Chronicles/ December 20, 2020The Siekopai’s Ancestral Remedy to the Pandemic In The Amazon“Fighting COVID-19 with Ancestral Wisdom in the Amazon”, A film for The New Yorker created… Read more Amazon Frontlines
Chronicles/ November 20, 2020Record Fires This Year Edge the Amazon Rainforest and Our Climate Closer to the BrinkFrom Siberia to Australia, California to the Amazon, 2020 was another record setting year for… Read more Jena Webb
Chronicles/ September 28, 2020Our Planet Depends On Indigenous Action:As the leadership council of Ceibo Alliance, we’re proud and honored to have been awarded… Read more Amazon Frontlines
Chronicles/ July 30, 20205 Ways a Recent Ecuadorian Constitutional Court Victory Boosts Indigenous Peoples’ Fight For The AmazonLast week, in an historic verdict, the Ecuadorian Constitutional Court ruled in favor of more than… Read more Brian Parker
Chronicles/ July 7, 2020The Pact: A Filmmaker’s Collaboration With The Siona To Tell Their Story In Defense of The AmazonIn this article, American filmmaker Tom Laffay, whose inspiring short film “SIONA: Amazon’s Defender’s Under Threat” recently premiered… Read more Tom Laffay
Chronicles/ June 3, 2020Amazonian Elders Under Threat During COVID-19 PandemicAs Latin America hurtles toward its coronavirus peak, Amazonian indigenous peoples are warning that the… Read more Amazon Frontlines
Where we workAmazon Frontlines and the Ceibo Alliance work on concrete initiatives with over 60 communities from the Siona, Secoya, Kofan and Waorani indigenous Nations in Ecuador, Peru and Colombia. Explore the Where We Work map to learn more about the past and present of these indigenous communities. Make sure to check out Communities with Stories to watch films or read first-hand accounts of our work with these communities, from clean water and solar energy, to territorial defense and cultural revival. Explore the map
Waorani: Mapping Ancestral LandsIn the face of mounting threats to their lands and livelihoods, Waorani communities have begun creating territorial maps of their forests that document the historic and actual uses of their territory, demonstrating that their homelands are not up for grabs.Whereas the maps of oil companies show petrol deposits and major rivers, the maps that the Waorani peoples are creating identify historic battle sites, ancient cave-carvings, jaguar trails, medicinal plants, animal reproductive zones, important fishing holes, creek-crossings, sacred waterfalls Explore the map
Secoya: Recovering Ancestral TerritorySince the 1941 war between Ecuador and Peru, the Secoya Nation has been separated by political borders and displaced from their ancestral homelands. Now they are working to reclaim their ancestral land and reunite with their families.Here is an interactive georeferenced map of Lagarto Cocha which visually displays Secoya ancestral settlements, ceremonial centers, mythological sites, ancient travel routes, and traditional forest uses. Explore the map
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