
CULTURE
Due to various influences from civilization, the culture of the forest peoples has been suppressed or has almost disappeared. This has had devastating consequences for the indigenous peoples and the forest population in the Amazon region. AMAZONICA promotes the revival and cultivation of the respective culture as an indispensable basis for the identity awareness of these peoples and as a motor for future healthy living and working in their ancestral lands.











The young „Tsentsak“ describes the daily routine in his Achuar village on the great Pastaza River. His name means „arrow“.

The measures in detail
Cultural lessons
We set these up at the elementary school with the help of the „elders“, the grandparents of the families who still know the traditions. This concept has proven its worth. That is why we always start working with new villages in this important area (in addition to drinking water supply, horticulture and small animal husbandry).
Arts and crafts
Depending on the culture of a people, the handicraft activities of women and men are quite different.
Only pottery is almost always done by women, and carving is done by men. Jewelry making, weaving and braiding are handled differently. The items are useful and decorative in the daily lives of the villagers and can be sold. The employees of AMAZONICA and visitors to the academy are among the good customers.
Dances, songs, musical instruments
These traditions are also not the same for every people. While the Achuar, for example, have no festivities apart from celebrating the return of their men after a victorious campaign, the neighboring Shuar never miss an opportunity to celebrate. Whether the fruits of the chonta palm are ripening or a snakebite has been successfully treated – everything has its celebration with a traditional sequence of events.
Dances and songs are often unaccompanied by music. The women sing to their own dance. Self-made musical instruments are played by the men – mainly flutes, hand and jaw drums – stringed instruments reminiscent of a violin are probably copies of the instruments brought by the missionaries.
The legends
The men in particular are fantastic storytellers and tell legends about gods, souls, people and animals from their original world of belief, animism. These are long serialized stories, like from 1001 Nights – only often much more gruesome. The oral transmission and recording of these legends is of particular importance because it clearly shows the close cooperation and interaction between man and nature. No true forest dweller can be imagined detached from nature and the forces of the primeval forest. This is his cosmos.
Traditional rites and social practices
As in other cultures around the world, rituals have evolved from tried and tested practices, from local requirements. Natural medicine, the relative isolation in the forest, the need to avoid inbreeding and other factors have had a particular influence. Knowing and maintaining spiritual rites and traditional social practices is of fundamental importance for life in the forest. Of course, some customs need to be adapted and possibly harmonized with contemporary life in forest communities.
Cultivating one’s own language
One’s own language is an indispensable part of every living culture. For peoples who are only just integrating into civilization, it is becoming increasingly important that they are able to formulate new knowledge, including higher school knowledge, technical terms at work and in modern communication in their mother tongue. The Achuar language, for example, has so far only been passed on orally, a language with complicated grammar and a particularly rich vocabulary.
Integration of all age groups
In the past, extended families lived in harmony, regardless of the age of the members. Due to the destruction of the traditional way of life and the state education of young people, an ever deeper divide is forming between „culture“ and „modernity“, between „old“ and „young“, to the detriment of all. AMAZONICA closes and prevents this divide by revitalizing culture and the associated revaluation of the older generation. Our motto: „The traditional knowledge of illiterate grandparents is at least as valuable as their grandchildren’s high school diplomas!“
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AMAZONICA Akademie gGmbH
AMAZONICA Akademie gGmbH
Ostpreußenstr. 81
D-81927 München
Tel: 0049-(0)89-642 99 133
E-Mail: info@amazonica.org
www.amazonica.org
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