We Are The Indians - Journeyman | Tuppashare Tuppershare Tupper Share Tupashare Tupa

The aboriginal Mbya Guarani have lived deep in the Argentinean forest since the Spanish Conquest. For centuries, their ancient spirituality and timeless way of life has shielded them from Westernisation. But modernity is slowly encroaching on the Mbya’s way of life. A beautiful portrait of a community’s struggle for survival.

Seriously Factual

Documentaries are moving online! Journeyman is one of the world's leading doc distributors and we're offering you a chance to see the best documentaries before anyone else! Every week we have fresh new titles, often direct from the cutting room. Its so easy - click on a film and watch.

We Are The Indians
Publisher: Journeyman
Length: 49mins
Location: Argentina
Copyright: ©Native Voice Films
Published: 12 Oct, 2006
Last Updated: 29 Oct, 2009
Ref: 3262
The aboriginal Mbya Guarani have lived deep in the Argentinean forest since the Spanish Conquest. For centuries, their ancient spirituality and timeless way of life has shielded them from Westernisation. But modernity is slowly encroaching on the Mbya’s way of life. A beautiful portrait of a community’s struggle for survival.

Cirilo has a problem. ‘I am going to tell you something very very secret. I don’t know what to do. I am in love with Susana, and Ara as well.’ A standard teenage dilemma? Perhaps, but Cirilo is no standard teenager. He is an aboriginal tribesman. Ara is his heavily pregnant wife and - threatened by poverty - they will soon be forced to journey to an exploitative tea estate to earn money for food.As Cirilo’s friend Marcelo points out, they may be Mbya Indians, but ‘they don’t eat people’. When Ara asks for relationship advice from her mother she is given the timeless advice ‘to try to live the good life.’ For her, like for so many, however, ‘the good life’ is an easy ideal threatened by the realities of alcoholism, adultery, poverty and exploitation. But surely this is nothing the indomitable Mbya humour cannot surmount.But chiefs Agustin and Juan have a bigger problem to grapple with – redefining and protecting the Mbya identity into modern day Argentina. Have the Whites ‘stolen everything’ or are the Mbya merely ‘lazy’? Can the authorities be made to recognise the rights of the tribe or - with their ‘past forever slipping away’ - must the Mbya succumb to a ‘white nothingness’?

Comments

 

If you already have a Tuppashare account just click here to Login & Post
Or Create a New Account with your post below!

Just letters, numbers and underscore(_).
This is your unique name on Tuppashare
  
Just letters, numbers and spaces   
(This will be your Tuppashare login)
We don't Spam obviously & your email is kept private.
  
Confirmation of your login email entered above.   
Just letters and numerals   
Just letters, numerals and spaces    I agree to the
Tuppashare T & C's and Privacy Policy.
Please check the box to confirm the terms and conditions
Please enter the 5 character code from the image below To confirm, please enter the 5 character code from the image below..    and click submit.