TY - JOUR
T1 - Give Me A Name, Give Me A God, Give Me A Land
T2 - The Waorani´S History of Contact and Evangelism
AU - Trujillo, Patricio
AU - Andrade, Susana
AU - Narváez, Roberto
AU - Rivadeneira, Catalina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Transnational Press London Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/4/9
Y1 - 2024/4/9
N2 - For generations, the Waorani people were known as the "Aucas," a term used to designate their family groups. However, in September 1955, missionaries from the Summer Linguistic Institute-Wycliffe Books Translators (SLI-WBT) and Fellowship-Christian Mission in Many Lands (FAM) were hired by the Ecuadorian government to evangelize, pacify, and civilize these indigenous groups. This marked the beginning of the so-called Auca's operation, aimed at contacting and evangelizing a clan of Waorani near the Curaray River settlement. Employing strategies such as dropping steel objects from airplanes as gifts, the missionaries sought to build trust with the Waorani. This paper utilizes extensive ethnographic data and the lens of orientalism to explore how colonialism transformed the mindset and ethos of the Waorani people. It examines the cultural changes resulting not only from physical domination but also from the colonization of the mind, which reshaped their perception of places, people, and history. By analyzing the hegemonic construction of the other, it seeks to elucidate the impact on modern Waorani identity in the Ecuadorian rainforest.
AB - For generations, the Waorani people were known as the "Aucas," a term used to designate their family groups. However, in September 1955, missionaries from the Summer Linguistic Institute-Wycliffe Books Translators (SLI-WBT) and Fellowship-Christian Mission in Many Lands (FAM) were hired by the Ecuadorian government to evangelize, pacify, and civilize these indigenous groups. This marked the beginning of the so-called Auca's operation, aimed at contacting and evangelizing a clan of Waorani near the Curaray River settlement. Employing strategies such as dropping steel objects from airplanes as gifts, the missionaries sought to build trust with the Waorani. This paper utilizes extensive ethnographic data and the lens of orientalism to explore how colonialism transformed the mindset and ethos of the Waorani people. It examines the cultural changes resulting not only from physical domination but also from the colonization of the mind, which reshaped their perception of places, people, and history. By analyzing the hegemonic construction of the other, it seeks to elucidate the impact on modern Waorani identity in the Ecuadorian rainforest.
KW - Amazon Cultures
KW - Civilizations
KW - Evangelism
KW - Religion
KW - Waorani
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85191533299&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.61707/5pqsyc22
U2 - 10.61707/5pqsyc22
DO - 10.61707/5pqsyc22
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85191533299
SN - 2633-352X
VL - 5
SP - 432
EP - 437
JO - International Journal of Religion
JF - International Journal of Religion
IS - 5
ER -