Archive for July, 2007

Podcast: With the Ayoreo-Totobiegosode in Paraguay

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Jonathan Mazower, Research Co-ordinator at Survival, has just returned from Paraguay. Jonathan was finding out about the situation that uncontacted Ayoreo-Totobiegosode face in the country’s rapidly-disappearing Chaco forests.

Here he speaks to Katya Brooks about his trip and how Survival supporters can help the Ayoreo reclaim their traditional territory.

[audio:ayoreo_podcast.mp3]

(use the player above or download the mp3 file)

The Man of the Hole

Friday, July 20th, 2007

Imagine living on your own, in complete silence, always on the run, always fearful, invisible to the world. This is daily life for one solitary man in the Amazon. He’s the sole survivor of his tribe. We don’t know who he is, the name of his tribe or what language he speaks. His people were probably massacred by cattle ranchers who are invading the region at break neck speed.

It’s eery walking through the tiny patch of forest where he lives. His presence is everywhere and I can sense him watching our every move. Mario and Pedro, our Indian guides, point to one of his hunting shelters made of leaves, and a palm tree which he has chopped down to extract the palm heart.

He’s known simply as the ‘Man of the Hole’ because of the huge holes he builds, either to trap animals or to hide in. Here is the hole (over six feet deep) in a tiny maloca (house) he abandoned, built of straw and thatch. Get too near and he will fire an arrow in warning. Last year he hit Tunio, who works for FUNAI, Brazil’s Indian Affairs Department. Fortunately, Tunio quickly recovered.Walking into somebody’s home uninvited feels like trespassing. Here are carved arrow heads, calabashes for storing water, dried nuts and a torch he has made from resin. His garden is brimming with produce – paw paw, manioc and corn. He will probably come under cover of night to gather the fruits when they are ripe . It must have taken him days to chop down the trees, single handed, to make the clearing.

We are not however voyeuristic interlopers. There’s a serious point to our visit. FUNAI wants to establish whether he is still alive, and if possible make friendly contact because they fear for his safety. Some of the ranchers have their eye on his land and there are plenty of trigger happy gun men who would think nothing of bumping him off for the cost of a night on the town. Not for nothing do many Brazilians call Rondônia the ‘bang bang’ state.

I am here because I want to tell his story as part of Survival’s ‘Uncontacted Tribes’ campaign, for the rights of isolated peoples around the world.

Some months after my visit I receive a rare piece of good news: FUNAI has decided not to contact the ‘Man of the Hole’, but to enlarge his tiny territory by 3,000 hectares to give him more space and more game to hunt. I hope that now he will have the chance to live out his life in peace.

Barney & Mike’s Triathlon Video Diary: Part II

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

In episode two of Barney & Mike’s triathlon video diary, the budding athletes practice their wetsuit quick-change routine, and go looking for new bikes.

Training’s going well, but they are still a bit of a way from their £3,000 fundraising target. Visit their Justgiving page to read the back story of their triathlon efforts, and give them the support they deserve!

Keep up-to-date with Survival news

Wednesday, July 11th, 2007

You might have noticed that a couple of new icons have appeared on the front page of the Survival website…

These are our new ‘news feeds’. You can click on the icons to subscribe to the latest news and blog headlines from our site. Whenever we publish a news item, you’ll be told about it automatically – but it won’t clog up your e-mail inbox.

The news items will appear in your favourite newsreader. I like Google Reader (it’s free, simple-to-use and web-based) but there are lots more. Even Outlook 2007 supports newsfeeds.

In time, we’ll add our petitions, job adverts and letter-writing campaigns so you can truly keep up-to-date with what’s happening at Survival. But don’t worry – you’re still not going to get more than one or two headlines a day.

So give it a try (you can always unsubscribe!) – go to feeds.survival-international.org/SurvivalInternational and subscribe using the buttons on the top-right of the page (or you can just paste the address straight into your newsreader).

And if you have a blog or website and want to keep your visitors up-to-date with Survival campaigns, you can add this Survival news widget to your page just by copying and pasting the code on the right-hand side:

Of course, we’re still publishing our monthly e-news. Sign up now to get a summary of our main news stories delivered straight to your e-mail inbox each month.