Portraits of tribal heroines for International Women’s Day
Portraits of tribal heroines for International Women’s Day
Which Brazilian tribal women suckle orphaned monkeys? Which North American Indian women have enjoyed equal status with men for centuries?
To mark International Women’s Day on March 8, 2014, Survival International is publishing a new photographic gallery that portrays the lives and stories of inspiring tribal women, past and present.
Tribal women have known brutal displacement, fear, murder and rape at the hands of invaders for generations. They have seen their lands taken from them, their self-respect annihilated and their futures become uncertain.
Survival’s gallery includes the stories
of:
- Pocahontas, a Powhatan Indian who
married an Englishman and was introduced to King James I in
London during the 17th century;
- Angata, an indigenous leader from Easter
Island, who stirred rebellion against their Chilean
colonists;
- Damiana Cavanha, a Guarani woman from
Brazil who recently spearheaded a courageous take-over of
the Guarani’s ancestral lands;
- Little Butterfly, a young girl from the
nomadic Awá people, the Earth’s most threatened
tribe.
Sophie Grig, senior campaigner at Survival International, said, ‘Tribal women have complex, evolving societies that flourish when they are able to pursue the self-sufficient and diverse ways of life they have developed over centuries.
‘The gallery shows some of the
courageous women who are fighting for their lands to be
returned to them and for their fundamental human rights.
Survival’s work has been preventing the annihilation of
tribal women and their communities for the last 45
years.’
Note to Editors:
- Survival’s gallery is available for
syndication, please contact the press office for the images in high
resolution.
Read this online:
http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/10046
Survival International is the global movement for tribal peoples’ rights. We help tribal people defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures. Founded in 1969, Survival celebrates its 45th Anniversary this year.
ENDS