Ecuador is mostly

 

jungle.

 

That's not well known by

 

the casual traveler

 

or even most Ecuadorians

 

since the bulk of them

 

live in the Western...

 

third of the country.

 

The capital Quito is

 

high in the mountains

 

with a pleasant climate.

 

The Amazon has few roads

 

and until recently few

 

people besides the

 

Indians

 

who have lived there

 

for eons.

 

Things are changing.

 

 

Funding for In the

 

Americas with David Yetman

 

was provided by

 

Agnese Haury

 

 

Funding for In the Americas

 

with David Yetman

 

was also provided by

 

the Guilford Fund.

 

 

 

In the Americas with

 

David Yetman theme

 

The city of Quito is

 

the capital

 

and most important city

 

in Ecuador.

 

It sits about 9,300 feet

 

above sea level

 

and there's about three

 

million people living

 

here.

 

The Spaniards came

 

here in the early part

 

of the 16th century

 

and they found it a very

 

good place to live,

 

high enough to be cool

 

but accessible to trade

 

in all directions.

 

They founded a city and

 

we can still see part

 

of what they founded in

 

the old Quito.

 

Spain owned and

 

controlled what is

 

now Ecuador

 

and its capital Quito

 

for nearly 300 years.

 

It was not until the

 

early 19th century

 

that Ecuador became

 

an independent country.

 

Spain left a heritage

 

of its laws governing

 

how the cities were to be estab.

 

They were called the

 

laws of the Indies

 

and those laws dictated

 

how wide the streets

 

were to be,

 

how tall the buildings

 

could be,

 

what kind of balconies

 

they had to have

 

and what buildings were

 

to be located where.

 

And this is a reflection

 

of those ancient laws.

 

It's the downtown

 

historiccenter of

 

Quito.

 

(Spanish)

 

This historic center was

 

home to the first

 

indigenous people

 

men and women that were

 

here before,

 

even the Incas and later

 

the Spaniards arrived.

 

This place has always

 

been viewed by the

 

public,

 

so when you see the

 

facade of the

 

presidential palace you

 

can see original stone.

 

Quito was declared a

 

UN Cultural Heritage

 

of Humanity's Site.

 

Part of the reason

 

people flock to downtown

 

Quito

 

on a Sunday afternoon,

 

is not just because

 

there's a lot of people

 

here but because

 

it is an intensely

 

agreeable place to be.

 

Ecuador is the second

 

largest producer of oil

 

in all of Latin America.

 

and the government has

 

used those oil revenues

 

to make sure that their essenti

 

In addition, they have

 

poured moneyinto the

 

country's infrastructure

 

producing some of the

 

best bridges and highways

 

in all of Latin America

 

 

From Quito, it's a good

 

five-hour drive east of

 

the Andes into the

 

Amazon.

 

The town of Shell is the

 

end of the road for us.

 

It's appropriately named

 

for the oil company that

 

initiated exploration in

 

the rain forest.

 

Shell enlisted

 

missionaries to do

 

advance work and pacify

 

Indians who were

 

notoriously unreceptive

 

to the oil prospectors.

 

The small airport

 

at Shell bustles.

 

It seems to be used

 

exclusively

 

by oil industry and

 

missionary people.

 

The flight into Huaorani

 

territory will only

 

take a half hour or so

 

but it will transport us

 

into a different world.

 

Huaoranis were only

 

discovered about fifty

 

years ago

 

and resisted all entry

 

by outsiders.

 

Since then, most have

 

accepted foreigners in

 

varying degrees and are

 

involved in ecotourism.

 

Some of the Huaorani,

 

however, have detached

 

themselves

 

and retreated deep into

 

the rainforest and

 

reject

 

all outside contact.

 

The airstrip where

 

we will land,

 

seems tiny from above,

 

the light green line

 

in the endless

 

emerald forest.

 

it's a community called

 

Huantaro involving

 

ecotourism.

 

I'm supposed to be

 

greeted by Moi,

 

the leader of the

 

Huaorani nation.

 

They call

 

themselves Wao.

 

(Spanish)

 

The Huaorani territory

 

is covered by primary

 

forest,

 

not secondary forest

 

like the case of

 

other indigenous

 

nationalities.

 

This is all tropical

 

forest, primary forest.

 

We have over 900,000

 

hectares that support

 

animals and fish.

 

For food, we also grow

 

cassava plants.

 

There are beaches along

 

the rivers but we don't

 

cut the trees.

 

It's all Huaorani

 

territory.

 

There are many problems

 

within the Huaorani

 

territory.

 

We have complaints

 

against other

 

indigenous people

 

against settlers in our

 

territory,

 

the presence of the

 

oil company.

 

But politically we

 

manage on our own.

 

Each community has

 

a voice and a vote

 

and school and even

 

a high school.

 

There are many

 

health problems.

 

Today the Ecuadorian

 

State gives rights

 

to all Ecuadorians

 

but in the past only the

 

Huaorani people defended

 

our land.

 

So, things were fine

 

because Huaorani

 

maintained a

 

healthy territory.

 

(Spanish)

 

As an organization, we

 

were trying to find

 

a way out for the

 

Huaorani,

 

trying to make

 

connections

 

with foreigners

 

like through ecotourism

 

or with oil companies.

 

Education is a way out

 

so we are looking

 

for work either with

 

the oil companies,

 

with tourism or just to

 

keep living as Huaorani

 

 

Native singing

 

(Spanish)

 

In our culture, we

 

always welcome people by

 

singing and dancing.

 

The women, young people

 

so as not to lose

 

our culture.

 

Now they will sing

 

like birds

 

Like the Oropéndola

 

and the Toucans sing.

 

 

(Native Singing)

 

(Spanish)

 

They're saying that

 

only the madrecitas

 

can raise their young

 

so if we take the

 

young Oropéndolas

 

out of their nest,

 

they won't survive.

 

That's the Huaorani

 

message.

 

The first thing we

 

experienced was

 

a welcoming dance

 

and it's not just

 

forthem.

 

Little by little, they

 

insisted that everybody

 

who was here...

 

including other

 

Ecuadoriansjoin in.

 

So, it's quite a

 

festive thing.

 

Not a lot of people come

 

here so when they do,

 

they insist that

 

you participate.

 

(Spanish)

 

These Huaorani

 

ceremoniesis a festival

 

and we always invite

 

enemies and friends.

 

These festivities also

 

take place when

 

there is a marriage.

 

We have happy, cheerful

 

tradition of dancing,

 

for our children

 

and preserve

 

our territory.

 

To live as free people,

 

the children and the old

 

people, we live as wao.

 

To live as free people,

the children and the old

people, Gracias!as wao.

 

Gracias!

 

 

(Native singing)

 

(Spanish)

 

This is a protected

 

area, a pristine area.

 

Land that we want

 

to be able to live

 

and work without

 

harming nature.

 

Oil money changes

 

our culture,

 

brings in outsiders,

 

lots of noise.

 

They drink alcohol

 

water,

 

that makes you dizzy

 

and kills you.

 

No, we want our

 

Wao culture

 

I guess you're

 

officially greeted

 

once you get the

 

face paint applied.

 

So, what we are running

 

into here is a culture

 

that is under huge

 

pressure from

 

the outside

 

particularly from the

 

petroleum industry

 

and very specifically by

 

Chinese petroleum

 

interests.

 

It's a conflict that

 

is coming in from

 

virtually all sides.

 

The women here

 

weave these out of

 

a relative of the palm

 

that is extraordinarily

 

tough and heavy.

 

This is the raw fiber

 

they strip away from

 

the leaf on this

 

palm-like plant.

 

Then they put it on

 

their thigh, several...

 

pieces and

 

rub it together

 

and it develops into a

 

perfectly spiral pattern.

 

I had no idea how

 

they do it.

 

It is a talent that must

 

have been developed

 

for centuries.

 

The red dye is easy.

 

They just pick a fruit

 

that grows wild...

 

all over the place

 

and rub it...

 

and it becomes the

 

face paint...

 

and the red dye for

 

their weavings that

 

they do.

 

I had no idea how

 

they do it.

 

So, his father taught

 

him how to make

 

the lances...

 

and for them this is a

 

traditional house,

 

this is the traditional

 

way of hunting...

 

and its worked perfectly

 

well for them.

 

For the Huaorani, the

 

only way to bring

 

supplies in or...

 

to take supplies out,

 

other than what they

 

make themselves...

 

is by air.

 

In the Amazon, the

 

traditional form of

 

transportation

 

is the dugout canoe.

 

This is made out of one

 

single trunk of a tree.

 

An immense amount of

 

labor goes into

 

making it.

 

And they are not easy

 

to maneuver...

 

so, it takes expertise

 

that these guys have.

 

This is an ecotourism

 

venture that is...

 

developed with the

 

Huaorani people...

 

for the Huaorani people

 

...

 

helping them spread the

 

message of conservation

 

...

 

that they have in

 

their hearts...

 

and in their minds

 

in front of what's

 

going on...

 

in the Amazon Rain

 

Forest of Ecuador...

 

The Huaorani lands

 

are in the foothills

 

of the Andes...

 

which means that

 

there are periodic

 

waterfalls...

 

some of them huge.

 

The water in the river

 

for many months

 

of the year...

 

is silky and brown

 

so if you want

 

fresh water...

 

you may have

 

to hike a way...

 

But this is a very

 

popular place...

 

not only with tourists

 

but with the Huaoranis

 

for centuries.

 

 

From Huantaro it's a

 

four-hour trek to the

 

next community.

 

Hardly are we into

 

the forest when...

 

Moipoi points out

 

new signs of

 

oil prospecting...

 

camps, swaths

 

through the jungle...

 

frequent helicopter

 

flights and

 

motorized boats...

 

Sadly, we have

 

new neighbors.

 

Right, the government

 

granted permits

 

for a Chinese company...

 

to come and carry

 

seismic work...

 

pursuing for oil

 

in the territory

 

where we work.

 

Moipoi tells me that

 

when I see these...

 

blue ribbons that's

 

a mark of oil explorers.

 

(Spanish)

 

Every day they fly

 

into the seismic lines.

 

It's just

 

starting now...

 

but the animals are

 

already fleeing.

 

Families are at a

 

war over money.

 

Others are selling

 

themselves for money,

 

benefits.

 

We had a good life

 

before all of this.

 

But now a lady died

 

fighting over money.

 

The ecotourism project

 

is different.

 

It's peaceful work.

 

(Spanish)

 

So, this is the plant

 

from which he

 

makes the darts.

 

Sanded with a special

 

tool made out of the

 

piranha's jaws...

 

then apply the

 

curare, the toxin...

 

the paralyzing toxin

 

to the tip and there

 

you have a dart to blow.

 

They call it an arrow;

 

we call it a dart.

 

(Spanish)

 

We only fish with hooks

 

for what we need and

 

the sharpest are darts...

 

We live free here,

 

peacefully.

 

That's the way

 

of the Wao culture.

 

(Spanish)

 

So, nothing is growing

 

under here because the

 

tree gives off chemicals.

 

And it has different

 

species of ants growing

 

on it.

 

Ah, there we go.

 

And I taste them...

 

and they do taste

 

just like lemon...

 

a very strong

 

lemony flavor.

 

And this much bigger ant

 

that also lives on

 

the tree...

 

has formidable jaws

 

and if it clamps

 

on to bite you...

 

it won't let go.

 

So, the people who live

 

in the forest

 

have discovered...

 

that if they get a cut,

 

they can take the ant...

 

make the jaws close

 

the cut...

 

then cut off the rest of

 

the body and leave it...

 

and it acts as a suture.

 

(Spanish)

 

They will drill wells

 

and then put explosions

 

in the earth.

 

All the fish will die.

 

They are prospecting

 

too close to the river.

 

(Spanish)

 

My name is Fabiano.

 

My house is over there.

 

I support the

 

ecotourism.

 

The oil company is

 

doing bad things.

 

(Spanish)

 

Extracting oil,

 

bringing lots of money,

 

business,

 

all of it is going

 

to another country.

 

We do not want to

 

live in a big house.

 

We want wild areas

 

like the Wao lands.

 

We want to live in

 

peace and quiet.

 

They're harming

 

all of us.

 

It is a shame.

 

Lying government.

 

Right here, they should

 

respect our place

 

and our rights.

 

Our land is being

 

attacked.

 

Better not to extract

 

oil at all.

 

(Spanish)

 

Oil companies will be

 

here for eight months...

 

then they leave.

 

Good-bye.

 

They will leave us

 

without anything.

 

Nothing.

 

So, I say: no more.

 

This is all Wao.

 

Where will the Wao live?

 

Wao culture is dying.

 

There is another place

 

up there where

 

Petroamazonas moved in.

 

They don't live

 

like Wao people.

 

They have guns, drink

 

a lot, fight a lot.

 

Part of this eco system

 

like, and imagine

 

what it is now...

 

to have 300 people

 

comingfrom the city...

 

and opening trails,

 

destroying their forest,

 

building campsites.

 

But most of people,

 

they don't really know

 

what's going on.

 

And they are just

 

suddenly meeting all of

 

these movement...

 

in the river, all of

 

this money that is

 

coming into their lives

 

and into their

 

communities.

 

So, I would say

 

confusionis a good word

 

for it.

 

Talking about the

 

ribbons we are basically

 

seeing dozens...

 

hundreds, thousands of

 

trails and being opened...

 

along all of this

 

beautiful territory and

 

being marked for what...

 

will be seismic

 

development.

 

Which are basically

 

lots of different

 

holes and explosions

 

and these companies

 

are gonna scan

 

the earth...

 

and see if there is oil

 

under this beautiful

 

land.

 

This is a small,

 

poor country that

 

depends a lot on oil.

 

Our national budget

 

depends tremendously

 

on the oil development...

 

in the Amazon

 

rainforest.

 

My perspective is that

 

you should balance the

 

opportunities...

 

for development, right?

 

There is constructive

 

development that we

 

respect...

 

and we understand

 

it that we need.

 

But there is also other

 

type of developments...

 

like this one,

 

like ecotourism...

 

like sustainable

 

development...

 

that would keep this

 

culture alive

 

which would be...

 

it should be a global

 

crime to for cultures

 

like the Huaorani...

 

to be over or

 

to be gone.

 

But this ecotourism

 

venture is protecting

 

50,000 hectares...

 

of primary rainforest

 

that belongs to five

 

indigenous communities...

 

of the Huaorani people

 

who are 400 people who

 

were living on tourism.

 

and getting

 

the income that

 

they need.

 

You know, they don't,

 

they didn't need much

 

more than that.

 

But basically, there was

 

this avalanche of cash...

 

now going in because

 

of the, this rights that

 

the oil companies...

 

got to come in here.

 

The Amazon Region

 

belonged to settlers...

 

and to indigenous groups

 

like the Huoaroni...

 

We have dozens of

 

different nations.

 

Ecuador is a country

 

that recognizes these

 

nations as they are...

 

And they have the

 

ancestral territories...

 

the land that where these

 

people's grandparents

 

were living on.

 

The Huaorani were

 

supposedly

 

a millennium culture.

 

They have the rights

 

of the use of land...

 

but the land is not

 

theirs. It belongs

 

to the state

 

 

It's early morning

 

on the Shirapuno River

 

after a big rain...

 

last night and

 

the fog makes it hard

 

to see birds.

 

But that doesn't

 

muffle the sound

 

It's almost as good

 

hearing them as seeing█

 

them.

 

(sounds of crickets)

 

The Huaoranis most

 

significant Eco project

 

is the Huaorani Lodge.

 

Jasci teamed with

 

community members

 

to build it...

 

and it is a place

 

of places.

 

I've never sat on a

 

bench park from a

 

dugout canoe.

 

So thank you,that i

 

s a new one for me.

 

Well, it's all about

 

recycling, right?

 

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

 

The structure as you

 

saw it is a beautiful

 

place...

 

five little cabins,

 

you know it's very

 

intimate property...

 

and experience.

 

But the intention is

 

to just create an

 

ambiance for people...

 

to explore like to

 

go out and learn

 

about these...

 

conservation areas that

 

the communities have

 

developed.

 

Dombai has demonstrated

 

a spear...

 

which is particularly

 

adapted for hunting

 

a tapir...

 

which can be very big,

 

four or five hundred

 

pounds.

 

It's carved,

 

believe it or not...

 

from a palm and it has

 

these barbs on it that

 

keep the animal...

 

from escaping.

 

Which you can see from

 

that sound how rigid

 

and strong the wood is.

 

With this you can kill

 

large animal deer, taínos,

 

tapirs...

 

and even jaguars when

 

they threaten us

 

So, my name is a very

 

large powerful ant.

 

Probably the bullet ant.

 

it's a huge ant that

 

lives in nests up in

 

the trees...

 

and inflicts a ferocious

 

bite as it protects

 

the tree.

 

I think that's

 

appropriate.

 

 

In Ecuador, we have very

 

few uncontacted tribes

 

compared to other countries.

 

So we have emblematic

 

ones, the ??

 

which are Huaroni.

 

that decided to

 

separate as well

 

as the Taromenane

 

which are not Huaroni.

 

This is a different

 

tribe.

 

And they all live

 

together down

 

river inside...

 

the Yasuni National

 

Park.

 

Where several years

 

ago the zone called

 

the Intangible Zone

 

was created with the

 

idea to protect these

 

two uncontacted tribes.

 

And ideally an

 

intangible zone will be

 

in place where...

 

nobody will go.

 

No one except the

 

people who live there

 

themselves.

 

Exactly.

 

In practical terms,

 

in Ecuador at least,

 

an intangible zone...

 

means that they have

 

the Huaroni who believe

 

that they own that land.

 

You have a national

 

park that is handled

 

by...

 

the environmental

 

authority.

 

And you have an oil

 

block that who allows

 

for oil companies...

 

to do extraction and

 

exploitation of oil.

 

(Spanish)

 

Unfortunately, the

 

long-term history of

 

the Ecuadoran Amazon...

 

has been a series

 

of conflicts caused

 

by oil companies...

 

disrupting the lives

 

of indigenous villages

 

and people.

 

Environmental damages

 

always create cultural

 

problems

 

that affect how the

 

native peoples organize

 

their way of life.

 

Oil exploration brings

 

with it a host of

 

disruptive activity.

 

It is hard to say who

 

is the winner or loser

 

in the longrun.

 

When these kinds of

 

conflicts appear,

 

someone has already lost.

 

And here, especially,

 

communities suffering

 

environmental intrusion...

 

always lose because

 

they break down the

 

mechanisms...

 

that organize

 

their culture.

 

From that point on,

 

they can only regroup

 

based on...

 

whatever rights remain

 

and to establish

 

minimum agreements

 

that they can only...

 

hope will create

 

the possibility

 

that this conflict can

 

be transformed and

 

changed for the better.

 

Most Ecuadorians don't

 

realize that their

 

countryis basically...

 

an Amazon country

 

because most of it lies

 

in the Amazon basin.

 

It is cloud forest and

 

rainforest and an

 

immense international...

 

planetary resource.

 

In recent years, the

 

integrity of that

 

vast forest...

 

has been compromised...

 

by the discovery of oil

 

and the development that

 

goes along with oil.

 

And the cultures of

 

the people of eastern

 

Ecuador are constantly...

 

threatened every day.

 

 

(native singing)

 

Join me next time in the

 

americas,

 

with me David Yetman.

 

In 1325 AD, Aztecs founded

 

a city in a lake

 

in a high basin in central

 

Mexico

 

They called it Tenochtitlán.

 

Almost 2 centuries later,

 

Spanish conquered the city.

 

And over the centuries, changed

 

to La Ciudad de México, Mexico .

 

That metropolis is now one

 

of the world█s great cities.

 

So the houses are

 

pretty easily made.

 

They have a native

 

bamboo that grows

 

very quickly.

 

In one day, people

 

can make several of

 

these.

 

They know how to

 

put them together.

 

And they shield water,

 

and they get a couple

 

hundred inches of rain...

 

a year. So it has to

 

be leak proof.

 

Funding for In the

 

Americas with David Yetman

 

was provided by

 

Agnese Haury

 

Funding for In the Americas

 

with David Yetman

 

was also provided by

 

the Guilford Fund.

 

Copies of this and

 

other episodes

 

of In the Americas

 

with David Yetman

 

are available from

 

the Southwest Center

 

to order call

 

1-800-937-8632

 

Please mention the episode

 

number and program title

 

Please be sure to

 

visit us at intheamericas.com

 

or at intheamericas.org