- The Andirá-Marau Indigenous Reserve in Brazil’s Amazonas state — in a remote part of the Amazon basin — covers 7,885 square kilometers (3,044 square miles), and is occupied by 13,350 Sateré-Mawé indigenous people who live sustainably off the rainforest.
- However, an area of Sateré-Mawé ancestral land along the Mariaquã River lies outside the demarcated reserve. It was abandoned by the Sateré-Mawé due to an epidemic. The Indians have renewed their claim to the territory since 2002 but FUNAI, Brazil’s indigenous agency, has not yet sorted the situation out.
- But the Mariaquã lands are now in dispute, as illegal loggers and land grabbers invade and threaten the indigenous people living in the area around the village of Campo Branco. Dozens of outsiders have made land claims to CAR, Brazil’s Rural Environmental Registry, and allegedly threatened the Indians if they don’t vacate.
- Mongabay’s reporting team joined a small group of Sateré-Mawé as they travelled to Campo Branco to strengthen their indigenous land claim. The Sateré fear that President Bolsonaro’s pledge to pass a law allowing Brazilians with “official” land claims to use arms to evict indigenous “invaders” could be used against them.
In February, a Mongabay reporting team travelled to the Brazilian Amazon, spending time with the remote Sateré-Mawé, documenting their culture and long-time conflict with mining companies and land grabbers. This series looks at new threats imposed on the Sateré and indigenous groups across Brazil as they’re threatened by the ruralist-friendly policies of President Jair Bolsonaro. The trip was funded by the Amazon Rainforest Journalism Fund in association with the Pulitzer Center and Mongabay.
FORTALEZA, Pará state, Brazil — It’s late night when the Sateré-Mawé warriors end their singing in the tiny indigenous village beside the Andirá River, on the border between Pará and Amazonas states in the Brazilian Amazon.
Their chanting gives way to the songs of the forest: amphibians, insects and primates — including the twilight roar of howler monkeys (Alouatta caraya). Then, little by little, the night sounds are supplanted by a dawn chorus and the village begins to wake up.
The warrior Benito Miquiles admits to us that he couldn’t sleep; his night-time hours having been filled with thoughts of the journey ahead, and with the intense pain he still feels from Waumat, the ant-stinging rite of passage he endured just hours before.
Yesterday, this young man put his hands in gloves filled with bullet ants (tucandeiras), that deliver one of the world’s most agonizing stings; this was Benito’s fifteenth repetition of a ritual that prepares a Sateré-Mawé man to become a tuxaua (leader).
However, he has another reason for coming to Fortaleza — the preservation of his threatened homeland.
Laying claim to lost lands
Benito’s family lives in Campo Branco village on the Mariaquã River. That area was inhabited for hundreds of years by a large group of Sateré-Mawé, but most left after a major epidemic in the middle of the 20th century. This region should have been included in the Andirá-Marau Indigenous Reserve when it was demarcated in 1986, but it was left out, probably as the result of an error by the indigenous agency, FUNAI.
Since 2002, the Sateré-Mawé have been asking FUNAI to correct this mistake in the boundaries of the reserve so this area is protected too. The local FUNAI office has informed its head office in Brasilia of the Sateré claim, but nothing has happened.
Recently, the situation turned critical with the arrival of invading loggers, miners and land thieves, along with an outsider who claims to “own” the area on which Campo Branco stands, and who has likely registered his claim officially with CAR (The Rural Environmental Register), the Brazilian government’s land registry.
Benito hopes to bring more of his people to Campo Branco to strengthen their presence and their ancestral claim. So he has come to Fortaleza seeking backing.
On the morning after the ritual, Benito tells his relatives about the growing attempts by land thieves to force his family out of Campo Branco. “We need help because we’re feeling very threatened,” he explains.
One by one, his relatives declare support. Some offer to go with Benito to the Mariaquã River to set up new surveillance villages. It could be a dangerous mission — the outsiders may well be armed with guns and they could feel emboldened to use them due to Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s anti-indigenous statements
Dico, the taciturn tuxaua of Fortaleza, says he’ll lend the expedition the community’s only motorized canoe. Érik Batista, who also took part in the previous night’s ritual, agrees to go, as do his father and younger brother. “All my life people have said that the Sateré once lived by the Mariaquã River,” he explains. “After putting my hand in the glove [with the bullet ants], I feel strong enough to take part in the expedition.”