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Pará for the CourseTarcísio Feitosa da Silva fights illegal logging in the Amazon28 Apr 2006
In the northern Brazilian state of Pará, where the mouth of the Amazon cuts into the continent, illegal logging, industrial farming, and a human-driven cycle of massive wildfires are destroying the tropical forests. Since he was a teenager, Tarcísio Feitosa da Silva has considered it his mission to help protect these forests, and the isolated communities that live within them.
Tarcísio Feitosa da Silva.
Photo: Goldman Environmental Prize.
Though several of his fellow activists have been assassinated because of their efforts, Feitosa continues to work with local communities and other allies to document and protest illegal logging activities. His work helped convince the government to establish a mosaic of parks and reserves in the region, which -- when combined with existing indigenous landholdings -- cover nearly 100,000 square miles, the world's largest area of protected tropical forest. Feitosa, 35, was awarded one of six 2006 Goldman Environmental Prizes at a ceremony in San Francisco on April 24. He spoke to Grist through a translator. Goldman Prizewinners
Meet the winners of the 2006 Goldman Environmental Prize:
Silas Kpanan'Ayoung Siakor of Liberia
Yu Xiaogang of China
Olya Melen of Ukraine
Anne Kajir of Papua New Guinea
Craig Williams of the United States
When I turned 18, I began to visit these communities constantly. Some of them are three to four days' travel away from the city. In some areas, I helped them mark the land so that they know which piece of land belongs to them. In 2001 and 2002, I went to investigate the illegal logging that was happening inside the Indians' land, in a place we call the Middle Lands -- that's the area between the Xingu River and the Iriri River. In the last four years, I have been working with rubber-tappers and other people who live next to the river. They are also defending their forest against land grabs.
Spreading the gospel of sustainable forest practices.
Photo: John Antonelli.
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