For at least 26 years a man known as Tanaru lived alone in a small forest in the south-western Brazilian Amazon, moving around his territory, building several houses, planting crops and hunting. He also dug large, mysterious holes inside his homes.

When a team from the National Indigenous Peoples Foundation (Funai) came across him in 1996, he resisted contact, aiming an arrow at them through a gap in his palm shelter, a scene captured in the 2009 documentary Corumbiara. In 2007, Funai officials made another attempt at contact. Again Tanaru repelled it, leaving one man with a bad arrow wound.

He lived undisturbed for another 15 years as the environmental destruction continued around him in Rondônia, one of Brazil’s most deforested Amazonian states. Some called him the “man of the hole” without knowing why he dug the holes.

In 2022, Tanaru lay down in his hammock and died; Algayer was the one who found him. His death, confirming the extinction of his people, made the future of his 8,000 hectares (19,800 acres) of rainforest contentious. Local lawyers argue against demarcating it as Indigenous land, citing a lack of native population. Government prosecutors insist the territory was historically occupied, so should be protected despite not having Indigenous people left in it. The dispute highlights the complexity surrounding the fight for Indigenous land rights, the impact of historical atrocities, and the ongoing risk to uncontacted people (isolados) in the Amazon.

  • whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Yes the land should be protected, just as any other forest in the world. The important thing now is to give me an explanation for the holes, you cannot just bring mysterious holes without anymore explanation! Someone has to dig deeper and find an explanation!

    • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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      23 hours ago

      Does a man need a reason to dig a big hole? Some men collect pervy plastic dolls, some collect holes. That’s all.

        • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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          12 hours ago

          Imagine being the last member of your tribe and unable to connect with any other member of your species. The sexual frustration. It really is the same and collecting sexy dolls.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      you cannot just bring mysterious holes without anymore explanation! Someone has to dig deeper and find an explanation!

      This winds up with things like the Oak Island mystery.

    • TheDuffmaster@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Same exact thought! They say they may be religious, but I need to know more!! Guess that lore may be lost with the end of this tribe.