Kaylor Singleton

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in September 1957, the highest court in Paraguay published a notice informing all the judges of the country that “the Indians, like other inhabitants of the republic, are human beings.” And the Center for Anthropological Studies of the Catholic University of Asunción later carried out a revealing survey, both in the capital and in the countryside: eight out of ten Paraguayans think that “Indians are animals.”
Kaylor Singleton
Lasting effects of dehumanization
Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent
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