Krausirpi (also spelt Krausirpe) is a village in
Honduras
Honduras, officially the Republic of Honduras, is a country in Central America. The republic of Honduras is bordered to the west by Guatemala, to the southwest by El Salvador, to the southeast by Nicaragua, to the south by the Pacific Oce ...
. The village is located in the municipality of
Wampusirpi.
[Goḿez Suárez, Águeda. ]
Movilización política indígena en las selvas latinoamericanas: los tawahka de la Mosquitia centroamericana
'. México: Plaza y Valdés, 2003. p. 133 Krausirpi is the centre of the
Tawahka people. The village is located at bank of the
Patuca River
The Patuca is a river in northeastern Honduras, formed southeast of Juticalpa by the merger of the Guayape and Guayambre rivers. It is the second largest river in Central America and the longest river of Honduras, measuring almost long and dra ...
. Wampusirpi is the nearest market town, located 30 kilometers away.
[Godoy, Ricardo A. ]
Indians, Markets, and Rainforests Theory, Methods, Analysis
'. New York: Columbia University Press, 2001. pp. 39, 53 The village can only be reached by boat.
[Rivas, Ramón D. ]
Pueblos indígenas y garífuna de Honduras: (una caracterización)
'. Tegucigalpa, Honduras: Editorial Guaymuras, 1993. pp. 386–387
Name
Krausirpi is a hybrid name. 'Krau' means 'island' in Tawahka language, whilst 'sirpi' means 'small' in
Miskito language.
[Goḿez Suárez, Águeda. ]
Movilización política indígena en las selvas latinoamericanas: los tawahka de la Mosquitia centroamericana
'. México: Plaza y Valdés, 2003. pp. 135–136
History
Krausirpi was founded in 1938 by the Tawahka chief Claudio Cardona. The original name of the village was Kaununhi.
At the time, the Tawahka people had been uprooted from their traditional centre, Yapuwas, by disease and forced displacement by the
Tiburcio Carias Tiburcio, the Spanish form of Tiburtius, may refer to:
*Tiburcio Carías Andino (1876–1969), Honduran military strongman
*Tiburcio de León, Filipino general (the Philippine Revolution and Philippine-American War)
* José Tiburcio Serrizuela (bo ...
government and some of them settled down in the new village.
Around the time of the Honduran-Nicaraguan border conflict of 1958–1959, the government of Honduras founded a school in Krausirpi.
[Goḿez Suárez, Águeda. ]
Movilización política indígena en las selvas latinoamericanas: los tawahka de la Mosquitia centroamericana
'. México: Plaza y Valdés, 2003. pp. 145–146
Another wave of migration from Yapuwas to Krausirpi took place in the early 1960s, as a number of Ladinos (escaping from law enforcement) had reached Yapuwas.
[Goḿez Suárez, Águeda. ]
Movilización política indígena en las selvas latinoamericanas: los tawahka de la Mosquitia centroamericana
'. México: Plaza y Valdés, 2003. pp. 126–129 In 1967
Moravian missionaries
, image = AgnusDeiWindow.jpg
, imagewidth = 250px
, caption = Church emblem featuring the Agnus Dei.Stained glass at the Rights Chapel of Trinity Moravian Church, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
, main_classification = Proto-Prot ...
sent pastors to Krausirpi and built a church there.
In 1989, the National Agrarian Institute issued a guarantee of protected lands for the Tawahkas, extending some 7,500 hectares in the surroundings of Krausirpi. In 1992, a Health Sub-Centre was built in the village. In the same year, the first attempt to launch Krausirpi as an eco-tourism destination was launched.
Demographics
According to one estimate, as of 1995, the village had 58 households and 479 inhabitants. At the time, about half of the Tawahka people lived in the village.
Another estimate stated that some 930 people lived in Krausirpi as of 1997, gathering the overwhelming majority of the Tawahka people in Honduras.
According to a third estimate, some 100 Miskito people and 4 Ladinos lived in the village as of 1995.
In a census for a study conducted in 2009, there were 115 houses, 218 families and 1056 people living in the community.
Krausirpi is divided into two distinct areas, one purely Tawahka settlement and an area inhabited by Miskito people.
The village hosts one Catholic church.
Politics
The Tawahka Indigenous Federation of Honduras (FITH) is based in Krausirpi. Apart from FITH, there is also an Auxiliary Mayor (appointed by the municipal mayor), some NGO presence, parents' society, Health Committee and Teachers' Association.
Krausirpi, with its surroundings, is one of three electoral sectors in Wampusirpi municipality. In the
2009 presidential election Elvin Santos
Elvin Ernesto Santos Ordóñez (born 18 January 1963 in Tegucigalpa) is a Honduran politician who served as the vice president of Honduras from January 2006 to November 2008, when he resigned to stand as a Liberal Party candidate for the presid ...
obtained 152 votes in the sector,
Porfirio Lobo 124 votes,
Cesar Ham Cesar, César or Cèsar may refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media
* ''César'' (film), a 1936 film directed by Marcel Pagnol
* ''César'' (play), a play by Marcel Pagnolt
* César Award, a French film award
Places
* Cesar, Portugal
* Ces ...
9 votes,
Felicito Avila Felicito may refer to:
People
* Felicito Araneta (19th century), Philippine, member of the Araneta family
* Felicito Ávila, Honduran politician
* Felicito Payumo (born 1937), Philippine businessman
* Felicito Hupan Tiu (born 1955), Philippine bus ...
3 votes and
Bernard Martinez 3 votes.
Economy
Around half of the inhabitants in the village work as artisans.
The Tawahka grow rice, yuca, beans and corn for their own consumption.
Cacao
Cacao is the seed from which cocoa and chocolate are made, from Spanish cacao, an adaptation of Nahuatl cacaua, the root form of cacahuatl ("bean of the cocoa-tree"). It may also refer to:
Plants
*''Theobroma cacao'', a tropical evergreen tree
** ...
is grown in the area. Cacao farming began in the 1980s, as hybrid seedlings were distributed by a non-governmental organization. Community leaders have sought to promote
eco-tourism in the area, but with little success.
[Benhwick, Greg, and Gary Chandler. ]
Honduras & the Bay Islands
'. Footscray, Vic: Lonely Planet, 2010. p. 252
References
{{reflist
Populated places in Honduras
Gracias a Dios Department