Abya Yala (from the Kuna language: 'Abiayala', meaning "mature land" [1] ) is used by some indigenous peoples of the Americas to refer to the Americas. [2] The term is used by some indigenous organisations, institutions, and movements as a symbol of identity and respect for the land one inhabits. [3] The increasing usage of the term can be viewed in the context of decolonization, as it serves to create an understanding that "land and discourse, territorio y palabra, cannot be disjointed" and a geography in which a struggle for sovereignty and resistance occurs on an everyday basis for Indigenous communities. [4]
The name, which translates to "land in its full maturity", "land of lifeblood", or "noble land that welcomes all" originates from the Guna people who once inhabited a region spanning from the northern coast of Colombia to the Darién Gap, and now live on the Caribbean coast of Panama, in the Comarca of Guna Yala. [5] The term is Pre-Columbian.
The first explicit usage of the expression in its political sense was at the 2nd Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala, held in Quito in 2004. [6] Despite each indigenous group on the continent having unique endonyms for the regions they live in (e.g. Tawantinsuyu, Anahuac or pt:Pindorama), the expression Abya Yala is increasingly used in search of building a sense of unity and belonging amongst cultures which have a shared cosmovision (for instance a deep relationship with the land) and history of colonialism.
The Bolivian indigenist Takir Mamani argues for the use of the term "Abya Yala" in the official declarations of indigenous peoples' governing bodies, saying that "placing foreign names on our villages, our cities, and our continents is equivalent to subjecting our identity to the will of our invaders and their heirs." [7] Thus, use of the term "Abya Yala" rather than a term such as New World or America may have ideological implications indicating support for indigenous rights.
A publishing house in Ecuador, Editorial Abya Yala, chose its name according to Takir Mamani's suggestion. [3] The name has also been used by an independent theater in Costa Rica, Teatro Abya Yala, [2] and by a San Francisco video production and web design firm, Abya-Yala Productions. [6]
A similar term referring to North America specifically is "Turtle Island", which is used by several Northeastern Woodland Native American tribes, especially the Haudenosaunee or Iroquois Confederacy, for part of the continent. [8]
An anthology titled "Turtle Island to Abya Yala", featuring 60 Native American and Latina women artists and poets, had raised startup funding on Kickstarter as of 2011. [9]
This section includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations .(October 2024) |
Some critics assert that the Guna people do not refer to the entire American continent when using the term Abya Yala, arguing that, cosmologically, the Guna refer to their ancestral lands.
However, studies by Guna intellectuals, such as the ethnolinguist Abadio Green Stocel and the sociologist and poet Aiban Wagua, indicate that the construction of the cosmogonic meaning of Abya Yala is related to the partitioning of Mother Earth into continents. In this process of creation and separation of the world, Abya Yala corresponds to the continent inhabited by Indigenous peoples, effectively assuming a continental nuance, distinct from the term associated specifically with the territory occupied by the Guna people, Guna Yala.
Moreover, the use of this term, which has been considered lacking demonstrable historical foundations, has been adopted by scholars proposing decolonial academic perspectives (Arturo Escobar and Walter Mignolo, among others) and by some Indigenous groups, in some cases associated with leftist ideological political movements in various countries on the continent, without a connection to the different cultures that have developed in the continental territory. In particular, the use of the term was promoted by the political movement of Bolivian Aymara Indianist Constantino Lima (self-named Takir Mamani, b. 1933) after a visit to Panama. Bolivian Indianists Pedro Portugal Mollinedo and Carlos Macusaya Cruz narrate this in their book El indianismo katarista. Una mirada crítica:
“[Constantino Lima] stopped to visit the Indigenous peoples of Panama. There, he learned that they referred to their lands as Abya Yala:
‘It was an unforgettable day because after 500 years of artificial separation, the moment came when I met the Guna brothers. I arrived at the island of Ustupo, one of the 300 islands of San Blas (Republic of Panama). Indeed, it was a solemn meeting. As we embraced, our hearts seemed to be conversing as well, because the diastole and systole seemed to leap like the finish of a race. The saylas [keepers of traditional wisdom] were the first to welcome me with the rigors and customs of decent Indigenous people. Among many things, we reached the name of their lands. It was a 76-year-old sayla, accompanied by others, who narrated the history passed down verbally from generation to generation, and that could no longer be kept silent in front of a brother who arrives from such distant lands.’ Regarding whether that name would be restrictive for the use of the Guna and its meaning, [Constantino] Lima states: ‘When asked [by the sayla] if that name was only for what is called Central America, he exclaimed: “No: it is the name of the entire territorial mass, that is, everything they call North America, Central America, and South America. Abya-Yala encompasses all of this. In our language, abya means ‘land’ (like something from Pachamama and many additions) and yala is a young man in the prime of youth. Thus, Abya-Yala is the territory in full bloom of youth.”’
El indianismo katarista. Un análisis crítico (2016: 272)
Pedro Portugal Mollinedo and Carlos Macusaya Cruz
According to critics of the term, each culture gave a name in its respective language to the territory they occupied. The Guarani territory was called Yvy Marãe'ỹ by its inhabitants (translated in ancient times as ‘virgin land’ and currently as ‘land without evil’). This region extended into what is today Paraguay, southern Brazil, and northeastern Argentina.
Guna Yala, formerly known as San Blas, is a comarca indígena in northeast Panama. Guna Yala is home to the indigenous people known as the Gunas. Its capital is Gaigirgordub. It is bounded on the north by the Caribbean Sea, on the south by the Darién Province and Emberá-Wounaan, on the east by Colombia, and on the west by the province of Colón.
The Guna are an indigenous people of Panama and Colombia. Guna people live in three politically autonomous comarcas or autonomous reservations in Panama, and in a few small villages in Colombia. There are also communities of Guna people in Panama City, Colón, and other cities. Most Guna live on small islands off the coast of the comarca of Guna Yala known as the San Blas Islands. The other two Guna comarcas in Panama are Kuna de Madugandí and Kuna de Wargandí. They are Guna-speaking people who once occupied the central region of what is now Panama and the neighboring San Blas Islands and still survive in marginal areas.
The Sápara, also known as Zápara or Záparo, are an indigenous people native to the Amazon rainforest along the border of Ecuador and Peru. They once occupied some 12,000 mi2 between the Napo River and the Pastaza. Early in the 20th century, there were some 200,000 Zapara. From the year 2009 on the Ecuadorian Zápara call themselves Sápara. The official name is Nación Sápara del Ecuador (NASE). It means Sápara Nation of Ecuador. The president of this nation is Klever Ruiz. The Sápara Nation was officially registered by CONDENPE – the Council of Development of the nationalities and peoples of Ecuador – on September 16, 2009. The current name of the organisation is the result of a unification process of upriver and downriver communities. There was a conflict between these different groups about their authentic ethnic identity in the last years of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century. With this unification this conflict seems to be solved. CONDENPE confirms as well officially the legal status of autonomy or self-government of the Sápara Nation of Ecuador N.A.S.E. and confirms their territory between the rivers Pindoyacu, Conambo and Alto Corrientes in the province of Pastaza. It is confirmed as well that the head office of NASE is the city of Shell, Pastaza.
The Mola or Molas is a hand-made textile that forms part of the traditional women's clothing of the indigenous Guna people from Panama and Colombia. Their clothing includes a patterned wrapped skirt (saburet), a red and yellow headscarf (musue), arm and leg beads (wini), a gold nose ring (olasu) and earrings in addition to the mola blouse (dulemor). Two groups, Choco and Cuna lived side by side without intermarriage and without adopting a similar culture. In Dulegaya, the Guna's native language, "mola" means "shirt" or "clothing". The mola originated with the tradition of Guna women painting their bodies with geometric designs, using available natural colors; at a certain point, after the arrival of the Spanish, these same designs were woven in cotton, and later still, sewn using cloth "acquired by trade from the ships that came to barter for coconuts during the 19th century".
There is an ongoing discussion about the terminology used by the Indigenous peoples of the Americas to describe themselves, as well as how they prefer to be referred to by others. Preferred terms vary primarily by region and age. As Indigenous peoples and communities are diverse, there is no consensus on naming.
The Naso or Teribe people are an indigenous people of Panama and Costa Rica. They primarily live in northwest Panama in the Bocas del Toro Province and Naso Tjër Di Comarca as well as in southern Costa Rica in the Puntarenas Province. There are roughly 3,500 people who belong to the Naso tribe. It is one of the few Native American indigenous groups or tribes that continues to have a monarchy.
The San Blas Islands of Panama is an archipelago comprising approximately 365 islands and cays, of which 49 are inhabited. They lie off the north coast of the Isthmus of Panama, east of the Panama Canal. A part of the comarca (district) Guna Yala along the Caribbean coast of Panama, it is home to the Kuna people.
The Kuna language, spoken by the Kuna people of Panama and Colombia, belongs to the Chibchan language family.
Turtle Island is a name for Earth or North America, used by some American Indigenous peoples, as well as by some Indigenous rights activists. The name is based on a creation myth common to several indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands of North America.
Eduardo Estrella Aguirre was an Ecuadorian doctor and researcher who published Flora Huayaquilensis: The Botanical Expedition of Juan Tafalla 1799-1808.
The indigenous peoples of Panama, also known as Native Panamanians, are the original inhabitants of Panama, is the Native peoples whose history in the territory of today's Panama predates Spanish colonization. As of the 2010 census, Indigenous peoples constitute 12.3% of Panama’s population of 3.4 million, totaling just over 418,000 individuals. The Ngäbe and Buglé comprise half of the Indigenous peoples of Panama.
The lands inhabited by indigenous peoples receive different treatments around the world. Many countries have specific legislation, definitions, nomenclature, objectives, etc., for such lands. To protect indigenous land rights, special rules are sometimes created to protect the areas they live in. In other cases, governments establish "reserves" with the intention of segregation. Some indigenous peoples live in places where their right to land is not recognised, or not effectively protected.
The Emberá, also known in the historical literature as the Chocó or Katío Indians are an Indigenous people of Panama and Colombia. In the Emberá languages, the word ẽberá can be used to mean person, man, or indigenous person, depending on the context in which it is used. There are approximately 33,000 people living in Panama and 50,000 in Colombia who identify as Emberá.
Ustupu-Ogobsucum Airport is an airport serving the island town of Ustupo in the Guna Yala comarca of Panama. It handles domestic flights and general aviation.
The Cayos Limones or Lemon Keys are a group of Caribbean islands in the San Blas Archipelago in Guna Yala province of Panama. As part of the autonomous Guna Yala indigenous territory it is mainly populated by the Guna indigenous People. The islands in Cayos Limones are sparsely populated. The most notable of the islands are Isla de Perro and Chichimen, both are situated near substantial reefs making them ideal for snorkeling, as they contain several sunken ships. The economy is mainly based on tourism, fishing and coconut harvesting. The Keys are connected to the other islands of the archipelago and to the mainland by taxi-boat, normally through the other islands of El Porvenir or Carti Sugtupu.
Lepidoblepharis emberawoundule is a species of gecko, a lizard in the family Sphaerodactylidae. The species is endemic to Panama.
Joel Fred Sherzer was an American anthropological linguist known for his research with the Guna people of Panama and his focus on verbal art and discourse-centered approaches to linguistic research. He co-founded the Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America. Sherzer completed his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania in 1968 and thereafter taught at the University of Texas at Austin for his entire career.
The San Blas Rebellion, Guna Revolution or Revolution of Tule was an uprising by the Kuna, to declare independence, in the San Blas Islands, in February 1925.
Petita Ayarza Pérez is a Panamanian Indigenous political leader and businesswoman. In the 2019 general election, she became the first Guna woman to run for a seat as deputy and be elected to the National Assembly of Panama.
Diwigdi ("Diwi") Valiente is an indigenous climate activist from the Guna people in Panama. He communicates with international audiences about the effects of climate change and sea level rise on his community, who mostly live on coastal islands in Guna Yala. He founded the organization "Burwigan" which means "children" in Kuna, to advocate for the community and bring attention to the issue of climate change by inviting artists to document the effects on the community. He is also an advocate for sustainable tourism, and opened a hostel in 2018 with his business partner, Allen Lim.