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Por Bia'ni Madsa' Juárez López

Tlaola es una pequeña comunidad Nahua del estado de Puebla en México, que se posicionó a nivel internacional gracias a un grupo de mujeres de esta comunidad que aceptaron el reto de recibir el evento internacional “Terra Madre Indígena de América”, que por primera vez se realiza en este continente. El rol de las mujeres y los jóvenes Indígenas en la protección de los sistemas alimentarios tradicionales fue el eje central del encuentro.
 

By Laura Hobson Herlihy and Brett Spencer


The year 2020 has not begun favorably for the Indigenous Peoples on the Nicaraguan Caribbean coast. Amidst the impending coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, settler colonists (called colonos) violently attack Indigenous people and invade their rainforest lands. Ten Miskitu and Mayangna leaders and land defenders have been killed since early January.
 

By Carolyn Smith-Morris


The coronavirus has now arrived in many Indigenous communities. The first case was reported in the Brazilian Amazon a few weeks ago. The Navajo Nation is grappling with a surge of cases. The disproportionate risk for COVID-19 infection and related harms suffered by Indigenous and minority communities has become extreme due to preexisting health conditions and inequalities across the board.


Photo: Celia Panduro (Shipibo) of Masisea, Pucallpa, Peru, holds a sign that says "Stay at home" in her native language. Photo by Cecilio Soria, social communicator with the Shipibo Konibo Xetebo Indigenous governance council, whose radio station was supported by a grant from Cultural Survival in 2018.

 

By Danielle DeLuca
 

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