Akurio people explained

Group:Akurio
Population:40 (2012)[1]
Languages:Akurio, Trío
Religions:traditional tribal religion
Related:Trío

The Akurio are an indigenous people living in Suriname. They are hunter-gatherers, who were first contacted in 1938 when chanced upon by a survey party led by Willem Ahlbrinck. Ahlbrinck was on a mission to find the Ojarikoelé tribe, also known as Wajarikoele, but could not find them.[2] A little over thirty years later in 1969, they were rediscovered by Ivan Schoen, a Protestant missionary. The people were nomadic and had a predilection for honey-gathering and the stone tools they had were typically employed for this endeavor.[1] [3] In 1975 American missionaries persuaded the tribe to live in Pelelu Tepu.[4]

Name

The Akurio are also called Akoerio, Akuliyo, Akuri, Akurijo, Akuriyo, Oyaricoulet, Triometesem, Triometesen, Wama, or Wayaricuri people.[1]

Population

40% to 50% of the Akurio died within two years after contact in 1969.[5]

The population was estimated to be 50 in 2000. It fell to 40 by 2012.[1]

Language

The group used the Akurio language, also known as Akuriyó, until the late 20th century, when they began using the Trio language. Schoen had left a number of Trio Indian guides with the Akurio after their first meeting.[3] The last native speaker is believed to have died in the first decade of the 2000s, at which time only 10 people were estimated to have Akuriyó as a second language. By 2012, only two semi-speakers remained.[1] In December 2018, Sepi Akuriyó, one of the last surviving speakers of Akuriyó, went missing when a small plane carrying eight people disappeared during a flight over the Amazon rainforest. A search and rescue operation was called off after two weeks.[6]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=ako "Akurio."
  2. Web site: Pater Ahlbrinck: Pionier en Apostel in Suriname. Pater Ahlbrinck Stichting. 30 May 2020. nl.
  3. Book: Cornell. Strange Sudden & Unexpected! - Smithsonian Institution's Center for Short-Lived Phenomena. 1972. Scholastic Book Services. 109.
  4. Web site: Een geschiedenis van de Surinaamse literatuur. Deel 2. 2002. 30 May 2020. nl. Digital Library for Dutch Literature.
  5. Web site: John Allen Chau: Do missionaries help or harm?. 28 November 2018. 16 February 2022. BBC.
  6. News: A scandal in the Amazon - where pilots are forced to lie. 18 March 2019. BBC News. 18 March 2019.