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ZEKE Magazine: Spring 2023.2

Feature articles on Ecuador by Nicola Ókin Frioli; Ethiopia by Cinzia Canneria, and Ukraine by Svet Jacqueline. Contents: Piatsaw:A Document on the Resistance of the Native Peoples of Ecuadorian Amazon Against Extractivism Photographs by Nicola Ókin Frioli Winner of 2023 ZEKE Award for systemic change Women's Bodies as Battlefield Photographs by Cinzia Canneri Winner of 2023 ZEKE Award for documentary photography Too Young to Fight, Ukraine Photographs by Svet Jacqueline Picturing Atrocity: Ukraine, Photojournalism, and the Question of Evidence by Lauren Walsh Interview with Chester Higgins by Daniela Cohen

Feature articles on Ecuador by Nicola Ókin Frioli; Ethiopia by Cinzia Canneria, and Ukraine by Svet Jacqueline.

Contents:

Piatsaw:A Document on the Resistance of the Native Peoples of Ecuadorian Amazon Against Extractivism
Photographs by Nicola Ókin Frioli
Winner of 2023 ZEKE Award for systemic change

Women's Bodies as Battlefield
Photographs by Cinzia Canneri
Winner of 2023 ZEKE Award for documentary photography

Too Young to Fight, Ukraine
Photographs by Svet Jacqueline

Picturing Atrocity: Ukraine, Photojournalism, and the Question of Evidence
by Lauren Walsh

Interview with Chester Higgins
by Daniela Cohen

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Antonio Mayancha, coordinator of

Sisa Ñampi (Border of Life), planting

trees under the rain. In 20 to 40 years

these trees will exceed the size of the

rest, and when flowering, they will

delimit the perimeter of Sarayaku’s

sacred territory, Pastaza Province.

The struggle for the conservation of

the Kichwa territory began with the

arrival of oil companies in Ecuador.

Since then, the community has

remained united in resistance for the

defense of the forest and the preservation

of their biocultural heritage.

Sarayaku is called, according to

an ancient prophecy of the shaman

ancestors, “The people of the Noon”

for being a pillar of territorial, cultural

and spiritual defense, a lighthouse as

strong as the midday sun, and the last

Native people to fall in the face of the

extractivist threat.

6 / ZEKE SPRING 2023

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