Gabriel Elizondo / Al Jazeera – 2012-05-26 00:48:02
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/aljazeeracorrespondent/2011/09/2011918122311463189.html
The Crying Forest
Gabriel Elizondo /Al Jazeera Correspondent
(May 26, 2011) — “I will protect the forest at all costs. That is why I could get a bullet in my head at any moment,” said Ze Claudio Ribeiro da Silva, an Amazon rainforest activist, at an environmental conference in Manaus. Six months later Ze Claudio was dead — gunned down, alongside his wife Maria, on May 24, 2011 in a remote corner of the Brazilian Amazon.
Renowned for standing up to the illegal loggers and ranchers who have laid waste to the world’s greatest tropical forest, Ze Claudio had long known he was a marked man. Investigations into the assassination are ongoing, but few doubt he was killed because of this unflinching struggle in defence of the environment. After riddling his body with bullets, the gunmen cut off one of Jose Claudio’s ears — proof, police say, that they had successfully completed their mission.
The news of Ze Claudio’s sudden execution — widely publicised on social-networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook — transformed him into a martyr for the environmental movement, both in and outside of his native Brazil. At his wake, in the Amazon city of Maraba, admirers hung a handmade banner which read “The forest is crying”.
Since 1996, at least 212 Amazonian activists have been murdered because of the battle to preserve nature or over of land disputes with wealthy loggers — an average of 12 a year.
Using a mixture of original footage and interviews as well as powerful archive images of Ze Claudio predicting his own execution, The Crying Forest examines the forces at work behind this brutal death foretold. The film follows Al Jazeera’s Brazil correspondent Gabriel Elizondo as he travels through the Amazon region seeking to discover why Ze Claudio and Maria were killed, and by whom.
Elizondo, who covered the aftermath of the couple’s murder for Al Jazeera, travels to the activist’s former home, a rainforest settlement now abandoned by terrified family members and friends. He meets some of the region’s “walking dead” — marked men and women who have been told they will die for standing up for the forest but who refuse to back down.
The Crying Forest paints a shocking portrait of life in the Brazilian Amazon through the story of a couple that lived and died for the rainforest.
The Amazon Is Crying
Gabriel Elizondo / Al Jazeera
(May 26, 2011) — It is fitting for a humble man who told anybody who asked that he preferred to be called simply ‘Ze.’ If you wanted to be formal, ‘Ze Claudio,’ would due.
The house has a small kitchen and a cozy and peaceful backyard with green shrubs providing shade from the sauna-like heat common in this region of Brazil.
Ribeiro did not live here much. He preferred his even simpler home in the Amazon sustainable reserve he ran with his wife, Maria. It is about 40 kilometers from here.
But it’s at his family house, here in Maraba on Wednesday, where I first met Ze and Maria in the cramped living room. Unfortunately, both were in coffins — dead, after being gunned down this week in what police are calling a cold blooded murder likely ordered by Ze’s enemies. And Ze had many.
But this was a day of his friends and family.
I was at the house for almost 10 hours on Wednesday. (My video report here)
A steady stream of friends, family, neighbors and other people associated with Ze came by to pass their respects. Many stayed a while. Some all day, sitting on plastic chairs in front of the house. Some stare off to nowhere. What was going through their mind only they know.
It was mostly quiet. There was some crying at times. Lots of hugging. Some just stared at the bodies in the caskets in apparent disbelief. There was no hysterical screaming. These people are Ze’s friends, and they are not a naïve bunch. Most had sunken eyes, weathered skin from years under the sun, and calloused hands from hard work. None wore suit and ties. These we Ze’s people.
Ze loved the forest, so much he used to call the trees his brothers and sisters. He was sickened, he told friends, when 80% of the native forest near his reserve was cut down to 20% in recent years as illegal loggers moved in. Lots of people here feel this way. But few dare do what Ze did. He took pictures on an old digital camera. He filed reports at police stations. He named names.
A relative told me usually nothing came of his denouncements. But it still infuriated powerful people in a region known in Brazil as terra sem lei (land without laws).
So Ze was threatened. He once woke up to spray paint on his house. Another time he came home to find his dog mysteriously dead.
Ze would get anonymous phone calls; “You better shut up, or else.†Then the person hung up.
But Ze didn’t. And wouldn’t. Because, he told friends, he couldn’t. He was the ‘voice of the forest.’
And for that, he famously told an audience at an environmental conference just six months ago, he could get a bullet in his head any day.
On Wednesday, a middle aged man walked up to me outside Ze’s house and without me asking told me: “Ze always said a bullet would get him someday. I never thought that day would actually arrive. Sad.†He then sort of shuffled off, without saying anything more.
Back inside the living room, the two coffins are pushed together. A sign reads: Injustice in the Amazon.
A net is placed over each of their covered bodies, to keep flies off their face.
Only the smallest portions of their faces are exposed. Both Ze and Maria had one of their ears cut off by the gunmen, a sign, police tell me, it was a murder for hire and the gunmen needed proof they killed the intended targets.
One young kid outside told me this: “Five thousand reals. That is the going rate here for killing two environmentalists like Ze and Maria. This was a big one, because both were killed.†Five thousand reals is about $3,000, more or less.
Ze’s 73 year old mother is devastated over his death; too upset to speak.
The Amazon reserve where Ze lived has mostly been abandoned since his death. Many people too scared to go back.
Ze’s sister, Claudelice da Silva, was one of the first to arrive at the remote dirt road where they were gunned down.
“To see my brother thrown on the dirt, full of bullet holes – it was the worst thing you could see in your life. Me and my family are deeply upset. But now we have more thirst for justice.â€
I ask her: “Is the fact Ze is dead mean the bad guys have won?â€
“No,†she says flatly without hesitation. “This fight continues.â€
At just about this moment, a little girl not too far from me hunches over, covers her face with her hands and starts weeping uncontrollably. “Who is that?†I ask. “That is my daughter,†Claudelice says. “Her father is not around anymore, so she considered my brother to be her dad. She is taking it hard.â€
About a dozen local environmental activists (‘Ze’s students’ a woman tells me) gather in a circle in the backyard and talk where to go from here. One woman says something to the effect of “fight†and “struggle†and “continue.†But there are no easy answers.
As the late afternoon turned to evening on Wednesday, at one point well over 200 people are crowding the block in front of Ze’s house. Someone from the church brings the pews out to the street so people have a place to sit.
Many are watching a projection screen set up in the street playing videos and showing a slideshow of pictures of Ze and Maria.
At one point, someone sets up a radio on the front porch area to play an audio recording of one of Ze’s talks. There is no video. No matter, they gather around, hanging on every word. Lost on many of them is that Ze’s body is literally only a few feet away.
Many people on Wednesday worried aloud that Ze and Maria’s death would go unpunished. On the phone, the state federal prosecutor told me there are over 200 unsolved murders in Para state alone involving ‘rural workers’ (usually code word for environmentalists, in these parts).
I heard 5 words a lot on Wednesday: Chico. Mendes. Dorothy. Stang. Impunity. If you don’t know, Google it. You can draw your own conclusions.
I didn’t hear one person – not one – utter the words Codigal Florestal.
It is dark now. A couple busloads of MST land rights activists arrive to pay their respects. They, along with about 100 people still remaining, light candles on crosses and place them in the neighborhood. It’s almost 11 pm.
A handmade banner has been sitting out in front of the house all day.
It reads: The forest is crying.
Ze won’t be around anymore to wipe away the tears.
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