We know that the Amazon Forest is considered the Heart of the World because it is the largest biodiversity pole on the planet, and we live in a new era where society is fully aware of the need to preserve the environment.
In parallel, according to indigenous traditions, we are living the New Thought, known as Xinã Bena. After decades of persecution, exploitation and conflict, native peoples are gaining an active voice in society and believe that the time has come to open up to interact with the whole world.
In this New Time, we all collaborate and together we co-create a New World, made of a Colorful People: all races of all colors reach a new way of feeling and integrating the real Xinã Bena and acting in favor of the Forests.
Now aware of their importance and their rights, indigenous peoples want to show their cultural legacy and their way of seeing man as part of Nature.
With this awareness, we at Instituto Nawá are connected to the greatest Brazilian indigenous leaders, who have been crying out for attention for over 500 years.
Our premise is to engage more and more people in the conservation of biodiversity and this ancestral culture that can help us with their ancient knowledge on how to live in harmony with the Forest.
We are the bridge that connects the Forest with our interior, allowing us to feel integrated with nature through the wisdom of native peoples.
Our goal is to bring awareness about the environment and the native peoples of the Forest, in addition to embracing projects aligned with the preservation of indigenous cultures and natural resources in the Amazon.
Eduardo Pizaroli is the creator of the Nawá Institute. Born in São Paulo, Eduardo graduated in 2001 in Business Administration from Universidade Anhembi Morumbi.
A researcher initiated and baptized in the HUNI KUIN tradition, Eduardo acts as a speaker, maintainer of ancestral cultures and has been a reference among indigenous leaders for over 10 years.
Tete Beru - name given by the Huni Kuins - facilitates experiences focused on human development through immersions in the Forest. His appreciation for biodiversity and coexistence with ancestral peoples encouraged him to become a social entrepreneur focused on projects aimed at raising awareness, supporting and preserving indigenous cultures and the Amazon Forest.
Increasingly engaged and in order to bring people together on this missionary journey, in 2018 he founded the Nawá Institute, which aims to take innovative sustainability and preservation projects to different communities throughout Brazil.
”My dream is to take these projects to all villages, of all ethnicities. From Brasil to the world. ”- TETE BERU
”My dream is to take these projects to
all villages, of all ethnicities. From Brasil to the world. "
TETE BERU