Mapuche woman's clothes, Chile, by quiquegrapher
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Mapuche woman's clothes, Chile, by quiquegrapher

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Almost a year has passed since Julia del Carmen Chuñil Catricura, a 72-year-old Mapuche elder and community leader, disappeared in Máfil, southern Chile.
She was last seen on November 8, 2024, walking with her dog Cholito to check on livestock and care for her land. She never returned. Now, we have confirmation that she has been murdered.
Julia was more than a victim of disappearance, she was a dedicated defender of Indigenous Mapuche lands and culture. As president of the Putreguel Indigenous Community, she led the protection of approximately 2220 acres of native forest, an area known as “Reserva Cora Número Uno-A.” She worked tirelessly to preserve biodiversity, raise livestock sustainably, and safeguard the rights and heritage of her people. Julia was also a mother of five and a grandmother of ten, an elder deeply respected in her community.
As it usually happens with indigenous women, her work was not without risk. Since 2015, she and her family report threats and intimidation linked to attempts to seize or exploit her land.
At the moment of her and her 3-month-old sheepdog Cholito's disappearance, tire marks from an unknown pickup truck were reportedly found near her property, which made her family suspect foul play was involved.
Recently, lawyers representing Julia’s family revealed that in a court-approved phone interception, suspect Juan Carlos Morstadt (owner of an agricultural, livestock, and forestry company, descendant of German settlers who came to Valdivia, south of Chile, and started exploiting indigenous land for economic profit) was allegedly recorded saying “they burned her” in at least two conversations. The lawyers say they located a prosecutor’s memo referencing these intercepted calls, but after requesting more information, they were reportedly blocked from accessing the Prosecutor’s Office online case portal.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) has called on Chile to intensify search and investigative efforts, and the National Institute of Human Rights (INDH) is monitoring the case. Yet, nearly a year later, Julia’s family and community still have no answers.
Julia Chuñil’s disappearance is not just a tragedy, and it's not the first time an indigenous person has been murdered in Chile. Camilo Catrillanca was killed by the Chilean police. Matías Catrileo was killed by the police too. Jaime Mendoza Collío was murdered too by the police. The same police that dismissed Julia's family's concerns about her disappearance. The same police that historically has NEVER protected mapuches.
She was murdered. She deserves justice. Her family deserves the truth. The Mapuche people and all Indigenous communities deserve safety and recognition of their rights. WALLMAPU LIBRE. MARICHI WEU.
Say her name, JULIA CHUÑIL CATRICURA.
DON'T STAY SILENT ABOUT INDIGENOUS WOMEN.
JUSTICIA PARA JULIA CHUÑIL.
Back for round two! Mapuche Miku!!!!! VIVA CHILE🗣️‼️‼️‼️‼️🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱
Robert M. Gerstmann, Mujer Araucana en el Telar / Tumbas araucanas. Puerto Dominguez, Lago Budi, Chile. 1932

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The Mapuche are an Indigenous people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina whose name in Mapudungun—Mapu (“land”) + che (“people”)—literally means “people of the land,” a phrase that signals how tightly their identity is woven to territory, language, social structures and spiritual cosmology; historically concentrated in what they call Wallmapu, the Mapuche maintained autonomous polities and mounted sustained resistance first to Inca expansion and then to Spanish colonial conquest (most famously after the 1598 uprising that produced centuries of effective independence in large parts of Araucanía), before facing 19th-century military campaigns by the Chilean and Argentine states that radically altered their land base. Social life is organized around the lof (local community) and larger regional groupings, with leadership roles such as the lonko (chief) and the werken (spokesperson), and a religious-ritual specialist, the machi, who performs healing, divination and ceremonies tied to a rich cosmology of spirits (ngen) and a creator/ancestral force often referred to as Ngenechen. Mapudungun, the Mapuche language, remains a core marker of identity and is the focus of revitalization and bilingual education efforts alongside widespread use of Spanish; cultural expression includes distinctive weaving and textile arts, silverwork and jewelry, oral history, poetry, and music, as well as culinary traditions and the construction of the ruka (traditional house). Economically many Mapuche have combined subsistence and market agriculture, livestock rearing and artisanal production with wage labor in regional towns, while contemporary political life features strong movements for land recovery, cultural recognition, indigenous rights and environmental protection—driven by community assemblies, legal claims, and sometimes confrontational protest—because loss of ancestral territory to forestry, agriculture and infrastructure projects remains a central source of social tension. Despite centuries of dispossession and state pressure, Mapuche communities have shown resilient cultural adaptation: language and ritual continue to be practiced alongside modern forms of organization, and Mapuche intellectuals, artists and activists play visible roles in national debates about multiculturalism, autonomy and reparative justice; demographically they number in the hundreds of thousands, with vibrant urban and rural populations whose experiences and political demands are diverse but rooted in a shared history and commitment to cultural survival.
Coordinadora Arauco-Malleco (CAM)
A Mapuche resistance group fighting against the historic discrimination and extreme poverty their people have suffered for centuries. They are heavily focused on combating the exploitation and expropiation of their ancestral lands.
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