Panará people

The Panará are an Indigenous people of the Pará and Mato Grosso states in the Brazilian Amazon. They were formerly called the Kreen-Akrore. Other names for the Panará include Kreen-Akarore, Krenhakarore, Krenhakore, Krenakore, Krenakarore or Krenacarore, and "Índios Gigantes" ("Giant Indians") – all variants of the kayapó name "kran iakarare", meaning "roundlike cuthead", a reference to their traditional hair style which invariably identifies them.

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Origin

The Panará are the last descendants of the southern Cayapós, a large ethnic group which inhabited a vast area in Central Brazil in the 18th century, from the northern borders of the state of São Paulo, Triângulo Mineiro and south of Goiás, streching eastwards from Mato Grosso, eastern and southeastern portion of Mato Grosso do Sul. The Panará belong to the Jê-speaking group in Central Brazil,[1] a subgroup of the northern Jê, which encompasses the Kayapó, Suyá, Apinayé and the Timbira languages. Latest researches indicate that the southern Cayapó and Panará are in fact one single language.

Contact

The Panará lived in relative isolation until 1973 when a government project (Cuiabá-Santarém) road BR-163 through their territory brought them in contact with the outside world. As a result the tribe was decimated by modern world diseases such as flu and diarrhoea which they had no immunity against, and by the environmental degradation of their land. Of the more than 350 members of the Panará tribe, more than 250 perished in the first twelve months after their first contact with the white men.[2]

Life in Xingu

On 12 January 1975, the 79 surviving members of the tribe were transferred by the government to the indigenous reserve Parque do Xingu, and forced to live in neighborly proximity with former enemies, under state supervision.[3] A working team from the Escola Paulista de Medicina examed 27 of the 29 newcomers, adults over 20 years old. The average height was 1.67m and that corresponded to the average height of those from the Jê group, a little taller than the indians from Alto Xingu.

Twenty years later the Panará began negotiations to move home to their original territory. However, much of their old land had by now been degraded by prospectors, gold-panning, settlement or cattle breeding (six out of eight of their old villages had by now been destroyed), but one large stretch of unspoiled dense forest could still be identified. In 1994 the tribe elders met with Xingu Park leaders and FUNAI to demand the right to move back to their original territory, and was eventually allowed 4,950 square kilometres from their ancient traditional territory along the Iriri River located on the border of Mato Grosso and Pará states.

Between 1995 and 1996, the Panará gradually moved to a new village called Nãsẽpotiti in their traditional land, and on 1 November 1996 the Justice Minister declared the Panará Indigenous Land a "permanent indigenous possession". By 2003 the number of Panará was around 250, and in 2008 they were 374.

Trivia

On Paul McCartney's 1970 album McCartney, the closing track is called "Kreen-Akrore".

Alcatrazz's 1983 album No Parole from Rock 'n' Roll also contains a song, 'Kree Nakoorie'.

See also

References

  1. ^ Indigenous movements, self-representation, and the state in Latin America pg. 269, Kay B. Warren,Jean Elizabeth Jackson, University of Texas Press (2003) ISBN 0-292-79141-0
  2. ^ Frontier expansion in Amazonia pg. 86 Marianne Schmink, Charles H. Wood, University of Florida. Center for Latin American Studies (1991) ISBN 0-8130-0785-2
  3. ^ Seduced and Abandoned The Taming of Brazilian Indians pg. 8 Alcida Rita Ramos, Center of International and Comparative Studies, The University of Iowa (1995)

External links