Maleku people

Traditional grass hut in a Maleku outpost near La Fortuna, Costa Rica.

The Maleku are an indigenous people of Costa Rica located in the Guatuso Indigenous Reserve near the town of Guatuso (San Rafael de Guatuso). They are also known as the Guatuso, the name used by Spanish colonizers. Around 600 aboriginal people live on the reserve, making this the smallest tribe in Costa Rica,[1] but outsiders have come into the community as well. Before the Spanish colonization, their territory extended as far west as Rincon de la Vieja, and included the volcano Arenal to the south and Rio Celeste as sacred sites. Today their reserve is concentrated south of San Rafael de Guatuso, an hour north of La Fortuna.

History

The Maleku historically lived in the Río Frío watershed on a geographic span of 2,500 square miles.[2][3] They remained undiscovered until 1750, with the incursion of Spanish colonizers. Between 1868 and 1900, Nicaraguan rubber farmers migrated onto Maleku territory, often in armed bands, claiming traditional Maleku territories. The resulting death, enslavement, and dislocation of the Maleku eventually ended due to the influence of Catholic missionaries, in particular Bishop Bernardo Augusto Thiel. Thiel's mission to "civilize" and "Christianize" the Maleku coexisted with a desire to end the enslavement and genocide of such indigenous populations.[3] He provided the Maleku with tools and firearms while encouraging the development of European farming practices and lobbied the government to punish citizens who captured indigenous people. In addition, he assigned people and places Spanish names despite knowing the Maleku terms.[4] Western tools, standards of dress, and economic systems like commercial farming were impressed upon the Maleku as they were other indigenous populations in the Americas. However, the Christian tradition did not surpass traditional Maleku beliefs due to the lack of a permanent mission and the language barrier.[3] However, the violent incursion, cultural and economic imposition, and diseases like malaria did decrease the pre-contact population of 6,000 to its current 600-member count.[4][5]

Culture

Maleku society was traditionally egalitarian, with little internal stratification, and featured gendered division of labor.[4] Their religion is polytheistic and oriented toward nature. Many aspects of Maleku culture are still practiced today, as seen in the production of traditional art for economic subsistence. Their culture is also shared with visitors through the tours they offer, which include cultural information like history, diet, and the reforestation program and ideology.[6] While the presence of Catholic missionaries was protective in the era of colonization, the terms of engagement did not remain economic and included the partial loss of cultural practices.[7] However, in 2016, linguist Carlos Sánchez Avendaño created dictionaries for three Costa Rican tribes including the Maleku in order to promote cultural retention among indigenous youth.[8] These dictionaries cover specific subjects like the wildlife prioritized by each tribe and recipes as well as the language as a whole and are meant to be publicly available as well. In addition, the work goes beyond translation to portray the cultural perspective, for example including bats and insects as flying animals in the Maleku animal dictionary.

The Maleku no longer live in their traditional houses, since the trees necessary to make them are now endangered, nor do they wear their traditional clothes. Today the villages mostly contain cement houses but still contain several traditional houses used for ceremonies as tourist attractions. The Maleku traditionally bury their dead directly inside their homes, so the dead are never forgotten.[3] Living in cement houses, the Maleku have had to acquire special permission from the Costa Rican government to bury their dead in their backyards. (See Gautusa mythology for more information on religious beliefs.) In addition, aside from those made for the tourism industry, traditional clay pots have been largely replaced by aluminum ones.[4]

Diet

Their traditional diet consisted of various plants and animals from the tropical forests.[9] Animal sources include a wide variety of fish, and turtles, from the Rio Frio, Rio Sol, and Caño Negro. The Maleku continue to hunt for iguana meat and use the skin on their traditional drums. Turtles are particularly culturally significant as codified in the annual rite of communal turtle hunting.[4] Some plants, while mildly toxic, are still part of a traditional Maleku diet. Medicinal plants are also important to the Maleku, particularly given their rural location and distance from mainstream medical centers.[10] Various types of chicha, for example banana and cassava, are consumed to connote amity at social gatherings, at celebrations, and in exchanges.[4]

Certain animals are specifically not consumed despite being native to the land. Wild or domestic animals with horns, like cows and deer, are religiously proscribed, as are howler and capuchin monkeys.[4]

Reserve

The reserve consists of 3 "palenques" or villages, Palenque Sol, Palenque Tonjibe, and Palenque Margarita.[3] These palenques meet several times a year in social and celebratory gatherings; historically, they would also join together militarily against external threats.[4] The reserve contains two elementary schools that teach the Maleku language and culture.[9]

The Maleku reserve is actually limited to 15% of the territory granted to them by the Costa Rican government with the foundation of the reservation in 1976.[2] Thus, of 11.5 square miles legally considered reserve lands, the Maleku own less than 2 square miles. While the land legally belongs to the Maleku, this is not enforced; the majority remains unreturned, having been sold or traded to non-indigenous people before this time in the uneven exchanges typical in the dispossession of indigenous lands.[1] Due to this appropriation of Maleku lands, 62% of residents in the legally designated Maleku reserve currently are non-Maleku.[5] Surrounding fields have been sold to farmers who have cleared the Maleku forest to raise cattle. The Maleku therefore use most of the money they earn to buy back the land they consider to be theirs, particularly to support their devotion to reforestation efforts like planting trees on the lands they reclaim.[2] In addition, they advocate for private owners to reforest the land even if they will not return it to the Maleku.[1] Meanwhile, dams, plumbing systems, and other governmental projects threaten indigenous control of water as a resource and sacred substance.[4]

Economy

As with many other Costa Rican indigenous populations, the Maleku today rely on the tourism industry for economic survival. They invite tourists to visit and tour their villages, although most tourists prefer to see them perform ceremonies in traditional palm clothing in the nearby town of La Fortuna.[2] Tourists who visit the villages, however, get a better sense of Maleku culture, even if it is somewhat diminished in modern times. One can visit the traditional gardens of healing plants and admire animals that still inhabit the forest, including toucans, frogs, and monkeys.

In addition to tours, the Maleku also create indigenous art to sell; carvings, paintings of wooden masks and jucara (bowls made from gourds), and musical instruments are their most popular items.[2][11] Such products preserve the cultural history of the Maleku and emphasize the sacredness of the land and animals, and the wooden masks in particular use only debris from surrounding trees rather than the destruction of live ones.[12] These are sold to tourists in the villages or taken to cities like San Jose to be sold there. [9] Most members in the villages (including children) make some type of art or help out, by cutting and preparing the necessary balsa wood trees or fruit needed for the projects. Additionally, many adults leave the reservation to work elsewhere periodically or to relocate permanently.[2] The Maleku’s rate of unemployment, at 10%, is the highest of any Costa Rican indigenous community; self-sustainability is further compromised by the small territory, which preempts their traditional reliance on hunting and fishing.

Politics

In January 2012, the Maleku Tribal Council received national recognition as a registered governing body.[5] This group oversees reforestation of native lands, and its legal status allows it to apply for grants for community projects. For example, the rancho, a building used for Council meetings and traditional ceremonies, had deteriorated over time and caught on fire, prompting a call for restoration; this effort reached full funding in 2013. More controversially, a group of Maleku began an occupation of a private estate within the reserve on December 10, 2012.[2] The occupation lasted three months. However, it does not appear to have had reaching effects on the historic and continued appropriation of Maleku lands.

In 2013, Jeffrey López wrote and directed a short documentary, Toro Hami (Caño Negro in the Maleku language), about the Maleku.[13][14] Only fifteen minutes long and in both Spanish and Maleku, the video engages with two Maleku elders about the cultural practices of and current obstacles faced by their people. Two main outside forces are described: the government and private interests. In particular, the federally managed Caño Negro Wildlife Refuge, established in 1984, restricts indigenous use of the wetlands, traditionally a major food source for the Maleku. Not only does this complicate access to food, but fishing also has a cultural significance for the Maleku: according to the Maleku religion, one punishment for those who misbehave is to have "fragile fishing nets," corroborating the social and cultural importance of fishing.[4] Meanwhile, transnational industries like pineapple companies and local ranchers are seen to be destroying nature, in conflict with Maleku philosophy which prioritizes environmental stability and the sacred importance of water.[4][14] The Maleku elders describe the loss of food animals and their inability to navigate production negotiations with such parties as major problems posed by the modern world.

Vocabulary and Language

70% of the tribe speaks the Maleku language. For a more extensive list of terms, see Maleku language.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Maleku Indigenous Tribe". Maleku Indians Costa Rica. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Minor, Jessica (March 26, 2013). "Life, Health, Purity, and Survival: the Maleku of Costa Rica Struggle to Regain Lost Lands | Cultural Survival". www.culturalsurvival.org. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Castillo Vásquez, Robert (May 20, 2011). "Bishop Bernardo Augusto Thiel and the Indigenous Maleku of the Northern Zone of Costa Rica". Reflections: 53–70.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Montoya-Greenheck, Felipe; Carvajal, Kenneth; Salas, Uri. "DESCRIPCIÓN DE LA CULTURA DEL AGUA EN COSTA RICA: PUEBLO MALEKU" (PDF).
  5. 1 2 3 La Reserva Forest Foundation. "Rancho Bienvenido, Maleku Reserve, Costa Rica".
  6. "Maleku Village Tours". Maleku. Retrieved 2017-03-27.
  7. Castillo Vásquez, Robert (May 20, 2011). "Bishop Bernardo Augusto Thiel and the Indigenous Maleku of the Northern Zone of Costa Rica".
  8. Coto, Katzy O'neal (December 12, 2016). "UCR recopila conocimiento indígena sobre animales". Retrieved 2017-04-23.
  9. 1 2 3 "Indigenous Maleku". www.amadeus.co.cr. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  10. Waddington, Ray. "Indigenous Peoples of the World — The Maleku". www.peoplesoftheworld.org. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  11. Vinding, Diana; Gray, Andrew; and Parellada, Allejandro (1998). From Principles to Practice: Indigenous Peoples and Biodiversity Conservation in Latin America, pp. 234–37. IWGIA. ISBN 87-984110-5-5.
  12. "Máscaras Maleku traducen lenguaje cultural". www.diarioextra.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  13. "Documentary shows problems faced by Costa Rica’s Maleku indigenous people". Inside Costa Rica. April 4, 2013. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  14. 1 2 Toro Hami. Dir. Jeffrey López. Association of Popular Initiatives Ditsö, 2013.
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