OVERVIEWWe Media connects individuals and organizations from across industries who believe the power of media, communication and human ingenuity should be applied to innovate in business AND to make the world better through media. READ MORE VIDEOVideo archives are now being made available. Click on the following links to view video from the following sessions:
Indigenous World DOWNLOADABLE AUDIOWe are posting downloadable MP3 files of every session. The files available for download are in the player below and more will be posted soon. MOBILEGet the schedule and other details on your phone - powered by Proteus LIVE CHATFollow the major sessions and contribute instant feedback, Ah Hah's and questions in the live chat room on wemediacommunity.org
Click on the video to add subtitles using dotSUB in any language. Hit the up/down arrow at the lower right side of the player, to scroll through languages while watching the video and select a different language.
ADD A BADGE |
The amazing work of Bolivian Voices
By: Renata Avila
What will be the result if you put together millenary cultures that preserved their memory and traditions in spite of repression and poverty, enthusiastic youth and volunteers discovering new media? You might be surprised of the amazing contents produced by Voces Bolivianas and Rising Voices (a project by Global Voices). In the year of the preservation of Endangered Languages by UNESCO, it brings results as you can see now online indigenous languages as Aymara then translated into spanish, french, english or even japanese.
Silenced, ignored or trivialized, communities around the world have preserved their identities. But expressions of folklore evolved in an amazing way. Indeed a language reflects a view of the world, but in some places it has been totally ignored. Often mainstream media do not offer a real space or real tools for indigenous or “different” people, they are “the others”. Ignorance of the voice of the others is the worst enemy of peace.
The Director of Rising Voices, David Sasaki, and Voces Bolivianas´s Project Director Eddie Avila (who is also the Editor of Global Voices for Latin America), did an amazing work on it, sharing their time and skills, with a small grant and a a lot of enthusiastic people willing to learn and contribute, you can show the world real stories, real insights of peoples daily life but also can empower people´s creativity, like Cristina Quisbert who had done an amazing job on her blog Bolivia Indigena. There you can see how bolivian people lives, their clothes, you can see a bolivian wedding, listen to traditional music that musicians are happy to share with the world, and also you can see how a blog can give a positive, different image of indigenous world reality.
Forget about the image of indigenous people you have in mind, in Cristina´s blog you can find a whole different reality full of energy, colors, magic, stories, faces and views alive and sharing their daily life with the world in the Aymara region of El Alto.
As a final remarks Cristina said: aymara peoples have a lot to share with the world? And I say to We Media why don´t you take a look on Voces Bolivianas and the other amazing projects of Rising Voices?
We Media Miami 20085 Comments so far
Leave a reply



































[...] est en estos momentos en Miami participando en We Media. Catalina ha sido invitada con sus compaeros ConVerGentes a participar en MedeLink a principios de [...]
[...] is currently in Miami participating in We Media. Catalina has been invited with her peers from HiperBarrio to participate in MedeLink in early [...]
[...] had the honor to be featured in the We Media conference in Miami last month. Renata Avila describes the amazing work of Voces Bolivianas: In the year of the preservation of Endangered Languages by UNESCO, it brings [...]
[...] to maintaining her prolific Spanish-language blog, Quisbert has also begun writing in English. She presented at the We Media conference in Miami about the potential of blogging as a means of inclusion for indigenous communities in [...]
[...] that money we were able to help bring Juliana Rincón from HiperBarrio to Pop!Tech in 2007 and Cristina Quisbert from Voces Bolivianas to We Media in 2008. (Both Juliana and Cristina have become frequent speakers [...]