Alberto Achacaz Walakial

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Alberto Achacaz Walakial (1929? – 4 August 2008) was a

Alacaluf, or Halakwulup.[1] The Kaweskar are an indigenous Native American people who were once found in coastal regions of Chilean Patagonia. There are estimated to be only approximately a dozen full-blooded Kaweskars still living following Achacaz's death in 2008.[1] However, there are no Kaweskar women of fertile age remaining, so the tribe appears to be headed for extinction.[1]

Achacaz lived in a modest home, which lacked a modern drainage system.

Achacaz had been hospitalized in

Alberto Achacaz Walakial died of

blood poisoning at the hospital in Punta Arenas on 4 August 2008, according to reports by the local Chilean newspaper, La Prensa Austral.[1] Official Chilean government documents listed Achacaz's age at 79 years old.[1] However, some believed that Achacaz was closer to 90 years of age.[1]

Background of the Kaweskar

The Kaweskars were known as the "Nomads of the Sea." They are also known as the Alacaluf. Traditionally, the Kaweskar lived aboard their canoes within the

sea birds and seafood.[1] It is believed that their nomadic way of life may have stretched back 6,000 years.[1]

The Kaweskars did not establish semi-permanent settlements on dry land until the middle of the 20th century.[1] They settled in and around the hamlet of Villa Puerto Edén on Wellington Island.[1]

The Kaweskars are facing cultural extinction as a distinct group as their surviving, full-blooded members grow older.[1] Since the arrival of Europeans, Chile has lost five of its original fourteen indigenous tribes.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Alberto Achacaz Walakial; one of the last Kaweskars; 79". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Associated Press. 16 August 2008. Archived from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 17 August 2008.

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