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Story Publication logo November 18, 2022

Video: Ka'apor, People of the Forest - Episode 2

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Ka’apor, Povo da Floresta
English

The devastation of the Amazon advances in Maranhão, Brazil. What native vegetation remains is in...

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This story excerpt was translated from Portuguese. To read the original story in full, visit Jornalismo TV Cultura. You may also view the original story on the Rainforest Journalism Fund website. Our website is available in English, Spanish, bahasa Indonesia, French, and Portuguese.


The series Ka'apor - People of the Forest, produced by TV Cultura in partnership with the Amazon Rainforest Journalism Fund and the Pulitzer Center, shows how this ethnic group developed a special way to ensure their own survival in the state of Maranhão, in the middle of the Amazon Rainforest.

The second episode of the series tells how the Alto Turiaçu indigenous land in Maranhão keeps its green areas preserved, while the surrounding area has become pastureland. The report also explains how decisions in the villages are taken collectively.

Two thousand Indians are divided into 26 villages on the limits of the demarcated lands. Spread out in nuclei, they manage to patrol, watch over, and, to a certain extent, prevent environmental crimes, such as land grabbing, deforestation, illegal fishing and hunting.


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The strategy has paid off: it is possible to clearly see the green of the inhabited villages in contrast to the devastated forest outside the indigenous territory. The Ka'apor's action is a hope for the survival of both the Amazon Rainforest and countless species of endangered animals.

Reporter Lais Duarte, from TV Cultura's journalism department, spent 10 days with the Ka'apor and tells, in five chapters, the saga of this people. Journalist Jorge Valente is the editor.

Video by Jornalismo TV Cultura