Monday, May 21, 2012

A Well Needed Update


So, I have been pretty terrible at keeping up with this blog. However, I thought I’d give an update now for anyone still reading.
The program I’m doing is titled Amazon Resource Management and Human Ecology. Here is the basic picture I had in my head before I left: A small group of student gallivanting through the jungle, hiking and meeting indigenous groups and maybe even some people trying to tear down the rainforest for wood or whatever.
Reality Check. First of all, just a random fact: the Amazon is NOT a jungle. For some reason, rainforest and jungle have always been synonymous in my head. This is false. The rainforest is a forest and while there is a lot of exotic life, it is still a forest, not a jungle. Secondly, most of our time here has been spent in cities and small towns. We’ve done a lot of talking to people and organizations and most of them do not live in the rainforest because, well, it’s rather hard to live in the rainforest. Also, the city we are based in is a pretty developed city. While it’s still impossible to find American peanut butter and the streets are filled with trash and stray dogs, it’s a pretty developed city. During our time here, my friends and I have often taken trips to the mall, which usually involve good food, Cairu (which is only some of the best ice cream ever, best two flavors are Lime Torte and Kinder Egg yum!), and sometimes a movie.
Random travel tip: If you’re ever in a foreign country and you’re a little homesick, go see a movie in English. They usually exist with the language of the country in subtitles and the dark room and people speaking English will feel just like home.
Back to what I was saying… The other thing that was not what I expected is kind of different. See, I didn’t know much about Brazil or the Amazon and the problems surrounding it. I mean most people really don’t. Brazil is such a mysterious place. Most people just think supermodels, beaches and jungle. In reality, Brazil is a developing country with problems only made worse with the burden and luxury of one of the biggest reservoir of rainforest and fresh water in the world. Here are just a few of the problems that specifically interest me.
As the world pushed Brazil to preserve their rainforest, because the Amazon is “the lung of the world” and what not, the conservation units soon made it illegal for indigenous groups AND other local communities to live places where their families had lived for hundreds of years. So, then indigenous people were given special rights and they could keep living there. However, there are these people groups that were formed by runaway African slaves, people trying to make a living during the rubber boom and military government push to exploit the Amazon, and some random indigenous mixing. These people make up something like a million or so people and they live off the forest and from the river. While the indigenous became protected from losing land due to conservation unit, these people have not gained that protection. Problem.
Another interesting issue is the hydroelectric dams. We got to visit the 4th largest hydroelectric dam in the world in Tucurui. Now, the engineer inside of me will be the first person to say it is INCREDIBLE; not only the sight, but the physics, engineering, and pure manpower behind it. It is AWESOME. However, when Tucuri was built and some land was flooded and due to a lack of surveying and an “error in calculations” thousands of people were displaced, their lives completely upheaved with nowhere to go. And since companies have more power and control than the government in many cases, the company dealt with it themselves and dealt with it rather poorly. However, even with this issue, the dam at Tucurui provides like a quarter or Brazil’s power and all the power for an Aluminum plant that is like the second largest supplier of Aluminum in the world. So the problem of a few thousand displaced people gets overlooked.
These problems are not easily solved, especially in a country that is still struggling to have adequate infrastructure. If you think the roads in Texas are bad, you should drive in Northern Brazil. Sheesh.
Well, that’s just a little bit about what I’ve actually been learning while I’ve been “playing in the rainforest".
Well, I'm off to start my Independent Study Project on water for rural communities in Satarem tomorrow!!!

Tchau!!!
Sarah

1 comment:

  1. Very interesting my darling Sarah, can't wait to see you and hear more about this marvelous adventure.

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