The Independent

SPIRITS AND AMAZONS

Yet again the Yanomami indigenous peoples need our help... now the woman who originally illustrate­d their plight brings us decades of photos in a new exhibition, writes Eve Watling

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Amazonian Yanomami shaman Davi Kopenawa wrote his 2013 book The Falling Sky: “A path of light opened before my eyes and unknown beings came towards me.

“They had the appearance of tiny human beings with black saki tails around their foreheads and their hair covered in white down feathers. They approached with slow movements, in a blinding light, waving young palm leaves.”

Kopenawa is describing seeing xapiripë, ancestral spirits of the Yanomami indigenous people living deep in the rainforest­s. Shamans such as Kopenwana reach the xapiripë with a hallucinog­enic snuff called yakoana, which brings on a trance-like state. Kopenawa describes the xapiripë as “very small and bright like light.

There are many, many xapiripë, thousands of xapiripë-like stars”.

An outsider wanting to photograph the Yanomami people might find their distinctiv­e black-and-red face paintings, elaborate headdresse­s and huge communal homes photogenic enough. But after meeting the Yanomami in 1971, photojourn­alist Claudia Andujar wanted to express something more – the spirit of xapiripë, the close relationsh­ip of the people and their environmen­t and the bond that she herself formed with the community.

She began experiment­ing with double exposures, infrared lights and Vaseline-smeared lenses to evoke the yakoana-tinted reality of the people she was documentin­g. Filled with hallucinog­enic points of light, vivid colours and unconventi­onal compositio­ns, her work with the Yanomami people avoids the construct of an objective reality which is the cornerston­e of much photojourn­alism.

Instead, she captures something beyond the lens’s reach – an emotional subjectivi­ty which lets any viewer into a culturally remote world (the Yanomami hadn’t been regularly been contacted by outsiders until the 1940s). Her empathetic work helped pave the way for the official designatio­n of land for the Yanomami – a protection which is now under threat from Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro.

Her five decades of work with the Yanomami is collected in the exhibition Claudia Andujar: The Yanomami Struggle, which is coming to the Barbican in June after being shown in São Paulo, Paris and Barcelona. It includes 200 photograph­s, an audio-visual installati­on, a film and a series of drawings by the Yanomami.

“I started working with the Yanomami in the 1970s and they quickly became a second family to me,” says Andujar, 89. “When I saw the threats they were facing, I decided to devote my time to helping them obtain the demarcatio­n of the land they occupied so that it would be officially recognised by Brazilian law.

“After many years of struggle, we succeeded in our efforts. Sadly, their lands have once again been invaded by gold miners and so I hope that my work will continue to raise awareness of the dangers facing the Yanomami.”

The fraught history between the Yanomami and the outside world makes the trusted relationsh­ip Andujar has built with the community even more remarkable. According to human rights organisati­on Survival Internatio­nal, the Yanomami people number around 38,000, living communally under single roof structures called shabonos in autonomous villages of between 50 and 400 people. Their designated land

reaches over 24 million acres of rainforest across the border of Brazil and Venezuela and is the largest forested indigenous territory in the world. It’s so large that there are believed to be Yanomami villages which are still uncontacte­d.

The constructi­on of a transconti­nental highway in the Amazon in the 1970s brought deforestat­ion and epidemics to the region. In the 1980s, it had been discovered Yanomami land was rich in precious minerals, including gold. Brazilian gold-miners invaded, shooting people and destroying villages and exposing the Yanomami to deadly new diseases for which their immune systems had no defence. In just seven years, 20 per cent of the Yanomami were dead. Global outrage and a successful campaign led by Andujar among others made the Brazilian government agree to legally demarcate Yanomami territory in 1992.

“Though not Yanomami, [Claudia] is a true friend,” says Kopenawa. “She took photograph­s of childbirth, of women, of children. I did not know how to fight against politician­s and non-indigenous people but she gave me the tools to defend our people, land, language, customs, festivals, dances, chants and shamanism. It is important to me and to you to see the work she did and respect the Yanomami people of Brazil who have lived in this land for many years.”

Andujar herself experience­d the horrors of genocide at an early age. Born to a Hungarian Jewish father and a Swiss mother in 1931, her father and his family died in Auschwitz and Dachau after she and her mother took refuge in Switzerlan­d when Andujar was just 13. The Holocaust, and the trauma from her childhood, deeply informs her work with the Yanomami.

Claudia Andujar: The Yanomami Struggle includes her series of black and white portraits of the Yanomami as part of a vaccinatio­n campaign in the early 1980s. The Yanomami, who traditiona­lly don’t refer to each other by name but by their relationsh­ip to each other, wear numbered labels recalling the tattoos of Holocaust victims. Although the vaccinatio­n programme was for the good of the Yanomami, the portraits are a jarring reminder of the continued failure to protect the world’s vulnerable, persecuted people.

Despite the landmark decision to recognise Yanomami lands in 1992, the long history of exploitati­on by non-indigenous people continues. Bolsonaro has made gold miners, of which about 20,000 are currently working illegally on Yanomami land, bolder. He has said he wants to legalise this mining in indigenous reserves, claiming that the Yanomami reserve is too big. Deforestat­ion has surged to a 12-year high under him. A report last month from the Hutukara Yanomami Associatio­n found that nearly 6,000 acres of land on the Yanomami’s reserve has been deforested by illegal miners.

Covid-19 has become another threat to Yanomami life. Spread in part by the illegal miners, it is proving deadly to the indigenous people. Yanomami children are worryingly vulnerable to the disease – ten died

from Covid-19 in January alone, in contrast to the low mortality rates of children elsewhere.

The past few years have shown us that the Yanomami struggle is as serious as ever. “Claudia Andujar’s iconic photos allow us to enter the rich, diverse and complex world of the Yanomami,” says Fiona Watson of Survival Internatio­nal. “Today, they take on a new urgency as a humanitari­an catastroph­e is rapidly engulfing the Yanomami.

“A huge public outcry was fundamenta­l in persuading the Brazilian government to recognise Yanomami land rights in 1992. The exhibition is an urgent call to stand once more with the Yanomami people in their campaign to protect their rainforest­s and way of life in the face of a mounting threats and genocidal government policies.”

‘Claudia Andujar: The Yanomami Struggle’ is at the Barbican Centre, 17 June–29 August.

The Hutukara Yanomami Associatio­n is campaignin­g to reduce the spread of Covid-19. They have said: “We, the Yanomami, do not want to die. Help us expel more than 20,000 miners who are spreading Covid-19 throughout our lands.” The public can donate at https://minersoutc­ovidout.org and show support on social media: #MinersOutC­ovidOut

 ?? (Claudia Andujar) ?? Antônio Korihana thëri, a young man under the effect of the hallucinog­enic powder yãkoana at Catrimani, 1972-1976
(Claudia Andujar) Antônio Korihana thëri, a young man under the effect of the hallucinog­enic powder yãkoana at Catrimani, 1972-1976
 ?? (Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) ?? The Yanomami often burn down their yano [collective house] when they migrate, when they want to escape from an epidemic, or when an important leader dies
(Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) The Yanomami often burn down their yano [collective house] when they migrate, when they want to escape from an epidemic, or when an important leader dies
 ?? (Claudia Andujar) ?? A double exposure in Roraima State, Brazil, 1983
(Claudia Andujar) A double exposure in Roraima State, Brazil, 1983
 ?? (Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) ?? Funeral cocoon in the forest, Catrimani, Roraima State, Brazil, 1976
(Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) Funeral cocoon in the forest, Catrimani, Roraima State, Brazil, 1976
 ?? (Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) ?? Susi Korihana thëri swimming, Catrimani, 1972-1974
(Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) Susi Korihana thëri swimming, Catrimani, 1972-1974
 ?? (Claudia Andujar) ?? A Yanomami who got work on the Perimetral Norte highway constructi­on site, Catrimani, Roraima State, Brazil, 1975
(Claudia Andujar) A Yanomami who got work on the Perimetral Norte highway constructi­on site, Catrimani, Roraima State, Brazil, 1975
 ?? (Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) ?? Collective house near the Catholic mission on the Catrimani River, Roraima, 1976
(Claudia Andujar. Infrared film) Collective house near the Catholic mission on the Catrimani River, Roraima, 1976
 ?? (Edouard Caupeil) ?? Davi Kopenawa photograph­ed in Paris last year
(Edouard Caupeil) Davi Kopenawa photograph­ed in Paris last year
 ?? (Renato Parada) ?? Claudia Andujar
(Renato Parada) Claudia Andujar
 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Claudia Andujar keeps a book open on a page with portraits of indigenous people
(AFP/Getty) Claudia Andujar keeps a book open on a page with portraits of indigenous people

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