Versuchen GOLD - Frei
'Hope has returned' Amazon tribe hails Lula's fight
The Guardian Weekly
|February 14, 2025
Two years after Brazil's president vowed to help, the Yanomami are reclaiming their land, health and future
The Yanomami villagers had trekked for days through some of Brazil's most secluded jungles to reach the assembly, their traditional clothing announcing an existence deeply entwined with nature that stretched back thousands of years.
As they filed into a thatched communal hut to share stories of their lives, the forest dwellers wore armlets fashioned from toucan and macaw plumes and monkey-tail headbands. "It's a symbol of unity because these little monkeys never get separated: they always roam together," said local leader Júnior Hekurari as the group gathered in Kori Yauopë, a Yanomami hamlet on a table mountain.
"Today the Yanomami people are no longer crying because our children are no longer dying," Hekurari told the meeting, recalling how his people had been pushed to the brink of destruction in recent years as tens of thousands of illegal miners invaded their lands and Brazil's previous government abandoned them to their fate.
Two years after Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva became president and launched an emergency operation to rescue inhabitants of Brazil's largest Indigenous territory, hunger and infant mortality rates were falling and miners had been expelled.
"We are recovering," Hekurari said, thanking Lula for sending health workers and hundreds of troops to kick out the miners.
The optimism during the four-day summit in Kori Yauopë comes after a traumatic spell for the estimated 32,000 Indigenous people who live in about 390 villages in the Yanomami territory, an area of rainforest covering 9.6m hectares along Brazil's Amazon border with Venezuela.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 14, 2025-Ausgabe von The Guardian Weekly.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
Heaven made
With a towering new album about female saints in 13 languages, Rosalía is pop's boldest star-and one of its most controversial
6 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
How Milei's 'chainsaw' cuts have hit the most vulnerable
Argentinians are used to the large rubbish containers in Buenos Aires.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
"The Peace Corps volunteers were just doing small things. Not what really needed to be done'"
On school holidays, when he went back to his village, David began to notice unwashed young Americans hanging out with his friends and family.
10 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Bumpy ride
Epic western with a brilliant plot is let down by having one eye on literary immortality
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Smash it up: finding new ways to use up excess lasagne sheets
I've accidentally bought too many boxes of dried lasagne sheets. How can I use them up? Jemma, by email
2 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
The best way to end this '6-7' obsession? Adults get on board
Don't tell your kids, but “6-7” is Dictionary.com’s “word of the year” for 2025.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Net zero gains A Cop30 minus Trump is better than one with a US wrecking ball
For years, countries around the world pressed the US to engage with them in addressing the climate crisis and to show it was serious about taking action.
2 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
'Matt's too sexy for my show'
As his scandalous novel The Death of Bunny Munro lands on our screens, Nick Cave and the show's star Matt Smith discuss Kylie, bad dads and child actors
5 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
When the president is groped in public, women know who to blame
'Machismo in Mexico is so fucked up not even the president is safe,\" said Caterina Camastra, a professor and feminist, when I talked to her in Morelia, a city west of the Mexican capital last week.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Zohran Mamdani built the greatest field operation by any political campaign in New York's history-by getting citizens to talk to each other.Can Democrats learn from his success? 'Unstoppable force' that drove victory
A WEEK BEFORE ZOHRAN MAMDANI'S convention-shattering victory in the New York City mayoral election, members of his vast army of youthful volunteers were amply aware of what was at stake.
8 mins
November 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

