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How Indigenous groups in Brazil are using virtual reality to reclaim their stories

A little girl wearing a virtual reality (VR) headset giggles and grasps at the air in front of her. “A blue macaw!” she calls out in delight.

The girl is in the Brazilian capital, but the headset transports her to a fictitious Indigenous village in the Atlantic rainforest, where capybaras and jaguars dart across the landscape. The five-minute simulation is modeled on the Guarani Kaiowá territory in Mato Grosso do Sul, near the border with Paraguay.

This is a “VR museum,” part of a wider project using technology to preserve an ancestral culture at risk of being lost.

Why We Wrote This

Oftentimes new technology is pitted against tradition. But in the Indigenous Guarani Kaiowá territory in Brazil, ancient – and modern – practices are recorded and preserved for use in a new virtual reality museum project.

Since 2019, members of the Guarani Kaiowá have been working with researchers from University College London’s Multimedia Anthropology Lab (MAL) and a local arts nongovernmental organization, Idac, to document their practices through a variety of innovative mediums, including the VR experience and an immersive audio archive.

For decades, researchers would visit Indigenous villages and gather audiovisual records that that locals never saw again. Now, the Indigenous people make the recordings themselves. Even the elders have lost their initial mistrust of cellphones, says Luan Iturve, a young Indigenous audiovisual producer and actor involved in the project. Many now enthusiastically use them to record rituals and everyday life. It’s part of a broader movement in Indigenous communities in Brazil to reclaim their narratives from outsiders, by using technology to tell their own stories.

“We can no longer escape from these technologies, so it’s better we take ownership of them and use them” to our benefit, says Mr. Iturve.

Constance Malleret

Luan Iturve is a Guarani Nhandeva audiovisual producer and actor. He works as a coordinator of the University College London’s Multimedia Anthropology Lab project with the Guarani Kaiowá, facilitating communication between the non-Indigenous researchers and the elders, Brasília, Brazil, April 10, 2025.

Who is technology for?

The Guarani Kaiowá are one of the largest Indigenous ethnic groups in Brazil, but also among the most threatened. They were violently displaced from their land in the 20th century by private companies and farmers to make way for commercial agriculture, an experience that the Brazilian Association of Anthropology has denounced as a genocide. Today, the Guarani Kaiowá regularly face violent and even deadly attacks as they try to reclaim this territory.

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