Kathy, could you please describe your background and experience?
I grew up in the native community of Remanso, my ethnicity is Murui, which means Huitoto. My parents are from Remanso, on the edge of the Putumayo River in the district of Yaguas, Peru, near the Colombian border. There are about 89 families living in Remanso, and I live here with my father and mother, my husband, and two children.
We are indigenous, and our livelihood is from agriculture and fishing. I have been a woman leader in the village, and deputy mayor of Yaguas. In Remanso, I have been carrying out a project for women leaders to recover the ancestral knowledge linked to the agriculture and fishing of our ancestors.
How are you working with your community to conserve and promote traditional indigenous knowledge?
We want to recover the sachapapa (purple yam), varieties of potato, and cassava, like manioc. We want to recover as many species as we can. Three to four women in Remanso are dedicating ourselves to recovering this knowledge.
We are planting cassava to make fariña (flour), and sugar cane to obtain sugar. We want to be healthy and not to drink things with chemicals. We also want to plant taricaya eggs (eggs from the yellow-spotted river turtle) because they are disappearing.
You recently won a scholarship to the Amazonia Indigenous Women’s Fellowship Program. What does this mean for your work?
I feel proud to have this scholarship. For me it is an achievement that I made, it is an achievement that I am not going to leave behind. I am going to move forward with the project. I am going to continue in the leadership of my people and of the four women I am going to work with. I hope that my people will see this, follow it and we will continue to grow and rescue what the land gives us. Maybe next year it won't be me, but another woman, that would be ideal.
The Amazonian Indigenous Women's Fellowship seeks to strengthen the leadership of Amazonian indigenous women through the development of competencies, building spaces for exchange and dialogue, and promoting networks that consolidate conservation and improve living standards in the communities. The selection of the second group of scholarship recipients began in February 2022 and the activities are expected to last until May 2023.