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The state of Acre, known as the land of rubber
and the land of Chico Mendes, is seeking another title: the land
of green
tourism. There is no lack of reasons why it should not get it,
seeing that 95% of its total area - 153.149,9 km2 is covered
by the Amazonian
Forest, with a huge variety of flora and fauna. The point of entry
for this "green tour" is the capital Rio Branco, which
lived its apogee of splendor during the golden age of rubber, extracted
from the plantations which covered the area on which the city now
stands. The tour includes, among others, the towns of Plácido de Castro and Vale do Juruá.
Acre was the last piece of territory to be annexed
to Brazil, and for this reason it was called "little brother" by the
São Paulo writer Mário de Andrade in his poem "Noturno
de Belo Horizonte". Until the beginning of the twentieth century,
the little brother was part of Bolivia, a corner of land lost in
the extreme west of Amazônia. It was migrants from the North
East region of Brazil who started to penetrate the region in search of rubber.
In 1903, the rubber workers, led by Jose Plácido de Castro,
declared Acre to be part of Brazil. This was the beginning of diplomatic
negotiations which were only concluded with firm action by Barão
do Rio Branco, the then Secretary for Foreign Affairs, who defined
the basis for negotiations between Brazil and Bolivia, when Acre
was definitively incorporated into Brazil. Although it was assimilated
administratively in 1904 as the territory of Acre, it only became
politically integrated in 1962 when it became the state of Acre.
Rubber guaranteed the economic survival of the
territory for more than a decade. With the fall in international
rubber prices, the
unregulated exploitation of timber began, and with it the devastation
of the Amazon Forest. In an attempt to put a brake on this unregulated
development, which actually put the survival of the people of Amazônia
at risk, a strong trade union movement of rubber workers under
the leadership of Chico Mendes grew up at the end of the 1970s.
Internationally known for his fight against deforestation and in
favor of environmental conservation, he was assassinated in 1988
because he had come into conflict with the local landowning elite
and their economic interests in the region.
Today the economy of the state is centered around
cattle ranching, agriculture, rubber and Brazil nuts. Rubber,
the product which brought hundreds of people from the North East region of Brazil
to colonize the territory, is still important, being one of the
principal export items of the state, along with timber and Brazil
nuts. Acre has a free trade area in Brasiléia, 230 kilometers
from Rio Branco, on the frontier with Bolivia. Apart from its economic
importance, the town's other attraction is the beauty of its majestic Brazil nut trees.
The Federal Government has defined and regulated
several areas devoted to rubber tapping, among which that in
Juruá, which carries the name of Chico Mendes. There is also in the state the
Colônia Agrícola 5000, a community of the followers
of the Santo Daime sect, whose principal ritual is the consumption
of a tea made from a herb called ayauhasca. Drunk for centuries
by the Indians of the Amazonian parts of Peru and Colombia, the
herb is the origin of the sect. Ayauhasca is a kind of liana and
is soaked and then boiled until it becomes a tea which, according
to many of those who have drunk it, produces visions. There is
much controversy about its effects. For many people it is an hallucinogenic
drug, for others it is nothing more than a harmless tea, used in
rituals and for treating various illnesses. In Brazil it is called
Santo Daime because the founder of the sect, Raimundo Irineu Serra,
used to pray using the words "dai-me força, dai-me
luz" (give me strength, give me light).
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