Pai Tavytera

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Pai Tavytera

Ña Silvia, a spiritual leader of the Pai Tavytera
Indians in Amambay, 2012
Total population
15,000 (2007)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Paraguay (Amambay Department,
 Brazil (Mato Grosso do Sul)[2]
Languages
Pai Tavytera[1]
Religion
traditional tribal religion, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Kaiwá[1]

The Pai Tavytera people are an indigenous people of Paraguay. They primarily live in the Amambay Department of Paraguay and Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil.[2]

Name

The Pai Tavytera are also known as the Ava, Caaguá, Caingua, Caiwá, Kaa'wa, Kainguá, Kaiowá, Kaiwá, Kayova, Montese, Paï, Paï-Cayuä, Paï-Tavyterä, Paingua, Pan, and Tavytera people. "Paï-Tavytera" is an arbitrary name given to northern Guaraní people of eastern Paraguay.[2] They are closely related to the Guarani-Kaiowá people of Brazil.

Language

The Pai Tavytera speak the Pai Tavytera language, which is a Tupi-Guarani language, division Guarani I. The tribe is rapidly adopting the more mainstream Guarani language.[1]

History

The Pai Tavytera are mostly likely the descendents of the Itatin Guaraní. They encountered Jesuit missionaries in the 17th century during the reducciones of eastern Paraguay. Many of them resisted assimilation. Following the violent War of the Triple Alliance in the 1870s, their lands were left alone, except for lumberers and harvesters of yerba mate. In recent years, an influx of settlers have disrupted the Pai Tavyter's hunting lifestyle.[2]

Agriculture

Pai Tavytera Indians, part of the Panambi'y tribe, in Amambay Department, 2005

In the sub-tropical environment of eastern Paraguay, Pai Tavyter practice swidden agriculture. Their primary crop is maize, supplemented with manioc. They also cultivate citrus trees, bananas, cotton, pineapples, rice, soybeans, and medicinal plants. Chickens, pigs, cattle, horses, and donkeys are popular farm animals.[2]

Artwork

Pai Tavytera woodcarving of a popular mythological creature, Kurupi

Pai Tavytera people are known for making necklaces made from carved wood and colorful seeds of different fruits.[2] They use urucú, a red dye made from Bixa orellana for body painting. Cotton and feathers, such as toucan, are used for headdresses. Labrets are made from resin. Men typically weave baskets, while women make ceramics.[2]

The tribe is also being consulted in interpreting ancient rock art in Amambay.[3] A hill, Jasuka Venda is an important cultural site for Pai Tavyera people that has petroglyphs in the "footstep style."[4] Jasuka Venda is where Pai Tavytera oral history says God created the universe.[5]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Pai Tavytera." Ethnologue. Retrieved 17 Jan 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Flowers, Nancy M. "Paï-Tavytera." Countries and Their Cultures. Retrieved 17 Jan 2013.
  3. "The Theme." Solar Map Project." Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
  4. "Spanish Archaeologists Find Oldest Evidence of Man in Paraguay." Latin American Herald Tribune. Retrieved 20 Jan 2012.
  5. Culture of the Pai Tavytera Indians." Solar Map Project." Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.

Further reading

  • Maybury-Lewis, David, and James Howe (1980). The Indian Peoples of Paraguay: Their Plight and Their Prospects. Cultural Survival Special Report No. 2. Cambridge, Mass.
  • Melia, Bartomeu, Georg Grünberg, and Friedl Grünberg (1976). "Los paï-tavyterã: Etnografía guaraní del Paraguay contemporáneo." Suplemento Antropológico (Asunción: Universidad Católica Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, Centro de Estudios Antropológicos) 11(1-2): 151-295.
  • Métraux, Alfred (1958). "The Guarani." In Handbook of South American Indians, edited by Julian H. Steward. Vol. 3, The Tropical Forest Tribes, 69-94. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Monteiro, John Manuel (1992). "Os guarani e a história do Brasil meridional: Séculos XVI-XVII." In Historia dos indios no Brasil, edited by Manuela Carneiro da Cunha, 475-498. São Paulo: Editora Schwarez.
  • Vogt, Franz (1904). "Die Indianer des oberen Paraná." Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien 34:200-221, 352-377.


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