In a grounded and necessary moment from Katô: Dreams of Dark Earth, Alessandra Korap speaks directly to a common narrative: the idea that money alone can “save the world.”
She challenges this from lived experience.
Alessandra explains that while resources matter, the work of protecting the Amazon is not abstract, it is hands-on, embodied, and ongoing. It means physically dema...
In a grounded and necessary moment from Katô: Dreams of Dark Earth, Alessandra Korap speaks directly to a common narrative: the idea that money alone can “save the world.”
She challenges this from lived experience.
Alessandra explains that while resources matter, the work of protecting the Amazon is not abstract, it is hands-on, embodied, and ongoing. It means physically demarcating territory. It means organizing communities. It means confronting and removing the industries that threaten their rivers, forests, and lives.
This is not charity.
This is defense.
This is sovereignty in action.
Her words remind us that support must move beyond distant concern into meaningful alignment with the realities on the ground, where land is actively being protected, and where every action carries consequence.
🎬 Watch the film:
theeternalsong.org/Kato/ (link in bio)
#KatoDreamsOfDarkEarth #AlessandraKorap #Munduruku
#DefendTheAmazon #LandBack #IndigenousSovereignty
#ForestDefenders #WaterIsLife #tes
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獻堂聚會-有家人的那城 | 台北樣線上主日 | 吳必然 牧師
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Mauri Healer Atarangi Murupaenga
00:32
When was the last time we walked barefoot on the Earth?