Sunday, July 10, 2011
Colonos have had many questions about volunteering in the Amazon, the Andes and elsewhere. Discussion have unfolded here and some “conclusions” are presented here. We have also given many answers in private emails and brought many in contact with local communities. We are no longer able to do so and have handed over this task to | t r 3 3 |:
Leave a Comment » | Amazonia, Ayahuasca, brewing ayahuasca, Coca to Iquitos, corridors, Ecuador, http://tr33.org.uk, indigenous movements, indigenous rights, jatun sacha, Politics, rain forest, Rio Napo, voluntary work for free, Volunteering | Tagged: http://tr33.org.uk | Permalink
Posted by colono
Friday, May 21, 2010
This is a general and quick post in response to Frequently Asked Questions about the problems of choosing where to invest one’s time and labour when volunteering in foreign places with good intent. It started as a reply to a comment – part of a long thread about a conservation project in the Amazon – then expanded slightly to become this first draft of a short reply to questions concerning volunteering.
Where and what is good agency put into which structures? It is an endless journey through the soul and the corridors of political thinking, philosophical reflection, historical recognition and ethical considerations – and it is also that first single step of your journey. It begins in the mind, unfolds in the imagination and will have a material impact on the place you go to.
Over the years we have spend a lot of time and energy helping people finding their ways in Ecuador and Peru, we have spend a lot of time suggesting projects, providing contacts and so on. However, in the end, people mostly go and do their own thing anyway. However, if you have only 4-6 months time and want to connect sooner, and should you really want to do something in or around Tena, Napo, in the Ecuadorian Amazon, or in San Francisco in Peru, and if working on a small scale and community level with people outside of NGO structures, doing down-to-the-ground, bottom-up work, with lovely families, if that is your thing, then do get in touch.
Read the rest of this entry »
2 Comments | Amazonia, Anti-capitalism, community based botanical gardens, ecological justice, Ecuador, grass-roots, indigenous movements, indigenous rights, Volunteering | Tagged: ethics of volunteering, jatun sacha, NGOs, Volunteering, volunteering in Ecuador, volunteering in napo, volunteering in tena, working in the amazon | Permalink
Posted by colono
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
WordPress offers statistics about who visits your blog – and I just checked an incoming link which someone followed from that anti-social networking commerce site called Fakebook. The latest two postings in the Fakebook group featuring the link to the colonos blog suggest that our commentary on Jatun Sacha’s involvement with Big Pharma (which is no big secret, just google for a while and you will see for yourself) is “interesting read at any rate“, although, “I’m not saying you have to believe it but i recommend having a look” – good job that criticism is taken, sort of, seriously:
So should you find yourself in the lucky position that you can make it to Ecuador (or Peru) for the purpose of volunteering, then do yourself and the world a favour: do your research well: who is who – and what do they (really!) do?
Can you not find the right kind of thing – that fits your social, cultural and political principles, then get in touch.
Colonos has worked and continues to work with people in the Napo-Ucayali corridor on a grassroots level. For instance we have sown the seeds for a network of community based botanical gardens in the region – and idea that emerged in the Napo (Ecuador) and Pucallpa (Peru) regions independently (thousands of kilometers apart) and the practitioners of which we are merely bringing together and helping them do what they want to do.
The work includes working with Kichwa and Shipibo people and offers great opportunities to get soil under your nails, doing research and analytical work (ecological, political, cultural etc.), talking to plants and animals, drinking ayahuasca and work with shamans and other traditional healers, such as midwives. Whatever tickles your fancy! The work is coordinated from England and by the “Grupo Sabio”, which meets regularly in Tena, Napo, Ecuador.
One of the people we work with used to work for Jatun Sacha (who consistently “forgot” to pay him) until he realised what was going on and what the Peace Corps, whose army of volunteers occupy large parts of the socalled developing world, has become (that is: a Pentagon outfit; see below for more) and what it always was: a forefront of capitalism and Euro-American developmentalism, culturally imposing itself through the manual labour of unwitting volunteers in good faith that they are making a difference for the better, not worse.
Make up your own mind – but do your home work!
More on Pentagon Peace Corps (..talk about an oxymoron..):
Read the rest of this entry »
7 Comments | Amazonia, Anti-capitalism, Capitalism, Ecuador, Globalisation, grass-roots, Green Politics, jatun sacha, Napo-Ucayali corridor, Politics, rain forest, Rio Napo, South America, voluntary work for free, Volunteering | Tagged: amazon, Ayahuasca, community based botanical gardens, Ecuador, grupo sabio, jatun sacha, napo, napo-ucayali, peace corps, ucayali, voluntary work for free, Volunteering, volunteering in Ecuador, volunteering in the amazon | Permalink
Posted by colono
Friday, May 30, 2008
Colonos recently referred to David Suzuki in the context of DiCaprio’s documentary about climate chaos and change, the appropriately titled “11th Hour” (link should be generated automagically below) – and doing a bit of googling for that purpose led me to some presumptuous nonsense? about Suzuki being an “ecofascist”:
“Eco fascism, can be used in two different ways:
- For specific elements of radical environmentalism which are openly affiliated with neo-fascism, or which share conceptual similarities with fascist theories. It is used critically from an external source, and somewhat less commonly used from within as a self label, to refer to various white nationalist and third positionist groups who incorporate environmentalist positions into their ideology.
- The term is also used as a political epithet by political conservatives to discredit deep ecology, mainstream environmentalism, and other left and non-left ecological positions, and less frequently by political leftists to discredit environmental movements they see as non-left such as deep ecology.”
So who do the conspiracy theorists think are behind this socalled ecofascism? None others than the very same kind of people that actual, radical environmentalists – anyone that I have ever met, and it is quite a few anyway – would call the greenwashers:
“Greenwashing is the unjustified appropriation of environmental virtue by a company, an industry, a government, a politician or even a non-government organization to create a pro-environmental image, sell a product or a policy, or to try and rehabilitate their standing with the public and decision makers after being embroiled in controversy. Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Anarchism, Anti-capitalism, capitalism is murder, climate change, ecological justice, environmental destruction, Environmentalism, Life, Spiritual, Tree Hugging, Veganism, Vegetarianism, voluntary work for free, Volunteering, we are winning, world domination disorder | Tagged: Anti-capitalism, ecofascism, Environmentalism, future, greenwash, industrial nightmare, murder, robert crumb, rockefeller, whole earth review | Permalink
Posted by colono
Thursday, December 6, 2007
If you want to do voluntary work in the Amazon, working with indigenous peoples, whether you’re interested in biodiversity, medicinal plants, shamanism, music, planting trees or (authoring) teaching (material), – as long as you’re committed to social change on a grassroots level for at least a period of three months Colonos through its many connections in the Ecuadorian and Peruvian Amazon region can help you create an independent volunteer programme. No fees, no institution, no nonsense….
11 Comments | Amazonia, Ecuador, Environmentalism, Life, Peru, voluntary work for free, Volunteering | Permalink
Posted by colono
Thursday, November 22, 2007
This article by CarbonWeb.org deserves to be reproduced in full:
Yasuni – Our Future in Their Hands?
Ecuador proposes to claim compensation in exchange for leaving crude oil in the ground. Esperanza Martinez examines what this means for resource sovereignty.
Oil, for countries that possess it, is often centre stage when it comes to issues of sovereignty. Invasions have been launched to access it and military and political interventions pushed through to control it, leaving the door wide open for corruption.
Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Amazonia, Anarchism, Anti-capitalism, Anti-militarism, asamblea constituyente, bio-fuel, bio-privateering, Capitalism, Coca to Iquitos, Collective Bio-Cultural Heritage, constitutent assembly, corridors, culture boat, deception, Direct Action, durban group for climate justice, eco-socialism, ecological justice, Ecuador, ecuador and china, enclosure, Environmentalism, Globalisation, grass-roots, Green Politics, greenwash, indigenous movements, Ishpingo, ITT, keep the oil in the soil, kichwa, latin american integration, Life, manta-manaus, Napo-Ucayali corridor, Neo-socialism, people power, Philosophy, Politics, rain forest, revolution, Rio Napo, Road Protest, shaman, South America, sub-empires, UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, UNASUR, Volunteering, we are winning, yachak, yasuni | Permalink
Posted by colono
Friday, August 17, 2007
Seeking refuge in Europe, to breathe and to reflect, the long, light evenings and the friendliness of the forest (that is the absence of the eternal threat of creatures out to get you) have besieged our imaginations.
The loved ones, the long-time friendships and the new friends are the medium of reflection – telling stories, observing reactions and thinking about it all at a distance ….we get high on our own anecdotal supply with a little help from our friends.
Read the rest of this entry »
2 Comments | Amazonia, Anarchism, Anti-capitalism, Anti-militarism, asamblea constituyente, atheism, bio-fuel, bio-privateering, breathe, Bush meat, Capitalism, Collective Bio-Cultural Heritage, constitutent assembly, corridors, culture boat, cyberspace, deception, Direct Action, eco-socialism, Ecuador, enclosure, Environmentalism, f-spot, Free Software, Globalisation, grass-roots, Green Politics, healer, Life, people power, Peru, Photography, Photos, private property, Rafael Correa, rain forest, Rain Forest Flowers, Rio Napo, shaman, South America, Spiritual, Travel Info, Tree Hugging, Trip Report, ubuntu, Volunteering, yachak | Permalink
Posted by colono
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Jatun Sacha is a lovely place. Comprising 2500 hectares of easily accessible primary rainforest, it is one of the last little paradises around Tena.
Or so it seems…
Promoting the conservation of ecosystems through technical training, scientific research, environmental education, natural resource management, and community development involving local peoples surely can’t be all that bad, even if it meant privatizing many square metres of ancestral indigenous territories. After all this was government policy in the 1970s anyway, and better the land goes to an eco- humanitarian project than some overweight cattle farmer. ¿No?
Read the rest of this entry »
65 Comments | Amazonia, Anti-capitalism, bio-privateering, Capitalism, Collective Bio-Cultural Heritage, deception, Ecuador, Environmentalism, Green Politics, greenwash, Ishpingo, jatun sacha, Politics, rain forest, South America, Volunteering | Permalink
Posted by colona
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Hi World,
This letter was sent in an email to a conference organiser, but it looks like it could be read by anyone interested in these matters:
One of the projects that I am fiddling with here (on the side of my PhD) concerns a network of community-based botanical gardens in the Napo-Ucayali corridor.
As you might be aware, Correa, Lula and Chavez (for instance an oil pipeline to Argentina), as well as of course the Peruvian state, have great plans for “corredores inter-oceanicos” which will essentially, finally, cut the Amazon apart in order to bring cheap consumer goods, in the short term, to the Brasilian cities, and in the long term to all of the continent, of course, –and the last trees and oil and other natural resources back to China, so that they can produce the plastics to come here….
Read the rest of this entry »
1 Comment | Amazonia, Anti-capitalism, Ayahuasca, Capitalism, Collective Bio-Cultural Heritage, corridors, culture boat, eco-socialism, Ecuador, Environmentalism, flow, Globalisation, Green Politics, Jurisprudence, Life, Peru, Philosophy, Politics, Psychedelic, Psychedelics, Pucallpa, rain forest, Rio Napo, South America, Spiritual, Tree Hugging, Volunteering | Permalink
Posted by colono
Friday, March 9, 2007
Calling on all Globalisation Pirates and Cultural Rebels: the boat is leaving any minute!
Having realised that political organising (in Amazonia, everywhere?) all too often falls prey to the lures of power corrupting even the best of intentions once the gap between representer and the represented grows to an irreconcilable division of minds, bodies and communities, or, even worse, realising that political organising simply bores people (refer in particular to the previous point for justification of that sentiment), and simply does not cut deep enough (how could technocratic thinking actually reach communities embedded in a poetic cosmovision?), we call for a story-telling, myth-carrying, ideas inter-changing and multifariously cultural boat to float down the river!
Read the rest of this entry »
2 Comments | Amazonia, Anti-capitalism, culture boat, Direct Action, eco-socialism, Ecuador, Environmentalism, Globalisation, Green Politics, Ishpingo, Politics, rain forest, Rio Napo, South America, Tree Hugging, Volunteering | Permalink
Posted by colono