This project is not accepting donations yet. Explore the story, places, and evidence — or follow Instituto Vidas do Xingu for updates.
Vidas do Xingu: Regenerating River Communities Through Forest Stewardship
Project Story
The Xingu River has always been the heart of our communities. For generations, riverside families on Ilha do Xicote and neighbouring communities have lived from fishing, small-scale agriculture, forest resources, and traditional knowledge of the river and its seasonal cycles. The river is our food source, our transportation route, our school, and our cultural identity. Today, this relationship faces challenges.
Changes in river dynamics following the construction of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam have altered water levels, affected fisheries, flooded traditional areas, and contributed to the death of thousands of trees along the riverbanks. Many of these dead trees remain in the landscape, creating navigation hazards for local fishers while symbolizing broader ecological changes affecting the region.
At the same time, economic opportunities have become increasingly limited for many families. Young people are leaving their communities, traditional knowledge is becoming harder to pass on, and environmental impacts continue to affect daily life.
Yet within these challenges, we see an opportunity for regeneration.
Our Mission
Instituto Vidas do Xingu was created by riverside families committed to strengthening community resilience, protecting traditional knowledge, and creating sustainable opportunities rooted in the Amazon. We believe that regeneration begins with the people who live closest to the land and water. Our work combines environmental stewardship, community education, cultural preservation, and sustainable livelihoods to help communities remain connected to their territory while building a more resilient future.
The Solution
This project transforms a visible environmental problem into a community-led regenerative solution. Rather than harvesting living trees, we will responsibly recover dead wood already present along impacted riverbanks and transform it into handcrafted furniture, artisanal products, and community-use structures.
Over 12 months we will:
Rather than harvesting living trees, we focus exclusively on recovering already dead wood generated by environmental changes along the river.
The Opportunity
The project creates benefits for both people and nature. Removing selected dead wood can improve river navigation safety for families living along the river while creating value from material that would otherwise remain unused. The initiative also creates opportunities for young people to develop practical skills, strengthens women's participation in community enterprises, and supports the transmission of traditional ecological knowledge between generations. By connecting environmental stewardship with sustainable livelihoods, we hope to demonstrate how local communities can lead regenerative solutions in territories facing ecological change.
How We Regenerate
Our approach combines traditional knowledge, community leadership, environmental stewardship, and participatory research. Community elders contribute knowledge about tree species, river cycles, and historical environmental conditions. Women help lead production processes and community organization. Youth participate in mapping, documentation, communication, and environmental education activities.
The project is led by Instituto Vidas do Xingu and supported by CAPACREAM (Centro Avançado de Pesquisa-Ação da Conservação e Recuperação Ecossistêmica da Amazônia), which contributes technical support in participatory mapping, ecological monitoring, environmental education, and impact evaluation.
How Funds Will Be Used
Funding will support woodworking tools and equipment; safety gear for participants; transportation and river logistics; community workshops and training activities; educational materials for youth programs; documentation, monitoring, and impact evaluation; and materials required for production and product finishing.
All funding will be used directly for project implementation and community activities.
Tracking Impact
We are committed to documenting and evaluating our results. Success will be measured through: Number of participating families; Number of women and youth engaged; Community workshops delivered; Quantity of dead wood safely recovered and reused; Furniture and artisanal products produced; Environmental education activities completed and additional income generated for participating families. Progress will be documented through photographs, videos, community reports, and participatory monitoring activities supported by local community members and technical partners.
Our Experience
Instituto Vidas do Xingu was founded in 2023 by riverside families in response to the environmental and social challenges affecting communities along the Xingu River. Since its creation, the organization has coordinated community support initiatives, emergency response actions during flooding events, food assistance activities, environmental awareness efforts, and programs that strengthen community resilience and local livelihoods. The institute works directly with riverside families, artisanal fishers, women leaders, youth, and elders to protect traditional knowledge and strengthen the long-term well-being of Amazonian communities. The organization works to strengthen community well-being, food security, education, traditional knowledge, and sustainable livelihoods. Through years of grassroots organizing, mutual aid, and community leadership, the institute has become an important local platform for collective action and territorial stewardship. Through this project, we seek to transform environmental challenges into opportunities for regeneration, learning, and long-term resilience for both people and ecosystems along the Xingu River.
Measuring Impact
Success will be measured through simple and meaningful indicators:
• 8 community members trained.
• 10 families directly involved.
•20 children and youth participating.
• 3–5 tonnes of dead wood recovered and reused.
• 30–40 products created for community and household use.
• Four community workshops delivered.
• Increased community participation in environmental stewardship activities.
• Documentation of traditional ecological knowledge shared by elders.
• Additional income generated for participating families.
Progress will be documented through photographs, community meetings, short reports, and participatory reflection sessions.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.