Santa Fe New Mexican

Pope offers defense of indigenous peoples

Departure from otherwise purely religious visit to Peru fits squarely within pontiff’s advocacy for environmen­tal issues

- By Marcelo Rochabrún RODRIGO ABD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru — In this sweltering Amazonian city, Pope Francis on Friday gave a stirring defense of the region’s indigenous people, whose lands and way of life are threatened by industry and government, leaving almost no institutio­ns to protect them.

It was a departure from an otherwise purely religious visit to Peru, where Francis arrived Thursday from Chile, but it fit squarely within his advocacy for environmen­tal preservati­on.

Facing a crowded sports arena — where the main stage was neatly divided between clerics sitting on chairs and indigenous people in traditiona­l garments sitting on the ground — Francis said he understood the local challenges.

He deplored, on one hand, “the pressure being exerted by great business interests that want to lay hands on its petroleum, gas, lumber, gold and forms of agro-industrial mono-cultivatio­n” and, on the other hand, threats from policies that ostensibly aim to conserve land “without taking into account” its inhabitant­s.

He also criticized those who call indigenous rights a “hindrance” to economic developmen­t.

“The fact is, your lives cry out against a style of life that is oblivious to its own real cost,” he said.

The speech resonated with indigenous leaders here, who have expressed hopes that the papal visit would finally cast a spotlight on their plight. But they also asked why indigenous leaders had been left to stand on the sidelines.

“It’s incoherent, it’s contradict­ory, to have an event to show the world the problems of the indigenous people and not let their principal authoritie­s speak,” said Julio Cusurichi, a native Shipibo and president of the Federation of Natives of the Madre de Dios River and Its Tributarie­s, or Fenamad.

“We are again expected to be subdued by the church?” asked Edwin Vásquez, who leads the Coordinato­r of Indigenous Organizati­ons of the Amazon River Basin, or COICA, an umbrella group. “I’m Catholic, I believe in God, but I’ve learned not to trust priests.”

Vasquez and Cusurichi, among the most prominent indigenous leaders here, said they had been denied, at the last minute, a chance to address the pope. (Cusurichi gave Francis a present but did not speak.)

“We’re scared because people who are from other places want our people to disappear,” said Luis Miguel Tayori, an indigenous man who spoke at the event.

The pope’s visit has overwhelme­d Puerto Maldonado. The stadium had capacity for 100,000 attendees, more than the city’s total population. The city was closed to traffic, forcing everyone to commute to events on foot. More than 2,500 police officers dotted almost every corner of the city. Hundreds more were dispatched from other cities.

Small and remote, Puerto Maldonado seemed an unlikely candidate for a papal visit. Unlike Peru’s bigger cities, its history does not trace to the Andean nation’s colonial past, when Spaniards urbanized and evangelize­d at the same time.

But Puerto Maldonado represents the gateway to two bluntly contradict­ory worlds that sit within Francis’ interests. The city provides access to pristine rain forest, jungle lodges and biodiversi­ty research stations, but it is also the entry point to a 21st-century gold rush that has not only eroded trees and rivers but also the rule of law.

From above, the mined areas look like orange scars piercing a green blanket made of trees. From the ground, the rise of illegal mining in the region has been accompanie­d by a rise in violent crime and human traffickin­g, which Francis called a “devastatin­g assault on life.” Mining also has threatened the territorie­s where indigenous population­s live. Tons of mercury, a byproduct of gold mining, have been poured into rivers.

In his message, Francis seemed to agree. “We have to break with the historical paradigm that views Amazonia as an inexhausti­ble source of supplies for other countries without concern for its inhabitant­s,” he said.

Others say mining is facing too much of a stigma in a city that has boomed in the past decade partly because of it. Maria Quispe Ccoca, from Huepetuhe, a town that has come to symbolize the region’s gold rush, said she had hoped the pope would strike a conciliato­ry note without demonizing miners. “We need peace, reconcilia­tion, especially in the far-flung towns of our Amazon jungle,” said Quispe Ccoca, who traveled to Puerto Maldonado to see Francis.

But indigenous leaders say they have had enough.

“We need a proper indigenous economy that is based on a sustainabl­e use of the rain forest,” Vásquez said. “We need an alternativ­e to hell, and hell is mining.”

 ??  ?? A priest holds a baby as clergy and indigenous people wait Friday for the arrival of Pope Francis in Puerto Maldonado, Madre de Dios province, Peru. Francis met with several thousand indigenous people gathering in a coliseum in Puerto Maldonado, the...
A priest holds a baby as clergy and indigenous people wait Friday for the arrival of Pope Francis in Puerto Maldonado, Madre de Dios province, Peru. Francis met with several thousand indigenous people gathering in a coliseum in Puerto Maldonado, the...

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