Your browser does not support this video. Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Fishing-with-Karo-Munduruku-in-the-Amazon---Web-Video--International-Version--27MZIFJJSB2ZA.htmlConceptually similarFishing with Karo Munduruku in the Amazon - Web Video (Portuguese Subtitles Version)GP0STQ0PVCompleted★★★★Fishing with Karo Munduruku in the Amazon - Web Video (English Subtitles Version)GP0STQ0QZCompleted★★★★A Munduruku Mother in the Amazon - Web Video (International Version)GP0STPXOLCompleted★★★★A Munduruku Mother in the Amazon - Web Video (English Version)GP0STPXRRCompleted★★★★Bunny McDiarmid in Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land - Web Video (International Version)GP0STPZE1Completed★★★★Bunny McDiarmid in Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land - Web VideoGP0STPZGJCompleted★★★★Alice Braga in the Tapajós Region in the Amazon - Web Video (English Subs)GP0STPYNHCompleted★★★★Munduruku Women Play Football in the Amazon - Web Video (English Version II)GP0STQ0R4Completed★★★★Munduruku Women Play Football in the Amazon - Web Video (English Subs)GP0STPZUECompleted★★★★View AllGP0STPZUSFishing with Karo Munduruku in the Amazon - Web Video (International Version)Cleodivaldo karo Munduruku is a young fisher at Sawré Muybu village. In this video he shares the daily routine of fishing, the importance of this activity and the importance of the land demarcation. The Munduruku people have inhabited the Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land in the heart of the Amazon, for generations. The Brazilian government plans to build a series of dams in the Tapajos River basin, which would severely threaten their way of life and the fragile biome of the Amazon, where rivers are fundamental to fauna and the survival of local flora. In addition to preserving their way of life, the demarcation of Sawré Muybu ensures the conservation of 178,000 hectares of Amazonian rainforest.In original language:Pescando com Cleodivaldo Karo MundurukuCleodivaldo Karo Munduruku é um jovem pescador da aldeia Sawré Muybu. Ele compartilha como é seu dia a dia de pescador, a importancia desta atividade e a importancia da demarcação das terras de sua aldeia. O povo Munduruku habita a Terra Indígena Sawré Muybu, no coração da Amazônia, há gerações. Mas seu modo de vida está ameaçado pelos planos do governo brasileiro de construir um complexo de barragens na bacia do Rio Tapajós. Por isso, os Munduruku começaram a sinalizar o território auto-demarcado e pedem pela demarcação definitiva. Além de garantir a manutenção do modo de vida deste povo, a demarcação de Sawré Muybu garante a conservação de 178 mil hectares de floresta amazônica.Locations:Amazon-Brazil-Pará-Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land-South AmericaDate:7 Jul, 2016Credit:© Todd Southgate / GreenpeaceDuration:2m34sAudio format:Final MixProduction Type :WEB VIDEORestrictions:IMAGES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN BRAZIL MUST NOT BE USED FOR FUNDRAISING PURPOSES.Keywords:Fishers-Fishing (activity)-Forests (campaign title)-Huts-Indigenous People-KWCI (GPI)-Lakes-Small-scale fishing-Sustainable fishing-Tropical rainforests-VillagesShoot:Fishing with Karo Munduruku in the AmazonCleodivaldo karo Munduruku is a young fisher at Sawré Muybu village. In this video he shares the daily routine of fishing, the importance of this activity and the importance of the land demarcation. The Munduruku people have inhabited the Sawré Muybu Indigenous Land in the heart of the Amazon, for generations. The Brazilian government plans to build a series of dams in the Tapajos River basin, which would severely threaten their way of life and the fragile biome of the Amazon, where rivers are fundamental to fauna and the survival of local flora. In addition to preserving their way of life, the demarcation of Sawré Muybu ensures the conservation of 178,000 hectares of Amazonian rainforest.Cleodivaldo Karo Munduruku é um jovem pescador da aldeia Sawré Muybu. Ele compartilha como é seu dia a dia de pescador, a importancia desta atividade e a importancia da demarcação das terras de sua aldeia. O povo Munduruku habita a Terra Indígena Sawré Muybu, no coração da Amazônia, há gerações. Mas seu modo de vida está ameaçado pelos planos do governo brasileiro de construir um complexo de barragens na bacia do Rio Tapajós. Por isso, os Munduruku começaram a sinalizar o território auto-demarcado e pedem pela demarcação definitiva. Além de garantir a manutenção do modo de vida deste povo, a demarcação de Sawré Muybu garante a conservação de 178 mil hectares de floresta amazônica.Related Collections:Munduruku Indigenous People Livelihood (Video)Tapajós River and the Munduruku Indigenous People - Full Edit (All Photos & Videos)