The Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International and We Play Well Together are honored to partner with Kichwa women of Sarayaku in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador to sell and distribute their beaded jewelry and pottery. All profits from your purchases will directly support the livelihood of the craftswomen, and their advocacy work to protect the forest through Amazon Women Defenders of the Jungle (Mujeres Amazonicas Defensoras).

About the Sarayaku women and the project

The Sarayaku Art Project: Uplifting Indigenous Women in the Ecuadorian Amazon

The Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International and We Play Well Together are honored to partner with Kichwa women of  Sarayaku in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador to sell and distribute their beaded jewelry and pottery. All profits from your purchases will directly  support the livelihood of the craftswomen, and their advocacy work to protect the forest through Amazon Women Defenders of the Jungle (Mujeres Amazonicas Defensoras). 

 

Protecting the Amazon Rainforest and a Way of Life

The Sarayaku are Kichwa-speaking people of approximately 1,400 inhabitants who live in a village made up of 7 community centers in the rain forest of the southern Amazon in the province of Pastaza, Ecuador.

They have struggled for over two decades to protect their villages, the forest, and their way of life after the government of Ecuador granted the oil company Compañía General de Combustibles (CGC) license for oil operations in Sarayaku territory. To survey for oil, the CGC planted explosives throughout the forests, sparking protests from the villagers.  When the community protested peacefully, setting up "Camps of Peace and Life" in the forest, the government sent armed troops. 

The struggle continued for years.  Then the Sarayaku brought a case against the Ecuadorian government to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and the court ruled in their favor in 2012.  The IACHR ruling was an extraordinary victory, not only for the Sarayaku but for the rights of all Indigenous communities in the Amazon facing similar threats. (You can learn more by watching this 2012 film Children of the Jaguar.)  

Activities Ongoing in 2020

The court victory was not the end of the story. The Sarayaku continue to face threats of extraction in their communities and today the women continue their advocacy to protect the Amazon and their community from past and future infringement. Women leaders in the community have also become international advocates and spokespeople for the rights of nature and climate change action. 


Resources/Links

Amazon Women Defenders of the Jungle  Amazon Women Defenders of the Jungle (Mujeres Amazonicas Defensoras). 


Women's Earth & Climate Action Network (WECAN) - Women for Forests Work
https://www.wecaninternational.org/women-for-forests

Kawsaksacha.org 

Article
Women of the Amazon Defend Their Homeland Against New Oil Contract on International Women's Day
https://www.ecowatch.com/women-amazon-defend-homeland-oil-1882188034.html

Watch women leaders from across North and South America tell their stories, in this Democracy Now! report from WECAN International’s event at the UN climate talks in Lima, Peru:
https://youtu.be/GpBfJLqo20E

The Voices of Amazon Women and a Visionary Declaration to Protect Indigenous Lands
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2018/11/18/voices-amazon-women-and-visionary-declaration-protect-indigenous-lands

Sônia Bone Guajajara spoke at a high-level session at the United Nations, participated in various events and actions, and gave interviews to multiple media outlets
https://www.facebook.com/WECAN.Intl/videos/467097167363093/

Additional Resources for Amazon Rainforest Work