Kategóriák: Minden - agriculture - indigenous - culture - language

a María Alejandra Calderón Pinzón 6 éve

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Indigenous kankuamos

The Kankuamo are an indigenous group residing primarily in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in Colombia, sharing this sacred territory with the Kogui, Arhuaco, and Wiwa peoples. Concentrated largely in the department of Cesar, they represent a small fraction of Colombia’

Indigenous kankuamos

Indigenous kankuamos

Kankano Indians have inhabited the sacred territory of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta since ancient times, and we share in this great territory the ancestrality and worldview of the world with the Kogui, Arhuaco and Wiwa indigenous peoples.

Language

Finally his motto in the tradition of the centuries has been: The world will kankuamize sooner or later.
Efforts to recover the language and cultural identity are parallel to the processes of other indigenous communities in Colombia.
Although with serious difficulties due to pressures from settlers and other forces that always corner the linguistic and traditional unity of the people.
The Kankuamo spoke a language of the Chibcha linguistic family, but the last speakers of it died around 1960.

Economy

The economy of the Kankuamo is based on agriculture, they produce yucca, yam, pigeon pea, corn, banana, coca leaves, fique, arracacha, backpack, taro.

They live in the north of Colombia and share the culture and tradition with the other peoples that live in the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Kággabba Kogi, Iku Arhuaco and Wiwa Damana.

Population

The Kankuamo represent 0.91% of the indigenous population of Colombia.
Most of them are concentrated in the department of Cesar, where 96.29% of the population lives. It is followed by La Guajira with 1.30% (165 people) and Bogotá with 0.87% (111 people).
The 2005 DANE Census reported 12,242 people who are recognized as belonging to the Kankuamo people, of which 48.62% are men (6,182 people) and 51.38% are women (6,532 people).

History

With the process of colonization and acculturation, the Kankuamo began to forget their commitment to take care of the Sierra and to maintain the tradition, for this reason the Kankuamo masters gave their wisdom and the golden mask of dancing to the Kogui, as a form of resistance , being these the guardians of the Kankuama tradition, tradition that would be kept and transmitted from mamo to mamo five generations, only until that moment would be that the Kankuamo would go to be reborn, the Kankuamo would reappear.
The Kankuamo Indians have inhabited the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta since ancient times, share in this great territory, the ancestral history and the worldview of the world with the Kogui, Arhuaco and Wiwa indigenous peoples.