Taracuá Explained

Taracuá is a small village located in the municipality of São Gabriel da Cachoeira, Amazonas, Brazil.[1]

The village is located from São Gabriel da Cachoeira, and has two schools.[2]

The village inhabitants consist mainly of Tucano people, an indigenous group native to the banks of the Uaupes River.

Location

Taracuá is situated on the bank of the Uaupes (Vaupés) River. It is the main location of the river's discharge, as it is set 2 kilometers upstream from where the Uaupes splits into the smaller rivers of the River Tiquié and the River Papuri.[3]

Schooling

The village of Taracuá has been the subject of many efforts to educate and bring literacy to the village.

In 2005 efforts were made by the municipality of São Gabriel, subsidized by the State Secretary of Education of the Amazon, to educate villagers from five villages which make up the "Tukano triangle" (a triangle meant to mark the borders of the Uaupes and its tributaries), taking students from the village for primary and secondary education in São Gabriel da Cachoeira, and placing 85 students in the village from the surrounding villages for education.[4] [5]

References

0.1283°N -68.5442°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Área de manejo da comunidade Taracuá: baixo rio Uaupés. Terra Indígena Alto Rio Negro Acervo ISA . 2023-09-07 . acervo.socioambiental.org.
  2. Web site: Tukano - Povos Indígenas no Brasil . 2023-09-14 . pib.socioambiental.org.
  3. Web site: RiefBR . RiefBR.
  4. Web site: (PDF) Érase una vez en Taracuá...sobre el origen del mundo: tradición cristiana, teoría científica y pensamiento indígena.
  5. Santos . Gilton Mendes dos . December 2011 . Érase una vez en Taracuá...sobre el origen del mundo: tradición cristiana, teoría científica y pensamiento indígena . Vibrant: Virtual Brazilian Anthropology . es . 8 . 24–39 . 10.1590/S1809-43412011000200002 . 1809-4341. free .