In 2021, Suruí and three other activists from the environmental group Engajamundo, along with two activists from the international group
Fridays for Future, sued officials in the Brazilian government for changing official carbon emissions calculations in order to circumvent
Paris Agreement restrictions. Later that year, Suruí was selected to be a speaker at the annual
United Nations Climate Change Conference, where she criticized attendees for their lack of attention to deforestation issues. The appearance significantly raised her international profile, leading Spanish newspaper
El País to call Suruí "the most well-known Brazilian environmental activist in the world". The film covers three years of conflicts between indigenous people and the farmers and land developers trying to use indigenous land for their own purposes.
The Territory was nominated for multiple
Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Cinematography For A Nonfiction Program, Outstanding Directing For A Documentary/Nonfiction Program, and Exceptional Merit In Documentary Filmmaking. Suruí and her fellow filmmakers won the Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. In 2023, Suruí and her mother were taken hostage, along with British film director
Heydon Prowse and a filmmaking crew, by a group of armed men, but were eventually released. ==References==