Sacred Rivers
Throughout the world, for millennia, rivers have provided wondrous gifts: nourishment, mobility, irrigation, natural beauty.
In recognition of these gifts, some cultures held the rivers of their kingdoms sacred, beseeching them with prayers, partaking of their waters for joyous and somber rituals.
Today, although these rivers remain objects of devotion, some face serious threats: severe pollution, diminishing flows, hydroelectric projects.
Telling their life stories, the deep conflict that exists between many Mapuche communities with hydroelectric projects that alter the course of the rivers and pollute their waters, was an extraordinary experience for me as a photojournalist.
The rivers not only irrigate their fields, feed their families, but also provide them with the water they use daily to hydrate themselves and cook their meals.
On the slopes of the rivers grow native plants that are used as natural medicines to cure all kinds of diseases. Ancestral wisdom is passed from generation to generation and natural treatments are performed in indigenous villages near the rivers, far from urban centers.
In the Mapuche cosmovision, the souls of the deceased are transported underground from the cemeteries to the rivers, and it is there where their waters carry the spirits throughout the territory.
That is why they believe they live with their ancestors, with their deceased loved ones who live in the natural world of trees, flowers, earth, stones and much more.
Today their rights are threatened by hydroelectric companies that fight, on the contrary, to profit from nature.