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Coronavirus has swept through tribes, killing
elders and inflicting irreparable damage on tribal
history, culture and medicine
When Bep Karoti Xikrin fell ill with Covid-19, he
refused to go to a hospital. The 64-year-old chief of a
Xikrin indigenous village in Brazil’s Amazon was
plagued by headaches and fatigue and struggled for
breath. But, according to his daughter Bekuoi Raquel, he was afraid that if he were admitted to hospital he
might never return.
Instead, he died in his village – and with him, was
lost decades of knowledge and leadership. “He knew
so much about things we haven’t even experienced,”
said Bekuoi, 21. “Everyone admired him. He was
very loved.”
As Brazil’s confirmed overall death toll from
Covid-19 passes 50,000, the virus is scything through
the country’s indigenous communities, killing chiefs, elders and traditional healers – and raising fears that
alongside the toll of human lives, the pandemic may
inflict irreparable damage on tribal knowledge of
history, culture and natural medicine.
The Munduruku people alone have lost 10 sábios, or wise ones. “We always say they are living
libraries,” said Alessandra Munduruku, a tribal leader. “It’s been very painful.”
The victims include prominent figures such as
Paulinho Paiakan, a Kayapó leader who fought
alongside rock star Sting against the Belo Monte dam.
The indigenous organisation Apib has logged at
least 332 Covid-19 deaths, and 7,208 coronavirus
cases across 110 communities. “We are facing
extermination,” said its executive coordinator, Dinamam Tuxá.
Indigenous leaders such as Tuxá say the
government of the far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, is failing to protect the country’s 900,000 indigenous
people – many of whom live in small communities, where dozens often share the same house.
Tuxá said Brazil’s Funai indigenous agency has
taken too long to send emergency food kits to people
isolating in their villages, forcing them to risk
infection by traveling to nearby towns for emergency
government payments. Funai said it had delivered
82,000 basic food kits and 43,000 hygiene kits.
Some leaders even blame government health
workers for bringing the virus. Katia Silene
Akrãtikatêjê, 51, a chief from the Gavião tribe in Pará
state, believes she caught Covid-19 after a
government health team visited their village to give
flu vaccines. “Everyone got sick from there on,” she
said.
From: shorturl.at/finAM. Accessed on 07/01/2020