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The Ticuna: Life in the Forest

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The Ticuna are one of the largest Indigenous peoples of the Colombian Amazon, living primarily along the Amazon River and its tributaries near the borders with Brazil and Peru. Their lives are deeply shaped by the forest and the river, through practices of fishing, small-scale agriculture, hunting, and the careful cultivation of chacras that sustain both people and biodiversity. For the Ticuna, the forest is not a backdrop but a living, relational world—one that teaches, nourishes, and demands respect.

Today, Ticuna communities are also closely connected to regional market economies, selling fish, cassava products, crafts, and forest goods in towns such as Leticia, while navigating the pressures and opportunities of increased mobility, tourism, and state presence. At the same time, they continue to maintain their language, social organization, and ritual life, most notably through the pelazón ceremony, a female initiation ritual that marks the transition to adulthood and reaffirms collective identity, ancestral knowledge, and the enduring ties between people, spirits, and the forest.

 The Ticuna are one of the largest Indigenous peoples of the Amazon 

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Forest Art
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