Menschen ermächtigen &

Natur

schützen

Menschen

ermächtigen

&

Natur

schützen

Unsere Arbeit
Bewusstes regeneratives Handeln, um Menschen zu ermächtigen und die Natur zu schützen
Spenden
Unsere Arbeit
Bewusstes regeneratives Handeln, um Menschen zu ermächtigen und die Natur zu schützen
Wir arbeiten um, das volle Potenzial der Menschen und der lebendigen Erde zu entfalten und konzentrieren uns dabei auf sechs miteinander verbundene Wirkungsbereiche.
Unsere Arbeit ist Menschen, Projekten und Prozessen gewidmet, die zu einer sozialen, ökologischen und spirituellen Heilung beitragen und eine achtsame Verbindung mit der Erde kultivieren.
Neun Nationen
Mit wem wir arbeiten
Wir arbeiten mit neun indigenen Völkern in Lateinamerika zusammen, um ihre Territorien, ihre Kulturen und das Wissen ihrer Vorfahren zu schützen.
Wo wir arbeiten

Wir sind in den folgenden Ländern tätig: Ecuador, Costa Rica, Kolumbien, Peru und Panama.

Karte von Mittel- & Südamerika
Visit the desktop version of this page to see an interactive map that shows the territories of the Indigenous Nations that we work with.
Legende
Mittel- & Südamerika
Indigene Nationen
Cabécar
Bribri
Emberá
Siona
A’i-Cofán
Waorani
Secoya-Siekopai
Amazonian Kichwa
Shuar
Regenwälder
La Amistad International Park
Darien Rainforest
Amazon Rainforest
Legende
Costa Rica & Panama
Indigene Nationen
Cabécar
The Cabécar people are the second largest Indigenous group in Costa Rica numbering around 14,000 people. Living mostly in remote rainforest areas, their relative isolation has allowed them to maintain their culture, traditions, and spiritual identity, which is centered around their relationship with the forest.
Bribri
The Bribrí are one of Costa Rica’s largest Indigenous nations, numbering around 10,000 people, and and live in the Talamanca mountain range forest. They are well known for their rich artistic and musical traditions and are one of the few matrilineal societies in the world, where land traditionally is passed from mother to daughter.
Regenwälder
La Amistad International Park
La Amistad Tropical Rainforest is located in Costa Rica and Panama and covers around 14,991 km2. In Costa Rica it is also known as Talamanca rainforest and is considered the largest and most biologically diverse protected wild area, due to its wide range of altitudes, climatic variations, and variety of soils.
Legende
Panama
Indigene Nationen
Emberá
The Emberá people live in Panama and western Colombia, numbering around 50,000 people in Colombia and 33,000 in Panama. The Emberá are a riverine people who despite their experiences of forced displacement have preserved a strong cultural and spiritual connection to the rivers and celebrate their rich cultural identity.
Regenwälder
Darien Rainforest
The Darien Tropical Rainforest, located in eastern Panama and bordering Colombia, covers an area of 579,000 hectares. It is the largest protected natural area in Central America. It is also known for the Darien Gap, with deep wilderness and extreme biodiversity, where the Pan-American Highway is interrupted.
Legende
Ecuador, Peru, Kolumbien
Indigene Nationen
Siona
The Siona, numbering around 400 people, live along the Putumayo River and its tributaries in the Amazon regions of Colombia and Ecuador. They are also known as Zio Bain, “people who cultivate the land”.
A’í Cofán
The A’i Cofán, descendants of ancient riverine people, today number around 2,100 people. They live between the Aguarico River in the northern Amazon region in Ecuador and the Guamés River in southern Colombia.
Waorini
The Waorani people, numbering around 2,000, have largely retained their cosmovision and continue to be known as skilled warriors and defenders of Nature living in the eastern Amazon region of Ecuador.
Secoya-Siekpia
The Secoya-Siekopai, numbering around 1,600 people, live in the Amazonian regions of Peru and Ecuador. They have great ancestral wealth, shamanic wisdom and a profound knowledge of medicinal plants.
Amazonian Kichwa
The Kichwa people of the Amazon are the most populous Indigenous group in the Ecuadorian Amazon, with smaller groups living across the Colombian and Peruvian borders.
Shuar
The Shuar, who are well-known for their hunting skills, live in tropical rainforest between the Andes mountain range and the Ecuadorian and Peruvian Amazonian region.
Regenwälder
Amazon Rainforest
The Amazon Rainforest, the largest on Earth, spanning approximately 5.5 million km2 across nine South American countries. Beyond its immense biodiversity, the Amazon rainforest plays a crucial role in regulating global water cycles and the climate.
Zur Hauptkarte
Diese Karte zeigt die Territorien der indigenen Völker Lateinamerikas, mit denen wir zusammenarbeiten. Die Grenzen sind ungefähre Angaben und garantieren nicht, dass sie frei von Fehlern oder von den jeweiligen Regierungen als solche offiziell anerkannt sind.