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Panara

Panará
Total population
(437 (2010))
Regions with significant populations
 Brazil ( Mato Grosso)
Languages
Panará, Portuguese

The Panará are an Indigenous people of Mato Grosso in the Brazilian Amazon. They farm and are hunter-gatherers.

They were formerly called the Kreen-Akrore. Other names for the Panará include Kreen Akarore, Kren Akarore, Krenhakarore, Krenhakore, Krenakore, Krenakarore or Krenacarore, and "Índios Gigantes" ("Giant Indians") – all variants of the Kayapó name "kran iakarare", meaning "roundlike cuthead", a reference to their traditional hair style which identifies them.

The Panará speak the Panará language, which is classified as a Kreen-Akarore language, belonging to the Jê language family. It is written in the Latin script.

The Panará are the last descendants of the southern Cayapós, a large ethnic group which inhabited a vast area in Central Brazil in the 18th century, from the northern borders of the state of São Paulo, Triângulo Mineiro and south of Goiás, stretching eastwards from Mato Grosso, eastern and southeastern portion of Mato Grosso do Sul. The Panará belong to the Jê-speaking group in Central Brazil, a subgroup of the northern Jê, which encompasses the Kayapó, Suyá, Apinayé and the Timbira languages. Latest researches indicate that the southern Cayapó and Panará are in fact one single language.

In 1970 an expedition was formed to make contact with the Panará headed by the Villas-Bôas brothers. Claudio and Orlando worked for the government at the indigenous reserve, Xingu National Park, in Brazil, and were motivated to begin their adventure by the capture of one of the Panará tribes children by a rival tribe, as well as their hopes that contact with Panará would prevent conflict with the outside world when they learned that the (Cuiabá-Santarém) road BR-163 planned to cut straight through their territory. The leaders of the expedition gathered members of other tribes who had once been isolated but who now lived on in Parque do Xingu and set out on to make contact. Despite many months of leaving presents for the Panara at one of their banana and maze plantations the expedition was unable to make any real contact with them other than a few visual encounters as well as few presents which the Panara left them in return. After the expedition was over, The Panará lived in relative isolation until three years later in 1973 when the government project (Cuiabá-Santarém) road BR-163 through their territory finally brought them in contact with the outside world. As a result the tribe was decimated by modern world diseases such as flu which they had no immunity against, and by the environmental degradation of their land. Of the more than 350 members of the Panará tribe, more than 250 perished in the first twelve months after their first contact with the white men.


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