Abstract
The mythical narratives of the Munduruku people in the Tapajós region are permeated by metamorphic transformations from humans to nonhuman beings into vegetables, animals, or spirits. Today, while these beings live as other forms in the world they still have an agency in the lives of humans and can intervene directly in the social life of the villages. The Munduruku strategies used to negotiate with these beings undergo ritualized actions that are also part of everyday life. Most of these actions are intended to bring joy to the spirits, who in return provide them with an abundance of food from the fields, hunt, and fish. This cosmopolitical relationship with these beings, however, is today threatened in the face of logging and mining operations that are advancing on indigenous lands. The pursuit of the defense and demarcation of the territory, in this sense, is intrinsically linked to the sacred places and to nonhuman beings that help to direct the strategies of struggle and political resistance. Thus, the war that the Munduruku people face is to protect the multiple worlds or existing plans, the multiple histories and scenarios where they live.
Keywords
- mundurku
- cosmopolitics resistances
- territory
- construction of the world
- struggle for life
1. Introduction
For the Munduruku people, as for many Amerindian peoples, the world—or the worlds—is inhabited by various human and nonhuman beings. To relate to the forest, to the rivers, and to the territory also implies relating to these beings, for they are subjects whose agency influences the world of the living. In this same sense, actions carried out in the world of “humans” also have the capacity to interfere in the lives of these other beings, because those are worlds that coexist and intertwine.
Thus, for the Munduruku to be able to relate without noise with the spirits of the ancients, with the mothers of the forest, of the game, and of the fish, they must negotiate conviviality by means of respectful exchanges, based on generosity, with all these beings of distinct forms of existence. It is important to emphasize that the conviviality to which I refer does not mean harmonious coexistence, without conflicts or the possibility of predation. So that the relationship and connection between these diverse worlds, with different materialities and temporalities, do not become chaotic and predatory, the Munduruku trigger ways of doing cosmopolitics through the ability to “articulate the multiple existing worlds” ([1], pp. 446–447).
The Munduruku inhabit the Tapajós river basin, which comprises part of the states of Mato Grosso and western Pará, Brazil, and is the largest tributary of the Amazon river. Known since the eighteenth century as Mundurukânia, the region of the middle and upper Tapajós course is inhabited by at least 14,000 Munduruku and a great diversity of traditional peoples and communities living along its banks and those of its main tributaries, the Jamanxim, Juruena, and Teles Pires rivers.
The Munduruku people live on the banks of the Tapajós and Amazon river basins, between the states of Pará, Mato Grosso, and Amazonas, and are historically known for their warrior character ([2], p. 81). They call themselves
2. Munduruku cosmopolitics and the struggle for life
Isabelle Stengers’ cosmopolitical proposition recognizes these other ways of existing in the world, and among the Munduruku the relations between humans and nonhumans are almost always ambivalent: sometimes of estrangement and avoidance, and other times of rapprochement. The strategies with which the Munduruku manage these worlds, however, are confronted by logging and mining invasions in their territories, which often affect places that are sacred to them. The respect for these places, as well as the protection of the dwellings of the mothers of the fish, hunting or mountains where the spirits of the ancients’ dwell, for example, are fundamental so that the connection between the multiverse [5] does not become dangerous. Not to protect these places is to provoke the anger of these other beings, who may respond with violence in the form of accidents or illnesses upon the Munduruku.
Beatriz Perone-Moisés is right when she says that we must take indigenous people seriously, which “means, in this case, to stop treating as metaphor or figure of speech that which appears so to us” ([6], p. 18). One must recognize the specificity in the construction of historical processes and narratives present in Munduruku historicity, for every historicity has a specific temporality ([7], p. 109) and this often differs from the linear and “progressive” temporality of Western society. Given that sacred places are inseparable from the Munduruku way of handling the world, we can see how mythic narratives also direct political and social decisions in the present, for these places fall within what Cayon [8] understands as “shamanic geography.”
Thus, the landscapes of the Tapajós region are intrinsically linked to the people’s mythical narratives and their ways of managing the world, that is, the procedures that ensure the order of their world and allow “the vital processes of the various beings and the succession of the seasons to take place without inconvenience” ([8], p. 17).
The chief of the Sawre Muybu village, Juarez Saw, always travels through the territory with the warriors to find out what has been happening inside the indigenous land. I have sometimes accompanied this type of action, in which the warriors and young people of the Munduruku audiovisual collective1 would register the presence of mining rafts and tracks opened by loggers. In one of these situations, we passed one of the rafts that, according to the cacique, belonged to the largest illegal mining operation inside the indigenous land, the Chapéu de Sol, whose damage is easily seen by satellite images.
With an ever-watchful eye, cacique Juarez spots the red macaws flying above the forest from afar. It is from the feathers of these macaws that the Munduruku headpieces are made, and it is these feathers that show their social organization, which is divided into two clans, the white (adorned with yellow and blue feathers) and the red (adorned with red feathers). On our way, we pass near a large raft that has been trying for many years to mine for diamonds out of that place. The cacique points to a mountain in the middle of the vegetation, where there is a large crevice, and says that that is the passage of the pigs, where “they narrowed the river to try to get the son of Karosakaybu,” and went on to tell us that many workers have already died trying to get the diamond out of there. He explains that “they will never succeed because this is a sacred place, there will always be consequences.”
Although there are specific places in the territory to which they refer as sacred sites, usually places where the “mothers” of the animals are, or where there is a concentration of spirits of Munduruku dead or of former Munduruku living on another plane, the territory as a whole and everything that was left out in the administrative demarcation process, although part of their territoriality, is permeated with stories about the people, about the ancestors.
Thus, as the Munduruku themselves point out, the whole territory needs to be protected because there is a multitude of sacred places in it, where their ancestors are. If any destruction happens in these places, the angry spirits may take revenge:
The sacred places, so important for the Munduruku people, hold ancestral memories of the people, but they are also channels of communication “between worlds,” for “sacred places are inscribed within people, while they connect them with their ancestors and with other dimensions of the world” ([8], p. 218). In this sense, a place that was once occupied by Munduruku will always be a Munduruku’s place, in which one of the marks is the black land,
3. The Munduruku people and the construction of the world scenario
In the history of the Munduruku people, the Tapajós River, or
Thus, the landscapes of the Tapajós region are intrinsically linked to their mythical narratives and their ways of managing the world. For the Munduruku people exist specific places in the territory to which they refer as sacred sites, which are usually places where the “mothers” of the animals are, where there is a concentration of spirits of the dead Munduruku and of the “old ones” living in another world. But the territory as a whole, and also everything that was left out in the administrative demarcation process is permeated with stories about the people, about the ancestors, and contains some degree of “sacredness.”
According to Munduruku narratives, the spirits of the ancients are those who, during the time when the Munduruku had the power to metamorphose, became animals, vegetables, turned into streams, or simply chose to live in another world. The elders say that at that time their bodies were made of tapir lard, which is why they had such transformative powers. As for the spirits of the dead, they are all those who “lost their human life” and their spirits went to the forest, because, as the Munduruku teacher Hiléia Poxo told me: “when we die our spirits go to the animals, they go walking with the spirits of the ancestors” (Hiléia Poxo, Poxo Muybu Village, interview held in 2020).
Sacred places not only nurture a relationship of identification with the Munduruku, but also relationships of reciprocity, through the exchange of gifts with the various beings that exist in the territory. In line with Cayon and Chacon [9]: “los lugares no están són conectados con las narrativas míticas sino con otros elementos como las curaciones chamánicas, los cantos, la música y los objetos, donde todos sirven como vehículos o manifestaciones de conocimiento” (2014, p. 216).
In the myth about Karosakaybu, the great warrior metamorphoses some Munduruku into pigs as punishment for having denied his son food, even coming across the abundance of a great hunt. By turning those who did not share the food into pigs, Karosakaybu established a way of acting, a parameter for what is or is not a “social being.” Thus, not sharing the game is considered an act that breaks Munduruku rules of sociability and can even interfere with the availability and diversity of such game, which is released by the mother of these groups of animals. The spirits of these animals can come through dreams to rebuke those who are stingy and, in addition, the act of eating game can also be considered a ritual. The sharing of the game is still reflected today in the way the Munduruku deal with this type of food. Even though being composed of small animals, the game must be shared among all the inhabitants of the village.
The Munduruku who were turned into pigs were confined in a kind of enclosure inside the village. The armadillo Daydu, another mythical character, went to Karosakuybu’s son to urge him to leave the hammock his father had ordered him to stay in while he went hunting, and persuaded him to open the enclosure where the pigs were and feed them tucumã. When the pigs realized who had opened the enclosure, they wanted to take revenge on Karosakaybu and set out in pursuit of his son. To try to reach him, the pigs, who also had superhuman powers, narrowed the banks of the Tapajós, but according to some narratives, never managed to catch the descendant of the great warrior. 3
They left marks on the mountain the trail they had passed through, as well as Karosakuybu’s footprint on the stones by the river. For the Munduruku, this place, called
Jairo tells another part of the myth: After losing his first son, who had never been seen again, Karosakaybu carved a wooden doll and, in one breath, gave him life. When his son grew up, the women began to have sex with him, until one day the men of the village found out about it. They then went to talk to Karosakaybu, who decided to transform his son into a tapir, which did not stop the women from continuing their relations with him. In retaliation, the husbands gathered to kill him, and, after it was done, cooked him for the whole village to eat. When the women found out what they had done, they decided to take revenge: “so, they told the men, ‘tomorrow everyone goes hunting!’ When they went, the women lined up, performed a ritual, and, singing, fell into the water to turn into fish” (Jairo Saw, personal communication).
Today, in order for them to score the big catch with timbó4 they have to do the Tinguejada ritual to ask permission from the mother of fish, “which is Xiquiridá, Karosakaybu’s wife—I will talk about this ritual in more detail later. She is the one who pulled the woman to transform into fish, this ritual is to make her happy. If she is happy, we can make the big catch” (Jairo Saw, personal communication). Taking care of the mother of the forest, the fish, and the game, as well as protecting the sacred places and objects, are all part of a cosmopolitical relationship, for they are agencies that operate and articulate themselves both in the earthly world of the living and in the worlds of other beings.
The Tinguejada ritual takes place between the two moieties of the social organization.5 During the ritual, the women and men from opposite moieties try to pass sorva on each other. This ritual aims to bring joy to Xiquiridá, the mother of the fish. When approaching the dono-maestria-maternity theme, Carlos Fausto [10] understands that this relationship is constitutive of sociality and”“characterizes interaction between humans and nonhumans” ([10], p. 16). About Tinguejada, the mother tongue teacher, Hiléia Poxo, clarifies:
On the day of the Tinguejada, women may not be menstruating and no one should have sexual intercourse the day before, otherwise, the fish that we cannot see in this dimension will climb trees and throw dry leaves in their place, thus preventing them from being caught. Trophy headhunts, performed by the Munduruku until the eighteenth century, also fulfilled functions similar to the ritual performed to make the mother of the fish happy. Comprising three parts, the ritual lasted from one and a half up to two years, and the warrior involved had to comply with a series of interdictions. The first part of the ritual was the
Headhunting was a way to please the mother of the peccaries,
About Munduruku headhunts, the chief of Sawre Mubyu village, Juarez Saw, told me that there were two types of headhunts: those of other Munduruku, from other villages, whose heads had great power of attracting the hunted, and were also very desired by the spirits because they also wanted this hunting facility; and the other is the hunting of heads of other ethnicities, which gave the warrior value and status.
Maintaining the tranquility of multiple worlds, with sacred places protected, while the hunts continue to be released to feed the villages, is part of a set of agencies that are being negotiated all the time in order to maintain conviviality among the Munduruku multiverse, controlling alterities in a “constant lucha contra el carácter disruptivo del caos” ([12], p. 53) so that, in this way, it can also maintain social reproduction. This kind of negotiation that “articulates multiple worlds” is, in Stengers’ terms ([1], pp. 446–447):
Myths end up giving guidelines on ways of acting that guarantee people’s sociability. Santos-Graneiro [13] emphasizes the importance of thinking of myths as “sacred truths,” literal and conscious manifestations that are present in all spheres of life and “provide guidelines for social action” ([12], p. 18). Thus, the Munduruku participation in the construction of this landscape of the world described by the cacique Jairo Saw must be taken seriously, because not only are they producing the history of these landscapes, they are also “producing knowledge and reality, confronting the reality created by Western science” ([14], p. 599). They thus tension the production of the Western “single world” that has the extinguishing of multiple words as its
The pursuit for the defense and demarcation of the territory is intrinsically linked to sacred places and nonhuman beings that help directing strategies of struggle and political resistance, as contemporary works on the people have been demonstrating. In her work with the Munduruku resistance movement
Even with their ambivalent power, the shamans access the multiple worlds and mediate relations with them. They are important figures in the struggle for land the Munduruku people face. This struggle is for the existent different worlds or planes, for the multiple histories and scenarios they inhabit. When analyzing the paths and territories trodden and lived by the Mbyá indigenous people, Guimarães [14] analyzes how indigenous peoples understand that territories are made of human and nonhuman beings as subjects identified in narratives, situated in histories, and with whom they establish social relationships. He goes on to argue that territories are space-time of social interactions, where there are beings with whom they weave social relations of both peaceful and bellicose reciprocity. In these interactions, several plans are made and the Munduruku need to deal with them. They make themselves Munduruku and make their world through this careful interaction.
In all elaborations of resistance that I followed from the Munduruku, where chiefs, leaders, shamans, and warriors were present, the songs were always present, sung before or during the occupations and demonstrations held by them. These songs evoke the presence and wisdom of the ancients, telling their trajectories and strategies of fighting in the wars they took part in. According to Hiléia Poxo (2020): “whenever a person goes to the movement, the spirits of the old people who died are always close by, that is why they sing so that they can hear our songs and let them know that we have our living culture. The living culture, as described by the teacher, can be interpreted as what the Munduruku recurrently refer to, not without a certain pride, about the ‘warrior spirit,’ reaffirmed by the odysseys played by the ancients, the head cutters of the Brazilian Amazon.”
The Munduruku war against invaders and development projects that presuppose the destruction of these sacred places has the “purpose” to maintain the life of different beings that inhabit the multiverse, keeping them within a relationship of coexistence, not one of chaos. They think, feel, and live this multiverse differently from the State’s war, and its territorial occupation, which is against all forms of multiplicity. The relationship between the Munduruku and these beings can be read from the concept of gift in Marcel Mauss [16], as conviviality and predation are not always opposed. In the Munduruku case, they go together, and are not rarely are mediated by gift exchanges. To understand how conviviality, predation, and gift are connected, we will see how the gift is defined by anthropology.
4. Giving, receiving, and giving back: the spirit of giving
Starting from the assumption that gift exchanges can exist universally, Marcel Mauss [16] makes a series of comparisons between the various regions and continents where the exchange of gifts are present. According to the author, they generate alliances and sociability and can occur through matrimonial, political, economic, legal, etc. Exchanges materialize in different ways, whether through parties, gifts, visits, or the circulation of goods and people. In many societies, gift exchanges are present throughout daily life, as well as in cosmopolitical relations, that is, between humans and nonhuman beings.
In said gift exchanges, unlike mercantile exchanges, whose relationship is between subject and object, the exchange of “objects” is constituted as a relationship between subjects [17]. When one exchanges something, one also exchanges part of oneself, for that which goes, is embedded with spirituality, soul. That which is given must be received and reciprocated, but this obligation is, at the same time, “performed” as spontaneous. The gift differs from other types of exchange because its exchange, in most cases, is not immediate, and can even occur between generations, between peoples, and between beings of different forms of existence. Its specificity, however, is in what “transcends” what is exchanged, because it is not a relationship between subject and “object”—in the Western way of understanding the latter—it is a relationship between subjects. It is a long-term relationship, not one an immediate exchange such as defined by the edges of capitalism. To give, receive, and reciprocate is a continuum that is constituted and constitutes social life, and it is also the triad that makes up the gift.
The refusal to give or receive something can mean war or the path of enmity, as described by Davi Kopenawa about the ethics of exchange among the Yanomami. By bartering, on the other hand, collectives are linked, and alliances are consolidated:
In the Munduruku myth of Karosakuybu turning his relatives into pigs for having denied food to his son, we can see that by denying something to someone one also denies what guarantees the sociability of the group. In the case of the myth, by denying hunting, a behavior that is considered unsocial, one loses the status of “humanity,” culminating in the transformation of people into game animals. In the Munduruku villages, games or fish must be shared, as mentioned before, even if they are only available in small quantities. If this food is not distributed among the families in the village, the mother of the fish and game may appear in dreams to “scold” the Munduruku or even limit and exhaust the possibilities of being able to access said food.
Also, according to Mauss, in the exchange of gifts “souls are mixed into things, things are mixed into souls. Lives are mixed, and thus the mixed persons leave each one of their own spheres and mix together: which is precisely the contract and the exchange” ([16], p. 213). If by exchanging something the receiver feels morally obliged to reciprocate, Mauss questions, it is because there is something more to this relationship than goods going, coming, or being passed on. For the author, “if things are given and reciprocated, it is because ‘respects’ are given and reciprocated—we can also say ‘courtesies.’ But it is also because people give themselves by giving, and, if people give themselves, it is because they ‘owe’ themselves—themselves and their goods—to others” ([16], p. 263).
To reflect on Munduruku sociability, like Yanomami sociability, would require thinking about the exchanges established in interethnic contact between indigenous and white people, but also about the exchanges within the group itself and with other nonhuman beings. Among the Munduruku, contact with non-Indians peoples occurred most intensively through the SPI (Serviço de Proteção ao Índio—Indian Protection Service) and later through the regatões6, for while the Munduruku worked in latex harvesting and made rubber for exchange, the regatiros took drugs from the sertão, “luring” them to the riverbanks. According to Dias-Scopel, “to some extent, the rubber enterprise eventually placed the Munduruku in a circuit of the local and global economy, in which they inserted themselves as part of an extensive network of production and circulation of commodities.” Chief Juarez Saw, who also worked in latex and sorghum milk collection as a young man, SPI agents also took goods to trade with rubber,
Exchanges with nonindigenous peoples, however, had been taking place since the nineteenth century, when travelers, mainly foreigners, traded Western items for trophy heads that were no longer useful to the Munduruku. Soon after, the gatekeepers, as the buyers of animal skins are called, such as maracajá cats, bush cats, and jaguars, also began to trade with the indigenous people.
Although these are the most obvious forms of exchange, and which undoubtedly generated significant changes in Munduruku ways of life and sociability, this is not the only exchange relationship between them. Between the spirits of the ancients, with the mothers of the forest, the pigs, or the fish, gift exchanges mediate the good (or bad) communication between them. That can also occur between hunters and hunted, between shamans and spirits, and between humans and nonhuman beings.
An example of this is the relationship between hunter and hunted among the Munduruku and Yanomami. In Yanomami cosmology, the hunted give themselves to the hunter, attracted by objects given by the shamans to be used in the hunt. The hunted give themselves, and the hunters receive and take them back to the village. This hunter, however, cannot consume the game he has taken, he has to make it go further. It is the logic of the gift that is at work: giving, receiving, and giving back. Thus, other hunters will have to do the same and this hunter will feed on the game of another, creating a relationship of interdependence among the group. If this triad is broken and the hunter consumes his own game, the animals of the forest will respond by no longer giving themselves to him, and this hunter will become panema.7 Without being able to bring food to the village, social relations between him and the group may be damaged.
In the Munduruku case, the hunter and hunted relationship are also complex. In one of the many dialogs, I had with a great sage and leader of Sawre Muybu, the chief Juarez Saw, one of them seemed especially interesting. Instigated by the fact that many Munduruku had been transformed into animals, as the myths tell, I asked him about his relationship with the animals they hunted. The chief told me that when the Munduruku found a group of peccaries or other animals, it was because the mother of those animals—who for some peoples are called chiefs of the hunt, as occurs in the Runa ([19], p. 106)—set them free to be hunted by them. The animals, Juarez Saw told me, “walk all around here, they know where we are, they know who we are, if we can hunt them, it is because they gave us permission. They are the ones who find us.”
According to him, the game, in their worlds, think that Munduruku humans are shamans. “When, in their world, these animals get sick, they go to meet the ‘shamans’ to be cured” (Juarez Saw, 2020), and the number of sick ones in the animal world is exactly the same amount that goes in flocks to meet the Munduruku in their human form. This encounter is the hunt, which functions as the beginning of a healing ritual whose last act is the meal. According to the chief Juarez Saw:
After the game is eaten, the skulls of the hunted are placed under trees near the houses. Their spirits return to other animal bodies, now in good health. Murphy [11], during his work with the Munduruku of the upper Tapajós in the 1950s, had already described rituals for pacifying the mothers of the hunted using animal skulls.
In the middle Tapajós, it is still possible today to perceive this ritual operating in the daily life of the village, where around the houses these skulls are, to unsuspecting eyes, “thrown” randomly. Although the ritual does not happen the way it was described by Murphy in “Mundurucu religion” (1958), one can see how it still occurs, with few modifications. Children are even told from a very young age not to play with those skulls, because the spirits may cause them harm. According to Professor Deusiano Saw
Viveiros de Castro, in
Among the Munduruku, it is recurrent to hear that the older men, for example, have more experience with otherness, because they have already gotten lost in the forest during days of hunting, and have seen and gone through things that the younger ones are yet to go through. Getting lost in the forest is not something casual or an accident, because according to what they told me when this is not the result of some
After the Munduruku goes through such situations several times, which can also be of sickness, they become “intimate” and “friends” with these spirits, after which they are allowed to play around during meals or afterward, when the skulls of the hunts are still around the houses ([11], pp. 59–60). Juarez Saw clarifies how this approach to the spirits happens:
For the Munduruku, most illnesses are occasioned by
Death in this sense is not the definitive rupture of life. It is related to the change of corporality, which, as said by Aparecida Vilaça about the Wari in
5. Concluding remarks
For the Munduruku, the territory is not only where their ancestors lived and where they continue their occupation process. The dead are not framed in a picture depicting the past, are not static in a time gone by, or are alive only in the memory of the people. These dead, their ancestors, are also in the present, they have agency, personality, and rationality in the same way as the spirits, the peccaries, the açaí trees, and the mothers of the animals. The way reality and time are constituted for the Munduruku people confronts our own perceptions of time and of what we so pretentiously call reality.
Nevertheless, the indigenous people lead us to conclude that our conception of politics is not sufficient to understand the complex relationships in which these people are inserted. As well put by Cadena [23] and Stengers [1], we need to “pluralize” politics: not limit the concept to power disputes between opposing forces, but rather make it pluriversal, involving all human and nonhuman beings who seek conviviality.
The Munduruku are fighting for territory, but this territory cannot be read as a space without any kind of agency. The Western way of understanding the world often establishes dualisms and dichotomies to explain the social, such as subject/object, nature/culture, male/female, and the idea that one must dominate the other. But these dualisms do not make sense to these people, being that too many Amerindian peoples here the idea of a continuum makes sense, which sometimes brings subjects together and sometimes distances them depending on the relational play.
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Notes
- The Munduruku audiovisual collective is formed by young women, who accompany the actions of resistance inside and outside the territory. See more at: <https://www.facebook.com/audiovisualmunduruku/> [Accessed: March 25, 2021].
- Chief of Sawre Aboy village, interview conducted in 2017.
- In another version of this story, Karosakaybu managed to trap the pigs between some mountains, but his son ended up staying with them and no longer seen by the demiurge.
- The timbó is part of a group of plants in the leguminous and sapindaceous families, and is used by the Munduruku, as for several other indigenous peoples, to stun fish, making them float and facilitating fishing.
- The Munduruku organize themselves into two exogamous halves: white and red. On the social and kinship relationship, return to the introduction.
- The regatões traveled the rivers of the Amazon in small boats to exchange products from the city for products from the forest.
- Panema is a term used for hunters who can no longer catch game or fish. Either because a spell has been cast on them, because he has transgressed some interdiction, or because he has disrespected the hunts.