Kapawi:A Model of Sustainable Developmentin
Ecuadorean Amazonia (Summer
1999)
By: Arnaldo Rodriguez
The tremendous lack of communication
and trust between indigenous groups and the private sector
has been the
foremost hurdle tin development in Latin American countries.
Indigenous organizations have seen private enterprises
as abusive institutions eager to exploit indigenous culture
and resources. The private sector, on the other hand,
tends lo consider indigenous people untruthful am! indolent
If these misunderstandings are resolved, a new niche
for socially responsible development will evolve which
can provide important economic and social benefits, and
create a space for tolerance and learning.
Kapawi. an ecotourism project with community -based participation
provides a model of how private capital investments can
be integrated with local community goals, with minimal
cultural and environmental impacts, even in areas where
local cultures still function with primarily non-monetized
economies Kapawi offers a model which avoids the integration
destruction paradox that laces most indigenous Amazonian
groups.
Living in the remotest area of southeastern Leuador and
northeastern Peru, the Achuar, or people of the achu
palm, had practically no contact with westerners before
the arrival of missionaries in the late 1960’s. Even
today Western influence is minimal and the Achuar remain
nearly self-sufficient in their territory. still able
to obtain most of what they need from the forest. However,
the Achuar find themselves at a crossroads. Proud warriors
of the past, the Achuar face the dilemmas of integration:
the establishment of semi-villages along an airstrip
versus traditional nuclear settlements: access to formal
education versus loss of their own culture: and the function
and efficiency of manufactured products versus a dependence
on monetary transactions.
The Achuar themselves want their children to have access
to the possibilities that the outside world can offer.
Yet the Achuar don't want to lose the social cohesiveness
and relation to the world that their traditional culture
provides. Culture is dynamic, and flexibility can mean
the capacity to avoid extinction. As the Achuar search
for their place in the future, integration will occur.
The question remains how.
Present-day economics are characterized by a fragmentary
and reductionistic approach which fails to recognize
that the monetary economy is merely one aspect of a whole
ecological and social web. The basic error is dividing
this web into fragments. The only values appearing in
current economic, model are those that can be quantified
by currency exchange. This leaves out qualitative values
that are crucial to understanding the ecological, social,
and psychological dimensions of economic activity. Traditional
Achuar economics are not based on currency exchange.
Rather, the Achuar use the so-called "gift economy," a
type of economy based on the exchange of gifts. There
is a direct relationship between gift exchanges and community
building. Actually, the word "community" itself
contains the root cumm (together, among each other):
and munere (to give); Hence community means "to
give among each other."
Defined as sustainable nature-based tourism, contour
ism also includes social and cultural dimensions, where
visitors interact with local residents. To be beneficial,
ecotourism must foster environmental and cultural understanding,
appreciation and conservation. When ecotourism projects
are developed in consultation with host communities there
are several mutual benefits. Tour operators gain access
to local villages or remote areas. Local people derive
income from hosting visitors while elders pass on cultural
knowledge to ecotourists. The benefits of ecotourism
for rural or indigenous communities include preservation
of cultural traditions, conservation of the natural environment
and maintenance of social, cultural, and spiritual values.
In remote areas with limited development, ecotourism
ventures can improve the quality of life, self esteem,
and well-being of local and indigenous communities.
Although the concept is full of good intentions, in practice
the impact has not always been positive. The arrival
and presence of tourists in small villages and remote
areas can affect local residents at the individual, family,
and community level. Worse, people have been marketed
like objects, community contributions have been trivialized
and locals have received limited access to decision making.
In fact, a number of ecotourism projects in the Amazon
have been based on the same model oil companies and rubber
merchants used in the past: give Indians the least possible,
obtain the most, and do not teach them too much, lest
they become hard to control.
Additionally, few examples of exclusively community-owned
projects have succeeded. The lack of know-how and experience,
this limited funding and no understanding of international
marketing strategies, has loft most of the small community-based
projects out of business.
Kapawi represents a new model in the implementation of
sustainable ecotourism built on a respectful relationship
between a private enterprise and the Achuar. The objectives
of Kapawi (andCANODROS S.A.. its tour operator) are twofold:
1)
To implement a $2 million project in an indigenous territory
by leasing their land, sharing benefits- and
passing the know-how and installations to the Achuar.
At the end of a 15 year period, the project will be owned
and managed by the Achuar. Meanwhile Kapawi seeks to
recover the investment and to obtain a profit.
2) To facilitate the Achuar's request for partnership
with the outside world by contributing to the creation
of a not-for-profit organization that provides access
to technical expertise and funding for a variety of Achuar
projects. These projects are all intended to enhance
the Achuar’s ability to manage integration with the modern
world on their own terms and to defend their lands against
encroachment.
These two objectives are based on a unique philosophy
Any project with the Achuar must build structures that
allow long-term autonomous management. Thus, much attention
is placed on training, education, and efforts that support
the Achuar's governing federation and leadership.
The economic model of Kapawi is grounded in a recognition
that a sustainable sense of success is based on taking
pride in the value of our contributions to others rather
than taking pride in the value of our possessions. By
extension, this means striving for quality in the use
of the power and capital at the disposal rather than
working to accumulate more money and power over others
as primary goals. In this view, profit and wealth may
help us to contribute, but they do not themselves constitute
business success, Kapawi can be seen as a low-profit
activity. Perhaps its investors could have made a better
profit by buying a pesticide factory or building a luxurious
hotel on the Caribbean. But. despite its apparent low
productivity. Kapawi fits within a sustainable framework,
while the other options seek to maximize profits
Defining success by what one gives rather than what one
has is neither a new practice nor an overly idealistic
view. It is rooted deep in history and human nature,
and is more basic than wealth or money. Having learned
from other projects that paternalistic or charity attitudes
lead to serious disruptions of the social structure.
Kapawi conceives the exchange of goods (monetary or not)
only as a reciprocal transaction.
Kapawi, the most expensive ecotourism project in the
Ecuadorian Amazon Basin will be given entirely to the
Achuai in the year 2011. The land where Kapawi is situated
is rented not purchased, and a rent has been set at $2000
a month, increasing at a yearly increment of seven percent.
At the end of the period, the amount paid as rent will
total over $600.000. In addition, a $10 fee is charged
to every visitor for the exclusive benefit of the community.
With an estimated average of 1000 passengers per year,
this will contribute an additional $150.000 through the
year 2011.
The economic influence within the local communities has
also been significant. Before the Kapawi Project most
of the people based their external economy on cattle
ranching. Today. 16 out of 52 Achuar communities members
of the federation, base a significant percentage of their
economy on ecotourism and are discussing how to limit
cattle ranching and then eliminate it. In these communities,
up to 45 percent of their total income comes from direct
employment (22 Achuar employees work in Kapawi and women
in neighboring communities work doing the laundry), and
supplying products to the ecotourism project. In addition,
sales of handicrafts represent 21 percent of an average
family's income in these communities.
CANODROS S.A, is also a receiver in the exchange The
Achuar provide wood, palm thatch, and other building
materials, access to their existing airstrips, an agreement
to restrict hunting to the areas outside the ecotourism
zone, and knowledge about their culture and environment
Although not measurable, this last contribution has probably
been their most valuable contribution, In order to maintain
high standards of service, CANODROS S.A. has created
a structure in order to tram the Achuar personnel, ranging
from biology lo carpentry.
Flying over Kapawi in a small aircraft, it is difficult
to differentiate the lodge from local communities. Twenty
thatch roofed houses, aligned along a small lagoon, look,
from the air, like a rather unimpressive project. By
combining the vernacular architecture with exogenous,
low-impact technologies, it was possible to create a
suitable structure for ecotourism.
The Achuar house is considered a magnificent example
of an appropriate design for the conditions of the region.
But an Achuar house is more than that; it is a reproduction
of a cosmos on a small scale. The house, elliptic and
harmonious, is to an Achuar what a womb is to a fetus.
Actually, in Achuar. womb (uchi jeej shares the same
root with house (jca). Built along an east-west axis,
this structure follows the path of the -.an. offering
cooler temperatures. This type of architecture is the
most suitable for tropical climates: the heat of the
sun on (he thatched roof produces connective currents
of fresh air that force the warm air to pass through
the thatch of the roofing. Also, this structure does
not isolate the visitor from the environment Between
the shelter and the forest there is a continuum, not
an obstacle.
Kapawi incorporates low-impact technologies, such as
solar energy, trash management, black water treatment,
and electric and four-stroke outboard motors, in its
overall design. Kapaw i accommodates 70 people at the
most, including guests and employees, and is not much
larger than a medium-size Achuar village. Actively participating
at different organizational levels of the Achuar Federation.
Kapawi respects and encourages the political system adopted
by the Achuar integrating individuals, communities, associations,
and the federation itself in the decision-making process.
Although ecotourism and the Kapawi project sometimes
produce community conflicts, most of the social problems
have been solved via open discussions with community
members The tool used to measure the social impact is
generally sensibility and a continuous feed-back from
the surrounding communities. In order to minimize social
and cultural impacts, the visitors are advised not to
take photographs of people, not to give away present!,
or money, to respect their traditions, and to preserve
the local environment, among other things.
Ecotourisim means quite simply "ecologically sound
tourism" or "ecologically sensitive tourism." This
implies that we must care for the place visited as much
as we care for and appreciate home. Community-based ecotourism
includes a new component, where the visitor must care
for the culture visited, as much as that culture would
like to be respected.
Arnaldo Rodriguez is the biologist
who co-developed the Kapawi Ecological Reserve. He has
worked for several
years with the Achuar in various projects, including
suitable education, administration, and long-term management.
He is a founding member of the Paehamama Alliance. |