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Guaraní |
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Guaraní (gwäränē`), indigenous group living in the eastern lowland area of South America, related to the Tupí of the Rio São Francisco and the Tupinambá Tupinambá, a people living in the eastern lowland area of South America, related to the Tupí of the Rio São Francisco and the Guaraní of Paraguay and adjacent portions of Brazil and Argentina.
..... Click the link for more information. on the Atlantic coast. The Guaraní language is currently spoken by over 4 million people in Paraguay and in adjacent portions of Argentina, Brazil, and Bolivia. At the time of the Spanish conquest (16th cent.), the Guaraní lived in settlements consisting of four to eight large communal dwellings, each of which accommodated 100 people or more. Chiefs resided patrilocally, but other men lived in their wives' houses and performed bride-service. They depended primarily on intensive agriculture supplemented by fishing, hunting, and gathering; the staple crops were corn and manioc. Men cleared fields that women tilled. Although their material culture was not advanced, Guaraní songs, dances, and myths constituted a rich body of folklore. Their religion was based on an impressive and elaborate mythology. The shaman was believed to possess supernatural powers that allowed him to ward off evil and cure sickness. The Guaraní survived initial contact with rapacious conquistadors because Paraguay lay apart from the main routes of Spanish trade and influence. Early Jesuit missionaries established the historically controversial system of reductions reductions, Span. reducciones, settlements of indigenous peoples in colonial Latin America, founded (beginning in 1609) to utilize efficiently native labor and to teach the natives the ways of Spanish life. ..... Click the link for more information. , which (for a short time) protected them from the slave-trade, and hispanicized them. Surviving Guaraní continue to practice communal agriculture in some rural areas and Guaraní culture has had a strong influence on present-day Paraguayan musical folklore. GuaraníSouth American Indian group that has traditionally inhabited eastern Paraguay and adjacent areas of Brazil, Bolivia, and Argentina. They numbered about five million at the turn of the 21st century. Aboriginal Guaraní were warlike and took captives to be sacrificed (and allegedly eaten). Their shifting cultivation required them to move their settlements every few years. The descendants of Guaraní women and Spanish ranchers are today Paraguay's rural population. Only a few scattered communities of “pure” Guaraní remain, but Paraguay claims a strong Guaraní heritage, and most of the people living along the Paraguay River near Asunción speak Guaraní, now much altered by contact with Spanish. More Paraguayans speak and understand Guaraní than Spanish. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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No references found | While US films have dominated the closing days of the festival, other standouts include Argentine-Italian director Marco Bechis' "BirdWatchers," exposing the plight of Brazil's Guarani Indians in the face of the biofuels boom, and "Teza," in which Ethiopia's Haile Gerima revisits his homeland under the dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam. Vincent to the Guarani Indians of the Amazon to leaders of the Japanese healing tradition of Seiki Jutsu. Based on historical events from the 1700s and set in Paraguay, Brazil, and Argentina, the film was simultaneously moving and inspiring, yet also a disturbing presentation of how the Guarani Indians found themselves at the epicenter of a geo-political, religious conflict between the Crown of Portugal, Spain, and the missionary Jesuits. |
Guarani Indians |
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