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                    <text>EL SALVADOR

"An Indian With Land Is An Indian With Title"
Adrian Esquino (Nahuat) from El Salvador was interviewed by SAIIC during a recent visit to
Washington, D.C.
SAIIC: What region in El Salvador are you from?
Adrian: The Nahuat are located in the western part of the country. The Lencas live towards
the east, and the Mayas occupy a part of Chalatenango, in the north.
SAIIC: So there are three Indian groups in El Salvador?
Adrian: Yes. Thirty-six per cent of the Salvadorean people are Indian.
SAIIC: What is the general situation presently?
Adrian: Well, brother, the current situation in El Salvador has deteriorated, especially for us
Indian people. Violence has come again. Well, why not say it. Since 1932 [when 35,000 people
were killed] until the 80's, even up to today, the population that has been repressed the most, that
has been massacred the most, has been Indian. On February 22 [1983], 74 Indians from a single
cooperative in Las Hojas were assassinated [see $AIIC Newsletter, Spring, 1985, pp. 4-5]. In 1982 in
another community, 36 people were killed. Generally speaking, it is the Indian people who are in
the worst situation.
SAIIC: Who are the assassins?
Adrian: Generally our brothers are killed by members of the armed forces.
SAIIC: Is the government involved in this?
Adrian: Yes, and that's why we have come to Washington. During the electoral campaign,
Duarte [the president of El Salvador] promised to prosecute Col. Elmer Gonzalez Araujo, who
was responsible for the Las Hojas massacre.
SAIIC: And what happened to the colonel? Has he been prosecuted?
Adrian: No, the opposite has occurred. As a reward, he has been appointed chief of logistics
of the armed forces.
SAIIC: What are the claims
of Indian people?
Adrian: The principal claim
is to the land. Most of us do not
have professions. We live off the
land. We say that an Indian
with land is an Indian with title,
and an Indian without land is
an Indian without title. So our
main objective is to keep our
land. We also have other claims.
Most of us do not have houses.
There is no education, no
schools, no medicine or clinics
for us, no work. We have many
problems in El Salvador.
SAIIC: How do you feel
that your people will overcome
Page 14

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

�this situation? Are you in contact with nonIndian people who can assist you?
Adrian: Yes, the National Association of
Indigenous Salvadoreans (ANIS), as we call our
organization, has joined the Salvadorean
National Workers Unity (UNTS). UNTS is a
coalition of all grassroots organizations, including unions, cooperatives, farmer organizations,
Indians, and other. We are convinced that the
only way to face this situation is to unite. UNTS
is the strongest organization in the nation.
SAIIC: You talked earlier about your land
claims. Do you function as cooperatives?
Adrian: We have about 28 or 29 cooperatives throughout the country. Some of our
cooperatives already have their own land. In
other cases we have negotiated with individuals
who have gradually given us some land. But we
are not benefiting from the famous agrarian
reform, since in our country it is an arbitrary one, and eventually the land will be returned to the
large landowners.
SAIIC: What crops do you grow?
Adrian: We grow rice, beans, maize, choca, camote, and Jicama. We also make crafts. We
make clothes, hats, baskets, and other things. As you know, we Indians can live anywhere on
earth. If we do not do one thing, we do another.
SAIIC: Are you in contact with other Indian organizations internationally?
Adrian: Yes, we are in touch with non-governmental organizations in Canada, the United
States, and with the World Council of Indigenous Peoples. Here I have had meetings with Indian
organizations, Apache and others, and yesterday they sent telegrams to the Duarte government
and to the armed forces.
SAIIC: Do you have contacts with Indian people in Mexico, Guatemala, or Nicaragua?
Adrian: Yes. Today, especially, we know that international Indian solidarity will help us find
a way out, and to get recognition of the rights of Indian people.
SAIIC: What can we do here to help Indian people in El Salvador?
Adrian: Indians and non-Indians are sending telegrams and letters in response to our
appeal, asking that respect be given to the Indian people, and also that Gonzalez Araujo be
prosecuted. After the massacre we insisted that he should be brought to trial. Because of our
demands, we have been robbed of our land, and even of our offices, so we have come to
Washington to be heard.
SAIIC: Would you like to send a message to Indian people in the United States?
Adrian: I urge you to unite in solidarity with the Nahuat, Lenca, and Maya people of El
Salvador during this war situation. We believe that your support, moral or financial, will help us
solve our problems and ultimately achieve peace.
I would like to invite all brothers and sisters to visit us in Sonsonate on December 21 and 22,
when we have our traditional celebration. We Indians need to be strongly united and to help each
other. We especially need your support with the difficult situation in El Salvador.
Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

Page 15

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                    <text>Announcements
The Fifth General Assembly of the World Council of
Indigenous Peoples was held July 11-17 in Lima, Peru. Prior to
the General Assembly, the WCIP sponsored a series of workshops in Cuzco, Peru, from July 4-10. Workshop topics included
political economy and self-determination, development projects,
analysis and prognosis, organization and management for
development, and Indian policy on development. For further
information contact the World Council of Indigenous Peoples,
555 King Edward Ave., Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5 Canada. Telephone (613) 230-9030.
August 3-7, 1987, the United Nations Commission on
Human Rights, Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, Working Group on Indigenous Populations will meet in Geneva, Switzerland.
The Museum of the American Indian seeks submissions for
the Fifth Native American Film Festival to be held December
11-13, 1987. Animated, narrative, and experimental works on all
topics concerned with Indians of North, Central, and South
America will be considered for this non-competitive festival.
Formats include 16mm, three-quarter inch video, and one-half
inch VHS. Deadline for submitting entries is August 14. Contact
the Museum at Broadway and 155th St., New York, NY 10032 for
more information.

.
'

The First Meeting of Caribbean Indians will be held in the
Dominican Republic in August, 1988, rather than 1987, as stated
in a previous issue of the SAIIC Newsletter.

Did You Miss Your Spring Issue?
An abundance of springtime activities prevented SAIIC
from publishing the Spring issue of the Newsletter. We hope you
missed us. Paid subscriptions will be extended an issue to
compensate.
SAIIC promotes exchange and unity among all Indians of the Americas by making
information available and by making increased direct communication possible.SAIIC also
makes South and Central American Indian issues and culture known to the general Englishspeaking public. The Newsletter, one of SAIIC's projects, reflects indigenous perspectives of
the Americas.

Nilo Cayuqueo, SAIIC Coordinator, and Susan Lobo, Publications Editor

Page 18

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

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                    <text>olic Church is allied with local elites against Indian interests the evangelicals sometimes provide
welcome support. The following articles describe relations between evangelicals and Indian
communities in various areas of South and Central America.

Ayoreo Deaths In
Paraguayan Chaco
Late last year in Paraguay missionary activities of the New Tribes Mission caused conflict between Indians which resulted in five
deaths and four injuries. According to Hoy, a
major Paraguayan newspaper, a group of
Ayoreo Indians who are a part of the New
Tribes Faro Moro mission went into the forest in
search of Totoviegosode, other Ayoreo Indians
who have refused to abandon their traditional
lifestyle. The Totoviegosode ambushed the New
Tribes converts, resulting in deaths and injuries.
News of the incident was first reported on the
Mennonite radio station ZP30, which led other
media in Paraguay to suspect that the Mennonites, large landowners with a history of antagonism to Indian people, had distorted the news
to protect New Tribes proselytizing.
A Catholic priest in the area, Father Jose
Sanardini, blamed the New Tribes Mission for the deaths of the Ayoreo. He said, "It is possible
that there is a relationship between the New Tribes missionaries and large landowners who covet
land where the Totoviegosode live."
According to a report by the Ayoreo Project, which is sponsored by the Indigenist Association of Paraguay, missionaries first contacted the Ayoreo Indians in 1967. In addition to bibles,
they also supplied rifles. and traps, encouraging the Indians to become professional hunters. The
missionaries acted as middlemen in charge of the commercialization of skins and administrators
of the income generated from the project.
By 1971 Ayoreo people had begun approaching the Mennonite settlements in the Chaco in
search of work, marking the transition from independent life to rural workers. By 1974 it was no
longer possible to make a living from hunting and more Indians became wage laborers subjected
to low pay and subhuman treatment.
Project Ayoreo provided the following description of the area on the periphery of Filadelfia
where some Ayoreo live: "The place has no shelter and no bathrooms. During the summer
thousands of flies accumulate around the encampment, and during the winter the Indians sit
very dose to each other by the fire and cough all night long.
"In the mission itself, the missionaries practice a simple plan. They force the Indians to obey
a rigid work discipline. They cannot rest before the day ends. They cannot drink terere [a traditional tea] during work hours. The routine is reinforced with biblical readings about sobriety,
hard work, family, and property in order to make them work harder for the bosses."
Vol. 3, No. 3.Summer, 1987

Page3

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B

0
J::

c..

Loyan Red Hawk and
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testing the mics before
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Central American
Indian Update," which
is heard the third and
fourth Fridays of each
month at 8:00p.m.
on KPFA-FM, 94.1 in
northern California.

SAIIC/Intertribal Friendship House
523 E. 14th St.
Oakland, CA 94606

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NEWSLETTER

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 7550, Berkeley, CA 94707 USA
Office: 523 E. 14th St.1 Oakland 1 CA (415) 452-1235
Voi.3,No.3

Summer, 1987

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Earthquake Disrupts
Many Indian Communities
On the night of March 5, an earthquake
measuring between 6.8 and 7.2 on the Richter
scale struck southeastern Ecuador. The epicenter of the earthquake was in the Amazonian
province of Napo. The tremors caused mudslides and avalanches which dammed rivers
with debris. When rising waters burst through
the dams, floods devastated downstream
areas. Entire communities disappeared as
mudslides swept away houses, livestock, agricultural land, and people. Reports indicate that
between 2,000 and 3,500 Indian people are
missing and presumed dead from the earthquake and its aftermath.
In the mountains the worst damage
occurred in the densely populated Indian
regions of Imbabura and Pichincha. Although
crops and roads remain intact, between 10,000
and 12,000 homes were destroyed, leaving at
least 25,000 people homeless. People are now
living in improvised shelters made of sticks,
plastic sheeting, and cut grass.
Immediately after the earthquake,
CONAIE, the Confederation of Indian Nations
of Ecuador, which includes organizations from
both the Amazonian and mountain regions,
went into action. Indian leaders from all over
Ecuador gathered in Quito to work through
CONAIE to assess damage in isolated areas,
handle public relations, and formulate proposals for relief and reconstruction.
In Amazonia CONAIE is concentrating

relief efforts to help Indians rebuild canoes,
most of which were lost during the initial
flooding, so people will be ready to navigate
the rivers when the waters have subsided. In
the mountain regions, CONAIE is working
with local cooperative work teams called
mingas to rebuild destroyed houses.
According to Cristobal Naikiai, general
secretary of CONFENIAE, the organization of
Amazonian Indians which forms part of
CONAIE, "virtually none of the aid sent by the
United States government is reaching Indian
people. The North American and Ecuadoran
governments are targeting their efforts at rebuilding roads for oil corporations and African
palm plantations, while ignoring the needs of
the people in the region. The attitude of the
North American army reserve units which are
doing relief work is to discredit the Indian
confederation, thus causing more confusion
and conflict."

At the request of CONFENIAE, SAIIC is soliciting funds for earthquake relief which
will go directly to Indian communities through CONFENIAE. If you are interested in
helping, please contact SAIIC at (415) 452-1235 or by mail. Checks for financial contributions
should be made payable to Capp Street Foundation and sent to SAIIC at P.O. Box 7550,
Berkeley, CA 94707. Oxfam America and Catholic Relief Services are also raising money in
the United States to be sent directly to CONFENIAE in Ecuador.

Page 12

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

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                    <text>Evangelical

selytizing

Missionaries, missionaries, go and leave us all alone . / .
We've got a God of our own.
-Floyd Westerman, J. Curtiss
Throughout the Americas, fundamentalist Christian missionaries, often called evangelicals,
have proselytized for many years among both rainforest tribal people and highland agricultural
Indian communities. Their aggressive missionary work has had a widespread impact in the
Amazon basin, the highlands of southern Mexico, western Guatemala, Ecuador, and around Lake
Titicaca between Peru and Bolivia.
According to David Stoll, a North American who has conducted extensive research on evangelical proselytizing among Indian people, conservative Protestant missions have surpassed the
Catholic Church in influence among many tribal people. By reaching the last and the smallest
groups, evangelicals hope to fulfill a prophecy in the Christian bible and bring a second coming
of Christ.
The misnamed Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL), one of the largest of such evangelical
organizations, has worked in 370 native languages in South and Central America. SIL, which
raises funds in the United States under the name of the Wycliffe Bible Translators, has tried to
avoid opposition to its work by entering
countries as linguistic scientists. It has secured
contracts from national governments to conduct
linguistic work and then proselytized among the
communities to which it has gained access.
The more fundamentalist New Tribes Mission operates in 79 languages. It has often been
criticized for its zeal in attracting nomadic
hunter-gatherers to more settled lifestyles without protecting them from the consequences of
cultural disruption. In recent years it has
pursued contacts with Yuqui, Ayoreo, and Ache
bands in Paraguay and Bolivia and with Macu
and Jaarua in Colombia.
The legacy of evangelical missions is complicated. Many Indian organizations angrily
reject them, tiring of their paternalism, of the
pressure to adopt evangelical beliefs, and of the
disparity in wealth between the missionaries
and themselves. The conservatism of evangelical
groups has often stood in the way of Indian
communities defending their right to land and
other resources. Yet, there is also an underlying
basis of support for the missionaries in some
communities. The missionaries are sometimes
more reliable providers of schools and health
clinics than governments, and where the Cath-

Page 2

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

�olic Church is allied with local elites against Indian interests the evangelicals sometimes provide
welcome support. The following articles describe relations between evangelicals and Indian
communities in various areas of South and Central America.

Ayoreo Deaths In
Paraguayan Chaco
Late last year in Paraguay missionary activities of the New Tribes Mission caused conflict between Indians which resulted in five
deaths and four injuries. According to Hoy, a
major Paraguayan newspaper, a group of
Ayoreo Indians who are a part of the New
Tribes Faro Moro mission went into the forest in
search of Totoviegosode, other Ayoreo Indians
who have refused to abandon their traditional
lifestyle. The Totoviegosode ambushed the New
Tribes converts, resulting in deaths and injuries.
News of the incident was first reported on the
Mennonite radio station ZP30, which led other
media in Paraguay to suspect that the Mennonites, large landowners with a history of antagonism to Indian people, had distorted the news
to protect New Tribes proselytizing.
A Catholic priest in the area, Father Jose
Sanardini, blamed the New Tribes Mission for the deaths of the Ayoreo. He said, "It is possible
that there is a relationship between the New Tribes missionaries and large landowners who covet
land where the Totoviegosode live."
According to a report by the Ayoreo Project, which is sponsored by the Indigenist Association of Paraguay, missionaries first contacted the Ayoreo Indians in 1967. In addition to bibles,
they also supplied rifles. and traps, encouraging the Indians to become professional hunters. The
missionaries acted as middlemen in charge of the commercialization of skins and administrators
of the income generated from the project.
By 1971 Ayoreo people had begun approaching the Mennonite settlements in the Chaco in
search of work, marking the transition from independent life to rural workers. By 1974 it was no
longer possible to make a living from hunting and more Indians became wage laborers subjected
to low pay and subhuman treatment.
Project Ayoreo provided the following description of the area on the periphery of Filadelfia
where some Ayoreo live: "The place has no shelter and no bathrooms. During the summer
thousands of flies accumulate around the encampment, and during the winter the Indians sit
very dose to each other by the fire and cough all night long.
"In the mission itself, the missionaries practice a simple plan. They force the Indians to obey
a rigid work discipline. They cannot rest before the day ends. They cannot drink terere [a traditional tea] during work hours. The routine is reinforced with biblical readings about sobriety,
hard work, family, and property in order to make them work harder for the bosses."
Vol. 3, No. 3.Summer, 1987

Page3

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                    <text>COLOMBIA

Indian Struggle For Land In Cauca Intensifies
The Colombian government has declared
the department of Cauca a "zone of national
rehabilitation," a term used to designate areas
where special measures must be taken as a
result of human actions or natural events. In
Cauca, the "disaster" that has occurred is increasing social tension caused by the old
problem of land.
The Cauca is the only department in
Colombia where the majority of the population
is Indian, but the region has long been controlled politically and economically by a coalition of landlords and a conservative Roman
Catholic church. The power elite was shocked
in the early 1970's by the creation of the Cauca
Regional Indian Council (CRIC), which is
among the most successful grassroots political
organizations in Colombia in recent years.
CRIC has been central to the struggle of
Indian people throughout Colombia. It was a
key contributor to the creation of the National
Indian Organization of Colombia (ONIC) in
1980, which includes 18 regional federations
representing 75 per cent of the Indian population of the country. Each organization publishes its own newspaper, and the 10-year-old
Unidad Ind{gena, formerly published by CRIC,
is now the official publication of ONIC. Unidad
Alvaro Ulcue, CRIC's current newspaper, is
named in honor of the only Indian to become a
priest in Colombia. He was killed two years
ago as a result of his participation in the Indian
struggle.
Although Indian people have been expelled from their land and forced to integrate
into non-Indian society for centuries, the formation of regional and national Indian organizations has meant that the "Indian conflict" has
been forced onto the government's agenda of
major problems. The situation is complicated
by the armed struggled being waged between
government forces and non-Indian guerrillas.

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

An editorial in the CRIC newspaper in
November, 1986, states that "the guerrilla
groups have declared war from Indian territory on the current government." CRIC condemns this development because of its negative social and political consequences for
Indian people. Indian organizations reject the
militaristic solution which has been proposed
by, among others, former president Carlos
Lleras Restrepo, who recently called for the
organization of patrols by military veterans in
the countryside. This would result in the
institutionalization of para-military organizations which have been responsible for murder and destruction in the area. Faced by two
armies, ONIC adopted a neutral position at its
national congress last year, but from an editorial in a fall, 1986, issue of Unidad Alvaro
Ulcue, it seems that CRIC is more inclined to
support the government initiative as the best
way to maintain the autonomy of Indian
organizations and to defend Indian land.

Page 13

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                    <text>SIL Serve,s G

rnment Interests In

The Summer Institute of Linguistics has operated in Brazil since 1959. The following statement on
their activities was presented by the Union of Indian
Nations (UNI) to the United Nations Working
. Group on Indigenous Peoples in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1985.
"From the point of view of the government, they had everything to offer: personnel
skilled in technology and methodology, experience working in similar situations in 21 countries, and the fact that they provide their work
for free. And SIL textbooks served the development policies of the government, like trying to "Those Summer Institute of Linguistics people are
convince Indians that a road cut through our really a pain in the mouth."
land would benefit us.
"In order to change the influence of SIL, bold moves are needed. Indian education should
not be limited to the fundamentals of reading, writing, and arithmetic. We must also redeem the
past, not only to retain certain myths and narratives, but also to ensure the perpetuation of our
body of scientific knowledge, of our knowledge of the world, of our own ways of accounting and
measuring, and of our relationship with nature. Education should offer more than just an understanding of the world of whites. We need to move around and defend ourselves within it."

Many Sects Seek Indian Converts In Ecuador
Juan Aulestia, Oxfam America associate program representative for South America, made the follow'. ing comments in an interview with SAIIC.
"The government is focusing on how to disarticulate the Indian organizations. They have
been utilizing many strategies. One is allowing an open-door policy to religious sects. The fundamentalists, such as the Jehovah Witnesses and the Pentecostals, have been able to penetrate to
every corner of the country, which is steadily dividing Indian organizations and communities. In
Ecuador there are about 300 different religious sects, most of them from the United States, as well
'We are not against a belief in God. We are very religious, very religious. We believe
that people are the same as the plants, as all of the natural world. All have life and are
brothers."
-

-Floriberto Diaz Gomez (Mixe) of Oaxaca, Mexico
"Most primitive tribal people are steeped in cultural practices initiated and motivated
by superstition and fear. Religion ... is generally a spiritist form of worship which is energized by satanic forces."

-New Tribes Mission

Page4

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

�as the Unification Church [Moonies], which has over 150,000 followers.
"The people who belong to these churches no longer relate to the rest of the community
people. They do not participate in traditional events and will not participate in community
organizations. The social base is being divided.
"Under President Roldos, the Summer Institute of Linguistics was expelled from Ecuador,
but the current government has been doing everything possible to bring them back. These sects
do much work on the government's agenda in terms of providing basic education and controlling
the level of Indian community unity and organizing.
"There have been three pillars of colonial rule: the state, the military, and the Catholic
church. The Catholic church has maintained that position, a power position. There has been a
spiritual gap and a lack of direct attention. So in some instances, the evangelical churches have
responded to some of the direct needs of Indian communities."

SIL Divides Indian Communities In

eX ICO

Floriberto Diaz Gomez of the Assembly of Mixe Authorities in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico, recently
described to SAIIC the activities of SIL in his community.
"The Summer Institute of Linguistics came
into the Mixe region in 1936 during the Cirdenas era. They came first to work as linguists.
When we were little kids, we were very frightened of the gringos because our parents told us
that they ate people. Our families tried to protect
us any way they could. The Institute introduced
a different religion and their consciousness
began to intrude into the communities. They
sent Mixe to study at Mitla, which was their
training center. After a while it was even Mixe
who were pushing their religious belief while
doing linguistic work.
"They have made bible translations, but
they haven't made their linguistic work useful to
the people. Even though they have been working here since the 30's, Mixe people still don't
read and write in Mixe. If they really had an
interest in teaching us to read and write our language, there would have been two or three
generations reading and writing by now.
'We consider that religion is something

Attempts by outsiders to impose religious beliefs on
Indians has a long history, as shown in this Indian
painting from the first years after the Spanish
conquest of Mexico. A Spaniard with a sword fights
one Indian while a priest baptizes a child.
Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

PageS

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                    <text>CHILE

apuches Present Views to Pope
'We, the Mapuches, want to make our
own present and future history. We do not
want to fight or to be fought. We want understanding, and along with it peace, justice, liberty and adequate lands for development in
our own style, culture, and capacity."
These words are part of a letter presented
to Pope John Paul II at Pampa Ganaderos
during his recent visit to Chile. The letter also
says that, "Five hundred and fifty years ago,
our people lived on this land which nourished
us both physically and spiritually. We were defeated militarily and placed on small reservations where the land is poor. Because of this
we have had to change certain aspects of our
culture and our social and economic systems.
Forms and styles have changed with time, but
our situation as a segregated ethnic minority
has been constant and becomes more intense.
"Pefii [Brother] John Paul, we are not
even considered a people. The laws and the
constitution of the Republic of Chile do not
recognize our existence." The letter explains
that although the Mapuche are a people,
"legally we do not exist in this society."
'We, the Mapuches, want you to know
that we are a very religious people, that we
have deep faith. Our god Ngenechen Kimnei

knows this. We trust that you understand and
support us, but we need you to listen to our cry
and pray to your god, Jesus Christ, to intervene
before those who do not want to listen to our
problems."
The Mapuche want "respect . for our
traditions. We want to continue celebrating our
religious ceremonies, our Nguillatunes, and
speaking our language, Mapuduglin. Through
it, we transmit to our children our values,
habits, and customs. To not speak . our language would be like not breathing, not living."
In Pampa Ganaderos, where the Pope
made a public appearance and mingled with
people of the .Temuco area, a large rehue
(Mapuche altar) was built. The Mapu~hes who
carved it and the machi (spiritual leader) who
blessed it hope that it will later be put in a
central location in Temuco to remind everyone
of the Pope's encounter with Mapuche people.
In another letter to Pope John Paul II, the
Mapuche organization Nehuen Mapu asks
support in their struggle for restoration of
Mapuche land, recognition of the land titles
granted by Spain centuries ago, programs of
bilingual education and technical assistance,
loans for agricultural development, and political autonomy.

Mapuches Occupy

In

A farm of 380 hectares was occupied by
two Mapuche communities comprising 160
people in Puren on April 5, 1987. The Mapuches said that the act is "part of a movement
which intends to recover the land that legitimately belongs to us because it belonged to our
ancestors. Our current conditions force us to
find a way to survive."
The farm was occupied by members of
the Loncoyan Grande and Pichihueico communities, who say they are heirs.of Cacique Jose

Manuel Catrileo Inal1 who had legal authority
over the land. Members of the Mapuche organization AD-Mapu, who helped organize the
takeover, said, 'We offer our support and $Olidarity as we feel this is a just struggle to recover land legitimately theirs and necessary for
their survival.ff AD-Mapu also noted that the
presence of elders, children, and animals of the
communities demonstrates how desperate
their situation is and how inadequately the
national economy serves their needs.

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

uren

Page7

�The Mapuches were removed on the
evening of April 8 by Arigol police led by the
governor of Malleco province. The removal
was not as violent as the previous year, when
some of the same people occupied the farm
and four Mapuches received gunshot wounds.
Other events involving AD-Mapu include
the convening of its Fifth Assembly April13-16
in the headquarters of the Catholic bishop of
Temuco. In Santiago, the capital, AD-Mapu recently held a press conference at the office of

the Chilean Commission for Human Rights to
denounce a summons issued by the Ministry of
the Interior as '"unjust and immoral political
persecution."
"While there is one Mapuche left in
Chile, he will defend his people so as to
fulfill the ideals of justice and liberty."
-Antupillan, in 1641

BRAZIL

Struggle For Indian Rights In New Constitution
The Union of Indian Nations (UNI) is
facing a critical period as Brazil's new constitution is being written without the participation of official Indian representatives. UNI
and many national and international groups
are watching the process closely and pressuring the constitutional assembly to guarantee
Indian rights and protect Indian land.
Ailton Krenak, national coordinator of
UNI, writes to SAIIC: "It is criminal what they
are doing to contain the Indian population now
at the end of the 20th century, especially
regarding our territorial rights and the use of
our resources.
"The project Calha Norte, a project of the
National Security Council, provides for the
military occupation of the Amazon, especially
in the areas of the Solimoes, Negro, and Bravo
rivers. This implies the establishment of military bases and the presence of civilian workers
throughout 6,000,000 square kilometers of our
land. It's 40 per cent of all Indian territory and
"It is very important for us to know that your organization exists there in the United
States and that you make information available and encourage exchanges among Indian
people of South and North America. It's very important to expand the knowledge and
understanding of our peoples. Please keep us informed of the ways we can help with these
goals."

-Domingos Verissimo (Terena), UNI leader, in a letter to SAIIC.

Page8

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

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                    <text>CHILE

apuches Present Views to Pope
'We, the Mapuches, want to make our
own present and future history. We do not
want to fight or to be fought. We want understanding, and along with it peace, justice, liberty and adequate lands for development in
our own style, culture, and capacity."
These words are part of a letter presented
to Pope John Paul II at Pampa Ganaderos
during his recent visit to Chile. The letter also
says that, "Five hundred and fifty years ago,
our people lived on this land which nourished
us both physically and spiritually. We were defeated militarily and placed on small reservations where the land is poor. Because of this
we have had to change certain aspects of our
culture and our social and economic systems.
Forms and styles have changed with time, but
our situation as a segregated ethnic minority
has been constant and becomes more intense.
"Pefii [Brother] John Paul, we are not
even considered a people. The laws and the
constitution of the Republic of Chile do not
recognize our existence." The letter explains
that although the Mapuche are a people,
"legally we do not exist in this society."
'We, the Mapuches, want you to know
that we are a very religious people, that we
have deep faith. Our god Ngenechen Kimnei

knows this. We trust that you understand and
support us, but we need you to listen to our cry
and pray to your god, Jesus Christ, to intervene
before those who do not want to listen to our
problems."
The Mapuche want "respect . for our
traditions. We want to continue celebrating our
religious ceremonies, our Nguillatunes, and
speaking our language, Mapuduglin. Through
it, we transmit to our children our values,
habits, and customs. To not speak . our language would be like not breathing, not living."
In Pampa Ganaderos, where the Pope
made a public appearance and mingled with
people of the .Temuco area, a large rehue
(Mapuche altar) was built. The Mapu~hes who
carved it and the machi (spiritual leader) who
blessed it hope that it will later be put in a
central location in Temuco to remind everyone
of the Pope's encounter with Mapuche people.
In another letter to Pope John Paul II, the
Mapuche organization Nehuen Mapu asks
support in their struggle for restoration of
Mapuche land, recognition of the land titles
granted by Spain centuries ago, programs of
bilingual education and technical assistance,
loans for agricultural development, and political autonomy.

Mapuches Occupy

In

A farm of 380 hectares was occupied by
two Mapuche communities comprising 160
people in Puren on April 5, 1987. The Mapuches said that the act is "part of a movement
which intends to recover the land that legitimately belongs to us because it belonged to our
ancestors. Our current conditions force us to
find a way to survive."
The farm was occupied by members of
the Loncoyan Grande and Pichihueico communities, who say they are heirs.of Cacique Jose

Manuel Catrileo Inal1 who had legal authority
over the land. Members of the Mapuche organization AD-Mapu, who helped organize the
takeover, said, 'We offer our support and $Olidarity as we feel this is a just struggle to recover land legitimately theirs and necessary for
their survival.ff AD-Mapu also noted that the
presence of elders, children, and animals of the
communities demonstrates how desperate
their situation is and how inadequately the
national economy serves their needs.

Vol. 3, No.3. Summer, 1987

uren

Page7

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