When Marielle Ramires disclosed her cancer diagnosis in December 2024, she chose honesty without despair, revealing vulnerability while emphasizing resilience. Her approach was pragmatic, yet deeply hopeful.
“I embraced my destiny,” she wrote, taking each step “one drop at a time.”
For a woman who dedicated her life to articulating collective struggles, her illness became another front in which she championed community, solidarity, and mutual care.

Ramires co-founded Mídia NINJA in 2013, Brazil’s influential network of independent communicators that challenged traditional media paradigms. From the mass protests of June 2013 to the turbulent years under Presidents Michel Temer and Jair Bolsonaro, NINJA’s cameras and microphones brought unseen narratives from the streets directly to the public. Its unapologetic partiality was a guiding principle, rooted in the belief that journalism should amplify marginalized voices rather than claim neutrality. Ramires herself epitomized this ethos: always present, quietly orchestrating the dissemination of critical stories, particularly from the front lines of environmental justice and Indigenous rights.
Her contributions were profound. Friends and colleagues describe her as gentle yet fiercely effective, often working quietly behind the scenes to build bridges between disparate groups—from Indigenous communities in Brazil’s Amazon to global movements in Indonesia and Latin America. She played a key role in initiatives like Peoples For Forests, a global gathering of environmental activists seeking collaborative responses to the ecological crises of our time. Her writings around this event emphasized collective healing, insisting that the path forward lay in collaboration rather than isolation.
“Monoculture suffocates, monoculture kills,” she wrote. “The solution must be collective.”
Born in Cuiabá, Ramires began her activism in culture and human rights early, eventually shaping policy through positions at Brazil’s Ministry of Culture and the UNDP. She was instrumental in organizing the groundbreaking 2018 presidential campaign of Sonia Guajajara, the first Indigenous woman to run for national office in Brazil, an event emblematic of her commitment to intersectional justice.
In recent years, she gained increasing international recognition, engaging audiences in Latin America and beyond on the importance of free, decentralized media. But the core of her work remained the same: to empower communities to tell their own stories, leveraging technology not as an end but as a means of societal transformation.
Marielle Ramires leaves behind a legacy not only of movements and organizations, but of a profoundly humanist vision.
She once described hope as a “stubborn girl” that insists upon renewal, organically growing “with us, or despite us.”
Her passing was mourned via posts on social media as deeply as her life was celebrated, marking a profound loss for Brazil’s activist communities.
Yet, as she herself often reminded her followers, “the grass will grow again. With time.”