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Kichwas

from Amazonia

(Quichuas)

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I have spent in this community a lot of time in many visits and co-living between the years of 2014 and 2016, and now we have had a great first experience with the pilot expedition between April and May  in heading there again in 2017, with the goal to bring direct financial support. The family kindly received the participants and we spent 3 weeks with them.

 

 

For this journey to Ecuador it is NOT required to understand and speak some Spanish, but of course it is just much better if you can understand or learn by yourself during the stay some basics, at least on a communicative level. This is, because it is going to be your own experience to immerse yourself in the local life, and by translating everything to English or any other language, your experience and immersion in the local community would be incomplete. Anyways, the basics of the Spanish language are pretty easy to learn, so do not worry, if you still don’t handle this language, you can learn communicative basics in one or two months.

The Quijos-Quichua (Napo-Quichua) are a Lowland Quechua (Runa Shimi) people, living in the basins of the NapoAguarico, San Miguel, and Putumayo river basins of Ecuadorand Peru. In Ecuador they inhabit in the Napo Alto as well as the rivers Ansuy and Jatun Yacu, where they are also known as Quijos Quechua. The Original Nation Quijos (NAOKI) has an extension of community territory of approximately 13,986, 78 hectares. It was recognized as such on March 13, 2013, by Codenpe (Council of Development of Nationalities and Peoples of Ecuador). Sus habitantes viven a lo largo del Alto Napo (Oriente ecuatoriano) y actualmente hablan el quichua, aunque su idioma original es el shiripano. It is made up of dozens of groups, communities and organizations, according to their status.

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The Quijos are an indigenous ethnic group of the territory in the banks of the River Napo, in Ecuador. From them the Napo-runa are derived. The modern Quijos are Quichua speaking, but the inhabitants of the region indicate that their original language is the Shiripano. This language has become almost extinct due to the expansion of the Quichualanguage through the Inca empire: first due to the inter-Andean commercial relations; and then with the conquest of what is now Ecuador by the Inca empire or Tahuantinsuyo.

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The Original Nation Quijos has its roots in the ancient indigenous Quijos that populated that region and that were almost exterminated by the Spaniards, during the time of the conquest. Their local hero is Jumandi, a warrior who fought against Spanish expansion, in the year 1578. Despite the great resistance of Jumandi and the people who followed him, the Spaniards captured him, tortured him and finally killed him.

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The Quijos are now being reunited in what is the traditional Quijos Nation, which combines Quichua speaking communities, who inhabit the Ecuadorian province of Napo.

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Traditional Food

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Traditionally in these communities, the women went out to work in the chacras and the men went to hunt and fish. Their days would start by drinking chicha or guayusa. Both of these are plants that are dried and brewed as tea. Traditional cuisine from these communities (Quijos- Quichua) do not use salt. They replace salt with ash from certain plants. Some food products in their diet include: sweet potatoplantain(and/or banana), yucacorn (maize), ricebeanschontaheart of palm , chilihoney, meat and fish. They also cultivated granadillaschirimoya, logmas, barbascoayahuasca and tobacco. The above produce is grown and cultivated in these gardens (chacra). Household gardens, or chacra, remain important in the lowland Quijos (Quichua) communities in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Chacra production is not only central to household food security but also its symbolic importance to Quijos (Quichua) cultural identity.

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Hunting and Fishing

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Exclusively the men of the community carried out both hunting and fishing. Before going hunting they smoked tobacco as part of an ancestral practice. The ritual indicates that the Quijos would identify in the ashes of tobacco the animal they are going to hunt. In the case of not seeing any figure in the ashes would mean that they would not have good results for that day. Another traditional practice before the hunt was for the Quijos people to drink Guayusa. This plant, found in the Ecuadorian Amazon, contains caffeine and other components such as theobromine or L-teanine, stimulants that reduce physical and mental fatigue and fight stress. The leaves of the guayusa tree are dried and brewed like a tea. It is also a traditional tea that the Quijos brew in the early mornings. A traditional ritual they do before hunting is to smoke marijuana in order to see their prey clearly.

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Crafts and artisan production

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Men and women wanted precious jewels on their chest, arms and nose. A typical ornament were dowels, objects that were embedded in the lower lips. In addition, they had gold ornaments on their nose. In Baeza and Archidona, gold earrings were worn on the chest and on the arms. The main ornament used by men at parties were necklaces that were worn across their shoulders and across their chest. Women, and girls, wore necklaces and bracelets made with crystal beads, both around the neck and around the waist. They made stone utensils, clay pots, hammocks, pita nets and wicker baskets. They also made objects using raw materials such as stone, metal, clay, wood and fiber. With the stone they made their work and war goods, they washed the gold in the rivers for their personal adornments.

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