LARGE SMALL Video Size:
The latest version of Adobe Flash Player is required to watch video. Get Flash Now
An update to Veoh Web Player is required to watch this   video.
This update improves video playback performance and also includes many quality and stability enhancements. Update Web Player

Comments

Videos > More Videos like "Yanomamis: la última tribu (1/2)"

Yanomamis: la última tribu (1/2) 10:50

Un excepcional viaje para conocer a una de las tribus más ancestrales que habita la faz de la Tierra. Un grupo indígena nómada que habita la selva tropical al sur de Venezuela y el norte de Brasil. Rituales chamánicos y flechas impregnadas de un veneno mortal son algunas de las tradiciones de los Yanomamis.

Advertisement
  • Un excepcional viaje para conocer a una de las tribus más ancestrales que habita la faz de la Tierra. Un grupo indígena nómada que habita la selva tropical al sur de Venezuela y el norte de Brasil. Rituales chamánicos y flechas impregnadas de un veneno mortal son algunas de las tradiciones de los Yanomamis.


    by:
    JohnTitorNT
    views:
    2,649
    added:
    7 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • Die Yanomami-Indianer, Bewohner im Amazonas.


    by:
    Inspectorbong
    views:
    1,785
    added:
    6 mos ago
    language:
    de
  • NHK_YNM_Amazon


    by:
    RussianDiscovery
    views:
    31,216
    added:
    7 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • Part1: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=DcEBJHpAVxg Bruce Parry uses the numerous active alkaoloids in the Virola species of plants. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virola "Virola, also known as Epená, is a genus of medium-sized trees native to the South American rainforest and closely related to other Myristicaceae, such as nutmeg. It has glossy, dark green leaves with clusters of tiny yellow flowers and emits a pungent odor. The dark-red resin of the tree bark contains several hallucinogenic alkaloids, most notably 5-MeO-DMT (Virola calophylla), 5-OH-DMT (Bufotenine), and also N,N-DMT, perhaps the most powerful member of the Dimethyltryptamine family; it also contains beta-carboline harmala alkaloids, MAOIs that greatly potentiate the effects of DMT. The bark resin is prepared and dried by a variety of methods, often including the addition of ash or lime, presumably as basifying agents, and a powder made from the leaves of the small Justicia bush. Ingestion is similar to that of Yopo, consisting of assisted insufflation, with the snuff being blown through a long tube into the nostrils by an assistant. According to Schultes, the use of Virola in magico-religious rituals is restricted to tribes in the Western Amazon Basin and parts of the Orinoco Basin."


    by:
    Percy203
    views:
    2,336
    added:
    11 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • Part2: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=YLkFpzcoYco Bruce Parry uses the numerous active alkaoloids in the Virola species of plants. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virola "Virola, also known as Epená, is a genus of medium-sized trees native to the South American rainforest and closely related to other Myristicaceae, such as nutmeg. It has glossy, dark green leaves with clusters of tiny yellow flowers and emits a pungent odor. The dark-red resin of the tree bark contains several hallucinogenic alkaloids, most notably 5-MeO-DMT (Virola calophylla), 5-OH-DMT (Bufotenine), and also N,N-DMT, perhaps the most powerful member of the Dimethyltryptamine family; it also contains beta-carboline harmala alkaloids, MAOIs that greatly potentiate the effects of DMT. The bark resin is prepared and dried by a variety of methods, often including the addition of ash or lime, presumably as basifying agents, and a powder made from the leaves of the small Justicia bush. Ingestion is similar to that of Yopo, consisting of assisted insufflation, with the snuff being blown through a long tube into the nostrils by an assistant. According to Schultes, the use of Virola in magico-religious rituals is restricted to tribes in the Western Amazon Basin and parts of the Orinoco Basin."


    by:
    Percy203
    views:
    792
    added:
    11 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • The film Hakani claims that every year, hundreds of children are buried alive in the Amazon. Produced by the American evangelical missionary organisation Youth With a Mission, Hakani uses faked ('re-enacted') footage to show a child being buried alive by an Amazon Indian tribe. The film is being used to generate support for a draft law being debated in Brazil allowing indigenous children to be taken from their parents by force. Find out about infanticide in the Amazon at http://www.survival-international.org/hakani


    by:
    survivalintl
    views:
    902
    added:
    10 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • A rare documentary insight into how tribal superstition, ritual and ignorance evolved into worship. An elder of a primitive Stone-Age Amazon tribe performs a sacrificial ritual rooted in tradition. A child is unwanted and is burried alive. "He must die! For the good of the tribe!" Could this type of superstition help explain the origin the Judeo-Christian crucifixion/scapegoating myth? Is this ritual, in part, the basis of modern religions? _______________________________________ Here is a story from the UK Telegraph: Babies born into some Indian tribes in the Amazon are being buried alive, a practice that is being covered up by the Brazilian authorities out of respect for tribal culture. The tradition is based on beliefs that babies with any sort of physical defect have no souls and that others, such as twins or triplets, are also "cursed". Infanticide has claimed the lives of dozens of babies each year, say campaigners fighting to end the practice. Babies who are girls, who have some disability or who have unmarried mothers are all in danger of an early death in a shallow grave in the rainforest. Others are suffocated with leaves, poisoned or simply abandoned in the jungle. According to Dr Marcos Pelegrini, a doctor working in the Yanomami Tribe Health Care District, 98 children were killed by their mothers in 2004 alone. Campaigners say that the true figure is obscured by officials who often record cases of infanticide as simple malnutrition. At the same time, family anguish over infanticide has led to many adult tribal members committing suicide. READ THE COMPLETE STORY!!! http://tinyurl.com/6avgmn _________________________________________ The video was produced by an organization called Global Voices... "Global Voices is a non-profit global citizens' media project founded at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society" http://www.globalvoicesonline.org Voice of the Survivor: http://www.hakani.org/en/ This film is directed by a son of a JESUIT missionary and actors ARE used, according to ABC


    by:
    thruthem
    views:
    33,386
    added:
    12 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • http://troy.amazonherb.net/Zamu_Empowerment.aspx email Elisa: shipibotours@hotmail.com http://www.refugioaltiplano.org after many years as an alcoholic i have used many techniques and tools for awakening. 10 day silent Vipassana meditation courses: http://www.dhamma.org/, Amazon Herbs: http://amazontroy.amazonherb.net/ yoga, nutrition, Maori Shamanism: http://www.ata-rangi.com/ Rolfing: tarpitboss@mac.com and recently Natural childbirth: http://www.tlcwomanscenter.com/ all having a profound impact on my life and realization that life is sacred and it is important to respect the Earth, others and myself. Peter Gorman writes: "Plants, like everything else, are our co-dwellers in the universe. But man has a special relationship with plants. They provide, and have since the beginning of time, the bulk of our food, our clothing, our shelter. Some provide us with the loveliest scents; some with extraordinary color. Theyre the source of our medicines, their roots work with soil and stone to keep the surface of the earth intact. They go so far as to take the poisonous carbon dioxide that humans exhale and turn it back into human-life-giving oxygen. Thats some relationship. Of course it may be that plants only invented us to distribute their seeds, so Im not suggesting they live to cater to us. But they do provide us with much of what we need to exist on this planet." Ralph Metzner writes: "Ayahuasca is an hallucinogenic Amazonian plant concoction, that has been used by native Indian and mestizo shamans in Perú, Colombia and Ecuador for healing and divination for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years. It is known by various names in the different tribes, including caapi, natema, mihi and yajé. The name ayahuasca is from the Quechua language: huasca means "vine" or "liana" and aya means "souls" or "dead people" or "spirits". Thus "vine of the dead", "vine of the souls" or "vine of the spirits" would all be appropriate English translations. It is however slightly misleading as a name, since the vine Banisteriopsis caapi is


    by:
    certifiedhealthnut
    views:
    496
    added:
    12 mos ago
    language:
    en
  • TX32


    by:
    eightiesmod03
    views:
    167
    added:
    6 mos ago
    language:
    de
  • Dr. Constantin Stan performs a Breast Shape Enhancement consultation with the BioDynamic Breast Analysis System for Allergan Implants.


    by:
    breastanalysis
    views:
    49,717
    added:
    12 mos ago
    language:
    en