Amazon, the lost world
AMAZON
This is a classic case of a story that you will never believe it unless you see it with your own eyes. Far away from modernism, technology, pollution, corruption and hostilities that some of us see on TV, other of us actually live in, there is a lost but clean and so pure wold. It's an awe-inspiring place where people work together to survive and share in the beauty that surrounds them, protecting the nature and living in communion with the nature. Where poverty as we intend it does not exist, it is just a simple way of living, where food is in abundance but never discarded. Also the green you'll see it's a shade of green that you'll never see anywhere else!
Below you will see some images of the community from Boca Da Valeria, Brazil and a few villages around.
TRIBES OF AMAZON - MANAUS
Brazil’s Amazon is home to more uncontacted tribes than anywhere in the world. There are thought to be at least 100 isolated groups in the rainforests, according to the government’s Indian Affairs Department. Umuri Diro Mahsa is one of them and you can enjoy these amazing images below.
This is a classic case of a story that you will never believe it unless you see it with your own eyes. Far away from modernism, technology, pollution, corruption and hostilities that some of us see on TV, other of us actually live in, there is a lost but clean and so pure wold. It's an awe-inspiring place where people work together to survive and share in the beauty that surrounds them, protecting the nature and living in communion with the nature. Where poverty as we intend it does not exist, it is just a simple way of living, where food is in abundance but never discarded. Also the green you'll see it's a shade of green that you'll never see anywhere else!
Below you will see some images of the community from Boca Da Valeria, Brazil and a few villages around.
TRIBES OF AMAZON - MANAUS
Umuri Diro Mahsa
Brazil’s Amazon is home to more uncontacted tribes than anywhere in the world. There are thought to be at least 100 isolated groups in the rainforests, according to the government’s Indian Affairs Department. Umuri Diro Mahsa is one of them and you can enjoy these amazing images below.
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