The ‘Church of the Poor and the Earth’ in Latin American Mining Conflicts
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Religion in the Literature on Mining Conflicts in Latin America
3. Laudato Si’ and the Greening of the Church of the Poor
4. Catholic Ideas and Organizations at Ecuador’s Mining Frontier
4.1. Mobilizing God’s Gift in Favor and against Mining
4.2. Catholic Actors’ Role in the Mirador Conflict
4.3. Indigenous Cosmologies and the Historical Legacy of Catholic Missions in the Amazon
4.4. The Gift of Women: Religion and Gender in Struggles against Mining
5. Concluding Remarks on the “Church of the Poor and the Earth” in Mining Conflicts
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Although this debate falls outside the scope of this paper, it is worthwhile to mention that the narrative of ‘David vs. Goliath’ struggles that dominates the literature is increasingly being questioned. Various authors have sought to destabilize the image of transnational, capitalist companies pitted against unified, resistant local communities by pointing at the diverse community responses that mining yields (van Teijlingen 2019b; Gajardo 2021) or by reporting on community members setting up mining enterprises themselves (Marston and Perreault 2017; Lalander et al. 2020). |
2 | The notion of the Church of the Poor comes from the work of Gustavo Gutierrez, a famous Peruvian liberation theologian (Nickoloff 1993), and has become a popular term to emphasize the Church’s concerns with the poor and socially marginalized promoted by Liberation Theologians (see Holden and Jacobson 2009 for a more elaborate account on the term). |
3 | The notion of ‘the Church of the Poor and the Earth’ that I use here and in the title of this article connects Gutierrez’ typification of the role of the Catholic Church with Laudato Si’s call to “hear the Cry of the Earth and the Cry of the Poor” (Francis 2015, p. 35). With references to ‘the Church of the Poor and the Earth’ I thus refer to the ambition of the Catholic Church to place ecological and social concerns at the centre of its agenda. |
4 | Abya Yala is the name indigenous people use to refer to the region that is now known as Latin America. |
5 | Other authors take this analysis further and look into the multiple ontologies that are at play in mining conflicts (de la Cadena 2015; Li 2013; Escobar 2016). |
6 | The role of religion, spirituality and rituals did receive some attention by anthropologists studying mining communities and labour situation in Latin American mines in the 1970s and 1980s (Taussig 1980; Nash 2001). Although these works have become important contributions to the literature on miners’ culture and popular Andean culture in general, I focus here on the literature on the boom of mining since the 2000s and related conflicts. |
7 | |
8 | The moral conscience and authority that the Catholic Church enjoys across Latin America are often related to the Catholic Church’s key-role during the dictatorships, civil wars and state repression that swept Latin America during the 1960–1980s. Inspired by liberation theology, Church authorities in many countries stood up against oppressive regimes or functioned as impartial observers of peace negotiations (Barger 2018). |
9 | The synodal process took two years and involved a consultation with about 87,000 Amazonian people and the participation of indigenous and women groups. In 2019, the world’s bishops as well as involved organizations met in Rome for 3 weeks as to discuss the final document of the synodal process, titled ‘The Amazon: New paths for the Church and for an Integral Ecology” (Duncan 2020). |
10 | The Catholic Church’s interest in reconnecting with indigenous groups and with environmental concerns should also be seen within the context of expansion of the Evangelism across the continent, and the competition between both religions for the ‘hearts and minds’ of particularly indigenous communities that this expansion has ensued (Berry and Albro 2018; Hagopian 2009). |
11 | See https://www.vaticannews.va/en/vatican-city/news/2019-10/synthesis-synod-eighth-general-congregation.html; (accessed on 12 August 2021). The increased openness to indigenous cosmologies shown during the Amazonian Synod has led to fierce critique by more conservative forces within the Church on whether or not this implied idolatry (Duncan 2020). |
12 | “A Radical Vatican?” by Naomi Klein in the New Yorker, published 10 July 2015. https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/a-visit-to-the-vatican; (accessed on 24 July 2021). |
13 | “Year-old Laudato Si’ has stirred up action for Earth” by the National Catholic Reporter, published 16 June 2016. https://www.ncronline.org/blogs/eco-catholic/encyclical-boost-year-old-laudato-si-has-stirred-action-earth; (accessed on 21 July 2021). |
14 | See the petition titled “Contra Recentia Sacrilegia. Protest against Pope Francis’s sacrilegious acts” launched in 2019. https://www.contrarecentiasacrilegia.org/; (accessed on 23 July 2021). |
15 | See https://www.ncronline.org/blogs/earthbeat/eco-catholic/francis-mining-industry-need-radical-paradigm-change; (accessed on 10 August 2021). |
16 | Buen Vivir is also refered to as the Good Living or Sumak Kawsay (in Kichwa). With origins in indigenous cosmologies, this concept sets forth a way of living in harmony with Pachamama that is presented as an alternative to mainstream development. See (Lalander 2016; Beling et al. 2021) for further debates about Buen Vivir. |
17 | Interview with Gloria Chicaiza in Quito, May 2012. |
18 | Interview with leader of a peasant group opposing the Mirador project, Gualaquiza. |
19 | Interview with indigenous leader in Tundayme, January 2015. |
20 | President Rafael Correa during an inaugural speech of a school in Huaquillas, April 2010. |
21 | See van Teijlingen (2016) for a more in-depth analysis of the historical origins and present-day expressions of these sentiments. |
22 | Interview with a male mestizo peasant, El Pangui, October 2015. |
23 | Letter by the Viccariate of Zamora, issued in May 2014. |
24 | Interview with mestizo man and woman and one of the first settlers of San Marcos, August 2015. |
25 | See for more detailed description of this counter-territorialization van Teijlingen (2019a). |
26 | Address to the national congress in 1871 by President García Moreno. See Esvertit Cobes (2001, p. 559) for full quote. |
27 | The words of Padre José Manuel Plaza and Friar José Preto cited by Celi Jaramillo (1998) and Rubenstein (2002), respectively. |
28 | Once “acculturated”, alumni were seen as key actors in multiplying the efforts of the mission, as they were encouraged to return to their homes to build new chapels and create “centres” of converted Shuar across the region (Rubenstein 2005). |
29 | Interview with a Shuar man from the surroundings of El Pangui, November 2015. To recruit students, missionaries often resorted to ‘kidnapping’ Shuar children. This forced separation of children from their families was legitimized by the “low morality” that the missionaries found within Shuar families (Salazar 1989, p. 64). |
30 | Examples of these are the Shuar association Pueblo Shuar Arutam (PSHA), Interprovincial Federation of Shuar Centres (FICSH), Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of the Ecuadorian Amazon (CONFENIAE) and Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE). |
31 | Interviews with colono men from El Pangui and Guisme (including local government officials) in November 2014, January 2014, October 2015 and November 2015. |
32 | Interviews with a Shuar woman from the Mirador community, October 2015, and a Shuar woman from Tundayme, November 2015. |
33 | This is exemplified by the case of José Tendetza, a Shuar man and critic of the Mirador mine who was found death in 2014. The local police initially buried him in an anonymous grave. When his family demanded the exhumation of the corpse, they found out that his hands and legs had been tied together with a rope, and his body revealed traces of a violent death. Only then did the police start to investigate the murder but it has remained unsolved up to the writing of this article. |
34 | This finding is in line with (Rohloff 2010) critique on liberation theologians in Guatemala. |
35 | Querida Amazonía does refer to the history of colonization in the Amazon, and also admits that “the wheat was mixed with the tares, and that the missionaries did not always take the side of the oppressed” (p. 15). The document however mainly emphasizes the ‘emancipatory’ and almost heoric role of missionaries in the history of colonization: “many missionaries came to bring the Gospel, leaving their homes and leading an austere and demanding life alongside those who were most defenceles. […] It was often the priests who protected the indigenous peoples from their plunderers and abusers…” (Francis 2020, pp. 14–15). |
36 | Interview with settler woman and her son, November 2014. |
37 | Paragraph 101 of the Instrumentum Laboris, published by the Vatican in June 2018. See: http://secretariat.synod.va/content/sinodoamazonico/en/documents/final-document-of-the-amazon-synod.html; (accessed on 20 July 2021). |
38 | Personal communication, June 2020. |
39 | See their letter to the President here: https://amazonwatch.org/assets/files/2018-03-mandate-from-amazonian-women-grassroots-defenders.pdf; (accessed on 12 June 2021). |
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van Teijlingen, K. The ‘Church of the Poor and the Earth’ in Latin American Mining Conflicts. Religions 2022, 13, 443. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050443
van Teijlingen K. The ‘Church of the Poor and the Earth’ in Latin American Mining Conflicts. Religions. 2022; 13(5):443. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050443
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan Teijlingen, Karolien. 2022. "The ‘Church of the Poor and the Earth’ in Latin American Mining Conflicts" Religions 13, no. 5: 443. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050443