(Pictured) Bejà, a Kayapo Indian, in the Xingu River in Mato Grosso. Speaking about his project, Stuckert remarked, "Indigenous people were the first to live in Brazil. We owe them an important ...
Below us lay Kayapo Indian country ... perhaps the richest and most powerful of around 240 indigenous tribes remaining in Brazil. Their ceremonies, their kinship systems, their Gê language ...
Historic Indigenous leaders still fell. Chief Aritana Yawalapiti, who led his Xingu people for five decades. Paulinho Paiakan, of the Kayapó. Artist and healer Vovó Bernaldina… from the Macuxi tribe ...
They met Thousands of Indigenous people marched through Brazil's capital ... Indigenous leaders from the Kayapo, Panará, and Munduruku tribes criticized the proposed Ferrograo railway , saying ...