The Guarayos are an indigenous group living in their ancestral land in eastern Bolivia. [1] They are located north of the department of Santa Cruz. [2] The current population of the Guarayo group in Bolivia is 12,000. They primarily speak Guarayu, and 70% of the population is Roman Catholic with the remaining 30% practicing ethnic religions. Guarayu comes from the language of Guaraní as it belongs in the Tupí Family. They are known to be predominantly agricultural as much of their culture and lifestyle relies on their land. [2]
Most likely Guarayos migrated to Bolivia from Paraguay centuries before when the Guaraní attacked the frontiers of the Inca Empire. [3] Guarayos ancestors are believed to be the Guaraní. [4] Guarayos and Pauserna once made up a single group; one part of that group, the ancestors of the Guarayos, was moved into missions, and the other part remained independent and is known as Pauserna. [3] They were contacted and grouped in the beginning of the 1880s where they became involved in agriculture and cattle raising.[ citation needed ]
The Guarayos believe that three persons formed the world: Alaangui, Mbirachucha, and Candir. [5] They also hold Zaguaguayu with respect as their first ancestor. [5] The traditional religious beliefs include attributing marks on the moon to misbehavior of Abeulo, their Great Father. [5]
As missionaries came into their villages, Guaayo were in feather ornaments and paint without any other clothing. [6] Today, the Guaryo women wear dresses out of long cloth and men wear long bark-cloth tunics. [6]
The Guarayos reside in the Bolivian lowlands and are predominantly hunter-gatherers and small farmers that grow corn, bananas and rice. [7] Guarayos communities began forming sindicatos to occupy and allocate land in the 1970s. [8] These sindicatos, known locally as agrarian zones were headed by presidents selected by traditional village leaders. [8] Of the Guaryo population, 90.6% were below the poverty line, compared to 58.6% for Bolivia, and 38% for the Department of Santa Cruz. [7]
It was difficult for the Guarayo people to abandon polygyny as they resisted accepting marriage traditions of the church. [3] Young women require the consent of both their father and brother, where marriages between a man and his sister's daughter is preferred. Following the birth of a child, couvade is practiced. [8] Fathers remain in their hammocks for the first three days after their child's birth in order for the child's soul to follow its father and not be injured. [8]
When a Guaryo dies, their soul travels to the land of Tamoi, the Great Ancestor. [6] On this journey, their soul passes through various temptations with great danger. [3] At the end of the journey, Tamoi washes the soul as it will now become young and attractive again. [6]
Following the destruction of an interdepartmental highway[ clarification needed ] opening the region to outsides, the Guarayo people created second level organization, Central Organization of Native Guarayos Peoples (COPNAG). [9] Leaders were elected a general assembly consisting of representatives across the province. [9] COPNAG is responsible for representing Guarayo interests, allocating resources through submitting forest management plans entitled TCO lands, and certifying the authenticity of pre-existing land claims. [9]
COPNAG struggled with accusations and fraud because of the power the leaders of the organization have over land claims. [9] The organization soon split and a parallel group, the ‘authentic’ COPNAG assumed power and were soon recognized by the Santa Cruz departmental government and the Comité Cívico of Santa Cruz. [9] Daniel Yaquirera, the new President of COPNAG, has been fighting the pressures on their land with minimal support from the state government for their land rights. [10]
The 1996 Forest Law finally recognized the Guaryos as legitimate forest users occupying shared land. [11] During a period of broad reforms, this law was negotiated for the status and use of Bolivias forest land. [12] The law allowed them to consolidate their control of the land and create 76 forest management plans. [11] The government has not fully supported and defended these forest properties which has created insufficient security. In recent years, soybean producers have moved to the southern parts of the farmlands, occupied by the Guarayos, as the region has higher economic stakes. [2] This has led to greater administrative problems as organizations and the government often neglect the Guarayos property rights. [2]
The BO Road Sector Capacity Development Project includes an Indigenous Peoples Plan financed by The World Bank credit and loan that was approved in September 2015. [7] Through promoting intercultural dialogue, mechanisms of respect, and education for road usage and garbage management, the project aims to support the Guaryo and Siriona people. [7] Since the Guaryo group is in the project area, the Indigenous Peoples Plan was created in order for the indigenous group to benefit from the project. [7]
When Evo Morales won the presidential election in 2006 making him the first indigenous president of Bolivia, he promised hope to indigenous groups, including the Guarayos, by standing firmly with them and the environment. [11] However, during 2000–2017, deforestation in the Guarayos Indigenous Territory was enhanced by agricultural commodity production. [13] Evo Morales' presidency weakened the Guarayos governance as extractivism and export-oriented agriculture was prioritized over group autonomy. [13]
The demographic characteristics of the population of Bolivia are known from censuses, with the first census undertaken in 1826 and the most recent in 2012. The National Institute of Statistics of Bolivia (INE) has performed this task since 1950. The population of Bolivia in 2012 reached 10 million for the first time in history. The population density is 9.13 inhabitants per square kilometer, and the overall life expectancy in Bolivia at birth is 68.2 years. The population has steadily risen from the late 1800s to the present time. The natural growth rate of the population is positive, which has been a continuing trend since the 1950s; in 2012, Bolivia's birth rate continued to be higher than the death rate. Bolivia is in the third stage of demographic transition. In terms of age structure, the population is dominated by the 15–64 segment. The median age of the population is 23.1, and the gender ratio of the total population is 0.99 males per female.
The Guarani are a group of culturally-related indigenous peoples of South America. They are distinguished from the related Tupi by their use of the Guarani language. The traditional range of the Guarani people is in what is now Paraguay between the Paraná River and lower Paraguay River, the Misiones Province of Argentina, southern Brazil once as far east as Rio de Janeiro, and parts of Uruguay and Bolivia.
Tupi–Guarani is the most widely distributed subfamily of the Tupian languages of South America. It consists of about fifty languages, including Guarani and Old Tupi. The most widely spoken in modern times by far is Guarani, which is one of the two official languages of Paraguay.
Santa Cruz de la Sierra, commonly known as Santa Cruz, is the largest city in Bolivia and the capital of the Santa Cruz department.
Santa Cruz is the largest of the nine constituent departments of Bolivia, occupying about one-third (33.74%) of the country's territory. With an area of 370,621 km2 (143,098 sq mi), it is slightly smaller than Japan or the US state of Montana. It is located in the eastern part of the country, sharing borders in the north and east with Brazil and with Paraguay in the south.
The Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Bolivia is a national representative organization of the Bolivian indigenous movement. It was founded in October 1982 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra as the Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of the Bolivian East, with the participation of representatives of four indigenous peoples of the Bolivian East: Guarani-Izoceños, Chiquitanos, Ayoreos and Guarayos.
Guarani, Guaraní or Guarany may refer to
The Guaraní language belongs to the Tupí-Guaraní branch of the Tupí linguistic family.
A referendum to approve the autonomy statute of Santa Cruz Department of Bolivia was held on 4 May 2008. The vote resulted from strains between the Prefecture of Santa Cruz and President Evo Morales. The referendum was declared illegal and unconstitutional by the National Electoral Court. Final results from the referendum showed that 85.6% of participating voters supported autonomy. Abstention rates were 37.9%. Partisans of the Movement for Socialism called for a boycott of the vote, and the Guarayo, Guaraní, Chiquitano, Ayoreo, Yuracaré-Moxeño indigenous peoples were urged to reject holding the vote in their territories.
Bienvenido Zacu Mborobainchi is a Bolivian politician from the Guarayo people. His grandfather had been a Guarayo leader.
Bolivians are people identified with the country of Bolivia. This connection may be residential, legal, historical or cultural. For most Bolivians, several of these connections exist and are collectively the source of their being Bolivian.
The Chiquitano or Chiquitos are an indigenous people of Bolivia, with a small number also living in Brazil. The Chiquitano primarily live in the Chiquitania tropical savanna of Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia, with a small number also living in Beni Department and in Mato Grosso, Brazil. In the 2012 census, self-identified Chiquitanos made up 1.45% of the total Bolivian population or 145,653 people, the largest number of any lowland ethnic group. A relatively small proportion of Bolivian Chiquitanos speak the Chiquitano language. Many reported to the census that they neither speak the language nor learned it as children. The Chiquitano ethnicity emerged among socially and linguistically diverse populations required to speak a common language by the Jesuit Missions of Chiquitos.
Guarayu is a Tupian language of Bolivia that is spoken by the Guarayo people who number 23,910 in 2012.
Indigenous peoples in Bolivia, or Native Bolivians, are Bolivian people who are of indigenous ancestry. They constitute anywhere from 20 to 60% of Bolivia's population of 11,306,341, depending on different estimates, and depending notably on the choice "Mestizo" being available as an answer in a given census, in which case the majority of the population identify as mestizo, and they belong to 36 recognized ethnic groups. Aymara and Quechua are the largest groups. The geography of Bolivia includes the Andes, the Gran Chaco, and the Amazon Rainforest.
The Yuqui are an indigenous people of Bolivia. They primarily live in the Santa Cruz and Cochabamba Departments of eastern Bolivia.
The Sirionó are an indigenous people of Bolivia. They primarily live in the forested northern and eastern parts of Beni and northwestern Santa Cruz departments of Bolivia. They live between the San Martín, Negro Rivers, and the Machado River.
The Pauserna are an indigenous people in Bolivia and Brazil who live along the upper Río Guaporé. Most of them live in the southeastern part of the department of Beni, in Bolivia. The people derive their name from the fact that the pao cerne tree is abundant in their area. Only a few of the older people speak the Pauserna language, which is closely related to Guaraní and is a member of the Tupí language family.
The Mbyá, also called Mbyá Guaraní, are a branch of the Guaraní people who live in South America, across a wide territory that ranges through Paraguay, Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay.
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