Both Brazil and India have a lot in common as economies of the future, BRIC experts would like to have us believe. But what they invariably fail to tell us is about the ruthless marginalising and exploitation of indigenous people that have been taking place in these two countries in the pursuit of growth.
A community of Guarani Indians in Brazil, however, have decided that enough is enough and have retaken part of its ancestral land, having lived by the side of a highway for a year and a half. The Guarani marched back to their land last week, unwilling further to endure the appalling living conditions they had been subject to on the roadside.
The Indians of Laranjeira Nanderu community had their lands stolen from them in the 1960s, to make way for cattle ranches, according to Survival International. They returned to their land in 2008, but were evicted again in September 2009 – soon after, their village was brutally attacked and burned down.
Since then, the Guarani have been living under tarpaulin sheeting, with little access to clean water, food, or medical care, and subject to intense heat and flooding, by the side of a highway. Large trucks and cars thundered past day and night, and one Guarani was run over and killed.
Faride, spokesman of the community, told Survival researchers before the reoccupation, 'Laranjeira Nanderu was my father's land, my grandfather's land, my great grandfather's land... We need to go back there so we can work and live in peace... that is our dream.’
The community is now urging the government officially to protect their land so they are not evicted again. The Guarani have a deep spiritual connection to their land, upon which they rely for their mental and physical well-being.
Following the loss of almost all their land to ranches and soya and sugarcane plantations, thousands of Guarani are living in overcrowded reserves, and some are camped by the side of highways. Some Guarani leaders who have led their communities' reoccupations of their land, such as the internationally-renowned Marcos Veron, have been assassinated.
Survival International's Director, Stephen Corry, said, “It is no surprise that, having been forced to endure such precarious conditions for so long, the Guarani have taken matters into their own hands and returned home. This should surely act as a wake-up call for the authorities to protect the land and remove the lurking threat of another eviction. That is the least the Guarani deserve.”
It would be premature to dismiss this as an one-off incident. Sooner or later, people always fight back. Let's now see what the Indians of India do.