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KAIABI   
photo: Simone Ferreira de Athayde, 1998.
 
Other names:
Caiabi, Kayabi

Where they live:
Mato Grosso and Pará state

How many people:
1000 (in 1999)

Language:
of Tupi-Guarani family

The Kaiabi have vigorously resisted the invasion of their lands by rubber companies since the end of the 19th Century. After the 1950s, the region of the Arinos, Peixes and Teles Pires rivers was divided up into glebes that became ranches and the Kaiabi were divided into three groups. Most moved to the Xingu Indian Park, where they are outstanding for their practice of a strong and diversified agriculture, their art which is characterized by complex graphic designs inspired by their mythology, and by their active participation in the indigenous movement organized in defense of the interests of the ethnic groups of the Park.
General information on this can be found at the page on the Xingu Indian Park.

Klinton Senra
Instituto Socioambiental
kltvs@ig.com.br
março de 1999.
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