Thursday, December 12, 2013

"AMBROSIO FOUGHT HARD...NOW WE'VE LOST HIM"

ALWAYS AT THE FOREFRONT OF THE STRUGGLE


Last week a great man died.

Guarani Indian leader Ambrosio Vilhalva was murdered as he approached his community, known as Guyra Roká, near the town of Caarapao, in Mato Grosso do Sul state, Brazil.

Vilhalva travelled extensively internationally to speak out about his tribe's plight, and push the Brazilian government live up to its legal obligations and protecting Guarani land.   The Guyra Roká community was evicted from its land by ranchers many decades ago, forcing the people to live in conditions of poverty on the side of a motorway while their land was predominantly turned into sugar plantations. In 2007, the Guyra Roká community began to occupy a part of the land which was taken from them and now live on a small portion of this territory.

In 2010, Vilhalva said, "  The sugar cane plantations are finishing off the Indians. Our lands are getting smaller and smaller. The plantations are killing the Indians."

Survival International  reported that Vilhalva had been receiving death threats, a situation all too common for Guaraní indigenous leaders.  It also wrote:



Ambrósio Vilhalva was a spokesman for his people and a leader in his community’s struggle to reclaim their ancestral land. In the words of another Guaraní spokesman, 


Ambrósio Vilhalva was also an actor. In 2008 he took part in the Italian-Brazilian film Birdwatchers, at the same time a love story and an attempt to describe the plight of the Guaraní-Kaiowá people and their forest homeland. Produced with significant participation from the Guaraní themselves, and with several Guaraní actors in leading roles, the film drew a very diverse range of reactions, from thoughtful praise to angry criticism. This controversy, however, could be counted as a victory for the film, since one of its goals was precisely to call attention to the situation of the Guaraní.


A Guarani spokesman told media: "Ambrósio fought hard against the sugar cane. He was one of our main leaders, always at the forefront of our struggle, so he was being threatened. He was an extremely important figure in the Guarani land campaign, and now, we've lost him".

Vilhalva’s ceaseless campaigning against sugar cane planting made an impact when a joint campaign between the Guyra Roká community and Survival International forced Raízen, a venture between fuel companies Shell and Cosan to use sugar cane for biofuel production, to stop using produce from the Guarani’s ancestral land.


A few days after his death, a protest in Brazil's capital served as a reminder of the deprivations and danger that face many Indigenous Brazilians.  Indian Country Today reported:


...an estimated 1,700 representatives of dozens of tribes marched on Brazil’s Presidential Palace and the Ministry of Justice to protest a proposed judicial decree that would change the rules for creating indigenous territories in a way that protesters said would make it nearly impossible for Indians to gain title to ancestral lands. It was the latest of various indigenous protests this year to bring attention to moves by branches of the Brazilian government that threatened Native land rights, and the increase in violence against their leaders.

 During the  march a confrontation broke about between some protesters and the Palácio do Panalto security force, which used pepper spray to disperse the group. "Some participants were hospitalized," an indigenous leader, Marcos Xukuru, told the Brazilian news agency Adital. The marchers then moved on to the Justice Ministry and requested an interview with the minister; they were told he was out of the office. 

The following is from Survival International.



Ambrósio Vilhalva, 1960-2013 – an obituary

Ambrósio Vilhalva, 1960-2013
Ambrósio Vilhalva, 1960-2013
© Fiona Watson/Survival
One of Brazil’s most prominent indigenous leaders, Ambrósio Vilhalva, has been stabbed to death near his community in southern Brazil. He was 53.
Although details of the murder are confused and there are conflicting accounts, many believe his murder was at the behest of the landowners who have taken over his people’s territory.
With his large, powerful frame, Ambrósio’s physical presence made an instant impact. He was genial and outgoing, and well known for his philosophizing. He liked nothing better than to expound his views on the universe whilst drinking tereré (the ubiquitous tea of southern Brazil) from a cow-horn gourd. His easy-going manner masked a strong will and a deep determination to fight for what he believed in – land, above all, and justice for his people.
Ambrósio’s life typified that of so many Guarani. His community, Guyra Roka or ‘Place of the Bird’, was expelled from their tekoha (ancestral land) in the 1940s and 50s by ranchers and farmers, and dumped in a tiny reserve already overcrowded with hundreds of other Guarani refugees. Violence, suicide and malnutrition were soon rife.
This pattern has been repeated across southern Brazil, where the Guarani, numbering some 50,000, have been powerless witnesses to the theft of 99% of their once-verdant territory. With no land to cultivate and no means of sustaining themselves, the Guarani now have one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
Like many, Ambrósio and his community dreamed of returning to their tekoha. In 2000, led by Ambrósio and his father Papito (the rezador or religious leader) the community moved out of the reserve to camp on a roadside near their land, now cleared, fenced off and filled with endless fields of sugar cane. Life here was grim too – their rickety tarpaulin shelters were permanently enveloped in clouds of dust from the trucks thundering past day and night. Children were malnourished, and adults were forced to seek work on the ranches occupying their land.
Tired of waiting for the government to take action, Ambrósio and Papito led three attempts to reoccupy their land, finally succeeding in 2004. Avoiding the ranchers’ pistoleiros, the community settled on a tiny piece of land where they planted crops amidst the sugar cane. Largely thanks to Ambrósio’s tireless and passionate advocacy, the Minster of Justice finally recognized Guyra Roka as Guarani land in 2009. But it was a victory in name only – the landowners vowed not to move, and occupy the area to this day. The largest and most powerful is Zé Teixeira, a state congressman.
Ambrósio was catapulted into international stardom in 2008 when he played the lead role in Birdwatchers, an award-winning feature film that highlighted the bitter conflict between the ranchers and the Guarani. With his love of language and powerful, brooding presence, Ambrósio was a natural. The film’s director later said he tore up the script and let the Guarani speak their parts as they saw fit.
He attended the launch of the film at the Venice Film festival in 2008, along with other Guarani actors. Here he spoke of the Guarani’s long struggle for land rights and equality in one of Brazil’s richest and most violent states, and said, ‘This is a great film, as people can observe who the Indians really are and see their problems.’
Prophetically, he told a Survival campaigner who accompanied him that, ‘I am marked. When I return to my land they will come for me.’
In a grim turn of the dice, fiction has become reality. Ambrósio’s character in the film is brutally murdered as he leads his people back on to their land at the dead of night to avoid the ranchers’ gunmen.
Whilst he wore his fifteen minutes of fame lightly and toured the sights of Venice with his tereré gourd always to hand, it was not easy to return to the grinding poverty, the constant death threats from the patrolling gunmen, and the total abandonment by the Brazilian state.
Ambrósio is the latest in a long line of Guarani leaders systematically targeted for their activism. Ever since the reoccupation he had received death threats, and the intimidating presence of pistoleiros patrolling around the community meant that he rarely ventured out. Medical staff from the government health agency who were supposed to make regular visits stopped coming, and abandoned the community to their fate. All this undoubtedly took a toll on his health and his family.
When taking his leave Ambrósio would say Ñe’e porã, tape puku, tape porã – ‘Nice talk, a long path, a beautiful path.’
Ambrósio leaves his wife Maria, his father Papito and several children and grandchildren.

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