It was a monumental week for Brazil’s Krenak Indigenous group after decades of being overlooked at best, and at worst, subjugated and tortured. On Tuesday, the Krenak people received a formal apology for human rights abuses they suffered during the military dictatorship (1964-1985) — a first in Brazil.
Writer Fernanda Montenegro holds Indigenous writer and environmental activist Ailton Krenak during his admission ceremony at the Brazil ian Academy of Letters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Friday, April 5, 2024. Krenak is the first Indigenous person to be elected to the academy. Indigenous writer and environmental activist Ailton Krenak stands at the Brazil ian Academy of Letters during his admission ceremony in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil , Friday, April 5, 2024.
Earlier, he told the academy he wants to create a platform to make the institution’s documents and books available in Indigenous languages, many of which are on the verge of disappearing.Mexican president wanted to lead Latin America, but reality and his own rhetoric got in the way“We could do this for every native tongue. It is completely up to the Brazilian Academy of Letters to include another 170 languages beyond Portuguese,” Krenak said.
Those crimes included forcing the Krenak off their land in southeastern Minas Gerais state, where a so-called reformatory site was built. There, Indigenous peoples were tortured, beaten and forbidden to speak their languages. President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has long advocated for Indigenous peoples’ rights and created eight new Indigenous-only territories since taking office for a third, non-consecutive term in 2023. He climbed the presidential ramp alongside
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