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An interview a shaman in the Amazon rainforest

Amasina, a Trio shaman, in the Amazon rainforest in Suriname.

  • Deep in the Suriname rainforest, an innovative conservation group is working with indigenous tribes to protect their forest home and culture using traditional knowledge combined with cutting-edge technology.
  • The Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) is partnering with the Trio, an Amerindian group that lives in the remote Suriname-Brazil border area of South America, to develop programs to protect their forest home from illegal gold miners and encroachment, improve village health, and strengthen cultural ties between indigenous youths and elders at a time when such cultures are disappearing even faster than rainforests.
  • In June 2008 mongabay.com visited the community of Kwamalasamutu in Suriname to see ACT’s programs in action. During the visit, Amasina, a Trio shaman who works with ACT, answered some questions about his role as a traditional healer in the village.

Deep in the Suriname rainforest, an innovative conservation group is working with indigenous tribes to protect their forest home and culture using traditional knowledge combined with cutting-edge technology.

The Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) is partnering with the Trio, an Amerindian group that lives in the remote Suriname-Brazil border area of South America, to develop programs to protect their forest home from illegal gold miners and encroachment, improve village health, and strengthen cultural ties between indigenous youths and elders at a time when such cultures are disappearing even faster than rainforests.

Indigenous ranger team in Kwamala, Suriname.
Indigenous ranger team in Kwamala, Suriname.

ACT is providing the Trio with equipment and training so that “indigenous park guards” can map — and thereby someday gain title — to their lands. The Trio use GPS units to document geographic features as well as the location of hunting grounds, places of spiritual significance, and sites rich with medicinal plants and other important resources. Key to the process is bridging the generational gap between indigenous elders and youths: the shamans provide the younger rangers with the historical and cultural information needed to add critical details to the maps. In addition to mapping, the indigenous park guards patrol forest areas for illegal activities, including mining and collection of wildlife for the pet trade.

ACT is also promoting the transfer of ethnobotanical knowledge to Trio children through the “Shaman’s Apprentice Program” where school kids learn the traditional uses of medicinal plants. The program is combined with an indigenous health clinic which operates next to a conventional health clinic. Both offer free services for villagers.

Jonathan, head of the indigenous park guard program for Kwamalasamutu, on patrol in the Amazon rainforest.
Jonathan, head of the indigenous park guard program for Kwamalasamutu, on patrol in the Amazon rainforest.

A critical part of these programs are village shaman, medicine men and women who serve as custodians of the immense biological knowledge of a people who have survived in the Amazon rainforest for generations. No one understands the secrets of these plants better than these indigenous shamans, but like the forests themselves, this floral genius is fast-disappearing due to deforestation and profound cultural transformation among younger generations. The combined loss of this knowledge and these forests irreplaceably impoverishes the world of cultural and biological diversity.

In June 2008 mongabay.com visited the community of Kwamalasamutu in Suriname to see ACT’s programs in action. During the visit, Amasina, a Trio shaman who works with ACT, answered some questions about his role as a traditional healer in the village. He also unexpectedly noted strange happenings with climate, suggesting that either climate change or regional deforestation is noticeably affecting local conditions.

Please note: The interview was conducted through a translator, so Amasina’s responses are abbreviated.

Q&A with Amasina, a Trio Shaman

Mongabay: How did you learn about medicinal plants?

Amasina: From my mother and father.

Mongabay: Are you passing on your knowledge to the next generation?

Amasina in Kwamalasamutu, Suriname.
Amasina in Kwamalasamutu, Suriname.

Amasina: Yes, through the Amazon Conservation Team’s Shaman’s Apprentice Program program I teach children how to prepare medicines and use healing plants.

Mongabay: How do you choose apprentices?

Amasina: It is based on trust. I look at the relationship between a person and their parents and whether they get along with the community. I have two apprentices in the program and I am also teaching my son. I also work in the clinic about five days a week and other apprentices learn from me there as well.

Mongabay: Do you see different diseases between local people and foreigners.
Amasina: Local people usually need treatment for the flu, skin diseases, wounds, and diabetes. Foreigners are more likely to need treatment for many ailments that don’t seem to be curable with western medicine, like stress and insomnia.

Mongabay: What did you think of the shaman gathering between medicine women from Colombia, Brazil, Suriname, and other parts of the world? Did you learn from their techniques?
Amasina: It was interesting meeting shamans from other places. Although we don’t speak the same language, I learned a treatment involving leaves to remove disease from a person. And I taught them some of my medicine as well.

Mongabay: Do you ever use plants to help you “see” how to treat a person?

Amasina in Kwamalasamutu
Amasina in Kwamalasamutu

Amasina: My father and I used a vision plant long ago but now I rely primarily on the eyes. I look in a person’s eyes to see their illness and I also use touch.

Mongabay: It’s evident there has been a lot of flooding here recently. Is this normal?

Amasina: Flooding happens from time-to-time but it seems that the waters are rising higher now than in the past. The rains used to be very predictable but now the system is mixed up. We have rains falling during the wrong time of year. These recent rains did a lot of damage to the cassava crop. The climate seems to be changing and it is affecting us.

The Trio

The Trio (or Tiriyó) are a Carib-speaking indigenous group that lives in the forests of southern Suriname and bordering areas of Brazil.

Aerial view of Kwamala village in Sipaliwini District, Suriname. Photo credit: Rhett A. Butler
Aerial view of Kwamala village in Sipaliwini District, Suriname. Photo credit: Rhett A. Butler
Kwamalasamutu, Suriname. Photo by Rhett A. Butler
Kwamalasamutu, Suriname. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

Encouraged by Christian missionaries and the government to settle in villages in the 1960s, the Trio today primarily in small to medium-sized villages headed by a grandman or chief. Because there are few roads in the remote areas where most Trio live, air strips serve as the only access to the outside world, but few Trio have ever been in a plane — they usually travel by foot or in canoes.

The Trio rely on small-scale slash-and-burn cassava (manioc) cultivation as their principal source of food. This starchy staple is supplemented with fish and game taken from surrounding rivers and forests. The forest provides them with other important resources, notably medicinal plants, building materials, and dyes and resins.

While the missionaries initially banned many traditional practices including shamanic use of plants, some Trio have clung to the use of medicinal plants and shaman are increasingly seen a valuable providers of healthcare to treat many ailments.

Amazon Conservation Team

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Amazon Conservation Team wins “Innovation in Conservation Award” for path-breaking work with Amazon tribes (12/11/2007) The Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) was today awarded mongabay.com’s inaugural “Innovation in Conservation Award” for its path-breaking efforts to enable indigenous Amazonians to maintain ties to their history and cultural traditions while protecting their rainforest home from illegal loggers and miners.

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Indians are key to rainforest conservation efforts says renowned ethnobotanist (10/31/2006) Tropical rainforests house hundreds of thousands of species of plants, many of which hold promise for their compounds which can be used to ward off pests and fight human disease. No one understands the secrets of these plants better than indigenous shamans -medicine men and women – who have developed boundless knowledge of this library of flora for curing everything from foot rot to diabetes. But like the forests themselves, the knowledge of these botanical wizards is fast-disappearing due to deforestation and profound cultural transformation among younger generations. The combined loss of this knowledge and these forests irreplaceably impoverishes the world of cultural and biological diversity. Dr. Mark Plotkin, President of the non-profit Amazon Conservation Team, is working to stop this fate by partnering with indigenous people to conserve biodiversity, health, and culture in South American rainforests. Plotkin, a renowned ethnobotanist and accomplished author (Tales of a Shaman’s Apprentice, Medicine Quest) who was named one of Time Magazine’s environmental “Hero for the Planet,” has spent parts of the past 25 years living and working with shamans in Latin America. Through his experiences, Plotkin has concluded that conservation and the well-being of indigenous people are intrinsically linked — in forests inhabited by indigenous populations, you can’t have one without the other. Plotkin believes that existing conservation initiatives would be better-served by having more integration between indigenous populations and other forest preservation efforts.

How did rainforest shamans gain their boundless knowledge on medicinal plants? (5/14/2005) For thousands of years, indigenous people have extensively used rainforest plants for their health needs — the peoples of Southeast Asian forests used 6,500 species, while Northwest Amazonian forest dwellers used 1300 species for medicinal purposes. Perhaps more staggering than their boundless knowledge of medicinal plants, is how shamans and medicinemen could have acquired such knowledge. There are over 100,000 plant species in tropical rainforests around the globe, how did indigenous peoples know what plants to use and combine especially when so many are either poisonous or have no effect when ingested. Many treatments combine a wide variety of completely unrelated innocuous plant ingredients to produce a dramatic effect.

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