@article{Steffens_2019, title={INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN ABIA YALA, LATIN AMERICA: REFLECTIONS FROM A EUROPEAN POINT OF VIEW}, volume={13}, url={https://dvkjournals.in/index.php/ah/article/view/2257}, abstractNote={<p>Assassination of Berta Cáceres (1971-2016), a Maya-Lenka Woman from Honduras in 2016, shows in a brutal way, that the recognition of indigenous religions in Abia Yala-Latin America is not only an interreligious, but also an economic and political challenge. Indigenous people believe that, as animals and plants, they belong to nature, where they are born, cultivate and die. All elements of nature are alive, have a soul. So, destroying nature for big transnational projects without consulting the people, especially indigenous people, who live in the concerned regions means destroying their (im)material existence which is in inherent relationship to spiritual forces. This paper elaborates upon the impact of catholic evangelisation until today, tries to explain the links between spiritual and economic exploitations of indigenous people and proposes ways to overcome these violations by developing new partnerships between Indigenous and Nonindigenous people. </p> <p>An original version of this article was first published in German language: “Indigene und Religionsfreiheit in Abia Yala – Lateinamerika. Überlegungen aus einer europäischen Sicht,” in Glauben in Bedrängnis. Religionsfreiheit als Menschenrecht, ed. Volker Kauder und Hans-Gert Pöttering, Herder: Freiburg im Breisgau, 2017, 38-47</p>}, number={04}, journal={Asian Horizons}, author={Steffens, Elisabeth}, year={2019}, month={Dec.}, pages={619–628} }