Authorities Assert Cannibalism in Brazil Is Just a Myth

Kulina Indians from Brazil International experts on the Amazon tribe accused of killing and eating a white settler cast doubts on the authenticity of the accusations. The tribe's supposed cannibalism has been reported by media all around the world.

Dr Donald Pollock, Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, said, "The Kulina have no history or tradition of cannibalism, and have often expressed disgust at the notion. I am confident that the current charges will prove to be false when they are fully investigated."

Members of the Kulina (or Culina) tribe have been accused of killing a man, variously reported as a handicapped student and cattle farmer, and eating his heart and thighs in a "cannibalistic ritual". The Kulina live in the remote Amazon forest – some in Brazil, others in Peru.

Domingos Silva, an anthropologist at Brazil's Federal University of Santa Catarina, said, "During all the years when I studied and lived with the Kulina they never gave any sign of practicing cannibalism."

Dr Daniel Everett, Chair of the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Illinois State University and author of the best-selling book "Don't sleep, there are snakes", said, "I have worked with every group of the Arawan family, of which the Kulina are a member. I am not aware of any evidence that the Kulina or any other Arawan group have ever engaged in cannibalism."

The source of the reports appears to be limited to the mayor of a nearby town, who told police he was informed by a member of the tribe that the "ritual" had taken place.

Ivar Busatto, coordinator of the non-governmental organization OPAN, which has worked with the Kulina for years, said, "Facts have been attributed to the Indians without prior investigation. They are being pre-judged, as part of a wider campaign of slander which has hidden interests."

FUNAI, the Brazilian government's Indian affairs department, released a statement saying, "The practice of anthropophagy [eating people] does not exist among indigenous peoples in contemporary Brazil".

Tags:

You May Also Like

You don’t know this Rio

We present here an unknown Rio for those willing to forgo the myth of ...

Shock Treatment

That Brazil has produced some of the most expensive and environmentally damaging hydro projects ...

Foot and Mouth Disease Hits Brazil with Close to US$ 2 Billion in Losses

Foot and mouth export losses are estimated to reach US$ 1.7 billion given the ...

Catholic? No, Chaotic, says Cardinal about Brazil’s Lula

Two Brazilian cardinals already in Rome for the conclave that will choose a new ...

All Indications Are That Brazil President Will Veto Forestry Law Pushed by Farm Lobby

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff’s top administrative aide, Gilberto Carvalho, made it clear that the ...

Beware! Email Coming from Brazil Promising Goodies on Ronaldo Is Malware

A new malicious threat circulating in the Internet masquerades as a video file relating ...

Brazil Looking Forward to Argentina Leader’s Visit

The president of Argentina, Néstor Kirchner, will arrive in Brazil on January 18 for ...

Lula, Left of the Third Way

American influence in Brazil has been massive. Brazilian president recent trip to Europe was ...

Brazil’s Presidential Candidate Scolds Lula for Befriending Castro and Ahmadinejad

During the Brazilian Social Democracy Party, PSDB, national convention that confirmed him as his ...

President Lula’s Choices

Pressing problems faces his Excellency President Lula—who will run the central bank By John ...