Earth’s Most Threatened Tribe as Seen by Sebastião Salgado in Vanity Fair

Vanity's Fair coverWorld-famous Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado and Vanity Fair magazine have joined forces to publicize the plight of the Awá Indians, who have been labeled ‘Earth’s most threatened tribe’ by Survival International, the global movement for tribal peoples’ rights. The 13-page feature, published in the December issue of the magazine, is out worldwide since November 1.

Vanity Fair’s Senior Contributing Editor Alex Shoumatoff and Salgado spent several weeks with the Awá, in the Amazon rainforest, to expose the Brazilian government’s failure over many decades to protect the tribe’s territory from a massive invasion of loggers and ranchers.

The Awá’s lands are being destroyed faster than any other Indian territory in the Amazon. The government has ignored repeated court orders to remove the loggers. Just 450 Awá survive, of whom around 100 are uncontacted, hiding in an ever-smaller patch of rainforest to avoid the gunmen who hunt them down.

One Awá man told Survival, “The loggers are destroying everything, there’s hardly any good forest left. I used to hunt a lot, but the animals are disappearing. The police must remove the loggers now!”

A Survival International campaign, fronted by Oscar-winning actor Colin Firth, has generated more than 54,000 protest letters to Brazil’s Justice Minister. Countless celebrities, from designer Vivienne Westwood to actor Gillian Anderson, have photographed themselves with the Awá icon, a logo bearing the words “Brazil: Save the Awá”.

Stephen Cory, Survival International’s Director, said, “We hope this will give a real push to the desperately urgent campaign to save the Awá. Experts have warned of ‘extinction’ and ‘genocide’, as one of the last nomadic tribes in Brazil is squeezed into a disappearing island of forest.

“Brazil’s Minister of Justice has the power to save the Awá – here’s hoping the publicity finally pushes him into action. Or will the fans flocking to Brazil next year for the World Cup be just in time to see the last patch of the Awá’s forest go up in flames?”

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Sponsors World Coffee Conference to Discuss Sector’s Crisis

For the last five years the producer coffee market has been in a price ...

Railcar Builders Wake Up from the Dead in Brazil into a Booming Business

Brazil’s railway industry believes that sales are going to continue rising in coming years. ...

We Are All Brazilians, All Mixed, and Racists All the Same

From the end of the 1930s till his death in 1995, the anthropologist Ashley ...

Short Takes

Basic education in Brazil is in chaos. A little more than 30% of students ...

Brazil Sends Back to UK 1,500 Tons of Dirty Diapers and Used Condoms

The Brazilian government announced it has returned 1,500 tons of hazardous waste that arrived ...

Brazilians Will Decide Future of Mercosur when Voting for New President

As the pro-tempore chair of Mercosur in the last leg of his eight years ...

Half Century in the Tube

Brazilian TV will be celebrating its 50th birthday on September 18, 2000. Despite of ...

Brazilian Ceramic Tile Factory with Subsidiaries in the US Exports to 80 Countries

Eliane S/A, a Brazilian ceramic tile factory, exported the equivalent to US$ 78 million ...

Political Reform Bill in Brazil Calls for an End to Private Donations to Candidates

Brazil’s election campaign financing irregularities that have surfaced during the testimony and investigations into ...

Brazil Cannibalism: Man Gets 16 Years for Killing and Eating Foe’s Heart

Brazilian carpenter Gilmar Alberto Wasckman, 46, was convicted this Friday, July 31st, by a ...