Davi Yanomami receives 2019's “Alternative Nobel Prize”

December 5, 2019

Davi Yanomami holds the Right Livelihood award © Right Livelihood Foundation

This page was created in 2019 and may contain language which is now outdated.

Renowned Yanomami shaman Davi Kopenawa, the “Dalai Lama of the Rainforest,” received this year’s Right Livelihood Award, known as the “Alternative Nobel Prize” this Wednesday (Dec 4th). The ceremony took place in Stockholm and was the final event of a 10-day long programme of celebrations in Germany, Switzerland and Sweden.

During his acceptance speech Davi said: “I want to help my Indigenous brothers by asking the international authorities to put pressure on the Government of Brazil to demarcate the land of other Indigenous peoples. I have always fought for the rights of my people, the Yanomami, and the Ye’kwana. This award is a new weapon to strengthen the fight of our people.”

Davi led his people’s 20-year campaign to protect their Amazonian territory. Combined with the Yanomami territory in Venezuela, it is the largest area of rainforest under Indigenous control anywhere in the world.

Davi Yanomami speaking at the award ceremony © Right Livelihood Foundation

Davi leaving the stage after his speech at the award ceremony © Right Livelihood Foundation

Davi is the President of Hutukara, the Yanomami organization, who share the award with him. He first travelled outside Brazil in 1989, when Survival International, which won that year’s Right Livelihood Award, invited him to Europe to accept the prize on its behalf.

Subsequently Survival organized Davi’s first trip to the USA in 1991, where he met the then-UN Secretary General, members of the Inter American Commission on Human Rights and American senators to raise awareness of the impending genocide of the Yanomami, as gold miners flooded into their rainforest bringing deadly epidemics and chronic violence.

Davi Yanomami at the Swedish Parliament, Stockholm © Survival International

Davi Kopenawa Yanomami speaking at one of the events for this year’s Right Livelihood Award © Wolfgang Schmidt/Right Livelihood Foundation

Since then he has travelled extensively, campaigning to protect the Amazon from destruction by mining, ranching, logging, road-building and fire.

In 2010 he wrote The Falling Sky, the first book by a Yanomami. An exploration of Yanomami cosmology, as well as a deeply moving account of his people’s struggle to survive epidemics and violence, it was described by Survival’s Director Stephen Corry as “one of the most important books of our time.”

Davi outside the UK’s House of Commons on his first trip outside Brazil, with Survival. 1989. © Survival

Davi has frequently been threatened by the gold miners and politicians who target the resources inside the Yanomami territory. He lives in his community, Watoriki (the Windy Mountain), practising shamanism. His father in law, Lourival, was one of the oldest and most respected Yanomami shamans. Davi is married to Fátima and they have six children and many grandchildren.

Davi has won many prizes and awards in his lifetime, including the UN Global 500 award, and an honorable mention by the jury of Spain’s Bartolomé de las Casas Prize.

Davi Yanomami and the other laureates, with Survival’s Director Stephen Corry © Wolfgang Schmidt/Right Livelihood Foundation

In September when Davi was told he had won the award, he said: “I am very happy that the RLA prize people didn’t forget me. It has come at just the right time. I’m very happy. They trust me and Hutukara and those who defend the forest and Planet Earth. This gives me the strength to carry on fighting to defend the soul of the Amazon.

“We, the peoples of the planet, need to protect our cultural heritage as Omame [the Creator] taught us – to live well, caring for our land so that future generations can continue to use it.

“I trust Survival International’s work very much. It’s 50 years old and continues to support us, and carries on fighting and helping my people.”

Stephen Corry speaking at one of the RLA ceremonies © Wolfgang Schmidt/Right Livelihood Foundation

During his speech at one of the events associated with the award Survival International Director Stephen Corry said: “Over the last 30 years, Davi has become a spokesman for his peoples, for Amazonia, for the tropical forest, and for tribal peoples in general. The threat to this area remains acute. The current regime in Brazil is trying now to undo decades, generations of progress in recognizing Indigenous peoples’ rights. The threat has never been more acute.”

Notes to Editors:
- Survival’s Media Kit contains a bio, photos, video and more.
- In recent years the Yanomami territory has been invaded by 10-20,000 goldminers, who have polluted the rivers with mercury and attacked Yanomami villagers. Some of the miners are just a few miles from uncontacted Yanomami communities.
- In 2004 Davi founded Hutukara, the Yanomami association which advocates for Yanomami rights and runs land protection, education and health care projects. He is currently its President.
- Earlier this year Davi and other leaders organized the biggest ever protest for Indigenous rights worldwide, in reaction to President Bolsonaro’s war on Indigenous people.
- The other winners of this year’s award are: Greta Thunberg, Aminatou Haidar and Guo Jianmei

Yanomami
Tribe

Share