The Kogi people, the "Elder Brothers" of humanity, live hidden on a mountain they call "The Heart of the World." This is the true story of how they revealed themselves to warn us of the impending calamity we are creating.
I picked this book out due to my curiosity that you hear lots about the Inca, Maya, and Aztec societies, but almost nothing of the tribes that settled elsewhere in Central and South America. In particular, Colombia (okay my husband is from there and he's told me of large city ruins, offerings of gold that he saw in the Museo del Oro, etc.) which you never hear of. Granted, it's particularly difficult to do research in Colombia, but back to the book. The author who is a filmmaker for BBC went to Colombia on another assignment, heard of the Lost City and decided it would make a good movie and after approval from BBC preceded to make a movie on the generally named Tairona Indians. He is not an anthropologist, but had anthropologists working with him. The Kogi Tribe (the main focus of his movie/book) are as he puts it "the last surviving high civilisation of pre-Columbian America". In fact, the Natives routinely refer to any non-Native as Columbus, and it's amazing Ereira was able to talk with them at all, because most people that reappear after trying to see them are often beaten and sent back, that is if they survive the jungle, narcos, paramilitaries, banditos, regular military, etc. What's really amazing is that their heartland in the Sierra Nevadas is only 20 miles inland from Santa Marta, a large city on the coast that's been around since Columbus. But again, back to the book--it was fascinating...at first. The descriptions of the tribe and their social systems, along with Colombia's society, is really the best part. However, Ereira is not an anthropologist (I wish he was) and the Kogi only agreed to make the film if he would relay the message they had for the rest of the world. Their message is that the world is heating up, the water drying up, the lifeblood going out, we are taking out to much petrol, coal, minerals, gold, etc, and soon the world will end because of it. (The Kogi believe they are the caretakers of the world and we their less responsible younger brothers.) While rather amazing for it's close approximation to global warming , repeated over and over for 200+ pages it gets rather dull. I believe the National Geographic did a similar report from them two or so years ago in a much more succint fashion. I would recommend that article after the first couple chapters are over that describe the tribe's society to save yourself some time.
Traditional Kogi religion is closely related to Kogi ideas about the structure and functioning of the Universe, and Kogi cosmology is ... a model for survival in that it moulds individual behaviour into a plan of actions or avoidances that are oriented toward the maintenance of a viable equilibrium between Man’s demands and Nature’s resources. In this manner the individual and society at large must both carry the burden of great responsibilities which, in the Kogi view, extend not only to their society but to the whole of mankind.
The message and moral authority of the Kogi deserve 5 stars, whatever the book's literary merits.
Book Crawler This is an amazing book about the Tairona Kogi, their history and about the making of the documentary of the same name. A must read for anyone with an interest in the environment, anthropology, aboriginal people's history in South America and the rights of aboriginal people and cultural preservation.
A Heartbreaking awakening of the Kogi indians of Colombia, whose mission and beliefs is to protect our planet from the ecological holocaust caused by modern civilization. It makes you think about the hard beatings done to the indigenous people in America
Abandoned after reading about half of it. The writing just isn't very good and the author doesn't seem to be a very informed person in general... He's a tv producer who forwards his career with a book deal. Maybe the doc this book is based on is better