'Wake Up, World!' - SOS From the Amazon
BELÉM, Brazil - A human banner made up of more than 1,000 people, seen and photographed from the air, sent the message "SOS Amazon" to the world, in the first action taken by indigenous people hours before the opening in northern Brazil on Tuesday of the 2009 World Social Forum (WSF).
The mass message reflects "our concern about global warming, whose impact we will be the first to feel, although we, the peoples of the Amazon, have protected and cared for the forests," Francisco Avelino Batista, an Apurinán Indian from the Purus river valley in the Brazilian Amazon, told IPS.
"We are raising our voices as a wake-up call to the world, especially the rich countries that are hastening its destruction," said Edmundo Omoré, a member of the Xavante indigenous community from the west-central state of Mato Grosso on the border between the Amazon region and the Cerrado, a vast savannah region in the center of the country.
Both men belong to the Coordinating Committee of Indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian Amazon (COIAB), which joined the Quito-based Coordinating Body of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA) to create their "message from the heart of the Amazon."
Nearly 1,300 indigenous people from about 50 countries, although mainly from Brazil, plan to raise the issues of their rights as original peoples and environmental preservation at this year's edition of the WSF, which runs through Sunday in Belém, a city of 1.4 million people and the northeastern gateway to the Amazon.
Indigenous people have participated in the WSF in previous years, but this time a much larger presence was sought. The aim was for 2,000 to take part, but transport costs and financial difficulties prevented many participants from coming from other countries and from remote areas within Brazil itself.
In addition to indigenous groups, original peoples at the WSF include Quilombolas (members of communities of Afro-Brazilian descendants of escaped slaves) and other native peoples.
The key location chosen for the WSF, and the various global crises that are occurring, have created "a special moment" for original peoples to take a leading role, according to Roberto Espinoza, an adviser to the Andean Coordination of Indigenous Organizations (CAOI).
"A crisis of civilization" is under way, said Espinoza, who described the serious economic, energy and food problems, as well as climate change, as part of the same phenomenon.
In this situation, indigenous people should have political participation as of right, not "as folklore or as a merely cultural contribution," Espinoza, one of the coordinators of the indigenous peoples' presence at the WSF, told IPS.
The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, approved by the United Nations General Assembly, is of paramount importance here, he said. It should not be seen as a "utopian" document; rather, its provisions should be binding, like those of the International Labor Organization's Convention 169 on indigenous and tribal peoples.
Espinoza said he hoped this WSF would produce an agreement for global demonstrations similar to those held in 2003 against the United States' invasion of Iraq.
This time around, the goal would be to mobilise "in defence of Mother Earth and against the commercialization of life," added to specific causes championed by each nation, such as the fight against hydroelectric power stations in Brazil that flood vast areas of Amazon rainforest and displace riverbank dwellers, he said.
The voices of indigenous people are bound to have a greater impact on environmental matters when "the risk of catastrophic climate change in the near future and disputes over natural resources are threatening the survival not only of indigenous peoples, but of humanity itself," Espinoza said.
Indigenous and environmental issues will be even more visible on Wednesday, which is to be dedicated entirely to the Amazon region in an attempt to revitalize the PanAmazon Social Forum, inactive since 2005.
Launching a campaign led by the peoples of the Amazon, who "want a society that values them and understands the value that the land has for them," is a proposal for discussion at the WSF, according to Miquelina Machado, a COIAB leader belonging to the Tukano ethnic group.
This is necessary for "a greater balance with nature," at a time when Brazil's plans for economic growth and the physical integration of South America are fueling projects which have "strong negative impacts on the Amazon and Andean regions," she told IPS.
"The hydroelectric dams flood the land and destroy biodiversity," she said, while lamenting the fact that attempts to block the building of highways, that cause immense deforestation, have been frustrated in the courts, "which have more power."
The presence at the WSF of presidents of Amazon region countries like Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Evo Morales of Bolivia, and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, as well as Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo, should increase the impact of the event, hopefully benefiting the peoples of the Amazon, Machado concluded.
Indigenous peoples' voices should be heard, because "we are the ones who were born and raised in the middle of the forest, and who lead a lifestyle that contrasts with the ambition of capitalism, which does not bring benefits to all," said Omoré.
Furthermore, "we are the first to suffer the effects" of climate change. Rich people can cool themselves down with air conditioners and buy food in supermarkets, but "we depend on the fish in the river and the animals in the forest, so we are concerned about the future that belongs to everyone," added Batista.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
15 Comments so far
Show AllI was talking similar blue thoughts over xmas. Doomed doomed doooomed. And my Father in Law, 78, made a point that gave me a toehold of hope.
"You say, 'fudge, that we live in exponential times, that the bad things are happening faster and faster - but human beings are amazing things and we might be capable of changing fast enough, again, exponentially, to save ourselves. We're moving and communicating and inventing faster than ever before. We can see more history and further out into space every day. Change can happen fast for the good too. Pass the gravy."
Hi all...me again...
This is a heck of a long link, but here's one of the brilliant people residing on our planet who has some important things to say about our predicament. He obviously has more brain power and education than most of us, and it is a long piece of work. Maybe save it and read parts of it a bit at a time,...and...think.
http://www.seventhgeneration.com/learn/inspiredprotagonist/how-sustainably-solve-economic-and-environm...
Perhaps the age of the commenters simply reflects a era when there was considerably greater connection to the natural world. This is one of the reasons we would benefit from hearing the indigenous peoples. At present they are battling the right to live the ancestral stewardship of the land of Pachamama, Mother Earth, that is still in the stage of translation via academic collaboration and education development.
These are extremely WISE people who have for thousands of years lived in balance. The biological knowledge is spiritual/social and not theoretical. As the west drives the shattering blows of an unsustainable delusion of development, the is a convergence of the necessity to recognize another world as possible and emerging.
Strangely, the comments section appears to be a magnet for old farts.
My question is what is it all about? Hard work,long hours,mass consumption, using 1/4 of the world's oil supply, only to wind up bankrupt.The USA has "no money" to ensure that all citizens have access to health care, "no money" for schools, parks, pollution abatement, public transportation etc... Public amenities are starved, such as libraries, museums,and National Parks are neglected or under threat of logging, drilling, or mining.Plundering the remaining wild areas such as the Amazon basin and the Arctic (drill baby, drill) is necessary to ensure future prosperity.
I am 72 yrs old and as I grew up thru the late 30's, 40's, & 50's the majority of the families I knew could live comfortably on the salary of one wage earner. Now it appears to be that a family needs two incomes to get by. If the ultimate goal of capitalism is long hours of hard work for low pay living in a raped and polluted natural environment, then the USA is an unqualified "success"
I'm 42 so I don't know if I count as "young" or not but I am very interested in slowing down the rapacious pace of the destruction of the earth's eco-systems. I just hope the Gen-Y 20 somethings get woken up out of their text messaging world by the economic crisis and maybe start paying attention to the state of the world.
I agree about "capitalism," support your local food co-op if there is one in your town or city.
http://www.cimi.org.br/modules/gallery/show.php?id=803
Some pictures from the WSF
The indigenous peoples are focusing on uniting on a common approach to the environmental crisis. 1,500 are attending, presenting and meeting on rights questions & environmental issues.
theinitiate
Yes, you guys have 20yrs on me... but I agree. There's a change comin' and it won't be pretty, till it has transformed the human race, if it makes it through... The 2012 thing is looking so... how can I say, obvious now. I bought that book ( by many authors) and some theories are of a beautiful almost instant evolution... and some speak of catostrophic events which the human race could barely survive... there's a lot more in between... I see Obama trying so hard along with many others. of course you can't give up or cut and run... but the thing is... I have been seriously watching for a few years now, seeing things from my perspective based on something i study... and all the 'stuff" that has been predicted, is happening and with each happening it's worse than the one before. I hate to say that fate is ruling the roost here, there's a big part of me that doesn't believe that. I want to believe that if as a species we work together we can create our own solutions. I guess we should just keep plugging away...
Don't just be passive and ASSume that some mysterious "energies" are going to take of things in a good or bad way, be a change agent in your own life right now here in the real world or there won't be a real world left for our ancestors to inherit.
If you get to the bottom you will see it is related.
A FEELING
Been bothered for a while now about the state of the world, the people, my country and the people in it and what has transpired since the colonials dumped tea in Boston harbor and told King George to stuff it. Admirable stuff and then write a Declaration of Independence and a Constitution for the ages and right from the start started dragging the words through the dirt and mud since paving was not in yet. What they did to the native populations belied what was in those words, the alien and sedition act, slavery. So, let me see, it is ok to push a people different than themselves (color, mostly) out of their way and if they did not go peaceably they would go by force; even folks of the same color but different culture were “discouraged” from coming over but it was fine by everybody to import slaves to do all the work nobody else wanted and then get paid slave wages. This was all fine, right? After all slavery is mentioned in the Bible is it not? The first prez was cool a couple of other ones too and then we get to Lincoln; who did considerable but who, I think, would have done more but already the American malaise was in; greed and meism.
What is different today? Nothing except that we grew up to be the big bully on the on the world stage and treated and are treating our own people like shit which is not much better than what England was doing when the colonists left; some advancement eh? People talk and make everything complicated by “political realities” which is bullshit for I got mine , when you get as political as me you may get yours. What a way to live. Don’t even know why it is called life when all it is existence. We can sit here forever and blame whoever but the dems and repubs have screwed this peoples here and ,in my opinion, a third party would be doing the same as this first 2. Why? Politics.
Fear; for most of my adult life that has been hammered into the American conscience and it has worked most excellently just look at some of the assholes we’ve let run our government; legally or not.
This has just been a rambling because if I didn’t I would just cry, not only for my country and the people but for the world and all the people out there and here is the reason and the kicker. Read in Common Dreams today where Scientists say that in North America the trees are dying and is past the point of reversal http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/01/22-8.
Can Obama do any good? It may be to late and the feeling I get is that it just might be too late and history will blame him for a peoples mistakes that started well over 200 years ago. Imagine a leader who had slaves as ancestors getting the blame for a national disaster; how ironic is that? Still do my little bit, may not be enough, but that’s me. Fear to promote greed is a potent combination. At 72 death is another adventure and my license plate holder says it for me
FREEDOM IS A CREATORS GIFT
FREEDOM THRIVES IN A WE SOCIETY
Tony 1/23/09
Brother, I feel you...I;m a mere 60 but I can relate to what you saying. Been feeling a lot lately like it;s too late for the human race to change it's ways of greed and fear and ignorance. Well, the Boddhisatva's vow is to enlighten innumerable beings...but I'm just getting tired when I see how deep and widespread the ignorance and fear has become...but I keep trying. Hope I make it to 72 but sometimes I get to thinking about leaving this sorry bunch of monkeys behind.
Mustbefree,
72, huh. You're just a couple years ahead of me. But I'm catching up on that feeling. Since I can remember, I have known nothing but war and/or the preparation for war. Not one stinking solitary day. And what was the product of that war? Exploitation of the common folk.....The workers, the small farmers and the workers and farmers who no longer have their jobs or their farms. Those that still have jobs and farms find them less and less profitable. We work more hours to end up with less. We watch the greedy bastards on Wall Street, Washington, Bejiing, and Berne, London and Paris divide the world up to serve their ravenous appetites. While they fly around in billion dollar private jets we grope around trying to survive another day to please their egos.
Will it end? I do have faith that it will. This human organism has feasted on itself for too long now. We are not in the midst of a depression as many fools believe. We are witnessing the end of the world as we know it. No Armegeddon, no rapture. Just plain old fashioned decay.
The good news? Just as old dying and dead organisms rot into the ground and new and cleaner life springs from it, so will it be with this corrupt human existance. Mustbefree, you and I, if we last just a few more years, will see this magnificent, if painful, transformation.
"This human organism has feasted on itself for too long now. "
That's what Daniel Quinn says in the book Ishmael, I'm not sure I agree with everything in there but there is some good food for thought in that book (disclaimer I am only half way through).
Mustbefree and Seaweed,
I'm with both of you all the way. I have a few years on you (78 next week), but I, too, have hope. I just hope I survive long enough to experience the change. According to the current Mayan calendar, this "phase" of the current life stage will end on Dec. 21 (I think that's the date), 2012. After that, according to Mayan tradition, another "plane" of life will be entered. I know of some who are preparing for this transformation already
And I have a feeling that there will be love, acceptance, equality, wisdom, peace -- and all those things we long for in this chaotic world today.
Paz,
rosie2731
Hi Rosie and all,
Regarding the Mayan calendar and its predictions, the date of December 21, 2012 IS the end of the cycle with nothing more afterward. This may not literally mean there is nothing after that date. The Mayans were star and planet watchers and mathematically calculated the movements into the future. But realize, one must quit somewhere....
Here is a brief synopsis of current key dates and their "poetic" descriptions:
(I begin with a date in 2005. Note the date after our election November 4, 2008. However, one must also realize that we as a country and culture are just one of the actors, though a seriously causative one, and the descriptions are for the entire World. Night gives way to Day and midpoints noted.)
Nov. 29,2005 Beginning of Fourth Night: Bridge-building to consciousness expansion
May 27m,2006 Midpoint Fourth Night
Nov. 23,2006 Beginning of Fifth Day: Budding, breakthrough
May 22, 2007 Midpoint Fifth Day
Nov. 18,2007 Beginning of Fifth night: Destruction, challenge
May 16, 2008 Midpoint Fifth Night
Nov. 12,2008 Beginning of Sixth Day: Flowering, renaissance *** election 11/4
May 11, 2009 Midpoint of Sixth Day:
Nov. 7, 2009 Beginning of Sixth Night: Resting and fine-tuning
May 6, 2010 Midpoint Sixth Night
Nov. 2, 2010 Beginning of Seventh Day: Bliss
May 1, 2011 Midpoint Seventh Day
Oct. 28,2011 Completion of Seventh Day *** Nowhere else is the word "completion" used. THIS is the date that ends the cycle of Days and Nights, the progression of time as a concept. Then....
Dec. 21, 2012 Cosmic Consciousness, Oneness with all creation
Differing mind-sets can interpret these descriptions accordingly. Maybe it will be overt, or maybe it will be subtle...who knows? And maybe it will be devoid of serious impact. I'm just hoping that "void" is NOT a part of the outcome.
Rosie and all--There may or may not be something to the Mayan 2012 thing but it sounds too much like the Bible prophesies the JW's lay on us along with their Watchtower mags. Maybe the Mayans are more reliable...I don't know if I can wait 4 yrs. to find out...but it's not looking too good for the many species going extinct, including and because of us humans is it? Paz back at ya, everyone!