Brazilian Missionaries Try to Understand Indian Religiosity

How can missionaries and religious people work with the indigenous people, whilst respecting their religion? How can a mission that is almost 100 years old change its path and start to strengthen another religion? 

To start with, it is necessary to understand the other religion and comprehend how it has been transformed, whether this is through changes in the indigenous life style, or through the very presence of the mission.

Faced with these challenges, 20 religious and lay people have been together since Tuesday, September 12, in Santarém, in the Brazilian northern state of Pará, studying the religion of the Munduruku people, who live near to the Tapajós River, in Pará. 

"We do not study another religion to believe in it, but to understand it," said anthropologist Lucia Rangel, advisor at the meeting.

"In general, indigenous religions have different conceptions of live and death, body and soul, and the link between religion and work to those held by Western belief systems. These are not fragmented activities. While they are working, the people pray. While they are eating and drinking, they transcend. It is an integrated world," Rangel claims. 

In the same way, the events in the Munduruku social life are strongly related. Hunting is an economic activity but it also has social value, because the skills it requires are the same as those needed for war, and this is traditionally a warrior society.

The hunt is linked to religious activities because of the rituals that are involved, since the animals also have spirits. The spirits of animals are feminine: each animal has a spirit-mother. Thus, hunting is a masculine activity, but the women have to protect the hunt. They are different, yet complementary roles.

The group intends to better understand the spiritual forms of this people who were warriors, farmers and hunters for many centuries, and who are now living off other forms of production such as latex extraction, cattle raising and prospecting.

These activities have brought changes to the daily life and, therefore, to the social relationships between the Mundurukus, which have led to the readjustment of their religious aspects. 

Mission Re-evaluated

The Francisclarian mission that works with the Munduruku was built by the Catholic Church around 100 years ago. Ever since 2003 it has been undergoing an intense evaluation process.

The changes began with internal adjustments: the work which had previously been carried out by Franciscan monks and by sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary has started to be coordinated by the two groups together.

All the aspects of the mission’s work – in health, education and evangelization – have been reviewed. The intention for the mission’s school is to be managed by the indigenous people in the future and they have been trying to offer a bilingual education, already before the evaluation started, respecting the language learnt by the children in their own houses. Now, they are working on developing indigenous language teaching materials.

Cimi – Indianist Missionary Council

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian President Meets Bishop Who Went on Hunger Strike Against His Policies

Following a two-hour meeting between Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and the ...

UN Gives Brazil High Marks for Poverty Fight But a D for Justice

The top UN human rights official, during a three-day visit to Brazil that ended ...

Canada Firm Bets on Brazilian Diamonds

Canada-based Braz Diamond Mining Inc. now controls Brazil’s largest known diamondiferous kimberlite. The company ...

Brazil’s Yanomami Leader Gets Death Threats from Illegal Goldminers in the Amazon

Brazil’s Yanomami shaman and spokesperson Davi Kopenawa, who has led the struggle for the ...

Hacker or Google’s Inside Job? In Brazil Controversial Orkut Pages Disappear

Some Brazilians are accusing Google of suppressing freedom of expression in the still of ...

Dance, Fight? London Gets a Taste of Brazil’s Capoeira

Visitors making their way to Baishaki Mela – the Bangladeshi New Year – were ...

Brazilian Congress Wants Deeper Probe of Lula’s Former Adman

The final report of the Joint Parliamentary Investigatory Commission (CPMI) on the Post Office ...

Ecology Expert Pans Brazil for Building More Hydroelectrics

Washington Novaes, a Brazilian journalist who writes on environmental issues and has been a ...

110 Deaths Later Brazil’s Dengue Epidemic Seems to Be Easing

Brazil's dengue epidemic in the state and city of Rio do Janeiro added another ...

Brazil Announces Discovery of Huge Oil Fields Off Rio’s Coast

Brazilian oil giant Petrobras announced Tuesday, December 27, the discovery of a giant oil ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`