Home » STORIES » To the Indigenas with love

To the Indigenas with love

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Missionaries abducted and murdered… their church burned down… No, we are not talking about the Middle East, but about Brazil and about a situation that is little known about in the wider world – the situation in the Indigenous Territory of Raposa Serra do Sol, in the state of Roraima, close to the border of Brazil with Venezuela and Guyana. It is a region that was seized by colonists and landowners, who enslaved the Macuxis, the principal indigenous ethnic group in the region, to work in prospecting for minerals and producing rice in return for cheap alcohol, a vice introduced by the invaders themselves.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][bs_modal_gallery groupname=”Macuxi” images=”8391,8390,8389,8388,8387,8386,8385,8384″][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]But the Catholic Church has also been present in the region from the beginning of the 20th century onwards. First of all with the Jesuits, then afterwards with the Dominicans, and finally with the Consolata Missionaries. Theirs is not a mission like most others; when travelling in their vehicles the missionaries have to carry extra fuel and extra batteries, in addition to spare parts and reserves of tinned food. If your car breaks down on the road, it can mean waiting for days for another vehicle to pass by, given that mobile phone signals are non-existent and public telephone kiosks something of a precious rarity.

The strong and active presence of the Church alongside the Macuxis led to the decision by the indigenous peoples themselves to give up alcohol. Those who wished to continue using it had to leave the tribe.

This decision infuriated the local colonial landowners, because they were losing their source of cheap labour as a result. And so they started to stir up propaganda against the Catholic Church. Without success, however – so in 2004 they murdered some of the indigenous people and abducted three of the Consolata missionaries, and the following year a group of around 150 masked and armed men set fire to the whole of the mission complex, including the church of St Joseph and the school run by the mission. Their hope was to stir up the Macuxis to rebel and attack the authorities, which would result in a genocide, since the indigenous peoples would be fighting with stones and clubs against men armed with guns and bullets.

As a result of the fire, the Macuxis were enraged and ready to seek vengeance. But Tuxaua Jacir de Souza (tuxaua is the name they give to the leaders of the Macuxi people) called them together, opened the Bible and read with them for over an hour. He reminded his people that they were Catholic indigenous peoples and that God asks us to forgive, not to take revenge. All the people calmed down and did not take revenge. This action was one of the reasons why in 2005 the Raposa Serra do Sol was formally declared an indigenous people’s homeland, and returned to the indigenous peoples. All non-indigenous peoples, those using the land for rice growing, etc. were forced to leave the region.

In this place the simple reading of the Word of God prevented a massacre from happening. The Macuxi people are still very Catholic; they build their own churches with their own materials and their own manpower, they translate the Catholic hymns into their own native Macuxi language. And Tuxaua Jacir is known to two Popes on account of his pacific leadership stance. Nonetheless, there is still one thing they are unhappy about; the fact that they don’t have a Bible translated in their own language, and they are concerned about their future government. There are sects coming in, trying to woo them away from Catholicism. And some are even offering them alcohol once again, so they are very concerned, above all for their children and young people.

ACN has recently agreed to pay for the translation of its Child’s Bible into the Macuxi language. A theologian who has a profound knowledge of the language is currently working on the translation, and very soon thousands of copies will be made available for the children. But in order to fund this, we need your help. After seeing the miracle that the Word of God has worked in the region, we must make every effort to ensure that the next generation also grows up in a peaceful spirit and with God in their hearts. We are sure that you too will be happy to help us in this initiative, which is a truly missionary one![/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Don't miss the latest updates!

Crisis deepens in DR Congo as new terrorist front opens in the north

Despite the danger, and the looming threat of famine, missionaries…

Major Archbishop Shevchuk: “The war in Ukraine has caused many conversions”

During a visit to the headquarters of the Spanish national…

Bishop Silvano Pedroso: A humble shepherd who was close to the people

ACN mourns the death of Cuba’s first bishop of African…

From forgiveness to uncertainty: the story of a priest in southern Lebanon

Fr Youssef Semaan watches on as the conflict in Lebanon…

Statement By The President Of Aid to The Church In Need (ACN)

Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) has received with…

Crisis deepens in DR Congo as new terrorist front opens in the north

Despite the danger, and the looming threat of famine, missionaries on the ground insist they will not abandon their flocks, since they are “living signs of God’s presence”. Hundreds of...

Priest who remained with his people despite growing violence killed in the Nuba Mountains

Fr Youhanna Al-Amin died in Kauda, a region of Sudan marked by tribal tensions and disputes among armed groups. According to local sources, the killing appears to have been an...

Major Archbishop Shevchuk: “The war in Ukraine has caused many conversions”

During a visit to the headquarters of the Spanish national office of ACN, the primate of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church spoke of the role of priests as “wounded healers”...