Movimento, educação escolar indígena e os processos de (re)afirmações dos Kambeba na região do médio solimões-AM.
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Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
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The present work aimed to investigate the formation of the indigenous movement and the role 
of Indigenous School Education in the processes of (re)affirmation of the ethnic identities of 
the Kambeba, in the Middle Solimões/AM region. The same is based on the qualitative 
approach, having as methodological procedure the bibliographical and documental research. 
The theoretical foundation was based on Bartolomé (2006), Porro (1992), Barth (1995), 
Fontella (2020), Cunha (1992), Gondin (2007), Maciel (2007), Monteiro (1999), Santos 
(19993), Sampaio (2012), Faulhaber (1998), Luciano (2006), Oliveira (2004), among others. 
The results show that indigenous populations were not passive social actors in the 
colonization process and other moments in history. At all stages of the process of meeting the 
non-indigenous, the indigenous people promoted actions that denote their protagonism. In the 
second half of the 20th century, the indigenous movement articulated different indigenous 
groups in Brazil. This movement was political, as these populations began to claim rights 
such as health, land and education. This movement was ethnic in nature, as it allowed for the 
affirmation of ethnic groups that remained silent due to the colonization process. In the 
Middle Solimões region, effective participation in the indigenous movement resulted in the 
ethnic affirmation of the Kambeba. In the last two decades, the Kambeba of the Boará and 
Boarazinho communities, located on the left bank of the Solimões River, municipality of 
Tefé/AM, have continued the process of affirmation amid the influences of the so-called 
dominant society. These populations, even without the support of local government entities, 
promote Indigenous School Education based on their own learning processes that contribute 
to the strengthening of their identities and here we analyze the experience. Thus, the trajectory 
of the Kambeba reveals only one of the facets of the countless indigenous groups that are part 
of the immense mosaic of populations that inhabit the Amazon and that need to be known not 
only by academia, but by society as a whole.
