakers without shoelaces.
Jitoma Safiama, 70, is a shaman and chief of a small subtribe of Uitotos, descendants of those who were chased by the rubber barons from their original lands around 1925. Today, he and his wife eke out a living cultivating small plots of manioc, coca leaf and peach palms; Safiama also performs traditional healing ceremonies on locals who visit from Leticia. In the evenings, the family gathers inside the longhouse, with other Uitotos who live nearby, to chew coca and tell stories about the past. The aim is to conjure up a glorious time before the caucheros came, when 40,000 members of the tribe lived deep in the Colombian rainforest and the Uitotos believed that they dwelled at the center of the world. “After the big flooding of the world, the Indians who saved themselves built a maloca just like this one,” says Safiama. “The maloca symbolizes the warmth of the mother. Here we teach, we learn and we transmit our traditions.” Safiama claims that one isolated group of Uitotos remains in the forest near the former rubber outpost of El Encanto, on the Caraparaná River, a tributary of the Putumayo. “If an outsider sees them,” the shaman insists, “he will die.”
A torrential rain begins to fall, drumming on the roof and soaking the fields. Our guide from Leticia has equipped us with knee-high rubber boots, and Plotkin, Matapi and I embark on a hike deeper into the forest. We tread along the soggy path, balancing on splintered logs, sometimes slipping and plunging to our thighs in the muck. Plotkin and Matapi point out natural pharmaceuticals such as the golobi, a white fungus used to treat ear infections; er-re-ku-ku, a treelike herb that is the source of a snake-bite treatment; and a purple flower whose roots—soaked in water and drunk as a tea—induce powerful hallucinations. Aguaje palms sway above a second maloca tucked in a clearing about 45 minutes from the first one. Matapi says that the tree bark of the aguaje contains a female hormone to help certain males “go over to the other side.” The longhouse is deserted except for two napping children and a pair of scrawny dogs. We head back to the main road, trying to beat the advancing night, as vampire bats circle above our heads.
***
In the months before his reconnaissance mission over Río Puré National Park, Roberto Franco consulted diaries, indigenous oral histories, maps drawn by European adventurers from the 16th through 19th centuries, remote sensors, satellite photos, eyewitness accounts of threatening encounters with Indians, even a guerrilla from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia who had seen the Indians while on a jungle patrol. The overflights, says Franco, engendered mixed emotions. “I felt happy and I also felt sad, maybe because of the lonely existence these Indians had,” he told me on our last morning in Leticia. “The feelings were complicated.”
Franco’s next step is to use the photographs and GPS coordinates gathered on his flights to lobby the Colombian government to strengthen protection around the national park. He envisions round-the-clock surveillance by both semi-assimilated Indians who live on the park perimeter and rangers within the park boundaries, and an early warning system to keep out intruders. “We are just at the beginning of the process,” he says.
Franco cites the tragic recent history of the Nukak tribe, 1,200 isolated Indians who inhabited the forests northwest of Río Puré National Park. In 1981, a U.S. evangelical group, New Tribes Mission, penetrated their territory without permission and, with gifts of machetes and axes, lured some Nukak families to their jungle camp. This contact drove other Nukak to seek similar gifts from settlers at the edge of their territory. The Indians’ emergence from decades of isolation set in motion a downward spiral leading to the deaths of hundreds of Nukak from respiratory infections, violent clashes with land grabbers and narco-traffickers, and dispersal of the survivors. “Hundreds were forcibly displaced to [the town of] San José del Guaviare, where they are living—and dying—in terrible conditions,” says Rodrigo Botero García, technical coordinator of the Andean Amazon Project, a program established by Colombia’s national parks department to protect indigenous peoples. “They get fed, receive government money, but they’re living in squalor.” (The government has said it wants to repatriate the Nukak to a reserve created for them to the east of San José del Guaviare. And in December, Colombia’s National Heritage Council approved an urgent plan, with input from the Nukak, to safeguard their culture and language.) The Yuri and Passé live in far more remote areas of the rainforest, but “they are vulnerable,” Franco says.
Some anthropologists, conservationists and Indian leaders argue that there is a middle way between the Stone Age isolation of the Yuri and the abject assimilation of the Ticuna. The members of Daniel Matapi’s Yukuna tribe continue to live in malocas in the rainforest—30 hours by motorboat from Leticia—while integrating somewhat with the modern world. The Yukuna, who number fewer than 2,000, have access to health care facilities, trade with nearby settlers, and send their kids to missionary and government schools in the vicinity. Yukuna elders, says Matapi, who left the forest at age 7 but returns home often, “want the children to have more chances to study, to have a better life.” Yet the Yukuna still pass down oral traditions, hunt, fish and live closely attuned to their rainforest environment. For far too many Amazon Indians, however, assimilation has brought only poverty, alcoholism, unemployment or utter dependence on tourism.
It is a fate, Franco suspects, that the Yuri and Passé are desperate to avoid. On the second day of his aerial reconnaissance, Franco and his team took off from La Pedrera, near the eastern edge of Río Puré National Park. Thick drifting clouds made it impossible to get a prolonged view of the rainforest floor. Though the team spotted four malocas within an area of about five square miles, the dwellings never stayed visible long enough to photograph them. “We would see a maloca, and then the clouds would close in quickly,” Eliana Martínez says. The cloud cover, and a storm that sprang up out of nowhere and buffeted the tiny plane, left the team with one conclusion: The tribe had called upon its shamans to send the intruders a message. “We thought, ‘They are making us pay for this,’” Franco says.
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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