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Karuara, People of the River

Stephanie Boyd & Miguel Araoz Cartagena |Peru Canada |2024 |77min
Rating: G

Showtimes

November 18:7:00 pm

Best Peruvian Film, 25 Lima Film Festival-PUCP and Audience Choice Award, 25 Lima Film Festival-PUCP

Admission: FREE (donations welcome at the door)

Following the screening, there will be a Q&A with the director Stephanie Boyd and coproducer Mariluz Canaquiri Murayari, the film’s  protagonist and leader of the Kukama Indigenous Women’s Federation.

Mariluz Canaquiri says her river is more than just a body of water, it’s a living being. The Marañón River deep in Peru’s Amazon region is home to a vast network of spirit villages ruled by the Karuara, which means people of the river in Kukama-Kukamiria, Mariluz’s indigenous language.

The Karuara’s universe mirrors human society with an aquatic twist: river spirits lounge in hammocks made of boa constrictors, they smoke sardines and wear stingray hats and catfish shoes. Laughing Karuara children ride to school on giant turtles or play football with an inflated blowfish in the film’s stunning hand painted animations.

Behind their playfulness, the Karuara are powerful spirits. When a human is ill, indigenous shaman call on Karuara healers to cure their patient. Mariluz’s uncle must ask the river spirits for permission before fishing or risk going hungry. The Karuara are metaphysical ecologists; they maintain the delicate balance of life in the Amazon’s waterways. For centuries the Kukama people have depended on their rivers and spirit protectors for survival.

But Mariluz says the old ways are being forgotten and her people face cultural genocide. While foreign companies earn millions from the Amazon’s resources, indigenous communities lack basic development like schools, health care and clean water. She leads a federation of Kukama women who file a ground breaking lawsuit demanding the Peruvian government recognize the Marañón River as a legal person, with rights.

In a world that puts a price tag on nature, this film takes viewers inside the magic and beauty of the Amazon region and reminds us of our sacred connection to water.

“A brilliant mixture of legend and fact, combining animation and documentary” – Marc Glassman, top critic, Classical FM, Toronto

For more info please visit the Karuara website

Event sponsored by: President’s Chair in Law & Indigeneity at UVic, Indigenous Law Research Unit, Balance Co-Lab and Justice & Corporate Accountability Project

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