"Perhaps you read yesterday's article about members of the Nukak tribe � nearly 80 of them � who walked out of the Colombian jungle and renounced their ancestral ways. Until then, they'd had virtually no contact with modern civilization. What they expect from the future, which seems to be a problematic concept for them, is almost as unclear as what led them to leave Nukak National Park for the outpost of San Jos del Guaviare. That village is hardly an apotheosis of modernity, but it is nonetheless a threshold from which there is no going back. Attempts to describe how the Nukak feel about this transition have been rudimentary. According to witnesses, they say they are happy about it.
None of which explain the bittersweet feel this story leaves in the reader's mind. We have no clearer idea what it would mean to live a subsistence life in the Colombian jungle than the Nukak have of living even on the fringes of the modern world. In one sense, there has never been a better time for a people like the Nukak to leave the wild. They'll find medical care, sustenance and a genuine attempt at cultural respect that would have been impossible years ago. Yet the fact that they're leaving suggests how much their world and ours 闗 has been impaired.
The Nukak have every right to make this decision for themselves. But it's hard to escape the feeling that their self-sustaining existence � which went almost entirely unnoticed by the rest of the world � was holding something open for us, something that has now been lost."
Get the Story:
Editorial: 'The Future? What's That?'
(The New York Times 5/12)
pwnyt
Nukak Tribe in Colombia displaced from home
(5/11)
Indians in Colombia stage massive protest
(10/11)
Colombian tribe keeps rebels, drugs
out through peace (05/02)
Colombia's
Indians threatened by high death rates (04/21)
Suicide rates explode among Colombia's Natives
(11/23)
Colombian rebel extradited for
activist murders (05/29)
Colombia to extradite rebel for
murder of activists (05/09)
Rebels charged for deaths of Native
activists (5/1)
U.S. cites
abuses of indigenous rights (3/5)
Colombian conviction said not enough
(9/13)
Conviction for murder of
Indian activists (9/11)
US
criticizes indigenous rights worldwide (2/27)
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