100 years on - the unsolved mystery of the rubber boom slave
SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
August 1, 2011
100 years on - the unsolved mystery of the rubber boom slaves
An Amazon Indian woman has launched a public appeal to uncover the fate of two Indian slaves brought to Britain a century ago.
Exactly 100 years after the Daily News first introduced her ancestors Omarino and Ricudo to the British public, Fany Kuiru, a Witoto Indian from Colombia, has appealed to the outside world to ‘help us uncover the fate of our indigenous brothers … so that our ancestors’ spirits can rest in peace.’
The Indians were ‘presented’ to British Consul Roger Casement in their Putumayo homeland in southern Colombia in 1910. Omarino was exchanged for a pair of trousers and a shirt; Ricudo was won in a game of cards.
Casement, who
had been sent by the British government to investigate
atrocities in the Amazon during the rubber boom, brought the
pair to the UK to publicize the horrors he
uncovered.
Sky-rocketing demand for Amazonian
rubber was kick-started when US company Goodyear discovered
vulcanization – a process that makes rubber hard enough to
use for car tyres. The breakthrough gave rise to the first
mass production of cars by industry leader, Ford.
In just 12 years, Casement estimated that 30,000 indigenous people had been enslaved, tortured, and murdered to provide for Europe and the United States’ growing demand for rubber.
‘We are sent far, far into the forest to get rubber, and if we do not get it, or if we do not get it quickly enough, we are shot,’ Omarino told the Daily News.
Many of today’s uncontacted Indians are descended from the survivors of the rubber boom atrocities, who fled into remote headwaters to escape the killings, torture and epidemics that decimated the indigenous population.
After receiving the photographs of her ancestors, Fany told Survival, ‘Every nation did its bit to exterminate indigenous people: Colombia neglected them; Peru was mastermind and accomplice to the holocaust; England financed it, and Brazil uprooted Indians to work on the rubber plantations.’
More photos available here.
It
is not known what became of the two slaves, whose parting
words to the Daily News were, ‘London is very wonderful,
but the great river and the forest, where the birds fly, is
more beautiful. One day we shall go back.’ It is not known
whether either returned home.
Survival International Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘The rubber boom may seem like remote history, but its effect is still with us. When the West began its marriage to the motor car, its love letters were written in Indian blood. It provoked a gross crime against humanity which was perpetrated by a British company in the Witoto area. The parallel should not be exaggerated, but today there are still British companies, such as Vedanta Resources, planning the theft of tribal land, this time in India. It’s time to put a stop to these crimes and start treating tribal people like human beings.’
To read this story online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/7541
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