A/HRC/19/60/Add.1
We are unable to have access to our ancestral territories, since everything is private
property and so it is very difficult to recover it. Our traditional territory has been
split up and destroyed through cattle farming. Non-indigenous society imposes
projects and plans on us without consultation, although we are talking about
ancestral territory. Traditional culture is also affected, including indigenous religious
practices and beliefs, which were already completely overrun and not respected at
all. In the communities there are also representatives of other religions who do not
let the shamans work. There is practically no health service available. We need
access to education, but Government support is lacking and not all the communities
have schools. The Government and its agencies do not communicate with the
communities or ask their opinion and do not respect the distinctive form of our
organization. In addition, we are very poorly paid for the work we do. 12
46.
The Committee on the Rights of the Child, in its concluding observations on
Paraguay of January 2010,13 expressed concern at the limited enjoyment of rights by
indigenous children and, in particular, their limited access to education and health and
disproportionately high malnutrition rate, and relevant infant and maternal mortality rates.
The Committee recommended that Paraguay should take all necessary measures to protect
the rights of indigenous children against discrimination and guarantee their enjoyment of
the rights enshrined in domestic law and in the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
47.
Reports from and discussions with representatives of different indigenous peoples
conducted by the Special Rapporteur in Asunción, Ciudad del Este and Filadelfia revealed
that the imposition of religious doctrines and practices against their will seems to persist to
a certain degree today. This critical assessment was corroborated by the Chairman of the
National Institution for Indigenous Populations (Instituto Paraguayo del Indígena), as well
as by other experts working in this field.
48.
Interlocutors from indigenous peoples mostly agreed that the general attitude
towards their traditional beliefs and practices had become more respectful in recent years.
While in the past traditional cultural or religious practices, such as shamanist healing
rituals, were denounced as “satanic” by some Christian missionaries, such attitudes have
fortunately become rather exceptional. Moreover, efforts to recapture the cultural, linguistic
and spiritual heritage of indigenous peoples can now count on the political and financial
support of major streams in Christian churches in Paraguay and internationally. The
Catholic Church in particular seems to have largely abandoned its former paternalistic
attitude for active solidarity with indigenous peoples in their struggle for better living
conditions. Such positive examples were also cited with regard to Protestant churches.
49.
In spite of such encouraging developments, however, members of indigenous
peoples also reported on persisting practices or policies of religious paternalism that may
violate their freedom of religion or belief. For example, they mentioned a number of
instances in which material benefits or jobs given to indigenous individuals were made
dependent on their compliance with religious norms. This problem was particularly tangible
during the Special Rapporteur’s visit to Filadelfia, a town in the Chaco region established
three generations ago by Mennonite settlers. The Mennonites are a Protestant community,
with roots in the Netherlands and Germany, who themselves endured centuries of religious
persecution. The ancestors of many of those now living in Filadelfia fled from the former
Soviet Union, where Mennonites were exposed to harsh discrimination and political
persecution, including deportation and killings. Since settling in the Chaco from the late
12
13
14
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, Mission to Paraguay, available from
www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/documents/UNPFII_Mission_Report_Paraguay_EN.pdf, p.11.
CRC/C/PRY/CO/3, paras. 79-80.