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In contrast with the inhabitants of the banks
of the Guaporé, this Kanoê group is considered
a group of "isolated Indians" by the Funai,
having been contacted by them only in 1995, after ten
years of attempts by the contact front (today called
the Ethnoenvironmental Protection Front). The group
consists of a single family, comprised of the mother,
Tutuá, about 50 years old; a daughter, Txinamanty,
about 30 years old; a son,
Purá, around 25 years old; and two grandsons,
one of whom is called Operá, five years old,
whose father is Babá, the chief of the Akuntsu,
another very much reduced "isolated" indigenous
group on the Omerê. The other child was born in
the beginning of 2002. In the beginning of 2003, Tutuá
and the boy Operá, then seven years old, gotten
malaria (a febrile disease) and died.
This family is monolingual in Kanoê and, having
fled into a forest reserve of a ranch, they were able
to survive from direct contact with the white man, despite
the massacres which resulted in the near dissolution
of the group.
Back in 1943 in the report of Estanislau Zack
to the Rondon Commission, it was recorded that there
were Kanoê Indians located on the left bank of
the Omerê River, tributary of the left bank of
the Corumbiara (Cf. Maldi, 1991:263). Much later, in
the mid-70s, the Funai was informed about the possible
presence of isolated indigenous groups in the region
of Corumbiara. In 1984, reports pointed to the existence
of Indians in the forest reserves of areas that were
being deforested by the lumber industry and to form
cattle ranches, although local ranchers guaranteed that
there were no more Indians in the region. In 1985 the
Contact Front was created which officially initiated
the work of contact and in 1986, an area of 63,900 hectares
and 103 kilometers perimeter was interdicted for the
attraction of isolated Indians. Since then, attempts
have not ceased to destroy whatever vestiges of Indians
by clearing the forest, constructing roads and attacking
with tractors at the order of the ranchers. However,
by means of aireal and land incursions, the contact
team found various indications of indigenous presence
such as gardens, trails, traps, dwellings, and articles
of clothing.
The indigenists even gathered various statements
from Indians and ranchhands. Several ranchhands affirmed
that there were gunmen killing the Indians who sought
to stop the cutting of the trees. A Sabanê Indian
woman (Nambiquara branch) reported the visit of three
unknown Indians: an old man, an old woman and a girl
about 13 years old, armed with bow and arrow and carrying
a Mamaindê (nambiquara) basket, which they found
on the riverbank, a gourd with honey and another with
collars of black shells. They also carried a stone and
stick with artifacts to make fire. They said they were
looking for companions who had dispersed more than a
week before, when, one night, they were forced to flee
by a tractor that bulldozed their houses and cut through
the middle of their gardens.
In May, 1986, the federal judge of Porto Velho
deferred a Security Order, petitioned by the ranchers
of the interdicted area, ordering the suspension of
the President of Funai's decree. But the indigenist
agency appealed and the interdiction was maintained.
The indigenist Sidney Possuelo was then put in charge
of coordinating the work of locating the Indians. In
his report, he declared that the area was being intensely
cut up by roads used for removing lumber in all directions,
with a large number of trucks passing through, hundreds
of workers, planes constantly flying over the region
and deforestations of more than 30 kilometers long.
Possuelo then concluded that the area where there were
the most vestiges of Indians had been totally devastated,
but that until recently it had been inhabited by a much
reduced indigenous group which possibly had abandoned
the region, pressed by the circumstances. Thus, in December
of the same year, the interdiction of the area was lifted,
and the ranchers regained ownership of the area.
However, the indigenists of the Contact Front,
Marcelo dos Santos and Altair Algayer, did not give
up their investigations. Extra-officially, in the following
years they continued searching for and getting together
evidence, raising hypotheses and getting around the
obstacles set up by lumbermen, landjumpers and cattle-ranchers.
In 1993, the indigenists began to rely on a valuable
resource: recent satellite images made it possible to
cross with precision accumulated evidence of the presence
of the Indians with strips of forest left from the clearings
of the ranches. Then they began systematic tracking
of these regions of the forest. On the first two expeditions
they found nothing. They tried a third time and the
evidence appeared again. Finally, they located on a
satellite image a red dot (sign of deforestation) the
size of a pinhead, in the middle of a strip of forest
six by four kilometers. They marked the coordinates
and the team confirmed the location of the village.
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One month later, in September 1995, they prepared
a new expedition, this time certain that contact would
occur. They called reporters and, with the help of a
compass, they found the village four days later. The
first contacts were amply publicized in the press, especially
by the journal O Estado de São Paulo, by the
magazine Veja and by the TV Globo program Fantástico,
with images produced by Vincent Carelli, anthropologist
and cameraman of the Center for Indigenist Work/SP who
had followed the case since the 80s.
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According to the report by Pablo Pereira, journalist
of O Estado present on the occasion, on the top of a
slope two Indians covered with adornments appeared.
They seemed withdrawn. He, about 1.60 meters high. She,
shorter, dark skin, barefoot, carrying bows and arrows.
They talked loudly in an unknown language. By means
of gestures, the members of the Contact Front tried
to demonstrate that the visit was peaceful. The first
steps of the couple were timid. The woman began a cerimony
in which she appeared to grasp evil spirits in the air
and blow them into the forest. On aproaching the whites,
they touched their arms and hands. The woman trembled.
The man babbled an unintelligible sound. Later, all
of them smiled. The Indians indicated the presence of
another group in the same area, which they referred
to as "Akuntsu". In fact, a month later, contact
with the Akuntsu was made.
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After the contact was proved, the area was again
interdicted, a decade after the first interdiction.
The ranchers reacted immediately, trying to spread a
version that the contact announced by the Funai was
a farce, set up with Indian actors. They even went to
the village of the recently contacted Indians, accompanied
by the Cinta-larga, to tape a counter-proof in video.
After that, they requested from the Villas-Boas brothers
an opinion with regard to the truth of both tapes, accompanied
by a "present" of a new video cassete. The
indigenists preferred to watch the tapes on their old
machine and attested to the veracity of Carelli's material,
as well as the images made at the ranchers' orders,
with induced questions and reactions. Later, the "present"
was returned intact.
After this episode, the Federal Police in Rondônia
opened an investigation of the charge of genocide against
the Indians, based on the accusation that the ranchers
took Cinta-larga infected by flu to contact the Kanoê,
who had as yet not been immunized.
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After that, contact of the Funai team with the
Indians came to be more frequent, although they were
still not identified ethnolinguistically. At the time
of first contact, the Funai did not have any indigenous
interpreters. From the recordings made by Vincent Carelli,
interpreters of the Mequém language, another
people whose survivors live in indigenous areas of Rondônia,
were tested but without results.
The indigenist Inês Hargreaves collected
a list of 123 palavras by means of contact with two
Indian women of the group, which allowed Nilson Gabas
Jr., linguist of the Museu Goeldi of Belém, to
identify a great proximity with the Kanoê language.
An elderly man of about 70 years of age, who spoke the
Kanoê language - a language considered by linguists
to be practically extinct - fluently, was quickly located
on the Guaporé Indigenous Land. With the good
understanding that Munuzinho Kanoê had of the
tape recordings, and the answers the Indians gave on
contact with him, the Indians were identified as Kanoê.
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A Funai camp was set up at the entrance to one
of the forest reserves, on the banks of a small stream,
tributary of the Omerê. A medical and a dental
team began making regular monthly visits to the village
and a nursing assistant, trained in first aid, stays
at the camp continuously for three weeks every month.
There is even an employee to protect the Indians, in
the absence of the chief, from eventual interferences
by curious outsiders or intruders (such as cowhands,
lumbermen, and extractors of palm cabbage), as well
as to keep watch over the camp for possible retaliations
by annoyed landholders and lumbermen.
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In January, 1999, a technical group was formed
to define the limits of the Omerê Indigenous Land,
inhabited by the Kanoê and Akuntsu, which delimited
an area with 26,000 hectares and 81 kilometers perimeter.
The Land was declared official by the Ministry of Justice
in december of 2002 and awaits homologation by the President
of Republic.
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