"I'm alive." "The woman was killed." "The Indian is a dimerent humanity." "I'm mad at these Indians, stealing from us." "Get the machete ready." "Here, look, the bullet fits here, too deep, and it doesn't hit the cap." "Today I want to kill many..." "I'm not in the mood for talking." "Get him, get him..." "Go, go, get that little monkey boy." "Grab it!" "Come this way." "It's mine!" "No." "It's mine." "I saw it first." "Hold him!" "Hurry!" "This way, rush." "THE SIERRAS OF DISORDER" "Black cow Jaguar doesn't eat" "Ugly women's husband Doesn't fear another man" "Those married to the beauty Are betrayed and starve" "My horse and my woman Died both the same day for the horse I felt pity for the woman I felt joy" "A good horse is hard to find A woman you can find every day" "Get it!" "Get it!" "Get it!" "Get it!" "What is this, boy?" "Who did it?" "This is not a kids' game!" "The Beast!" "Who did this?" "This is Indian stum!" "But Indians no longer exist here!" "Mother, it's the beast, the beast!" "What beast, boy?" "What animal is it?" "Take the boy inside!" "Quickly!" "Let's go!" "Let's go!" "Let's get this beast." "Come on, everyone." "Come on!" "Come on!" "Loose it, give it." "Come on, give it here." "Come on." "Go home and tell we've got an Indian here." "Go!" "Run!" "Hi." "Do you remember me?" "Hi." "How are you?" "All right?" "Yes." "It's all right..." "I'm all right." "I was smaller at that time, wasn't I?" "He's the same..." "just the same." "But tell me..." "Look at them." "Remember?" "He was yelling, Ouch!" "Ouch!" "I'm dying!" "And you came and sucked om his tooth pain here." "And, when people gave him cigarettes, he wouldn't accept it." "How about drinking liquor?" "And you as well... 'hum, No!" "He didn't like the liquor either." "You used to jump rope with the girls." "Look here!" "Look the pictures, when you where here with us." "Look: you, Luís, Lucas' boy and I." "Here, look!" "Who's this?" "Carapiru?" "Carapiru!" "That's you, with bow and arrow." "Here, look, it's you standing by the door." "Darci, Lu..." "The girls there and I..." "All were quite small at that time." "Where's Carapiru?" "Where is he?" "Where's Carapiru?" "Carapiru." "Do you know how to swim?" "Do you?" "Swim?" "Swim?" "He didn't forget, indeed." "Good afternoon, everyone!" "Good afternoon!" "So you're back!" "What's up?" "See, he recognized me!" "I thought he wouldn't, but he did." "Man, look at him!" "You didn't think of coming back here, did you?" "And here you are!" "How have you been?" "He's just the same." "The same thing." "They took many pictures." "André took one of him, jumping rope." "They even filmed once." "They took so many pictures then of us with him and all his stum." "Here he is repairing an arrow." "It was bent and he was fixing it." "On this one he was shooting at a tree, playing with Lucas and me." "Look!" "It's me near him shooting the arrow." "Lucas!" "This one is at my place, by the door." "He enjoyed to be photographed." "Sta Luzia people wanted him to be taken away tied up... but I didn't allow it." "Then I took all his stum home." "I said, 'I'll take him home'." "So I took him there, then I got his arrows, and kept them away." "I said: 'Alone, what's he gonna do?" "He's not going to fight... because his weapons are safe'." "Mr.Tonho one day said something like this:" "'Some day, you'll see the Indian running after women all over... and the first is gonna be you'." "I said: 'Unlikely, he's not like that." "Because he wasn't indeed." "He didn't have such attitude towards women." "He scared me at night when we were in bed and he wouldn't stay still." "Then I was scared, and I asked Luís many times to unlock his door." "I opened the door, and he was completely naked." "Then he went out there and I said:" "'Now he'll be in trouble." "Without his bow and arrows, he'll die of hunger in the woods'." "I stood by the door." "He went, but then came back." "He just wanted to stool." "He was so used to us that he didn't want to leave." "One day they put him in a car, I said:" "'Bye, Avá'." "That's how I called him." "When I said bye, he jumped out of the car." "He thought he was going to leave." "He got out and didn't wanna go back in." "Hey, Robélia." "Get me some water." "Take the fish here." "Fish!" "Yes." "Put it here in the bowl." "See, take it out like this... do it." "Here, look." "Here, see." "It's manioc flour." "It's ok, it doesn't matter." "Put it here." "Do it yourself." "Hey, Déa!" "Andréa?" "Put some more!" "Over there, sit down." "Don't bother, it's all right." "Sit down!" "It's all right." "Get me a dish." "Is it good?" "Is good!" "Is it?" "Is good!" "Put it here to cool a little." "Is good!" "Is good!" "Is good!" "He's saying that it's good." "Do you want some chili pepper?" "Oh, gosh!" "My hair was this long, look." "I've cut it." "Carapiru is hungry." "Look, how fat!" "He is fat!" "Fish." "Fat!" "Look at his belly!" "The fat!" "Carapiru's fat." "Do you want to put it on Carapiru?" "Fits nice on Carapiru." "Carapiru is handsome!" "To put it on him?" "Come, Binho, let me put it on you." "Look, Binho!" "Look!" "He's cute!" "Do you want to lay on the hammock?" "You're going to sleep, aren't you?" "After you eat, you sleep, right?" "Eating and sleeping, right?" "I'll sit here." "Where's Shorty?" "Shorty 's gone to Barreiras." "I want him not to go, Luís." "I don't want him to be taken away." "I want him to stay here with us." "Is the fish good?" "Good." "He didn't eat out there in the woods, always sumering." "You're staying here with us, right?" "That's ok, right?" "Do you want some more?" "There's fish." "Give him some more fish." "I'm going there." "It's not very far." "I'm going and I'll be back soon." "Is the fish good?" "Is there any pepper, there?" "Is it good?" "There's some here." "So, is the fish good?" "Is it?" "Is the fish good?" "It is." "Is it?" "It's good." "Go!" "Go lay down a little!" "Take a nap!" "Go rest." "He's tired." "He's tired of the hard life in the woods." "Too much sun, hunger... thirst..." "Don't listen to him." "He's drunk." "Put one foot..." "But the horse won't let him hop over." "He's busy!" "No, don't kill my piglet, don't!" "No, not to eat." "Don't kill it, no!" "No!" "The little pig is mine." "Don't kill my pig, don't." "You won't take him!" "He's staying with us." "I don't have time to waste with silly talk." "You're not taking him away." "I came to take him." "It's an order, man." "An order." "Do you know what an order is?" "But you won't take him, kid!" "Of course, he will come." "No, he won't, kid." "I came to take him!" "But, you won't!" "You don't understand." "He won't go." "This is the job I came to do." "I will tie him up if I have to." "Tied up, he won't go." "Can't you understand?" "What's the matter?" "I'm saying he won't go, kid." "You don't understand!" "He's not going!" "Are you willing to keep the Indian?" "I'll keep him." "So do it, man." "You can leave now." "I don't have anything to do with any orders or any other thing." "You can leave now." "Go away." "Go away!" "Get out of here!" "Let's go home." "You're going to stay here, right?" "He won't leave." "He will stay with us." "Hi!" "How are you?" "Good morning, how are you doing?" "Good afternoon!" "Good afternoon." "How are you?" "Fine, thank you." "We stopped to ask for some information." "You know anything about an Indian who was caught, is supposed to be around?" "He's always around here, in the school, with the children... always near the school." "Everyday he is at the school." "And this school..." "Can we go to this school?" "You can." "It's really close." "Can we get there on foot?" "Yes." "You can walk there." "Let's go there, Wellinton." "Let's go!" "Ok." "So we're going there, sir." "Thanks for the information." "You wait for me here." "I'll get there slowly." "Go." "Draw a line." "'D' for dice." "'G' for goat." "'J' for jaguar." "Draw a line to this side." "Now, look at me, here, look." "Shall we do it here?" "Shall we?" "Catú?" "Good?" "You have five." "How many fingers are there?" "Catú, the tucum vine?" "Tucum." "Catú, tucum vine." "Tucum." "Ok." "Ok." "Catú, good." "Catú, all right." "Let's take a look at the alphabet letters, 'D'..." "Do your exercise." "Do your exercise." "Do the 'A', the 'E'." "Let's do it?" "Do your work, do it." "It's quite hard, isn't it, teacher?" "And despite all of this, all the dimiculties... these children still have will to learn." "It's true." "Although we do so little for them, It's very rewarding." "It can change their lives." "Avá?" "Come Avá, sit here." "Avá, look." "Sit here, Avá." "Over here." "Sit over here." "Take this book for you." "He comes here everyday." "He loves the children." "Did you come for Avá?" "Are you taking him away?" "You didn't think it was something else, did you?" "It was a man." "It was a man, but I didn't know what man was that." "I thought it was someone insane, or something like that." "Everyone got scared." "Many said: 'We don't want him here!" "We don't know where he's from'." "Do you think he saw you working the cattle?" "He could have been hiding, watching you." "He did." "He imitated my gestures, shooting... he saw me e_racting honey to eat and he did like this with his hand." "Did he say he saw you doing that?" "He knew about everyone's lives." "I think he wanted to know you as well, didn't he?" "If he was dangerous, he wouldn't let Nonato reach him." "How could we get him running so fast?" "He's used to run in the woods." "He knew how to avoid thick thorns, to get out of it." "He would never be reached." "He let them catch him, didn't he?" "He let us catch him!" "My thought was how would he survive with us." "We eat with salt... completely dimerent from his diet." "We worried about him getting ill and not being able to amord treatment." "Who first spoke to the INCRA personnel?" "Maurício?" "No, it was..." "It was Zé Ribeiro." "The other black man with him?" "Edílson." "There was another man, who I forgot the name." "It's gone." "He was the one who contacted FUNAI." "It's good, It's good." "When are you coming back here?" "You don't know." "Bye." "You grab his hand from that side." "You stay to that side, right?" "You're there, he stays in the middle, and I'll stay this side." "Where's Wellinton?" "I went to get his things." "I'm gonna miss you." "Ok." "Now let's go, let's go, give me your hand." "Yes!" "Let's go." "We've got to go." "See you soon." "Let's walk over there." "Let's go." "Loose your hand." "Let's leave." "Now you are going to travel, right?" "It's time to go home, Avá!" "All right, say good bye to him." "Well, good-bye. I didn't want you to leave, but you will." "Get in..." "Pull him here." "Let's go." "Let's go." "Pull him." "Yes." "Let's go." "Avá!" "Come Avá!" "Yes, let's go!" "I didn't want you to take him, but you work for the Indians, right?" "Guys, thanks a lot!" "Thanks for everything." "Thanks for the support and assistance." "He's getting out again." "He's getting out by the other door." "He got out from the other side." "Look at that." "Wait!" "Teacher, bring him back here." "He hasn't realized he's gonna travel." "Let me put this here inside." "Bring him back here." "Come on, Avá!" "Come on, son." "You're supposed to stay in the car." "Stay in there." "Get in and sit in there." "Wellinton, hold the door." "Bye." "Bye!" "Mind your foot!" "Ok, guys." "Teacher, thank you very much." "Guys, I'm very thankful to you." "Thanks for helping." "Thank you." "I didn't want him to leave, but..." "Yeah, but now he's got to go." "We're gonna take care of him." "Ok?" "Thanks." "Let's go." "Thank you all." "Have a safe trip." "Take good care of him." "Don't worry." "We'll do our best." "I was going to miss our friendship." "I said good-bye and leR." "I miss him very much." "I don't know if he could understand what I said. I think he didn't." "Neither could I understand what he said." "I think Carapiru was quite lucky..." "to end up around this nice people." "You're right." "That's true." "He could have met some mean people." "You're right." "That's true." "He was lucky." "And in this area which is all occupied land." "You can see that... it's been a while we're traveling and we're surrounded by these fencing build up." "Everything is quite devastated." "Too much land occupation, isn't it?" "He got by fine by hiding here and there." "If you look at him, you feel..." "Will we get there at night time?" "I think, around seven." "There's still a long way to Brasilia." "We've got to get om this dirt road." "We can't speed up." "We have to go slowly, here." "It'll be a surprise arriving with him." "Everyone thought it wasn't true." "It was a bit of a surprise for us as well." "But it's always like this." "Everybody thinks that way." "FUNAI's priority is never the Indian." "It ends up being about other things." "That's why they didn't provide us with a car... nor cared about the whole situation." "Hat?" "Good?" "Distant glance, lost... no idea about where he's going to." "What goes on on his mind?" "Wondering where he could be going to." "What journey is this?" "first contact with the civilization." "This was what happened to the Indian Avá-Canoeiro." "He reached the city ofAngical, in the north of Goiás state... completely naked as he was used to live in the forest." "He carried only a basket, a bow and arrows." "He didn't speak Portuguese." "Scared and uncomfortable with the clothes he had to wear... he was taken from Angical to Brasília... by the Isolated Indians bureau chief Sydney Possuelo." "It was in Angical that this Indian got dressed for the first time... but his clumsy way of wearing thongs showed... that getting dressed is still quite a novelty." "Avá shows little interest for the white people's culture." "Docile, he spends most of the time smiling and talks very little." "And even if he spoke more it wouldn't make a difference... because he speaks an old form of Tupi, hard to be understood." "What's going to happen to him now?" "He's going to be under a physician's care in Brasília." "As soon as the physician discharges him... he will come with us to Sierra da Mesa, to meet his relatives." "It smells like fish!" "Say, Bete..." "manioc flour might be a good idea." "It's right there." "Oh, yes!" "The flour!" "I'll get a saucer for the prickles, although he's not going to use it." "Catú?" "I'm not sure if he'll understand, but I'll put the dish here..." "Aren't you going to eat?" "Fernanda, sit over there, please?" "I will." "Can I serve you?" "Do you want some beans?" "Yes." "I want rice." "Rice?" "Now Carapirú..." "Rice?" "We're going to celebrate his visit with some wine." "In fifteen days everyone here will be speaking Tupi-Guarani." "Lulu." "Lulu, your spoon's fallen off." "Some more?" "lt's good." "Good?" "lt's good." "Beans?" "Catú." "Catú." "Fish?" "Catú?" "Do you want some more?" "It's a matter of... of having food." "He used to grab the food, wrap it up." "And he learned to eat with a spoon." "He used to eat om his hands." "Then, soon he learned to use the spoon." "Also the amount, right?" "Today he eats less." "I think he's learned that there is enough food here." "He used to make a mound because he didn't knew when he would eat ne_." "He would wrap it like this, hide it in his room... all because of what he's gone through in his life... the dimiculties he faced to survive." "Now, he is much calmer, much more controlled." "He knows that somehow he's not going to lack that." "I also remember when he got the flu." "Do you remember that?" "He arrived with a fever." "He was down with a fever for days." "That's why you didn't take him to the Indian House." "Remember you gave him a pill and had to wait, otherwise he'd spit it out?" "Oh, yes." "You gave him the medicine..." "He'd hide and pretend to swallow." "Just like a child does!" "Is good." "Is good!" "Now, he has learned" " Is good!" "Is good!" "The belly's full." "It's full." "Do you want to lay down on the couch over there?" "I'll get you a pillow so that you can lay down and sleep." "The President of FUNAI... to our land he sent... farmers, miners, lumber dealers... the President Romero Jucá had signed..." "It's not right." "I don't like it anymore." "I don't like the President of FUNAI anymore." "President of FUNAI steal our land." "I called on my people, our Caiapó people." "I came here to... change the President of FUNAI!" "Nobody does anything about it." "It smells bad in here." "Can't you smell a bad smell?" "Smells like shit!" "Shit!" "This Indian arrived and stayed 15 days with us." "And at that time we practically lived his story." "I was also lucky because I had a maid who was young... and she faced the situation quite naturally, with no constraints." "She helped him, opened the shower tap... taught him to open the sink tap." "And he had a terrible flu." "He sat on the windows and dirtied the walls." "He blew his nose and cleaned on the walls." "So there were problems which we were supposed to cope with as normal." "There was a ritual." "Sydney peed in the toilet to teach him... until the day he learned it." "One day we got home, both of us, and he had already gone to the bathroom." "He was careful with my children." "They laid on the carpet at night while we watched the news... and he helped them, moving their arms to a more comfortable position." "We had the impression that he had a family abandoned somewhere... that he had been taken away from a established family." "That was the feeling we had." "Fernanda!" "Come here so he can see how much you've grown." "Carapiru." "Look here, Carapiru." "Ask Fernanda to come here." "Look, here." "Here!" "She was very little, like this." "And here is Carapiru." "Here is Fernanda." "Here is Carapiru." "You were handsome because you were younger." "Hi, Luís." "How are you?" "How have you been?" "Luís, I need a favor." "Do you remember Geí?" "The one who came with us in the expedition to Sierra da Desordem?" "I need him in Brasília to translate something." "No?" "Who could come instead?" "Ok." "Benvindo is his name?" "Benvindo." "Ok, then." "Listen carefully:" "you get in the first bus... that leaves to São Luis... get in the first one there and come here." "I'll pick you up at the bus station." "I'll wait for you here." "Leave the rest to me." "Don't worry." "Listen, it's urgent!" "He's got slight curly hair like many Avá-Guajá do." "It's not so straight like regular Indians." "It's also a little thinner." "I'm not sure if this can indicate some degree of mixed blood." "We do not understand each other." "You don't have to reply." "You can't understand anything and neither can I." "So, that's ok." "I agree with you. I do agree." "I think you're right." "Yes." "You're totally right." "The language is not important." "What matters is the intention." "The gesture is more important than the language." "When I asked for a Guajá, I asked for a boy called Geí." "He was about 9 when he accompanied me... to Sierra do Tiracambu, Sierra da Desordem, in Maranhão State." "I've crossed it all, aiming to make contact with one Avá-Guajá group." "Then I was informed that Geí wasn't there." "But there was another young man, who was also a Guajá... and spoke Portuguese fairly well so that could be an interpreter." "I said, Ok." "I went to pick them up and took them home..." "Luís Moreira and this other teenager whose name was Benvindo." "That was the name of that Guajá boy." "So many things had gone on... between your father you and I." "When I look at you, now..." "I remember when you first... came to my place..." "I could never imagine you were that little boy..." "I took from that farm, aRer the attack." "Get it!" "Get that little monkey boy." "It's mine." "Grab it!" "I remember... when it happened and I still get all moved by... this thing that happened." "Fuck!" "I must tell you!" "The Awá-Guajá Tiramucum came from Maranhão to act as an interpreter." "Since the old Indian was first found, he was able to speak and understand." "He told his name was Carapiru." "The young Indian was surprised for this was the name ofhis father." "After long talks, the interpreter remembered a detail:" "his father had a bullet scar on the back." "And it was there." "And Carapiru just looked at his face and lowered his eyes." "Benvindo stared at him like... for about 30 seconds, looking at him." "Then he turned to me." "Luís Moreira was by my side." "He said: 'I do recognize his face'." "Those were his exact words." "I do recognize his face." "Then I reflected a bit and thought:" "'Well, of course, it's the same ethnicity, the same tribe'." "Then he said:" "'Yes, he is my father, has my father's face'." "I said: 'What?" "'" "Then Luís Moreira tells me the boy's story... the boy who came to replace Geí." "I asked for Geí." "Geí couldn't come, so they sent another one." "And then, the story of this boy is the following:" "this boy is Carapiru's son... and was with him at the time of the attack." "This boy gets tangled in a barbed wire fence they were building." "He gets hurt, then one of the farmers comes and gets the boy." "So he stayed for a few months with him to be raised." "The farmers caught him to raise him." "Until FUNAI found out about him." "When FUNAI finds out that there was an Indian being raised there..." "FUNAI went there and took the boy away to raise him properly." "And it's this boy... that later I ask for, and he's his son!" "That meeting takes place in my house." "After several attempts to identify the Avá Indian... today he's gone through the Iast test... to determine whether this lost Indian found about one month ago in Bahia... belongs to the Avá-Canoeiro or Awá-Guajá tribe." "His son is Guajá now, but he wasn't." "He was Canoeiro." "On one side there is an Avá-Canoeiro from Sierra da Mesa of Goiás... and Tiramucum, a Guajá from Maranhão who claims to be his son." "On the other side, Americans from the Summer Institute of Linguistics... and experts in Indian culture." "The conversation starts." "The Avá Indian speaks the Tupi he knows... quick and hardly moving his mouth." "They all hear what he says, but only the Guajá can understand him." "I couldn't understand a thing." "I just heard gibberish." "I couldn't understand anything." "I'm sure he is my father." "for sure it's him." "He is my father." "for you, is this valid?" "This is the most positive thing we've come to so far, at least." "The story of these two Indians is the same one as many other Indians'... who have lost everything because of the white people... but destiny has reserved a happy ending for Tiramucum and Carapirú." "I recognized my father's face." "My father, he's handsome, his face." "It's quite close now." "He told me you were leaving on Saturday?" "I would like to leave on Saturday." "Saturday is the day after tomorrow." "The day after tomorrow, is it?" "Today's Thursday, tomorrow's Friday." "There's only today, tomorrow, and then you leave." "So we follow him up to see if he's all right." "But he is all right." "He's eaten well." "How is he sleeping?" "Is he sleeping well at night?" "Yes, he is." "That's important." "'ln this opportunity..." "A physician was required..." "A physician..." "who attested there was no need... to remove him to hospital care.'" "You got a new cap, did you?" "He did." "Tell him not to feel sad." "I've already told him." "In two days he'll be leaving." "I've already told him, one more day and we'll leave." "The Indian is a dimerent humanity." "Nobody was left alive, right?" "Just them." "Now they are together." "I met him there in Brasília." "I met him and we were glad." "We're getting there, almost there." "Almost there, what a joy." "There're people waiting for us there." "Careful because there are passengers that throw things at others." "They'd throw anything at people standing here, you know?" "This one here is my boss." "How are you?" "How is it going?" "Everything's fine." "Have you been told about the story we are bringing?" "Mr.João, this one is Carapiru." "The man who was missing, reappeared and found his son, this one here." "And, how are things over there?" "Is the community waiting for him?" "Oh, yes, they are." "Shall we go?" "Let's go." "This is Pindaré River." "It separates Santa Luzia district... from the Carú Indian Area." "On the other side, there are Indians Guajajará and Guajá." "Carapiru gets ready for departure." "The Pindaré River valley is in the area where the country's... most land conflicts takes place." "The Parrot's beak." "And it's here where there are several groups of isolated Indians." "The hiking starts through the forest." "At noon, the most expected moment comes." "Tiramucum and Carapirú reach the Awa-Guajá village." "And he was received with joy after being missing for 10 years." "Carapiru spent five days in Brasília and aner that... he traveled by plane and boat to get back to the Awá-Guajá village." "All Awa-Guajá survivors came to greet Carapiru... but he was a bit shy... and Tiramucum had to call his father to greet his relatives." "All Indians smiled at him... but it was one of the leaders of the village who sang the welcome song." "Carapiru received arrows and spears, showing appreciation and respect." "He smiled in joy and soon felt comfortable among friends." "After 10 years of solitude in the woods... and the waiting days among the white people..." "Carapiru finds again the space he seemed to have lost." "Now there is one thing he is pretty sure of... it's here he wants to stay... with people who speak the same language... and enjoy the same things he does." "Hunt, hunt!" "Go on my friend." "Ok." "I read that." "It's like a mockingbird!" "Got to open the mouth." "Instead of crying for him" "Instead of thinking about him" "Think of me, cry for me" "Call me Don't, don't call him" "Well, Moreira, one of the things that has touched me in our work... and our experiences together... nothing compares to the time we picked those Indians at Água Preta." "They were in seven, right?" "Seven people." "And that has always been in my mind... and it is the most private one in our entire friendship." "We really shared our sumering on that occasion, don't you think?" "When that child who carried the firebrand in the group... I was anxious to walk faster... and I asked you to ask the group to put out the firebrand..." "I remember that." "And you promptly talkead to them... and it took a little while for them to put it out." "I couldn't understand anything." "My only motivation was our hike... our necessity to arrive soon." "We'd said that if we took longer than expected we'd run into some risks." "We would be out of food or the Indians would get sick." "But to me, after a while, at night..." "I could realize... the dimension of what we've caused through our act." "I think that not even you were able to evaluate our actions." "When you light up a lighter it causes such an astonishment." "You devaluate their knowledge to such an e_ent that..." "Because when you can make fire with the click of a magic box." "Where does that fire come from?" "It could have been there for hundreds of years." "Since they were isolated Indians." "One passes the firebrand to another, so..." "There was a story about that fire and we've ceased it." "When the boy put it out, I felt that he shrunk." "When he came and asked the favor of being given the fire... he shrank a little more." "As you start showing... your technology is more emicient than theirs... you also destroy their moral, mythological and religious values... because everything we develop ends up being more emicient." "These things help us reflect about... our experiences with the Indians." "We did that." "How many things have we done or not... that later brought on consequences for them... their lives and history?" "Geí, one of the things I forgot to give him... but that I've already asked for, is a firebrand to build a fire." "The first thing he is going to make is a fire." "See if it's ok for him to be around that tree, and make a fire." "Is it ok here?" "Over here." "We need a firebrand." "They've already gone there to get it." "Over there, or here, or there." "It depends on where it's better for him." "But It's around here I'd like him to make a fire." "Ok, Carapiru." "Get the firebrand." "I'll say it." "Camera."