Potoooooooo
Contributor
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/ec...tribes-and-the-familiar-promise-of-jungle-oil
I’ve been floating on a canoe for an hour when Luis Ahua taps my shoulder and points to the bank of the Tiputini River, deep in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
“Footprints,” he says, pointing to a small break in the treeline. Days earlier, a guide in a scientific refuge in the same forest had shown me jaguar tracks. But these were human footprints.
“Are you scared of them?” I asked him.
“No,” he told me. “Our tribe knows about violence. I can tell you about violence.”
What happened to the Huaorani people living in Guiyero, the village I'm visiting, was so textbook-predictable that researchers have been able to write and publish papers on how similar it was to what happened to dozens of communities of indigenous people in dozens of countries.
I’ve been floating on a canoe for an hour when Luis Ahua taps my shoulder and points to the bank of the Tiputini River, deep in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
“Footprints,” he says, pointing to a small break in the treeline. Days earlier, a guide in a scientific refuge in the same forest had shown me jaguar tracks. But these were human footprints.
“Are you scared of them?” I asked him.
“No,” he told me. “Our tribe knows about violence. I can tell you about violence.”
What happened to the Huaorani people living in Guiyero, the village I'm visiting, was so textbook-predictable that researchers have been able to write and publish papers on how similar it was to what happened to dozens of communities of indigenous people in dozens of countries.