Honorific Prefix: | Chief |
Pedro Guanikeyu Torres | |
Native Name: | Ciba Guanikeyu |
Native Name Lang: | Taíno language |
Birth Date: | [1] |
Other Names: | Noble Bird of the White Earth |
Citizenship: | American |
Organization: | Jatibonicu Taino Tribal Nation of Boriken |
Movement: | El Movimiento Indio Taino de Boriken (Puerto Rico) |
Baptised: | December 1, 1953 |
Pedro Guanikeyu Torres, also known as Peter Guanikeyu Torres,[2] is a Taíno-identifying[3] civil rights activist, non-profit organization leader, educator, language teacher, historian, actor and a Taíno nationalist of Puerto Rico.
Torres's academic background includes studies in Cultural Anthropology, Puerto Rican studies, Art and Latin American studies. Torres graduated from Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey at Livingston College in June 1977.[4]
In the late 1960s and early 1970s Torres did research aimed at documenting Taíno artifacts and history through the CPI Comite Pro Indigenismo. In the mid 1970s Torres had translated the very first theater script from the Spanish language to the Taíno language as a former Actor and member of El Grupo Guazabara (The Guazabara Theater Group). In 1993 he founded the Taino Inter-Tribal Council (TITC, Inc.), a non-profit cultural and educational organization. He worked at various archaeological sites, including Puerto De Tierra in the 1970s. For over five (5) decades and many years, Torres has advocated the reclaiming and repatriation of artifacts pertaining to the past pre-Columbian historical territory of the principal regional Chief Orocobix of the Jatibonicu Taino tribe, a tribe once located in the central mountain region of Puerto Rico.[5] It should be mentioned that Torres is credited and recognized as being a Taíno revivalist, civil rights activist, and one of the original founding fathers of the 1968 Taino Indian Movement of Puerto Rico.
He is an activist for the official government recognition of Taíno descendants and his unrecognized Jatibonicu Taino community of Puerto Rico and in New Jersey. As the organization's leader, Torres is politically active in the group's governance as well as national and international political affairs.[6]
Often known as Don Pedro or Chief Guanikeyu, in 1996 Torres called for the "Taino national unity of all the Taino Indian people.[7] In 2000, Torres represented the Jatibonicu Taino Tribal Nation before the U.S. Census Bureau.[8] As part of his Taíno revivalist activism he has written various papers and articles on the relevancy of Taíno culture and the history of Taínos in Puerto Rico, Florida and adjacent areas.[9]
Torres also performed as a Taíno language teacher and researcher. As the organization's leader, he conducted the traditional Taino Guatiao (naming ceremony) and has bestowed a Taíno name on many Taíno-identifying people today. He also promoted the Taíno language when he was chosen to name a crater on planet Venus that he named Nanichi "My Love or My Heart" in the year 2000.[10] [11]
Due to failing health, in 2001, Guanikeyu Torres withdrew from the leading role of his Taíno-identifying community and assumed the post of "tribal elder".[12]