Adjacent to the Centre
is a medicinal garden. The concept of a medicinal garden was designed
to help conserve and reinstate the value of this traditional knowledge
among younger members of the tribe.
Collecting
their traditional plants can involve travelling great distances and
younger members have become all too familiar with the "quick fix" of
pharmaceuticals and the elders assured Emily that they are on the verge
of losing this knowledge.
In 1997, Emily accompanied
a Xavante tribesman (the health monitor of the village), to a university
in Fortaleza where he successfully completed a short course under the
direct supervision of Professor Matos in the horticulture and administration
of medicinal plants at the Medicinal Gardens project. The objective
of the course was to introduce the concept of medicinal gardens to the
Xavante.
With funds, she purchased tools necessary for the implementation of
the medicinal garden and helped with the first stages of setting up
the garden adjacent to the health centre. The concept of the medicinal
garden has been accepted and the above photograph, of the medicinal
garden area, was taken in 1999.
The aim of the medicinal
gardens project is to reinstate the value of the traditional herbal
medicine amongst younger members of the indigenous community.
With the medicinal plants more
easily available, it encourages the younger members of the community
to use them.
The aim of the elders
is to develop an education programme on the reserve in the administration
of the traditional plants. The centre is a focus of this vision.