
NEWS FROM BRAZIL
supplied by Brazil Justice Net
Number 528, April 15, 2005
Note from the editors:
We here at Sejup are very concerned with a shooting which happened on March
31st, in two slums in Rio de Janeiro. Thirty people, including a 7 year-old and
six teenagers were killed in a drive-by shooting. The gunmen are alleged to be
members and former members of the police force. The shooting is said to be
retaliation for recent crack downs on police violence and corruption.
Unfortunately, the incident is being lost in all the media coverage of the pope's death and funeral. We fear that those responsible will go
unpunished.
Although to date we have not received any urgent action requests, concerned
parties could certainly write to President Lula to draw attention to the
incident and demand justice. If we receive any urgent action requests, we will
certainly pass them on to you. Below is contact information for President Lula:
Senhor Luis Inacio Lula da Silva - President of Republic Praça dos Três Poderes
Palacio do Planalto, 3 andar
CEP: 70.150-900 Brasília - DF, Brasil
Fax: 61 322 - 2314
email: pr@planalto.gov.br
This edition of News from Brazil focuses on the plight of indigenous people who
leave their traditional lands and move to the city.
From Outros 500 Construindo Uma Nova História Conselho Indigenista
Missionário Cimi Editora Salesiano; São Paulo, 2001.
Excerpt from Chapter on "Indians in the Cities To belong to a people even when
living away from the village.
Translated by Carolyn Moritz, MM
Buredupo´O (thank you), Celso Pitta" phrase in Pankararu, written on a banner
hanging on one of the buildings of "Cingapura", a housing project implanted by
São Paulo´s City Hall. In September of 2000, to the sound of the music and dance
of the ritual of "Toré", 85 Pankararu families thanked the then mayor of São
Paulo for giving them the possibility to live in some of the small apartments of
the urban project installed in the "favela"
(shanty town) Real Parque, in the neighborhood of Morumbí. The almost 250
Pankararu lived for a long time in rented, minuscule, wooden rooms given by City
Hall until they were transferred to the apartments of "Cingapura".
The wait, which was supposed to be six months, lengthened into four years. The
new inhabitants of Cingapura" of Real Parque represent a part of the
community,
which left the village of Brejo dos Padres, in the town of Tocaratu, Pernambuco,
to live in São Paulo. About 300 Pankararu also live in the same favela in the
neighborhood of Morumbi and another 400 are in the neighborhoods and favelas in
the southern and eastern zones of the capital and in favelas in the city of
Guarulho.
What happened that the Pankararu and other dozens of thousands of Indians would
abandon their villages and stay in the cities, to live in sub-human conditions,
as is the case of the neighborhoods and favelas of São Paulo and Manaus?
In the last decades, the numbers of indigenous who live on the margins of small
and large cities has grown frighteningly. The indigenous population concentrated
in some more than others, as is the case of Manaus, and São Gabriel da Cachoeira,
in Amazonas or Boa Vista and Campo Grande, the capitals of Roraima and Mato
Grosso do Sul. What these urban centers have in common is the fact that they are
located near a great number of indigenous areas, some with an elevated
population density.
The city of São Paulo is a special case. While being distant from the regions
which unite many indigenous lands, the city is traditionally the place where
persons, principally, natives from the states of the region of the Northeast,
coming in search of work or a "better life". And it is the indigenous
populations that inhabit that region that most seek the city in order either to
settle for a determined period or to settle definitely.
Having little time to acculturate, the Indians in the cities suffer
discrimination and abandonment on the part of the Brazilian government. There
does not exist any governmental policies of subsistence directed to the ever
growing indigenous contingent obliged to live outside their villages. FUNAI (the
Bureau of Indian Affairs) did not even count this population as they should have, even
though, officially, the indigenous agency admits to the existence of
a number of indigenous living in the cities. It also does nothing to minimize or
impede the exodus, which until now has been uncontrollable, from continuing.
The migratory phenomenon--intense in the last year -- and consequently, the
accelerated process of dispersion and disintegration of the original indigenous
communities, however, has not yet awakened FUNAI. This has become the motive of
concern for CIMI (Conselho Indigenista Missionáriowhich heads the Church's
Indigenous Pastoral), also for other religious entities, and more recently, for
academic entities. The indigenous presence in the urban centers has grown, has
reached a mark of 193, 000 (as of 2001), which corresponds to about 1/3 of the
known indigenous population in Brazil.
Pushed out to the cities in search of survival
Information brought to light as a result of surveys done in Boa Vista, Manaus
and Campo Grande indicate some of the causes for the migration to the cities.
Beyond this, they allow us to understand how the Indians perceive this new life
style.
At the end of the ´80s, Patricia Ferri, An Italian volunteer, identified some of
the reasons why the Indians in Boa Vista left their villages. The struggle for
survival was noted as chief among them. A 28 year-old Wapixana Indian, who had
lived 11 years in the Capitalof Roraima said, "I left my hut because of lack of
food and only the old could stand to eat only mandioc flour and pepper. There,
we had no more hunting nor fishing possibilities. There are so few animals and
fish left."
But in the city, it is not always possible for the Indians to find what is
needed for a life of dignity, as the Italian researcher points out in relating
the case of Deolinda de Freitas do Prado, of the Dessana people, ex-coordinator
of the Indigenous Women's Association of Alto Rio Negro. Living three years in
Manaus, she was able to get a job as a maid, earning less than US$30 per month.
Deolinda commented, "At times I have to go to bed without eating." But with all
the difficulty to survive, she does not think about returning to the village,
because there, she believes she would live in even worse conditions.
One of the principal reasons which compromises the survival in the village and
which also reinforces the exodus to the cities, is the invasion of Indian lands,
especially in the Northeast, even those officially reserved Indian territories.
With the occurrence of these invasions, there is a great reduction of productive
areas for planting, hunting and gathering in the forest, as well as insufficient
space for the physical accommodation of the communities, a factor which
contributes to the overpopulation of the villages.
This is the experience lived by the Pankararu, in Pernambuco, who sought an
alternative solution for survival in São Paulo. Destined as indigenous
territories since the beginning of the ‘40s, the Pankararu lands of Brejo dos
Padres were reduced from their original parameters in a new land demarcation
ratified in 1987. The area of 8,100 hectares, according to information from the
Indians, is actually half occupied by squatters and big landowners. This fact
causes lack of food, over- population in the village and consequently,
indigenous migration.
But the first movement of the Pankararu in the direction of the cities happened
at the end of the ‘50s, as an alternative to overcome the difficulties of a
prolonged period of drought. In the following years, the situation in the area
worsened due to intermittent invasions, which intensified in the ‘80s, with the
construction of the hydroelectric dam in Itaparica, on the São Francisco River.
In the last 45 years, the Pankararu of Brejo dos Padres sought to settle in
nearer regions, as well as in neighboring state, beyond Minas Gerais and São
Paulo. In order to have an idea of the impact of the evolution of the forced
exodus of these Indians, in 1989, it was estimated that a village population was
about 3,700 persons. Eleven years after, almost 1,000 Pankararu live only in
three favelas in the metropolitan region of São Paulo.
Some Pankararu of São Paulo still dream of returning home, to Brejo dos Padres.
But they believe that this only can happen if FUNAI clears out the invaders of
that area, a task that should have happened in 1987.
Frederico de Barros, president of the Pankararu SOS Association, laments the
plight of his people, saying that "it doesn't pay for the people to farm there.
The better part of the land, flat and with water, has been taken over by the
invaders." And he affirms that the Indians are not satisfied with being moved
into the buildings of the "Cingapura"
apartments, and much less with the situation of living in the favelas. And since
the Pankararu believe that, "if they depend on FUNAI", they also won't be
returning to their villages so soon, they decided to fight in order to get an
area of their own, where they can live with dignity, because "the favela is no
place for an Indian".
But another group of Pankararu, who also left Brejo dos Padres years before,
after much wandering, are said to have, finally, finding better luck, today
being installed on a "fazenda" donated by the Diocese of Araçuai, in Minas
Gerais. Waikire tells that "during many years we lived in villages of other
tribes. We had a period of time with the Karajá people, Xerente, Krahô, Pataxó
of Minas and others. We lived with the Pataxó of Minas for 10 years. Today we
are on land that was given to us.We are struggling to regain our traditions, culture and to strengthen out
identity."
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