Don't Cry

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accounts
actor
Americas
amnesia
anthopology
Bolivia
capitulation
Category=NHK
Christianity
colonialism
colonisation
communication
development
eco-translation
environment
epistemology
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
evangelisation
forgetting
Gran Chaco
historian
historiography
ideologization
indigenous
invisible beings
knowledge
Latin America
literature
memory
Mennonites
mission
nation-state
native
new channels
ontologies
orality
Paraguay
peace
philosophy
polyphonic
power
protagonism
relating
responsibility
settlement
settlers
shamanism
shared living
sharing
silencing
smallpox
subjugation
suppression
territoriality
trauma
voice

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228011682
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Enlhet, an Indigenous people of the Paraguayan Chaco, remained virtually untouched by colonialism until the 1920s. This changed with the arrival of Mennonites, who began settling in the centre of Enlhet territory in 1927; the Chaco War soon after (1932–35); the deadliest conflict in the western hemisphere after the American Civil War; and a terrible smallpox epidemic at the same time.

In Don’t Cry the Enlhet give their own account of this period, focusing on their experiences of the war between Paraguay and Bolivia, in voices never before heard outside their own society. Their accounts, translated from the Enlhet language and set alongside sensitive historical-anthropological analysis, allow unprecedented access to these hitherto hidden perspectives. Enlhet witnesses to those times describe the processes of colonization to which they were subjected while, at the same time, insisting on their own vision of the world. This vision challenges the views of colonial society, symbolizing the search for a relationship that assumes a shared history, addresses the gulf between peoples, and embraces the potential of each. These oral histories bear witness to the role of Indigenous voices in overcoming the colonial mindset deeply rooted within Western societies, which lacks the conceptual framework to meet Indigenous societies on equal terms.

A unique example of history from an Indigenous perspective, this book reflects a crucial moment for a people who preserved their language despite adverse circumstances and whose origins still inform their daily life. Don’t Cry demonstrates the importance of native voices for both Indigenous and colonial societies.

Hannes Kalisch is an expert in the language and culture of the Indigenous Enlhet-Enenlhet peoples of Paraguay and the founder of the Instituto Nengvaanemkeskama Nempayvaam Enlhet. Ernesto Unruh is Enlhet and co-founder of the Instituto Nengvaanemkeskama Nempayvaam Enlhet. Nicholas Regan is lecturer at the University of Bath and a translator of anthropological and technical texts from Spanish to English.