Paraguayan War In 1864 the
Paraguayan War started, pitting
Paraguay against the Triple Alliance, composed of the
Brazilian Empire,
Uruguay, and
Argentina. This conflict had substantial impacts on indigenous peoples in nowadays
Mato Grosso do Sul. The Terena people are noted to have fought jointly with Brazilian military forces during the late 1860s, and sustained substantial losses and attacks on their territories from adversarial troops. The war caused significant land disruption in the region of the Miranda and
Aquidauana rivers, causing indigenous populations there, including the Terena, to disperse. As inhabitants of that region, the Terena fled into near, densely forested regions until the official establishment of their land borders in the early 20th century.
Aftermath of the war: "Time of Servitude" At the end of the war in 1870, previous Terena land holdings and village territories were quickly taken into ownership by previous members of the
Brazilian military and other influential government figures who held political sway after the war. As a result, conflict arose between the Terena, other Guaná subgroups, and the new inhabitants of their lands. These indigenous peoples were venturing back to their previous territories, but were faced with new inhabitants who demanded indigenous labor in return for allowing them to live there. This is referred to the Terena as the "time of servitude".
Land establishment Under the establishment of the
Serviço de Proteção aos Índios (SPI) in 1910, the state of Mato Grosso requested official Terena Indigenous reserves. Two of these, deemed
Cachoeirinha and Taunay, were granted by the state government. Under this agreement, the Terena people were placed under a
reservation-like system. In this system, the Terena were designated about 2,000
hectares, a decrease from their original 17,000 hectares of land in the region. In 1988, an amendment was made to the
Constitution of Brazil, featuring a new declaration that, within five years of the provision's creation, traditional ancestral lands would be returned to groups of Brazilian indigenous populations. However, modern-day tensions have grown as many lands have yet to be returned.
Buriti Farm incident The Buriti Farm incident has become a representation of growing land rights tensions within the Brazilian Indigenous population, specifically pertaining to the Terena peoples. Though violent land disputes between indigenous individuals and state government forces aren't necessarily uncommon in Brazil, the Terena have proved to be a force to be reckoned with through this incident. On May 15th, 2013, a group of hundreds of Terena peoples moved to re-occupy a parcel of land, now owned by a local politician and rancher, that they believe is part of their indigenous ancestral territory. In 2010, the Terena were told that they would receive 42,000 acres their village could utilize as farm land, however, when the legal process halted they considered the land their ancestral home and reoccupied it. At the end of May, the owner of the farm filed a court order to have the Terena occupants removed forcibly. After two weeks of occupation and the court order, the Terena occupants were forcibly evicted on May 30 by local police as gunfire rang out in the early morning hours. One Terena member, 35-year-old Osiel Gabriel, was killed by gunfire initially under unclear circumstances. The incident drew national attention as he was thought to have been shot by
pistoleiros, who are gunmen or assassins hired discretely by farm owners in attempts to rid the farmland of indigenous peoples. This demonstrates the growing tensions between farmers and indigenous peoples in Brazil, where tribes on indigenous reserves say that farmers continue to not respect legal boundaries established. However, it was found that Gabriel was actually shot and killed by uniformed policemen during the eviction, and three others were also seriously injured.
Demography Over the course of the past three centuries, the Terena have experienced notable demographic shifts. Among Brazilian indigenous groups, the Terena are one of the few that have actually experienced growth in population numbers. When they migrated into Brazilian territory in the mid 1840s, the Terena population consisted of approximately 3,000 individuals. A century later, in 1950, they numbered 3,800. Data notes that 30 years later in the 1980s, they numbered 12,000. Demographically speaking, a large number of the causes of death prior to the mid-20th century were infectious diseases, namely
tuberculosis. ==Society and way of life ==