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Gifts to Support the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN)

Gifts to Support the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN)

The Sarayaku Art Project: 

Uplifting Indigenous Women in the Ecuadorian Amazon

The Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International and We Play Well Together are honored to partner with the Kichwa women of Sarayaku in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador.

We're thrilled to now be supporting this group by importing and selling their beautiful beaded jewelry on our website. We Play Well Together has donated funds to purchase the first round of artwork from the Sarayaku Women in addition to donating website and logistical support to send them to you.

All profits from your purchases will directly support the livelihood of the craftswomen, and their advocacy work to protect the forest through Amazon Women Defenders of the Jungle (Mujeres Amazonicas Defensoras).

Seed Bead Jewelry

Protecting the Amazon Rainforest and a Way of Life 

The Sarayaku are Kichwa-speaking people of approximately 1,400 inhabitants who live in a village made up of 7 community centers in the rain forest of the southern Amazon in the province of Pastaza, Ecuador.

They have struggled for over two decades to protect their villages, the forest, and their way of life after the government of Ecuador granted the oil company Compañía General de Combustibles (CGC) license for oil operations in Sarayaku territory. To survey for oil, the CGC planted explosives throughout the forests, sparking protests from the villagers.  When the community protested peacefully, setting up "Camps of Peace and Life" in the forest, the government sent armed troops. 

The struggle continued for years.  Then the Sarayaku brought a case against the Ecuadorian government to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and the court ruled in their favor in 2012. The IACHR ruling was an extraordinary victory, not only for the Sarayaku but for the rights of all Indigenous communities in the Amazon facing similar threats. (You can learn more by watching this 2012 film Children of the Jaguar.)  

Natural Local Seeds - Handmade Jewelry

Lovely intricate necklaces made with a variety of beads made of locally gathered Amazon seeds all feature stunning designs and ingenuity.

Browse Seed Bead Jewelry

 

Colorful Small Beads - Handmade Jewelry

This collection includes bracelets, earrings, and necklaces entirely made of small colorful beads. Each one is beautiful and carefully crafted by the Kichwa women of Sarayaku in the Amazon rainforest of Ecuador.

Peruse Beaded Jewelry

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