Chile – Luxury Travel to Peru, Galapagos & Bolivia https://www.kuodatravel.com Kuoda Travel Thu, 09 Sep 2021 15:43:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.3 Who are the Indigenous People of Chile and Why is their Story Important? https://www.kuodatravel.com/indigenous-people-of-chile/ https://www.kuodatravel.com/indigenous-people-of-chile/#respond Sun, 13 Dec 2020 09:39:01 +0000 https://www.kuodatravel.com/?p=34838

In the “Land of Poets,” nothing is particularly poetic about how Chilean indigenous populations have been relegated as second-class citizens in their own territory. This is to say, they have been officially cast-out since Chilean independence in 1818. Before Chile became an independent nation, Mapuche communities were actually one in a handful of indigenous populations to outwit Spanish colonists and evade conquest.

Since then, and even before (when they resisted being enveloped into the Inca Empire), Mapuche resilience, honor, and culture have proven poetic and admirable. We would like to pay homage to the proud Mapuche people in this blog and highlight the strong indigenous presence, including eight other native groups, in Chile.

Independence, but not for all

People Chile Travel

Photo Source: https://econojournal.com.ar/

Heading into the 1860s spelled trouble for the Mapuche and the prior treaties they heartily won against the Spanish to maintain sovereignty over their land. The Chilean government took almost 23 acres of their territory under legal sanction approved by National Congress, establishing indigenous reservations to reduce and displace the Mapuche population; because in doing so, they could officially allocate this land to European and national colonizers.

From roughly 1860 to 1885, the Chilean government joined forces with Argentina. They killed about 100,000 Mapuche, which in their eyes was necessary to “pacify them” and take their land by force. The Chilean state did award 3,000 deeds under Mapuche community ownership, but this led to too many usurpation cases and further displacement of Mapuche family members. These cases rarely settled out of court.

Throughout the 20th-century Mapuche activist groups began cropping up in resistance to these legal yet immoral practices, and they gained real momentum after the Pinochet dictatorship in the 1990s.

Modern-day struggle and victories

People Chile Travel

Photo Source: https://www.cultura.gob.cl/

Chile remains the only Latin American country to not recognize its indigenous populations and rights in its constitution. However, there’s a good chance this will change soon following the historic vote this past October to modify their constitution. The public outcry for a more egalitarian society in Chile was deafening, with over 79% of the population voting in favor of a new constitution.

And the vote for this revised constitution did not by any means take place in a vacuum. In 2019, protests spiraled out of control in Chile, with a small but significant fare hike on public transportation. Chile may be one of the wealthiest countries in Latin America, but it is also the most unequal, with a wealth chasm begging reform. The Mapuche played a vital role in these protests, utilizing the national outrage to promote their objective of becoming a “plurinational state,” like Bolivia to the north.

Indigenous cultures of Chile

Together, nine distinct indigenous groups make up 9% of Chile’s population. The Mapuche represent the largest and most politically active group at 84% of the country’s indigenous population. And the Aymara, Diaguita, Lickanantay, and Quechua communities make up the remaining 15%.

Today, most indigenous families reside in central urban areas, such as the Los Lagos and Araucanía regions, after much of their territorial land has been systematically taken away by the Chilean government; however, many maintain the eternal vision of returning to their ceremonial lands and recovering the unified community they have momentarily lost.

Despite these hardships thrust upon them, and time and time again needing to fight for their voice to be heard, their land to be recognized, Mapuche culture has had such a positive influence on Chilean culture. The Mapuche cultural values of wisdom, courage, perseverance, kindness, and optimism are finally recognized and reclaimed in 21st century Chile.

For instance, general practitioners are consulting Mapuche shamans for a more holistic vision of medicine. Mapuche recipes are landing in the famous Boragó restaurant in Santiago. And Chileans are taking note of the Mapuche’s compassionate sharing between us humans and the natural world, in the backdrop of a pandemic-weary global society yearning to return to nature.

Main Photo Source: https://chile.travel/

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Easter Island’s History and Mystery https://www.kuodatravel.com/easter-islands-history-and-mystery/ https://www.kuodatravel.com/easter-islands-history-and-mystery/#respond Mon, 23 Mar 2020 22:57:41 +0000 https://www.kuodatravel.com/?p=32574

Chile is home to many exciting things to see and do. However, one of the most mysterious and remote places to visit would be the enigmatic Easter Island. Known as Rapa Nui to those who first lived there, this fascinating place holds many mysteries – how did people get there in the first place? What happened to all of the trees? And most mysterious of all, what about those big statues that you find all over the island? What do they mean, how were they made, and how the heck did they transport them from the quarry to their final place?

Easter Island was given this name by the Dutch explorer Jacob Roggeveen, whose ship came across the island on Easter Sunday in 1722. The first inhabitants arrived from Polynesia long before that, though it’s nearly impossible to know precisely when. Some historians put their arrival at around 1200 AD, while others believe it may have been much earlier, anywhere from 100 AD to 800 AD. What is evident, however, is that these early settlers on the island were very clever, and built a complex society using what the island gave them.

Easter Island

These first inhabitants of Rapa Nui likely arrived on the island on boats made of a sort of double canoe, a common sea-faring type of vessel used in Polynesia over 1,000 years ago. When they arrived, the island was covered with thick vegetation, including a vast forest of palm trees, similar to what you would find on the island of Oahu today. In the process of settling the island, however, they cleared much of the forest and burned the trees, using the ash as fertilizer. Over the centuries, this slash-and-burn style farming led to massive deforestation, leaving the island with very few trees.

Another theory of what happened to the trees has to do with the giant statues you can find all over the island, called Maoi. There have been 887 statues accounted for, and they were all created between 1100-1680 AD, according to carbon dating. The majority were carved from a soft volcanic stone called tuff, using hand tools made from obsidian. One of these statues would take a team of 5 or 6 men approximately a year to create, though only about a quarter of them were actually installed. Nearly half of the moai that have been found remained at the quarry where they were created. The rest of them can be found along the sides of the road, never having made it to their destinations.

These statues are incredibly massive, and so there is much speculation of how they were moved from the quarry to their final destinations around the island. Some think that this is where many of those trees went – the statues could be pulled relatively smoothly over the terrain using the trunks of the palm trees as rollers. Others believe that these statues were ‘walked’ to their destinations, with ropes attached from either side and using a rocking motion along with gravity to move the figures while upright, giving them the appearance of walking. This would fit the legend that locals tell of the Moai “walking” to their final resting places.

Easter Island

These impressive statues were built as memorials to chieftains and other important people who had passed. The ones who reached their intended locations were placed upon platforms called ahus and served at tombs for the people they were meant to memorialize. These tombs and statues were placed with their backs to the ocean, gazing inland upon the island. In this way, those who had passed away would forever look over and protect their tribe and bring them good fortune.

Easter Island, or Rapa Nui, is an isolated place full of history and mystery. You can gaze out over the now-stark landscape, and visit the many moai dotting the island. While it is a long flight to get there from its mother country of Chile, it’s definitely worth a visit to experience a bit of this fascinating and ancient culture.

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