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STATISTIC (2002 Population Census)
Status : Indigenous Group
Population : 604.349 (in Chile) and 300.000 in Argentina
Areas : Central and Southern Chile and Southern
Argentina
Language : Mapudungun and Spanish
Religion : Nguillatun
Tribal Groups : Picunches, Huilliches, Moluche/Nguluche
UNPO REPRESENTATION
Since January 1993, the Mapuche, represented by the Mapuche Inter-Regional Council, is as member of UNPO.
OVERVIEW
GEOGRAPHY
In Chile their communities are concentrated in the provinces of Arauco, Bio-Bio, Malleco, Cautin, Valdivia, Osorno and Chiloe, with many migrating
to the cities. According to the census of 1992, 44.1 % of the total Mapuche population of Chile lives in Santiago; in Argentina, the Mapuche live mainly in the provinces of Neuquen, Rio Negro,
Buenos Aires and Santa Cruz.
POPULATION
At present they number approximately 1.5 million in Chile, and 200,000 in Argentina. The Mapuche nation is the most numerous of the indigenous
people in Chile and constitutes one of the largest indigenous societies in South America.
UNPO MEMBER PERSPECTIVE
Mapuche Inter-Regional Council (CIM) is an umbrella organisation in Temuco City, in the heart of Mapuche
territory, uniting six Mapuche organisations in Chile and Argentina, as well as the Mapuche Exterior Committee. The objectives of the Mapuche Inter-Regional council are the improvement of the
people'living standard, the preservation of the Mapuche culture and the restitution of ancestral Mapuche lands, as well as the exercise of the right to self-determination.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
The Mapuche belong to the tribe of the Araucanians, whose ancestors moved to the region now known as Chile in South America 12,000 years ago. They
are the only indigenous group that withstood the attacks of the Inca and were never conquered by them. Before the Spanish arrived in 1541, the Mapuche occupied a vast territory in the “southern
cone” of the continent and the population numbered about 2 million. The Mapuche nation comprised both settled and nomadic communities, hunters, shepherds and farmers, living in small family
groups which were under authority of a Lonko (chief), and formed part of bigger regional communities. At the time of the arrival of the Spaniards, in 1540, the Mapuche occupied most of what is
now Chile, from Antofagasta in the north, to the Isla Chiloe in the south. After about a century of interaction and struggle with the Spaniards, the Treaty of Quilin was signed in 1641,
recognizing the independence of the Mapuche; furthermore by this treaty the Mapuche agreed to remain to the south of the Bio-Bio river, in an area of only 10 million hectares. For more than two
centuries they successfully defended this area against the Spaniards and, later, the Chileans. From 1881 to 1883, the Chilean armies, which with the help and financing of England had just won the
War of the Pacific against Bolivia and Peru, put down a major uprising and finally “pacified” the Mapuche. Therefore, independence of the Mapuche came to an end with the independence of Chile.
Until 1881 the Mapuche nation was completely independent, territorially and politically. They were then settled on “reducciones” or reserves, all relatively small and, in most, cases, separated
one from another by areas settled by Chileans and European immigrants.
By 1979, the date of the law, which provides for the division and liquidation of the Mapuche reserves, this had been further reduced to only 350,000
hectares. In 1979, the Mapuche fell victim to an “Indigenous Peoples Law” instituted by the military regime under Pinochet, the aim of which was to destroy the traditional communities of the
Mapuche. The democratically elected government of Chile brought little recognition of the rights of indigenous people. In Chile's ninth region, on the Bio Bio River, Mapuche communities and
activists have been fighting a long running battle with the largest private companies in Chile because of its project of constructing hydroelectric dams. Back in June 1997 the $600 million
hydroelectric dam project was approved by the Chilean government's environmental office, but this ambitious project, which was one of six proposed in Chile by this Spanish firm, created many
problems for the Mapuche people and their ancestral land and created lots of tension. In Argentina, the Mapuche are facing the threat of confiscation of 110,000 hectares of their land in Pulmari
in the Alumine Region.
In 1985 the former president Raul Alfonsin announced that the Pulmari region would be returned to the Mapuche (Decree No. 1410), but this did not
happen despite persistent requests by the Mapuche communities to the Argentinean authorities. It is precisely the regional government of Alumine that does not respect the above-mentioned national
decree. In 1997, the European Parliament passed the “Resolution on the Situation of Human Rights and Indigenous Minorities in Argentina”. It concerns the protection of human rights of indigenous
people and also called on the Argentine Government to amend regulations to avoid misinterpretations regarding the rights of the legitimate land owners to defend the rights and interests of
Mapuche and to avoid expulsion from their constitutionally recognized lands. Since the beginning of October 1997, the Pichi-Loncoyan and Pilin-Mapu communities of Lumaco municipality have been
mobilising in defence of their land rights and the failure of the Chilean judicial system to deliver justice. Earlier this century, these communities were granted legal entitlement to an area of
3,000 hectares of their own ancestral land. Half of this area has now been confiscated by logging companies such as Arauco S.A. The loggers occupied and exploited the forests in that region. In
an effort to regain their land and protect the forest, the Mapuche tried to stop the logging operations by non-violent actions but on 14 October, a police squad from Puren violently evicted the
Mapuches, injuring many of them. 37 people were arrested and jailed for 20 days before being officially charged. Several other confrontations between the Mapuche and the Chilean authorities took
place there, during which a total of 36 people were arrested and detained by the Chilean authorities. Many corporations have bought land, destroyed the once abundant forests and evicted
indigenous inhabitants for sugar and genetically modified Soya plantations. In Patagonia, the Mapuche face a similar plight. In 1997 Benetton bought Patagonian land. The Mapuche have lived in
these territories for 13 000 years. Benetton now owns 900 000 hectares of Patagonia and is the largest landholder in Argentina. The multinational has since enclosed their ‘property’ with a fence.
Benetton demands that the local Mapuche community solicit permission from them to fish in the river.
The Mapuche people have lost control of their territory to Argentina and Chile. Their way of life has been eroded by governmental politics and
development projects. In spite of the democratisation process in Chile, human rights violations against the Mapuche continue, as was the case during past administrations. They daily suffer
racism, repression and social exclusion, but they keep their struggle alive.
CURRENT ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUE
Before the conquistadors arrived, the lush forests of southern Chile belonged to the Mapuche people. Today, though, tree farms stretch in all
directions. Ancestral Mapuche lands have been expropriated, by tree farming companies, leading to the plantation of thousands of monoculture eucalyptus and pine trees where there were once native
forests. The commercial tree plantations are processed into lumber and paper pulp, mainly for export to North America, Asia and Europe. The environmental impact of commercial tree farming has
acted as a catalyst for a rise in Mapuche activism in recent years.
ECONOMIC PROBLEM
Their main source of income comes from agriculture, predominantly grain and cattle. However many Mapuche moved to urban centres and their activities
are essentially constituted by all kinds of labors disdained commonly by the dominant society (housekeeping, construction, gastronomic, etc). The Mapuches’ living standard is generally low. The
Mapuche suffer from poor housing, malnutrition, illiteracy, alcoholism, tuberculosis and a high rate of infant mortality.
CULTURE AND LANGUAGE
LANGUAGE
the name of Mapuche is composed of two parts: “Mapu”, which means land, and “che”, which means people. The Mapuche call their language Mapudungun.
The language was first written down by missionaries, and the orthographic systems they used were adaptations from European languages, and varied from author to author. As a result, the many
written documents that exist today do not all necessarily use the same alphabet. Mapuche’s language is also called Araucano, a name given by the Spanish colonialists. However, the Mapuche people
also speak Spanish. Nowadays Araucanian speakers have almost disappeared from Argentina, while in Chile Mapuche speakers, who used to speak only Mapuche, are now mostly bilingual. Mapadungun
lacks substantive protection or promotion, despite the Chilean government's commitment to improve the situation and provide full access to education in Mapuche areas in southern Chile.
RELIGION
Their socio-cultural and political relations have always been shaped and complemented by their spirituality, their religious beliefs and the strong
relationship between man, land and nature. They have a deeply religious society. The Mapuches of today have managed to establish a new dimension of what is religious in a syncretism that includes
the catholic religion as well as protestant evangelic movements. The Machi, the shaman, is fundamental in the configuration of Mapuche's myths and rites. He is the mediator between the natural
and supernatural world and usually has a great knowledge of traditional medicine. Mapuche perform ritual ceremonies, such as: the nguillatun, a ceremony of prayer, the machitun, healing ritual,
the wentripantu or celebration of the New Year, day of the winter solstice; funeral and initiation rites.
USEFUL LINK
http://www.mapuche-nation.org/