Synopsis
Maps, Magic, and Medicine explores the importance of indigenous knowledge to protect the environment. Each month we bring you stories about the spiritual, the unexplained, and the unbelievable.To create innovative strategies that address global climate change, poverty, and land rights, we must understand the interconnectedness of humans and the environment. These stories are the first way to reimagine our relationship to the natural world.Maps, Magic, and Medicine draws on the stories and experiences of the Amazon Conservation Team's past 20 years of work. Subscribe to Maps, Magic, and Medicine on iTunes to continue listening to the stories of making contact and making change in the Amazon Rainforest. You can also engage on our website mapsmagicmedicine.com
Episodes
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Episode 4: Knowledge for Protection: safeguarding isolated indigenous tribes
27/01/2017 Duration: 17minDeep in the Amazon, there are groups that have made the decision to isolate themselves from the outside world. These isolated or uncontacted groups live under constant threat of incursion from mining, development, and illegal activity. On the final episode of this series, we'll explore the reason why these groups fled into the rainforest, how to protect isolated groups without contacting them, and the late Colombian historian who proved the existence of isolated groups in Colombia.
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Special Episode with Julian Lennon: Listen Younger Brother
13/12/2016 Duration: 12minJulian Lennon, musician, photographer, and founder of the White Feather Foundation hosts this special episode about the Kogi indigenous people of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia. Kogi community members discuss the importance of water, sacred sites, and their ancestral territory, while Julian Lennon reflects on his visit to Kogi sacred sites and the lessons it imparted.
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Episode 3: Knowledge on the Map
04/11/2016 Duration: 17minSuriname is the only country in the Western hemisphere that does not recognize the land rights of indigenous groups. Yet, development projects, loggers, and miners have legal contracts allowing them to work on traditional lands. On this episode, we'll hear how indigenous groups are using maps to reclaim their territory.
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Un Elemento Ambiental (Episodio Especial)
10/10/2016 Duration: 10minTaita Luciano, un medico tradicional de la cultura Inga, habla sobre la importancia del yagé para el medio ambiente y como su mal uso afecta a las comunidades indígenas.
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An Element of the Environment (Special Episode)
10/10/2016 Duration: 10minTaita Luciano, a traditional healer from the Colombian Amazon, reflects on the importance of the traditional medicine yagé or ayahuasca for the environment and how the misuse of yagé affects indigenous communities.
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Episode 2: Explorers Turned Apprentices
16/09/2016 Duration: 16minWhen Mark Plotkin went down to Suriname, he wanted to study how indigenous peoples use plants. But when he saw his indigenous friend Wuta leave his home in search of a better life in the city, he realized that indigenous knowledge was disappearing faster than anything in the forest.
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Episode 1: People First
18/08/2016 Duration: 16minOver 20 years ago, the conservation world was changing. An unexpected event showed Liliana Madrigal a different way forward that puts people first. On this episode, we talk to Liliana Madrigal, Adrian Forsyth, and Raquel Gomez about the challenges and successes of this new approach
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Promo: What's Maps, Magic, and Medicine?
17/08/2016 Duration: 01minMaps, Magic, and Medicine explores the importance of indigenous cultural knowledge to protect the environment. But what do we mean by "Maps, Magic, and Medicine?"
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Promo: A Waurá's desire to preserve cultural memory
16/08/2016 Duration: 01minMany indigenous groups in the Amazon struggle to encourage young people to adopt traditional culture and learn about their ancestor’s stories. As a result, a group can lose its entire archive of stories within a few generations. Yaucumá Waruá from the Waurá tribe in the Brazilian Amazon worries about this happening in his community.
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Promo: Wuta moves to the city
11/08/2016 Duration: 01minIndigenous groups are often given two choices: to stay in the rainforest or leave to enter "modernity." That was the case with Wuta in the Surinamese rainforest as Dr. Mark J. Plotkin recalls. To listen to more of the story subscribe to Maps, Magic, and Medicine
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Promo: A message from the Kogi
09/08/2016 Duration: 01minOver twenty years ago, the Kogi people predicted what we now call global climate change. Today, their message is the same.