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A
remarkable story of survival has emerged in Brazil, involving an indigenous
Indian tribe that was thought to have died out more than half a century ago.
The authorities have identified about 250 people living on a remote mountain
range near the border with Peru as members of the long-lost Naua tribe. An official
from the government's Indigenous Affairs Agency said the tribe had been thought
to have become extinct in the 1920s.
Their survival came to light when members of this
hill-top community came forward to protest over the creation of a national park
on their land. The discovery of the Naua is part of a resurgence of indigenous
peoples which has gathered pace in recent years.
Home of the indigenous
Brazil's north-western jungle state of Acre is
one of the remotest places on Earth. It is home to several of the country's
remaining Indian tribes. But, until recently, no one believed that the Naua
still existed, despite the fact that they were once the most populous tribe
in the region.
The local representative of the Agency, Antonio
Pereira, said he had spoken to them, compared anthropological data and confirmed
beyond any doubt that they were Naua. However, according to Mr Pereira, few
of them speak the Naua language and they have lost many of their cultural traditions.
He said that, like all Indian peoples, the Naua will now be entitled to their
own reservation. The task will be to demarcate it. "We thought there were no
more Naua," Mr Pereira said. "Our job now is finding them land. No humans are
allowed in the park, just the forest and the animals."
Colonialists
When Portuguese colonizers arrived in Brazil in
1500 the country had at least five million indigenous inhabitants. War, disease
and hardship caused that number to drop catastrophically, reaching a low point
of about 100,000 in the 1970s. But since then, Indians have won new constitutional
rights and
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The Political & Spiritual Purpose of the
Holy Land
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