Indigenous Amazon land management
Credit: Climate Alliance Org/Flickr/

The Ashaninka’s cultural revival is reshaping the Amazon region

The Ashaninka tribe, once displaced by deforestation and cattle farming, has restored its territory and is now leading efforts to expand its land management strategies across 12 Indigenous territories in the Amazon.

Fabiano Maisonnave and Jorge Saenz report for the Associated Press.


In short:

  • The Ashaninka people are using their successful reforestation and self-sufficiency model to help 12 Indigenous territories across 1.6 million acres of Amazon rainforest.
  • Supported by $6.8 million from the Amazon Fund, their efforts focus on food production, cultural preservation and forest surveillance.
  • The project emphasizes working with neighboring Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities to create regional cooperation for forest protection.

Key quote:

“The culprits for this live far from us. But if we start pointing fingers, we’ll waste a lot of energy and solve nothing. Instead, we’re focusing on adaptation.”

— Francisco Piyãko, OPIRJ leader

Why this matters:

As deforestation drives climate change, the Ashaninka are showing the world that preserving biodiversity isn’t just possible—it’s essential. This effort isn't only about the trees; it's about cultural survival, feeding their people and using their deep connection to the land to ensure its future. Read more: The planet’s largest ecosystems could collapse faster than we thought.

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