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"Us and Them" Film Screening with Tuwe Huni Kuin

  • Golden Drum 97 Green St. G1 Brooklyn, NY, 11222 Unites States of America (map)

A wonderful short documentary by Nilson Tuwe Huni Kuin, about a tribe living in voluntary isolation (locally called “Brabos”) who have been forced to flee from the Amazon Rainforest of P​​eru due to 30 years of commercial and industrial development.

This film shows the efforts of the Huni Kuin people, together with FUNAI, to mediate potential conflicts with locals of the region (where the Brabos have arrived to) and speak for the right of these people to remain in isolation.

“We know from our own moment of first contact with the outside world that we [Huni Kuin] experienced many changes in our lives.” - Nilson Huni Kuin

Suggested donation: $20; no one turned away due to lack of funds.

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Tuwe is a spiritual leader and Chief of his tribe, the Huni Kuin people of the Brazilian Amazon. Tuwe is from a long tradition of medicine people. He shares this ceremony with the support of all his ancestors and community. Tuwe has a clear connection with the spiritual world and strives to build harmony for all people. Join us in sharing Tuwe’s cultural and religious rituals on this day of healing and co-existence.

Tuwe lives in the Huni Kuin (Kaxinawá) Indigenous Territory of Rio Humaitá, São Vicente village, in the city of Tarauacá in Acre, Brazil. This is a 5 day boat ride from the nearest town. He is a filmmaker and has already produced a documentary about the indigenous peoples who still live voluntarily isolated in the Western Amazon, located on the border strip between Brazil and Peru. As an Agroforestry agent, he also works in the Environmental Territorial Management of his homeland and surroundings. He is also a leader, thinker and messenger for his people, both domestically and internationally. He has been researching his culture, cultivating his native spirituality and following the path of sacred medicines from a very young age with his father.

Tuwe is the youngest son of the Tribal leader, Vicente Saboia Nawa Iba Nai Bai Huni Kuin, who worked for the protection of the Rio Humaitá Indigenous Land and for the rights and empowerment of his people. Although his father is no longer on this physical plane, he lives on as a warrior and a patriarch of the Huni Kuin Land of the Humaitá River.