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         Quechua Indigenous Peoples:     more books (16)
  1. We Alone Will Rule: Native Andean Politics in the Age of Insurgency (Living in Latin America) by Sinclair Thomson, 2003-01-15
  2. Magical Writing In Salasaca: Literacy And Power In Highland Ecuador (Westview Case Studies in Anthropology) by Peter Wogan, 2003-07-31

21. NATIVE-L (July 1993): Re: Film Festival Re. Indigenous Peoples
indigenous peoples. from the 60's and 70's is very focused on Bolivian indigenouspeople most famous films (and the names of other films as well) are in quechua.
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9307/0035.html
Re: Film festival re. Indigenous Peoples
Pam Wilson pswilson@macc.wisc.edu
Wed, 7 Jul 1993 20:05:00 CDT
I forwarded the original post on this topic to the SCREEN-L list,
and I received this response through email, which I am forwarding
since I no longer have the address of the original poster. If
anyone has saved that, could you please relay this to them? Thanks.
cthompso@popserver.cc.gettysburg.edu

I am sending you this response to your request for suggestions
for the festival. My first suggestion is that a unit on Latin American
native people be included.
Specific materials and individuals.
(1) Although now inactive as far as I can tell, the Bolivian UKAMAU group from the 60's and 70's is very focused on Bolivian indigenous people. In fact, also the name of the group and the name of one of their most famous films (and the names of other films as well) are in Quechua. I

22. NATIVE-L (October 1993): AI On Indigenous Peoples
The war on drugs has also taken its toll on indigenous lives, especially becausemany indigenous peoples live in drugs growing areas. A quechua leader in
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9310/0165.html
AI on Indigenous Peoples
Human Rights Coordinator hrcoord@igc.apc.org
Wed, 27 Jan 1993 14:58:00 PDT
Subject: AI on Indigenous Peoples
/* Written 7:52 am Oct 11, 1992 by hrcoord@igc.apc.org in igc:hr.news */
/* Written 10:05 pm Oct 10, 1992 by aiusala@igc.apc.org in igc:ai.general */
Tuesday October 6, 1992
THE AMERICAS:
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CALLS FOR END TO
CENTURIES OF ABUSE OF INDIGENOUS HUMAN RIGHTS
The time has come for governments throughout the
Americas to stop turning their backs on the human rights of
indigenous peoples and end the hundreds of years of violations they have suffered, Amnesty International said today as it launched its latest report in Mexico City. "For centuries, governments have often treated the rights of indigenous people with contempt," Amnesty International said. "Torturing, 'disappearing', and killing them in the

23. Shamupailla
Translate this page indigenous peoples of Latin America - from UT-LANIC Ecuador Tierra Hermosa (indigenousPeople Information) Andean Language Resources. Cyber quechua quechua
http://www.geocities.com/rainforest/vines/4617/
Shamupailla Mashicuna
The Andes
Gateways

Language Resources

Ecuador
Gateways

Indigenous Communities

Work/Study in Ecuador

News
...
Travel

Native America
Cultural Institutions
Events
Gateways to the Andes
Cultura Andina (Red Científica Peruana's Buscador Yachay) Cultures of the Andes/Culturas de los Andes Indigenous Peoples of Latin America - from UT-LANIC Ecuador: Tierra Hermosa (Indigenous People Information)
Andean Language Resources
Cyber Quechua Quechua Language Homepage by Barry Brian Werger American Indian Languages (A Web of On-Line Dictionaries) Living Languages of Ecuador Indigenous Languages - from UT-LANIC Quechua Language Programs: Quechua Language Programs around the World Ecuadorian Quechua Quechua from Cuzco Bolivian Quechua
Gateways to Ecuador
Ecuador: Tierra Hermosa ECUANET Ecuador - from UT-LANIC Ecuador Red Científica Peruana
Ecuadorean Indigenous Communities
Saraguro, Ecuador The Inca Occupation of Saraguro, Ecuador Saraguro Otavalo, Ecuador Otavalo, Valle del Amanecer Gateway Indigenous Peoples of Ecuador
Work/Study in Ecuador
Centro de Estudios Interamericanos - Cuenca Estudie la Lengua Quichua y viva la Cultura Andina en el Ecuador
Ecuadorean Newspapers
El Comercio El Mercurio - Cuenca Incluye "Enlaces con Cuenca".

24. NativeWeb Resources: Websites Hosted On NativeWeb
indigenous peoples. indigenous peoples in Ecuador, quechua, SouthAmerica, 911. Resources on indigenous peoples in Ecuador. Instituto
http://www.nativeweb.org/hosted/index.php

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    Websites Hosted on NativeWeb
    NativeWeb hosts the following organizations and materials on our web server. We actively seek to expand these services to native and Indigenous peoples and organizations. For more information on this project or if you are interested in having NativeWeb host a web site for you, please see the information on Hosting for Web Pages Containing Indigenous Material . Other material, including speeches, statements, articles, essays, declarations, manifestos, papers, and historical documents, are available at . If you would like to help with this project, either consult the Volunteer Page or email us at volunteer@nativeweb.org
  • 25. NativeWeb Resources: Aboriginal & Indigenous Nations
    to the Amazon of Ecuador, quechua, South America, The Confederation of the NationalitiesIndigenous to the achievements in defense of Amazonia and her peoples.
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/organizations/aboriginal_indigenous_nations/

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  • Hosting Information ... Organizations
    Resources: 85 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission
    The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission is Australia's main Indigenous agency. ATSIC's site is an important international resource for information on Indigenous programs, activities and issues.
    Aboriginal Nurses Association of Canada Canada
    ANAC is a non-governmental, non-profit organization whose membership works mainly in First Nations Communities. An affiliate group of the Canadian Nurses Association, it is the only Aboriginal professional nursing organization in Canada.
    Canada
    The Aboriginal Services Kiosk has information on services, programs and people to support First Nations and Métis People. Right now the information is only for services in Regina, Saskatoon and Prince Albert, but at a later date, we hope to expand this site to include information on aboriginal services from all across Saskatchewan.
    Akwesasne Mohawk US - Northeast
    Akwesasne Mohawk Territorys' Premier website (the US/Canadian border runs thru Akwesasne territory)
    Alaska Community: Matanuska-Susitna Valley Alaska
    Information about (1) Alaskan Natives: Yupik Inupiat Aleut Tlinget Haida Athabaskan Native Americans Non-Native, and (2) people in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough: Wasilla Palmer Houston Big Lake Butte Willow Knik Tallkeetna Trapper Creek Chickaloon Meadow Lakes
  • 26. INDIGENOUS-FOLKLORE-TRADITIONS
    outside world on an isolated indigenous tribe, the Many native peoples of the BrazilianAmazon have The quechua Presented by Granada Television International
    http://www.latinamericanstudies.villanova.edu/media/indigenous.htm
    Log on Media Resources-Latin America Feature Films Historical Videos Videos on Indigenous Peoples
    Videos on Current Issues
    ... Slides Latin American Studies Program Requirements Courses Faculty ... Resources Villanova University Prospective Students Students Parents
    INDIGENOUS-FOLKLORE-TRADITIONS
    City of the Gods
    Hosted by John Rhys-Davies
    Presented by New Dominion Pictures ; in association with the Archaeological
    Videocassette (VHS)(28 min.)
    Location: Instructional Media Services
    Call Number: VT1186 VHS
    Murals found at Teotihuacán site provide archaeologists with information about this ancient metropolis. Notes: Episode from the television program Archaeology. Credits: Host, John Rhys-Davies; Producers, Tom Naughton, Nicolas Valcour ; director, Bertrand Morin ; writer, George Bledsoe. The Fall of the Maya
    An ARKIOS Production in association with the Archaeological Institute of America at Boston University and The Learning Channel. Videocassette (VHS)(23 min.) Distributed by Devillier/Donegan Enterprises, c1993.

    27. The Library
    Maya Peru Online PreColumbian stone statue, San Agustín, Colombia quechua LanguageHomepage RCP - Nuevo PERU Home Page. Literature of indigenous peoples.
    http://ksplibrary.tripod.com/native.html
    Aboriginal Links
    Geneology
    Native American Genealogy
    How To Guide for Native Americans
    NA Ancestry - Lisa Mitten
    Native Peoples
    Aboriginal Rights Coalition of Victoria
    Aboriginal Sites
    Aboriginal Studies WWW Site
    Aboriginal Youth Network ...
    Creative Nation - Aborigines
    The Incas
    Aymara's Page
    Cultures of the Andes, Quechua, Songs, Music, Poems, Stories, Photos
    Inca / Maya
    Peru Online ...
    RCP - Nuevo PERU Home Page
    Literature of Indigenous Peoples
    Aboriginal Peoples of the World
    Best Information on the Net - Languages and Multicultural
    History Internet Resources
    History of Biomedicine: Indigenous Cultures ...
    Stonee's Web Lodge
    Indigenous Peoples Around the World
    Indigenous People of Russia
    Indigenous Peoples' Literature
    Indigenous Peoples of Mexico
    Languages
    Blackfoot Language
    Kanienkehaka Language
    Languages
    Languages of Mexico ...
    Sign Language
    Native Leaders
    ARCHIE BLACKOWL - Cheyenne
    Chief Joseph, Nez Perce
    Chief Seattle Bibliography
    CHIEF SEATTLE'S 1854 ORATION ...
    Three Noted Chiefs of the Sioux
    Stories and Legends
    How Raven Brought Light to People
    How the Fly Saved the River-Ojibway
    Little People - Geow-lud-mo-sis-eg: American Indian Story
    Miracle Buffalo American Indian Story ...
    The Sun, Moon and Stars (Navajo Story)
    Indian People
    Ben Marra Photography
    Turquoise Turtle
    JAMES AUCHIAH - Kiowa
    Jerome Bushyhead, Cheyenne - El Reno

    28. The World Bank - Indigenous Peoples
    attempt at documenting the socioeconomic conditions of indigenous peoples using empiricaldata Among the indigenous population, quechua speakers are
    http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/149

    29. The World Bank - Indigenous Peoples
    The bulk of the indigenous population is concentrated in Mesoamerica (close to 18 about20 million, mostly made up of quechua and Aymara peoples) (PAHO 1993
    http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/28354584d9d97c29852567cc00780e2a/01a

    30. Language Links - LACS, Univ. Of Michigan
    Abya Yala Net (information on indigenous peoples in Mexico, Central,and South America) www.nativeweb.org/abyayala/. quechua and Aymara.
    http://www.umich.edu/~iinet/lacs/quechua/summlang.htm
    International Institute, University of Michigan
    Language Links
    1. Language Programs 2. Other Language Pages 3. Dictionary Sites
    1. Language Program Links
    The most comprehensive list of summer programs in less-commonly taught and indigenous Latin American languages offered by U.S. universities is collected by Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs (CLASP) Language Teaching Committee. The CLASP language report for Summer 2002 is at http://www.unc.edu/depts/ilas/clasplist.htm The Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition (CARLA) at the University of Minnesota compiles a list of all U.S. courses in "Less Commonly Taught Languages" http://carla.acad.umn.edu/lctl/access.html The Latin American Network Information Center (LANIC) a the University of Texas - Austin has one of the best pages on Latin American languages generally: http://info.lanic.utexas.edu/la/region/languages/ LANIC also has a good page for language programs in Latin America http://info.lanic.utexas.edu/la/region/lprograms/ For Spanish language programs , the most complete site I have found is Planeta.com's Directory of Spanish Language Schools:

    31. Andean Links
    Music, History, Archaeology, Languages, Politics, etcCategory Regional South America Regions Andes Society and Culture...... indigenous peoples in Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru; Libro Paykikin, la última ciudadinca. Book Paykikin, The last Inca City; Photographs of Ayamara and quechua
    http://www.andes.org/bookmark.html
    C ULTURES OF THE A NDES
    Culturas de los Andes
    Andean Links
    New additions added to the bottom of each catagory.
    Las mas recientes están al final de cada categoría.
    Andean Music Música Andina

    32. Amazon Alliance - Amazon Update October 1999
    and the possible benefits and threats it poses to Amazonian peoples. In Quito, Ecuador,Cofan, Shuar, Achuar, Siona and quechua indigenous leaders declared
    http://www.amazonalliance.org/update/1999/upd_oct99_en.htm
    About Us Amazon Update Resources Contact Us ... Archive October 1999 Amazon Update October 1999
    No. 51 In Brief: Coalition Office News
    Greetings Alliance Friends and Members:
    PERU: UNCONTACTED PEOPLES THREATENED BY FOREST CONCESSIONS
    The Peruvian government has granted forest concessions on territory inhabited by close to 20 uncontacted indigenous groups in the Alto Piedras, Madre de Dios region. The licenses were issued to several international logging companies and represent a major threat to the cultural survival of these indigenous groups and their environment. According to FENAMAD, the Federation of Natives of the Madre de Dios region, "the uncontacted peoples are a sector of the indigenous population, that as a result of previous traumatic experiences, have chosen to live in voluntary isolation in order to avoid contact with the Peruvian society which constitutes a threat to their way of life." FENAMAD has begun a "Campaign for the Defense of the Life of Indigenous Brothers in Voluntary Isolation" and asked for support from the international NGO community. For more information contact FENAMAD at 011-51-84-572-499 or FENAMAD@mail.tambo.com.pe. VENEZUELA: PEMONS PROTEST CONSTRUCTION OF HIGH VOLTAGE POWER LINE
    ECUADOR: SHUAR PEOPLE WIN COURT'S FAVOR
    COLOMBIA: GOVERNMENT APPROVES OCCIDENTAL DRILLING LISCENSE ON U'WA TRADITIONAL LANDS
    COALITION ACTIVITIES

    * Attended Discussion on Private Sector Finance sponsored by the Friends of the Earth and the National Wildlife Federation, Washington, DC. Sept. 23.

    33. Amazon Alliance - Amazon Update November 1996
    20,000 Aymara, quechua, and Chimane peoples organized by marches (by lowland indigenous,colonists, cocaleros, Aymara and quechua campesinos) flowing
    http://www.amazonalliance.org/update/1996/upd_nov96_en.htm
    About Us Amazon Update Resources Contact Us ... Archive November 1996 Amazon Update November 1996
    No. 19 In Brief Coalition News INDIGENOUS PEOPLES WALK OUT OF THE UN WORKING GROUP
    CIDOB WINS LAND TITLES IN BOLIVIA

    In September, Bolivia experienced the biggest indigenous and peasant march to the capital city in this century just prior to a debate by the National congress over a new agrarian reform bill (“Ley INRA”). Over 20,000 Aymara, Quechua, and Chimane peoples organized by the Confederation Unica de Trabajdores Campesinos ( CUSTCB) crowed the streets of this capital for over a week to protest changes in the bill that had violated earlier consensus agreements uniting all Boliva social sectors. The giant march was in practice many simultaneous separate marches (by lowland indigenous, colonists, cocaleros, Aymara and Quechua campesinos) flowing forth from diverse regions of the capital.
    The marchers from the lowland region of Santa Cruz led by CIDOB (Guaranies, Chiquitanos, Guarayos, Icocenos) were the only group not to reach La Paz yet ironically through astute negotiations were able to walk away with the biggest prize of all, the titling of the 6 indigenous territories and open path for many others within the terms of the new law approved by the Bolivian congress during the protest rallies. BRAZIL RETURNS PANARA INDIAN LAND
    INDIGENOUS PEOPLES FIGHT AGAINST NEGLECT

    In reaction to hearing that FUNAI might be closed down, the Xavante Indians of the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso dragged Julio Gaiger (a president of the agency) out into the street to demand that the agency not be closed down but instead be reformed in order to help the Indigenous Peoples of Brazil efficiently. There have been other cases of FUNAI officials being taken hostage by Indigenous groups as a form of protest. The Xavante Indigenous peoples also wrote a letter to the President of Brazil asking that he stop the building of the Tocantins-Araguaia Hidrovia, which passes through their territory and that of other Indigenous Peoples who live along the Rio das Mortes. They stated that if that if action is not taken to stop the waterway, they will fight the government on the project.

    34. Rights Of Indigenous Peoples
    colonial rule by Indonesia, the indigenous nations of Mapuche in Chile and Argentina;quechua in Bolivia Mayan populations in Guatemala; Sami peoples in Norway
    http://www.stanford.edu/group/smun/oldversion/oldversion/simun98/briefings/indig
    Social and Humanitarian Committee: Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    Nehal Raj, Social and Humanitarian Committee chair In many parts of the world, the dominant ethnic group is different from the native ethnic group of that area. Indigenous (native) peoples often struggle to maintain traditional lifestyles amid a foreign culture, and are frequently subjected to condescension, exploitation and discrimination by the dominant group. The committee will examine ways to increase the voice of indigenous groups in governing their own affairs. We will also attempt to strike a balance between improving indigenous people's standards of living and facilitating interaction with modern society for those who wish it, and preserving traditional ways of life. Recent attempts have been made to precisely define the term "Indigenous Peoples." A report presented to a United Nations body has even proposed a definition of this term that has been used by a United Nations group in its work. In 1982, the United Nations Economic and Social Council (UNESCO), Commission on Human Rights adopted the following definition: Indigenous Populations are composed of the existing descendants of the peoples who inhabited the present territory of a country wholly or partially at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic origin arrived therefrom other parts of the world, overcame them, and, by conquest, settlement, or other means, reduced them to a non-dominant or colonial situation; who today live more in conformity with their particular social, economic, and cultural customs and traditions then the institutions of the country of which they now form a part, under a state structure that incorporates mainly the national, social, and cultural characteristics of other segments of the population that are predominant.

    35. Indigenous Peoples' Rights
    The foundation will focus on children from the Aymara, quechua, and Amazonian NorthernArizona indigenous peoples Legal Defense Fund A legal effort to halt the
    http://www.saveourplanet.org/memorgs/indig.html

    Education
    Land Preservation Cultural-Performance Spiritual - Metaphysical Indigenous Peoples' Rights Full organization list Donate Now! Indigenous Peoples' Rights: ActionLA www.ActionLA.org
    Join thousands in Los Angeles to let the world know that business cannot continue as usual. We demand a total change of priorities from the production of things to the caring for people and the environment. Join us in marches, nonviolent direct actions, and events. ActionLA, the umbrella for ChangeLinks, ActionLA affinity group, LA Taco Bell campaign, and many other LA based activist groups, is calling all concerned individuals and organizations to join us in building unity and mobilizing popular support for Justice, Peace and Democracy. Our vision is to see the efforts of the many struggles for Justice, Peace, and Dignity in this region United and Standing Together to change the world! People and Planet Before Profits! Action Resource Center Action Resource Center (ARC)
    is an environmental and human rights group whose mission is to spearhead and support campaigns that protect the environment, human rights and social justice; and to provide training and coordination for grassroots organizing, education, and nonviolent direct action. Los Angeles-based environmentalists and human rights activists formed ARC in 1996. We seek environmental justice by actively opposing the destructive operations of multinational corporations and military regimes that repress, oppress, and exploit lands, peoples, cultures, and other life forms.

    36. 1Up Info > Peru > Indigenous Peoples | Peruvian Information Resource
    are also the ones with the highest percentages of quechua and Aymara life as partof the strategy for ruling conquered peoples the indigenous people were
    http://www.1upinfo.com/country-guide-study/peru/peru55.html
    You are here 1Up Info Peru
    History
    People ... News Search 1Up Info
    Peru
    Peru
    Indigenous Peoples
    The word indio , as applied to native highland people of Quechua and Aymara origin, carries strong negative meanings and stereotypes among non-native Peruvians. For that reason, the ardently populist Velasco regime attempted with some success to substitute the term peasant (campesino) to accompany the many far-reaching changes his government directed at improving the socioeconomic conditions in the highlands. Nevertheless, traditional usage has prevailed in many areas in reference to those who speak native languages, dress in native styles, and engage in activities defined as native. Peruvian society ascribes to them a caste status to which no one else aspires. The ingrained attitudes and stereotypes held by the mistikuna (the Quechua term for mestizo people) toward the runakuna (native peoplethe Quechua term for themselves) in most highland towns have led to a variety of discriminatory behaviors, from mocking references to "brute" or "savage" to obliging native Americans to step aside, sit in the back of vehicles, and in general humble themselves in the presence of persons of higher status. The pattern of ethnoracist denigration has continued despite all of the protests and reports, official policies, and compelling accounts of discrimination described in Peruvian novels published since the beginning of the twentieth century. The regions and departments with the largest populations of native peoples are construed to be the most backward, being the poorest, least educated, and less developed. They are also the ones with the highest percentages of Quechua and Aymara speakers. The reasons for the perpetuation of colonial values with respect to autochthonous peoples is complex, being more than a simple perseverance of custom. The social condition of the population owes its form to the kinds of expectations embedded in the premises and workings of the nation's institutions. These are not easily altered. Spanish institutions of conquest were implanted into colonial life as part of the strategy for ruling conquered peoples: the indigenous people were defeated and captured and thus, as spoils of war, were as exploitable as mineral wealth or land. In the minds of many highland mestizos as well as betteroff urbanites, they still are.

    37. Rights And Status Of Indigenous Peoples
    4.44 million indigenous people, most of them speaking quechua and Aymara, live inthe and the work of a Special Commission of indigenous peoples (CEPI), the
    http://www.law.harvard.edu/studorgs/hrj/iss12/wiessner.shtml
    Rights and Status of Indigenous Peoples:
    A Global Comparative and International Legal Analysis
    Siegfried Wiessner I. THE LEGACY OF CONQUEST: A REVIEW A. The United States of America B. Canada C. New Zealand ... IV. CONCLUSION Wounded Knee, the Trail of Tears, the Siege of Cusco endured by indigenous peoples around the world. The focus of the Interna- *** Top of Page 58 *** which has forced itself to the top of the international agenda. Its values could be, and increasingly are, sought-after models for a world drifting slowly, but seemingly inexorably, into alienation. Beyond the cultural sphere, indigenous peoples have reentered the arena of power. Under the battle cries of human rights and self-determination, they have become recognized actors in the world constitutive process. This Article is designed to review the legacy of conquest in various arenas around the planet, and to arrive at a transnationally valid conclusion, if possible, on the status of indigenous peoples under domestic law (Part I); to describe the actors and trends in decision-making in international indigenous law (Part II); and to appraise these developments with particular focus on the issues of conceptualization of indigenous peoples, their claims to self-determination, unique collective rights, as well as innovative avenues of enforcement (Part III).
    I. THE LEGACY OF CONQUEST: A REVIEW

    38. Peru: Indigenous Peoples Still Facing Colour Gap
    descent, and 36 percent are indigenous peoples who speak weight, the nine millionindigenous Peruvians lack the majority indigeous groups, the quechua and the
    http://www.converge.org.nz/lac/articles/news990820f.htm
    Latin American Report
    All Poverty Should Not be Treated Equally

    Poverty in Bolivia to Stay for Generations

    Regional : X Politics : Military : Environment : Rights : X Education : NZ Links : Aid/Relief : Economics : X Indigenous : X Health : Peru: 20 August 1999 Indigenous Peoples Still Facing Colour Gap By Abraham Lama LIMA, Aug 9 (IPS) - Not one official activity was planned in Peru for the International Day of Indigenous Peoples, an indicator of the marginalisation and discrimination faced by the country's nine million indigenous people. The United Nations (UN) established the date in 1995 as part of the International Decade of the World's Indigenous Peoples (1994-2004). The goal is to strengthen steps taken towards resolving indigenous people's problems in areas such as human rights, environment, education and health. Peru is a multi-ethnic nation of 25 million - 49 percent are mestizo (mixed race), 14 percent are of European, African or Asian descent, and 36 percent are indigenous peoples who speak their native languages. But Peru's large indigenous population suffers a serious situation of social, economic and cultural marginalisation. The government abolished ''the legal mechanisms for the protection'' of indigenous people because it believes their problems ''are an issue that must be resolved within the liberal economic model,'' stated sociologist Flavio Solorzano, of Population and Development, a non-governmental organisation. The 1993 Constitution, which president Alberto Fujimori actively promoted, was a step backwards as far as indigenous rights are concerned, said jurists Ana Maria Tamayo of Peru and Roque Roldan from Colombia.

    39. South America
    quechua, spoken by the Inca, is the most widely spoken language in South America.Since the Spanish conquest indigenous peoples have been used as laborers
    http://www.indigenouspeople.net/americas/southam/
    South America "In the Andes, Nurturance is at the Very Heart of Life"
    (Land of the Inkas)
    The indigenous peoples (aboriginal peoples) of South America are found from the Isthmus of Panama to Tierra del Fuego. An estimated 30 million people were living there when the Europeans arrived. In the Andean region extensive remains show developed cultures at Chavín de Huántar and among the Paracas in Peru. The Mochica, Chimu, and Nazca in Peru, the Chibcha and Aymara of the Andes, and the Araucanos and Mapuche
    of Chile had socially complex pre-Columbian cultures, surpassed only by the Inca. Descendants of these peoples live today in Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, northwestern Argentina, and Chile. Quechua , spoken by the Inca, is the most widely spoken language in South America. Since the Spanish conquest indigenous peoples have been used as laborers, poorly paid and lacking political representation; these conditions of semiservitude are changing slowly. Some, notably the Inca, play a significant role in the national culture; but many live in small, peripheral groups. A few descendants of the Arawaks and Caribs live in Venezuela, the Guianas, and Northern Brazil. The Guaraní in Brazil are few and scattered, but in Paraguay their language is widely spoken and, like Quechua in Bolivia, is the official language of the country.

    40. Directory Of Indigenous Peoples' Literature (Sorted By Name)
    Directory of indigenous peoples' Literature. htm price.htm prisoner.htm proudwar.htmpueblo.htm pumabear.htm purepech.htm qparker.htm quechua.htm quichen.htm
    http://www.indigenouspeople.net/natbynam.htm
    Directory of Indigenous Peoples' Literature
    (Sorted by Home Page) Return to Indigenous Peoples' Literature Compiled by: Glenn Welker
    Last Updated: March 23,2001 This site has been accessed times since February 8, 1996.

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