The Wai-wai (also written Waiwai or Wai Wai) are a Carib-speaking Indigenous people of Guyana and northern Brazil. Their society consists of different lowland forest peoples who have maintained much of their cultural identity with the exception of Christianity which was introduced to them in the late 1950s.

Wai-wai
Wai-wai man
Total population
2,672
Regions with significant populations
 Brazil2,502 (2014)[1]
 Guyana170 (2006)[1]
Languages
Wai Wai language
Various local languages
Religion
Christianity, Animism

The Umana Yana in Georgetown, Guyana, takes its name from the Wai-Wai for "meeting place".

Early contact

edit

The explorer, Sir Robert Schomburgk, may have been the first western to have contact with the Wai-Wai in December 1837. He found one village on a tributary of the Essequebo river, along with two others on the Mapuera River in Brazil. Schomburgk describes the Wai-Wai as:

"Of medium height, their skin lighter than that of Tarumas, in their general appearance and language they resemble the Makuskis a good deal. The Woyawais are great hunters and celebrated for their dogs. In appearance they are generally dirty."[2]

During the early 20th century, some of the Wai-Wai in Brazil moved further north. It is speculated that this is because of the influenza epidemic that nearly exterminated the Taruma tribe. From 1933 to 1938, the Wai-Wai people moved deeper in Guyana's interior to avoid the outsiders working with the Boundary Commission.[3]

Geography

edit
 
Regions in Guyana.

The Wai-wai in Guyana live in the far south of the country, near the headwaters of the Essequibo River. There are approximately 200 Wai-wai in Guyana, region of the country known as Kanashen. It is also a community-owned conservation area.[3]

There are about 2,000 Wai-wai in Brazil, and they mostly reside in Terra Indígena Wai-wai, Terra Indígena Trombetas-Mapuera, and Terra Indígena Nhamundá-Mapuera. These are located mainly in the northern states of Roraima and Pará. Settlements include: Mapuera in Pará and Jatapu-zine, Catual, Cobra, Pequeno Paraíso in Roraima.

Culture

edit
 
The Wai-Wai Headdress.

Though the Wai Wai are great hunters, they are also farmers. However, the light, thin soil they have to work with and an annual rainfall of 4 meters can make it very challenging to produce enough food. Their traditional method of farming was the 'slash and burn' method.[4]

The Wai Wai are known for their weaving. They twist cotton into yarn for weaving, but they (along with Arawak and Carib people) are known for their hammock weaving. All the hammocks are woven on square hammock frames.[5] Their other artistic skills include pottery, woven combs, bone flutes, and other crafts.

Consuming primate meat is a source of pride for Waiwai, distinguishing them as “‘true’ forest people” and making them distinct from most other indigenous groups in Guyana.[6] Primate hunting can be a way to demonstrate masculinity and improve chances of betrothal.[6] Various primate body parts have different non-game uses, from saki tail dusters to bone arrow points.[6]

The Wai Wai have an affinity for musical instruments such as guitars, flutes, and hand drums. Often the Wai Wai people will craft their flutes and drums out of natural materials found in the surrounding Amazon rainforest.

Wai-Wai Women

edit

Women play a crucial role in the Wai-Wai culture. In terms of Wai-Wai constructs, the men's success in terms of wealth and power are dependent on female labor and reproduction.[7] The size and stability of a village are dependent on cultural values and how relationships are tied. For the Wai-Wai, the relationship between a father and daughter lends a sense of control to the father over his daughter and son-in-law.

A village size is the indication of the level of political strength and riches, and thus heavily reliant on the women in the community.

Marriage

edit

Mansiya is marriage. For women, marriage cannot take place until after women have reached their first menses at around age thirteen. Most women are married by the age of seventeen.

Religion

edit

The yaskomo of the Waiwai, also called a medicine man or shaman in literature, is believed to be able to perform a soul flight. The soul flight can serve several functions:

  • healing
  • flying to the sky to consult cosmological beings (the moon or the brother of the moon) to get a name for a new-born baby
  • flying to the cave of peccaries' mountains to ask the father of peccaries for abundance of game
  • flying deep down in a river, to achieve the help of other beings.

Thus, a yaskomo is believed to be able to reach sky, earth, water, in short, every element.[8]

Western influence has severely changed their traditional culture and religion. Many have converted to Christianity.[9] In 1949, many of the Wai-Wai people chose to migrate to Brazil following the heavy persecution, violent imprisonment and forceful extradition of Christian missionaries by the authoritarian government run by Forbes Burnham at the time. Many of the missionaries were well liked among much of the tribe. When the missions had to leave Guyana because their residence permits were not renewed, 700 Wai-Wai people followed them to Brazil. Some 150 Wai-Wai people left in Guyana fell under the influence of Christian Brethren Bible Outreach.[10]

Language

edit

There are several thousand speakers of the Wai Wai language, though the Carib-speaking Wai Wai Indians have close affinities to another Amazonian group known as the Arara.

The Wai Wai have a history of intermarriage with other indigenous groups who speak similar languages.[11][12]

Settlements

edit

Wai-wai people are split between modern day Guyana and Brazil (Roraima).

  • In Brazil, they reside in three Indigenous territories[13]
    • WaiWái Indigenous territory, with a land area of 405,698 ha. Population of 365.
    • Trombetas/Mapuera Indigenous territory (shared with Hixkaryana, Isolados Karapawyana, and Katuenayana peoples), with a land area of 3,970,898 ha. Population of 811.
    • Nhamundá-Mapuera Indigenous territory (shared with Hixkaryana, Katuenayana, and Kaxuyana peoples), with a land area of 1,049,520 ha. Population of 2,293.

Konashen Community Owned Conservation Area

edit

The Wai-Wai people in the Konashen District of Guyana created the nation's first Community Owned Conservation Area (COCA). This area is legally protected under regulations passed by the Guyana parliament. 625,000-hectare is a protected area that was developed with the technical and financial support of Conservation International. The Wai-Wai people were given the formal title to this land in 2004, and has worked with Guyana's Environmental Protection Agency and the Ministry of Amerindian Affairs to develop COCA. The goal is that the area will bring economic benefit to the Wai Wai, and protect a large part of the rainforest. Because the Wai Wai have kept a deep cultural and spiritual relationship with the Earth, protecting natural resources and biodiversity in this region is a main objective.[14]

The COCA community is open to visitors all over the world, and protecting the plants and animals are valuable to the Wai-Wai's everyday life. The Wai-Wai people have said that the rainforest produces the air they breathe, keeps soil in place as not to clog waterways, provides foods (nuts, fruit, fresh fish), is a source for natural medicines, and many more. The Konashen Indigenous District in Southern Guyana is the headwaters of the Essequibo River. This river remains Guyana's main source for water, and drains the Kassikaityu, Kamoa, Sipu and Chodikar rivers.[15]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ a b "Waiwai". Socio Ambiental (in Portuguese). Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  2. ^ Fock, Neils (1963). WaiWai: Religion and Society of an Amazonian Tribe. Copenhagen: The National Museum. p. 115.
  3. ^ a b Edwards, W. (1979). "An Ethnohistory of Amerindians in Guyana". Ethnohistory. 26 (2). Duke University Press: 161–175. doi:10.2307/481091. JSTOR 481091.(registration required)
  4. ^ Schoenauer, Norbert (2000). 6,000 Years of Housing. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-73120-0.
  5. ^ Roth, Walter (1929). "Weaving in South America". American Anthropologist. 31 (3). Blackwell Publishing: 560. doi:10.1525/aa.1929.31.3.02a00300. JSTOR 661291.(registration required)
  6. ^ a b c Shaffer, Christopher A.; Milstein, Marissa S.; Suse, Phillip; Marawanaru, Elisha; Yukuma, Charakura (2019-02-28), "Comanagement of Primate Hunting in Amazonian Indigenous Reserves", Primate Research and Conservation in the Anthropocene, Cambridge University Press, pp. 74–98, doi:10.1017/9781316662021.006, ISBN 978-1-316-66202-1, S2CID 134999758, retrieved 2021-04-07
  7. ^ Mentore, George (1987). "Waiwai Women: The Basis of Wealth and Power". Man. New Series. 22 (3). Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland: 511–527. doi:10.2307/2802503. JSTOR 2802503.(registration required)
  8. ^ Fock 1963: 16
  9. ^ Guppy, Nicholas (1958). "Wai-Wai:through the forests north of the Amazon". Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  10. ^ Palacio, Joseph (1992). "The Sojourn Toward Self Discovery Among Caribbean Indigenous Peoples". Caribbean Quarterly. 38 (2/3): 55–72. doi:10.1080/00086495.1992.11671762. JSTOR 40654180.
  11. ^ Callegari-Jacques, S.M. (1996). "The Wai Wai Indians of South America: History and Genetics". Annals of Human Biology. 23 (3). Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil: 189–201. doi:10.1080/03014469600004422. PMID 8807037.
  12. ^ "Wai Wai, Katawian of Guyana Ethic People Profile". The Joshua Project. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  13. ^ https://terrasindigenas.org.br/
  14. ^ "Conservation International". Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  15. ^ "Biodiversity in the Konashen Community-Owned Conservation Area, Guyana" (PDF). Conservation International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-06. Retrieved 2012-05-16.

References

edit
  • Fock, Niels (1963). Waiwai. Religion and society of an Amazonian tribe. Nationalmuseets skrifter, Etnografisk Række (Ethnographical series), VIII. Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark.
edit