What happened to the indigenous people of Figueiredo Report (1967-1968)?

A seven thousand page document reveals the history of Brazilian territorial expansion in the twentieth century through the takeover of indigenous territories. The rediscovery of the missing Figueiredo Report in 2012 brings back this memory. The shocking charges mentioned in the lawsuit, then aired in the national and international press, were apparently forgotten.

Are there any survivors?
What is the situation of those ethnic groups now?

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Cinta larga

Traces of Brazil, a TV series in 12 episodes

Working with memory, based on Figueiredo Report

The shocking charges cited in the Report, carried out between 1967 and 1968, back then aired in the national and international press seemed to have sunk into oblivion. After the Institutional Act 5 issued on December 13th, 1968, the document disappeared, and many considered it to be lost.

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Vestígios - mapa índios do Brasil

Violence and beauty comprise the ethnic universe

A Taiga Filmes production

During the work of the National Truth Commission in 2012, the seven thousand page Figueiredo Report was found at the Indian Museum. From the data in this document, the series seeks to investigate what happened to the figures cited herein, for example, if there are still survivors, and what the situation of the ethnic group is now.

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12 episodes

Episode 1

Wari (Pacaás Novos)

MACHETES AND TOOLS

Episode 4

Kadiwéu

Fighting for the land/h4>

Episode 7

Munduruku

Tapajós: a desth project

Episode 8

Umutina

The beast that kills people

Episode 9

Canela

The paper accepts everything