In Brazil, the Word of God prevented bloodshed
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
The efforts of missionaries led to the decision by the indigenous peoples to give up alcohol.
By Rodrigo Arantes
NEW YORK—Missionaries abducted and
murdered; their church burned down.
Far from the headlines, this was happening in the
Indigenous Territory of Raposa Serra do Sol, in the state of Roraima, in
northern Brazil. The area was colonized, and the indigenous people, the
Macuxis, were enslaved, and forced to work prospecting for minerals and
producing rice. Their pay? Cheap alcohol that got them hooked.
The Catholic Church, from the beginning of the 20th
century, has been fighting back on behalf of the native people. The efforts of
missionaries led to the decision by the indigenous peoples to give up alcohol.
Those who wished to continue using it had to leave the tribe.

This decision infuriated the local colonial landowners
who thus lost their source of cheap labor—they started going after the Church.
In 2004 they murdered some of the indigenous people and abducted three Consolata
missionaries, and the following year a band of some 150 masked and armed men
set fire to the whole of the mission complex, including the church of St Joseph
and the school run by the mission. The landowners were aiming to push Macuxis
into rebelling against authorities, provoking a bloody crackdown.
However, a local leader, wielding a reading from the
Bible, reminded his people that they were Catholic indigenous peoples and that
God asks his faithful to forgive, not to take revenge. All the people calmed
down and did not take revenge. This prudent response was a key factor in Raposa
Serra do Sol being formally declared an indigenous people’s homeland in 2005.
All non-indigenous peoples were forced to leave the region.
A simple reading of the Word of God prevented a
massacre. The Macuxi people are still very Catholic; they build their own
churches with their own materials and their own labor, they translate the
Catholic hymns into their native Macuxi language. And Tuxaua Jacir, the leader
who prevailed over his people, is known to two Popes on account of his peaceful
rule.
Nonetheless, there is still one thing they are unhappy
about; the fact that they don’t have a Bible translated in their own language,
and they are concerned about their future leadership. There are fundamentalist
Christian sects coming into the region, trying to woo them away from
Catholicism. And some newcomers are even offering the native people alcohol
once again, so many locals are very concerned, above all for their children and
young people.
IAid to the Church in Need has recently committed to the translation of its Child’s Bible into the Macuxi language. A theologian
who has a profound knowledge of the language is currently working on the
translation, and very soon thousands of copies will be made available for the
children! It’s the beginning of ensuring a bright future for this faithful
native people.
Maxuci children; ACN photo
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