Author Topic: Evangelical Christian mayor in Peru investigated over murders of 14 curanderos.  (Read 7406 times)

Offline nemesis

  • Posts: 526
This is a very disturbing news story that I thought some here might be interested in.....



Peru shaman murders investigated
Peruvian government sends team to remote Amazon region to look into killing of 14 shamans, allegedly at behest of local mayor

Dan Collyns in Lima
guardian.co.uk,    Thursday 6 October 2011 18.31 BST

The Peruvian government is sending a team of officials to a remote region of the Amazon jungle to investigate the deaths of 14 shamans who were killed in a string of brutal murders.

The traditional healers, all from the Shawi ethnic group, were murdered in separate incidents over the last 20 months, allegedly at the behest of a local mayor.

No arrests have been made over the deaths, which took place in and around Balsapuerto, a small river port in Peru's vast Amazon region on its northern border with Ecuador, Colombia and Brazil.

The prime suspects, however, in the disappearance of one victim and the murder of another are the mayor of Balsapuerto, Alfredo Torres and his brother Augusto.

The two men were named in a report from the public prosecutor's office in the nearest town of Yurimaguas, which said seven of the victims had been shot, stabbed or hacked to death with machetes. Local people identified all of them as curanderos or native healers, said the vice-minister of intercultural affairs, Vicente Otta.

The Roman Catholic church in the area has reported the death of seven other shamans whose bodies have yet to be found, Otta said, adding that territorial disputes and political disagreements also pointed to the mayor being "one of the instigators of the slaughter".

He said that the murder suspects had sought to "legitimise the killings " by blaming the victims for the high level of infant mortality in the area.

Torres has denied the allegations in interviews with local media. Calls to his office went unanswered.

The public prosecutor's report also details the testimony of a survivor of one attack. Bautista Inuma was mistaken for a shaman and received gunshot wounds and had an arm hacked off before he managed to escape.

Roger Rumrrill, an expert on Peruvian Amazon cultures and a government adviser, said some of the victims' bodies were thrown into rivers, to be devoured by piranhas and other fish.

He alleged that the mayor, who is an evangelical Christian, ordered the killings on hearing that the shamans planned to form an association. He said the mayor's brother was known in the area as a matabrujos or witch killer.

"For Protestant sects, the shamans are possessed by the devil; a totally sectarian, primitive and racist concept," he said.

Shamans in the Peruvian Amazon use psychoactive plants such as the jungle vine ayahuascafor spiritual ceremonies. As early as the 16th century, Spanish and Portuguese missionaries described its use by native people in the Amazon as the work of the devil.

"Until now the death of 14 curanderos who are the depositaries of Amazon knowledge wasn't worth the attention of the press," Rumrrill said. "That's an expression of how fragmented and racist this country is. A centralised country which continues to look at its interior with total indifference."

The National Institute for the Development of Andean, Amazonian and Afro-Peruvian Peoples estimates that there are around 330,000 indigenous people in Peru's Amazon region, about 1% of the country's population of more than 29 million.

Gregor MacLennan, Peru programme coordinator for the NGO Amazon Watch, said: "The death of these shamans represents not just a tragic loss of life, but the loss of a huge body of knowledge about rainforest plants and the crucial role shamans play in traditional medicine and spiritual guidance in indigenous communities."

source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/06/peru-shaman-murders?newsfeed=true

Offline educatedindian

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This is a very disturbing news story that I thought some here might be interested in.....



Peru shaman murders investigated
Peruvian government sends team to remote Amazon region to look into killing of 14 shamans, allegedly at behest of local mayor

Dan Collyns in Lima
guardian.co.uk,    Thursday 6 October 2011 18.31 BST

....Roger Rumrrill, an expert on Peruvian Amazon cultures and a government adviser, said some of the victims' bodies were thrown into rivers, to be devoured by piranhas and other fish.

He alleged that the mayor, who is an evangelical Christian, ordered the killings on hearing that the shamans planned to form an association. He said the mayor's brother was known in the area as a matabrujos or witch killer.

"For Protestant sects, the shamans are possessed by the devil; a totally sectarian, primitive and racist concept," he said.

source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/06/peru-shaman-murders?newsfeed=true

That's sadly not unusual for the region. The evangelicals in Central America played a big part in the massacres of NDNs in Guatemala. They were led by a crzed born again military dictator.

Offline Sparks

  • Posts: 1444
I tried to find out more about this, and ran into:

http://shamanism.org/news/2011/10/07/peruvian-shamans-murdered-please-act-now/
which points to:
http://www.peruviantimes.com/05/report-14-shamans-killed-in-loreto-region/13843/

I hope to see some updates on this. And exactly who are these evangelical Christians, or Protestant sects?

Offline nemesis

  • Posts: 526
A very disturbing update on this horrific story

Peru's Top Indigenous Leader Says Industry, Traffickers Behind Shaman Slayings
Sunday 11 December 2011

by: Darrin Mortenson, Truthout | Report
Quote
Iquitos, Peru - It's been more than one month since Peru's government sent investigators to the Amazon to probe the brutal murders and mutilation of at least 14 shamans, traditional healers or medicos, of the indigenous Shawi people of Peru's northern border region near Ecuador.

Since then, the government has remained mum and, so far, has made no arrests, or at least has not made any known. Early reports focused on the Evangelical Christian mayor of the river port town of Balsapuerto, citing officials who accused him of instigating a fanatical religious purge.

But Alberto Pizango, Peru's top indigenous leader and president of the country's most powerful indigenous organization, the Interethnic Development Association of the Peruvian Rainforest (known by its Spanish acronym, AIDESEP) paints a more complex picture of the case, blaming cash and pressure from legal and illegal industries in the Amazon who poach natural resources from indigenous lands.

"What is happening now in my community is organized crime," said Pizango, himself a Shawi medico who studied for seven years under a master shaman.

"This work, I would say, is done in a very subtle way by the extractive industries," Pizango said, naming the timber and oil industries as well as those involved in producing illegal drugs.

"Divide and conquer," he said. "That is exactly what is happening here."

Masking Ambition

Pizango explained that Shawi tradition used to allow certain shamans, often ones who had quit their apprenticeships and used their powers for "bad things," to be killed or banished by others in the community. Now, he said, a "bad interpretation" of that tradition has been used to cover up corruption and greed.

"The criminals accuse someone, [they say], "He is a brujo! He is evil! He was killed because he was evil!" Pizango said. "That was ancestral justice," he said. "But now it is just organized crime."

Original reports cited public prosecutors from the nearby port of Yurimaguas who specifically named Balsapuerto mayor Alfredo Torres and his brother Augusto, also known locally as a matabrujos or "witch killer," as suspects in at least some of the murders. One early report said at least seven additional shamans were still missing from Shawi territory and listed as dead by local officials of the Catholic Church - making it more than 20 shamans killed in the region in less than two years.

At the time the murders were first reported, London's Guardian newspaper quoted the lead investigator, the vice minister of intercultural affairs, airing suspicions that religion or tradition were mere cover for territorial and political disputes - an interpretation with which Pizango concurred.

"[T]he mayor, the authority there, conspires with this oppressive system that offers him a way into office. This system gives him money for his campaign, so he is compromised," Pizango said.

"And when the people come out to defend their territorial rights, their rights to their natural resources, then the mayor has the perfect criminal organization to shut them up, accuse them, say that someone was killed because he was a brujo."

Cultural Loss

In the Amazon, shamans are keepers and teachers of the traditional knowledge of the forest, including plant medicines such as the visionary vine ayahuasca, as well as teachers of the spiritual and cosmological foundations of cultures. It often takes a generation of study and practice before one is considered a shaman or trusted by a community as a medico. The recent killings represent a devastating blow to Shawi culture and a loss for Amazonian society in general.

"[T]he recent murder of shamans in Peru is deplorable, and unfortunately is part of a historical pattern," said anthropologist Jeremy Narby, an expert on Peruvian indigenous issues and author of "The Cosmic Serpent" and "Shamans Through Time."

"Until recently, such occurrences have been under-reported. [T]reating shamans as devils goes way back in time," Narby said.

After spending long stretches with other Peruvian tribes, including the nearby Amazonian group, the Awajun, Narby said he's known of healers being forced to practice their art in secret and being subject to as much threat from within their own people as from forces and influences encroaching from the world outside.

Internal Threats

"It's a very risky thing. If you say that you know how to administer ayahuasca and you know how to cure," said Narby. "But if they don't get better, or even if they die because they actually have a condition, then you risk getting killed."

When the the conquering Spanish and Portuguese arrived, they declared open season on shamans and shamanism. Narby said modern versions of the conquerors' religion continue adding fuel to the old witch-burning fire.

"The people themselves have absorbed the outside ideology, in this particular case, the Evangelical Christian one, which goes explicitly against their own culture," said Narby, who noted that Christian and indigenous groups both have histories of bloody excesses in the Amazon.

Evangelical Christianity, Narby continued, "says ayahuasca is bad, it's the devil's stuff, we have to give up all this traditional stuff and we've got to sing all these hymns and talk about Jesus Christ and love and build temples in our communities," he said.

"And then communities are divided between those who are members of the Evangelical Church and those who aren't ... and it gets really complicated," he said.

Conflicting Visions

Pizango, who considered a presidential run earlier this year under a blanket indigenous party, says that the visions he and other medicos receive through ayahuasca emphasize harmony with nature, the value of all life and unity of all things - visions that contradict the dominant culture's ethos of consumerism and environmental destruction by industrial development.

As the keepers, cultivars and promoters of an alternative vision, he said traditional Amazonian healers continue to be seen as threats to the system and thus targeted, subjected to harassment and, in the case of the Shawi shamans, even worse.

Meanwhile, the government's official investigation of shamanicide continues.

"I lament so much that human beings are being eliminated, my brothers (are being killed), due to a bad interpretation," Pizango said.

"But that's not the bottom line," he said. "The bottom line here is that there's a purpose ... a political purpose."

A note on the author and sources: Freelance writer Darrin Mortenson is a former war correspondent and a contributor to Truthout. Interviews for this article are part of an ongoing investigation for Alianza Arkana, a nonprofit that works directly with indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon to help defend their territories and traditions. For more information, please visit www.alianzaarkana.org.