http://www.hakani.org/en/synopsis.asp
I have a friend that has been a missionary in Brasil for a long time, as my uncle had been though I don't know if he dealt with the indiginous population there. My friend did, and she has seen examples of some of the things in this movie. I just found out about this documentary, but I had heard a lot from my friend who had lived on the Amazon (with a well digging / filtration system installing crew)
This movie is coming under heavy attack from people who claim it's just a fundamentalist attack on tribal culture, and deny the facts of it. Facts that many people have witnessed all over the Amazon. Votes to outlaw the killing of infants with handicaps have been argued against in Brasil, again the concept of preserving the cultures as their backing. There are also people like the tourism board in Brasil who don't want any negative images lowering the number of tourists to Rio, which is a huge money maker, but the ones on the forefront are those "defending" cultures from "fundamentalists."
This isn't about attacks on culture that have been made by missionaries. I would never deny that. Things aren't quite that way today, in most cases, and certainly not in this one. It's one thing to preserve culture, but murder is not a legit part of culture. That's an issue of right and wrong, and any arguments against Abortion being murder go right out the window when you're talking about 2 year old children, in some cases.
I may have more to say on this later, but I have a class in 2 minutes.