Saturday, October 10, 2009

First Contact (BBC4 Anthropology Season)

The question is: Is the following real or a hoax?




Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part Six

BBC4 writes the following about the show:
First Contact

Adventurous and high-paying tourists are being offered the chance to make "first contact" with some of the world's last remaining uncontacted tribes.

First contact with the outside world usually spells disaster for genuine uncontacted tribes.

Presented by Mark Anstice, an experienced expedition leader and author of a book also called First Contact, this film looks at the complex issues surrounding the ethics of first contact and meets the people involved.

Compare this to this story of first contact:

In Brazil, the Indian affairs department FUNAI has long had a small unit responsible for initiating contact, as a last resort, with remote peoples who are at imminent risk of an uncontrolled and possibly disastrous collision with the outside world.

One of this unit’s most extraordinary contacts took place in a remote corner of Brazil’s Amazon on 15 October 1996. After months of watching and waiting, a small group of Korubo Indians overcame their fear and slowly emerged from the forest to meet the FUNAI team.

The tension of this historic first moment was captured on film by Sydney Possuelo, the head of the FUNAI unit. Unlike so many other first contacts, this initial encounter was peaceful, and no Korubo died as a result.

Some years previously, this tiny group of 24 Korubo had split off from the main group and unknowingly migrated towards an area where armed loggers and colonists were invading. Fearing for their safety, the FUNAI team decided to make contact with them. For months the team camped by the river bank and cut trails into the forest to locate the Korubo village, hoping that their permanent presence on the river would signal their friendly intentions.

However, this small group of Korubo remains very vulnerable to violent attacks. Their natural curiosity has led some to come out of the forest to seek contact with people travelling up and down the river. FUNAI has set up a guard post on the river in an attempt to stop people entering the Indians’ land.

The Korubo’s territory lies within the Vale do Javari indigenous reserve on the border of Brazil and Peru. It is home to seven contacted peoples and about seven uncontacted Indian groups, one of the largest concentrations of isolated peoples in Brazil.

With over eight million hectares of pristine rainforest, this area has long been targeted by rubber tappers, loggers, colonists and drug runners, who have frequently massacred the Indians. The Korubo are not afraid to retaliate and have occasionally killed invaders, signalling their desire to be left alone.

This article was taken from Survival International's website. This is a great source of information about the people most at risk in the world, particularly non-contacted aboriginal peoples in various places. They claim they "... work for tribal peoples’ rights in three complementary ways: education, advocacy and campaigns. We also offer tribal people themselves a platform to address the world. We work closely with local indigenous organizations, and focus on tribal peoples who have the most to lose, usually those most recently in contact with the outside world."
___________________________
References:

Anonymous. "First Contact". BBC Press Office: BBC Four Autumn 2006: Anthropology Season. Posted: December 9, 2006. Available online: http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2006/09_september/12/four_anthropology.shtml

Anonymous. 2009. "Uncontacted Tribes: Making Contact". Survival International: The Movement for Tribal Peoples. Available online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/uncontactedtribes/makingcontact

No comments: