Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes: Struggle for Justice in the Amazon

Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes: Struggle for Justice in the Amazon

Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes: Struggle for Justice in the Amazon

Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes: Struggle for Justice in the Amazon

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Overview

A close associate of Chico Mendes, Gomercindo Rodrigues witnessed the struggle between Brazil's rubber tappers and local ranchers—a struggle that led to the murder of Mendes. Rodrigues's memoir of his years with Mendes has never before been translated into English from the Portuguese. Now, Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes makes this important work available to new audiences, capturing the events and trends that shaped the lives of both men and the fragile system of public security and justice within which they lived and worked.

In a rare primary account of the celebrated labor organizer, Rodrigues chronicles Mendes's innovative proposals as the Amazon faced wholesale deforestation. As a labor unionist and an environmentalist, Mendes believed that rain forests could be preserved without ruining the lives of workers, and that destroying forests to make way for cattle pastures threatened humanity in the long run. Walking the Forest with Chico Mendes also brings to light the unexplained and uninvestigated events surrounding Mendes's murder.

Although many historians have written about the plantation systems of nineteenth-century Brazil, few eyewitnesses have captured the rich rural history of the twentieth century with such an intricate knowledge of history and folklore as Rodrigues.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780292774544
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 03/06/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 205
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Translator Linda Rabben holds a Ph.D. in anthropology and Latin American studies from Cornell University. She has worked on Brazilian issues for nearly three decades as a researcher and human rights activist. Currently an editor at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C., she is also the author of several books, including Brazil's Indians and the Onslaught of Civilization: The Yanomami and the Kayapó.

Table of Contents

  • List of Abbreviations
  • Foreword, by Marina Silva
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction to the English Edition, by Biorn Maybury-Lewis
  • Chapter 1. I Was There!
  • Chapter 2. A Very Difficult Beginning
  • Chapter 3. Rubber Tappers: A Century's Struggle
  • Chapter 4. A Genocidal Occupation
  • Chapter 5. "Our Victory Depends on Our Organization and Discipline"
  • Chapter 6. A Little about My Friend Chico Mendes
  • Chapter 7. An Interview with Chico Mendes
  • Afterword: Chico's Dream, by Linda Rabben
  • Author's and Editor's Notes
  • Editor's Bibliography
  • Index
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