Brazil's Indian Protection Service (''Serviço de Proteção ao Índio'', abbreviated as SPI) was a government agency created to administer
indigenous affairs. It was created by President
Nilo Peçanha
Nilo Procópio Peçanha (; 2 October 1867 – 31 March 1924) was a Brazilian politician who served as the seventh president of Brazil. He was governor of Rio de Janeiro (1903–1906), then elected the fifth vice president of Brazil in 1906. H ...
in 1910 in response to pressure from Marshal
Cândido Mariano da Silva Rondon and international accusations of indigenous genocide.
It was the first federal agency in Brazil to focus on the protection of indigenous peoples from violence and persecution.
Influence of Cândido Rondon
Cândido Rondon was the first and most influential director of the agency, and was invited to the role by Brazilian Minister of Agriculture Rodolfo Miranda. He emphasized interacting with indigenous peoples in a peaceful way with the motto "Die if need be, but never kill." His policies included protecting indigenous peoples from attacks, guaranteeing titles to the lands they occupied, and restoring lands previously usurped by whites. However, he also aimed to assimilate indigenous peoples into the Brazilian
nation-state
A nation state, or nation-state, is a political entity in which the state (a centralized political organization ruling over a population within a territory) and the nation (a community based on a common identity) are (broadly or ideally) con ...
. In a letter accepting the invitation to become the first director of the SPI, he said "As a
Positivist and member of the Positivist Church of Brazil, I am convinced that our indigenes should incorporate themselves into the West..."
These ideas and policies shaped government relations with indigenous peoples for the next four decades.
Under Rondon and Peçanha’s leadership, legislation was created which attempted to secure the rights of indigenous people to their native lands and customs while also facilitating the establishment of new Brazilian settlements in indigenous regions.
Disbandment and recreation
Shortly after Rondon left the organization in 1915, it became “riddled with corruption and double dealing,” however Rondon soon rejoined the agency and successfully made it somewhat honorable. However, by the early 1960s it was an international scandal, and it was disbanded in 1967, after allegations of atrocities surfaced in the
Figueiredo Report
The Figueiredo Report is an investigative report by public prosecutor Jader de Figueiredo Correia, published in 1967, detailing the crimes committed by the Indigenous Protection Service (Serviço de Proteção ao Índio) against the native peopl ...
.
["What Future for the Amerindians of South America? Minority Rights Group Report 15"]
PDF
. ''Minority Rights Group''. p. 20. That same year, It was replaced by the
National Indian Foundation (''Fundação Nacional do Índio'') or FUNAI, which is still active today.
Other names
* National Service for Protection of the Indians
References
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Government agencies of Brazil
Indigenous affairs ministries
Indigenous politics in Brazil
1910 establishments in Brazil
1967 disestablishments in Brazil
Government agencies established in 1910
Government agencies disestablished in 1967
Defunct government agencies