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Virus poses cultural threat to Brazil's Amazon people
Jul 10, 2020
Lucita Sanoma lost her two-month-old baby to suspected coronavirus on May 25. The boy was buried, without her knowledge, 300 kilometers (185 miles) from her village.
The infant died in hospital in Boa Vista, capital of the northwestern state of Roraima.
The burial followed government health guidelines that run counter to Yanomami culture, which dictates that the deceased must be cremated.
As part of the Yanomami's funerary rites, the remains are displayed in the forest before they are cremated. The ashes are collected in an urn to be buried in a new ceremony much later.
Her long black hair falling over her shoulders, the young woman wiped away tears as she described her distress in her own language.
"I went straight to the hospital with my son...The last word I received is that he died. I never saw him again," she said in a soft, rhythmic voice.
Not being able to mourn in her community, according to her ancestral rites, "is a lack of respect, which has a strong psychological effect on the mother," said Junios Yanomami, president of the Yanomami Indigenous Health Council.
After her ordeal, Lucita Sanoma returned to her village in the region of Auaris, in Brazil's northwest.
But her son's body remains in an unmarked grave in a Boa Vista cemetery, until the authorities decide if she can bring him home to grieve with her relatives.
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