Tribal Channel (Apple TV)
Summary: Films from Survival International - the movement for tribal peoples. For PC, Mac or Apple TV. Find our other video podcast for videos suitable for your iPod or iPhone.
- Visit Website
- RSS
- Artist: Survival International
- Copyright: 2018, Survival International
Podcasts:
In a small patch of rainforest in Brazil, the last six survivors of a genocide dance.
The Batak of the Philippines reveal the devastation caused to their land by illegal loggers and resin-tapping.
An eyewitness account of the violence that erupted after the Peruvian government decided to break up an indigenous roadblock by force.
The Peruvian government has denied they exist but the evidence is irrefutable. In this short video Teodoro, a local man, describes his encounter with an uncontacted tribe.
Brazil's uncontacted tribes are being devastated by disease, but there is hope.
This short film, narrated by Joanna Lumley, tells the story of the Dongria Kondh's resistance. Vedanta are intent on constructing an open-cast mine on their land and thereby destroying the tribes sacred mountain and with it everything they know. The Supreme Court has given the Dongria three months to decide whether to allow mining in the hills.
The Awá are one of only two nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes left in Brazil but their forest is dwindling as settlers and cattle ranchers invade.
Just as the pilgrims 'bought' Manhattan from the Indians for a handful of trinkets, Vedanta are trying to cheat the Dongria out of their sacred mountain.
Over one hundred tribes around the world choose to reject contact with outsiders. They are the most vulnerable peoples on the planet.
On India's remote Andaman Islands, the world's most isolated tribe has lived alone for up to 55,000 years.
Peru's uncontacted tribes are facing the gravest threat in their history as loggers and oil companies encroach.
In a small patch of rainforest in Brazil, the last six survivors of a genocide dance.
The Penan of Sarawak express anguish over the logging of their land.
An eyewitness account of the violence that erupted after the Peruvian government decided to break up an indigenous roadblock by force.
Brazil's uncontacted tribes are being devastated by disease, but there is hope.