Amazon

Flotilla, News

Indigenous Flotilla Arrives in Peru to Share More Stories of Amazonian Resistance

Indigenous Flotilla Arrives in Peru to Share More Stories of Amazonian Resistance “Today we set foot on land in Iquitos,” says Lucia Ixchiu, part of the Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla‘s Coordination team. By EmergentesOctober 23, 2025 15:50By Lucía Ixchiu Amidst the heat that embraces the Amazon jungle, after crossing the border from Ecuador to Peru and stopping at the Island of Yarina, we continued towards Iquitos, the largest city in the world inaccessible by road. We docked around 4 PM and said goodbye to the pilots and boats that had accompanied us for several days. We arrived at the place where we would stay for the next three days of this journey upriver. Finally, we left the Napo River and met the immense Amazon River. Between lines for food, lines to unload luggage, lines for mototaxis, and lines to board the buses that would take us to where we would sleep, we finally had the chance to stretch our backs on something other than the floor. This journey is a profound existential transformation and, in my view, a precious gift for traveling one of the routes that allows us to traverse not only the river but also our inner selves. After disembarking, we still feel, for days on end, the sensation of being on the water. Arriving at the hotel amidst the chaos and traffic was, without a doubt, another adventure. We were finally able to sleep and rest our bodies to continue the next day with an agenda led by Muyuna—a floating cinema collective from the city that works amidst the waters. We began our tour in the Belén neighborhood, where we saw a peculiar market with all kinds of plants and species that only exist in the Amazon jungle—turtle eggs, edible grubs, diverse smells, and a polluted river were part of the scene, in stark contrast to the living rivers we had been observing before reaching the city. The city of Iquitos floods from December to May every year, and the population learned to live this way a long time ago. I find this surprising due to their ability to adapt to reality, although, of course, the changes and floods are also an effect of biodiversity destruction. After lunch, we headed to the port to continue traveling through the lagoons and rivers of these territories. We arrived at Muyuna beach, or Isla Bonita, where we held an act of solidarity with Brazil. Yesterday, we learned that an offshore oil exploration license was granted to Petrobras. It is very powerful and painful that, in the midst of the flotilla, these things still happen, but at least we are together to support each other across territories. Touching the earth is also part of this journey on water. Our Mayan ancestors said that part of balance is harmonizing water, fire, air, and earth, and that is what we seek now. We are drawing strength from the land, looking for a bit of calm to continue venturing into this jungle that is so intense and beautiful at the same time. This trip dismantles myths and stereotypes about the jungle. Being here is not easy or romantic, but that’s how life is. The rashes on our skin and the thousands of bites from bugs, fleas, and mosquitoes remind us that honoring nature and being part of it also means accepting all of this—that leaving our comfort zone is part of breaking away from the convenience and parasitism of cities, and that returning to the land is anything but simple. The jungle has its own time, its own rules, and its own path. Thank you to it for welcoming us and teaching us to walk with it. Source: MidiaNinja

Community, News

With Satellite Technology, Amazonian Indigenous Peoples in Peru Monitor Illegal Deforestation

With Satellite Technology, Amazonian Indigenous Peoples in Peru Monitor Illegal Deforestation In this new chapter of the Yaku Mama Flotilla’s travel diary, a journey into the experience of the Regional Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the East (ORPIO) satellite monitoring in their fight against illegal logging. By EmergentesOctober 23, 2025 11:00 AMBy Lucía Ixchíu With the Yasuní River by our side, we set off to cross the border that separates the peoples and communities along what we now call the line between Ecuador and Peru. In the community of Yarina, in the Loreto province, the sons and daughters of the river and the stream welcomed us with songs and a contagious joy for our visit. Hugs and greetings were exchanged between the peoples, who asked us, repeatedly, to carry and amplify their voice as guardians of the forest. For years, communities of different nationalities have been monitoring and protecting the jungle in an area of over six million hectares of Amazon rainforest—all with their own resources and ancestral knowledge. The Regional Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the East (ORPIO) has been working for several years, supporting everything from land titling to the development of its own pioneering, technology-assisted monitoring system. Amidst the risks and impunity that mark the defense of territory in Abya Yala—threatened with death and persecuted by industries of all kinds—they stand firm, with the conviction to expand the territories where they can watch over and unite in the protection of one of the most important forests on the planet. We swam in the river that, for hundreds of years, has been home to thousands of species. We swam and saw the Sapara and Sarayaku peoples rowing in the same canoe. “The answers have always been in our territories,” said the participants in the Yaku Mama Amazon Flotilla Our gathering ended with a dinner and a detailed explanation from the community’s apus (leaders), monitors, and community technicians about their work and how they watch over the forest against illegal extraction The conversation was led by women, youth, and by those who place life at the center of everything. A blanket of stars accompanied us throughout the night, and lulled by the river, we rested. With the singing of birds, the sun rose, and we departed again, saying goodbye to Yarina and everything it taught us in such a short time. This time, we left with more hope: the future is today—and it is being built by the peoples who walk, create, and, like ants, change the world. Source: MidiaNinja

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