The Panare of Venezuala still live the same way of live they have always known, and refuse to accept outside influences. There are no laws, and everyone is equal. But how long can they survive the onslaught of the developed world?
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May 19, 1970
2. The Last of the Cuiva
There are only 600 Cuiva, a group of nomadic hunters left in Columbia, with perhaps another 400 across the border in Venezuela. They once roamed the plains, but now are restricted to a small strip of land.
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June 8, 1971
3. Embera: The End of the Road
There are around 10,000 Embura river people living in Colombia, but the government are about to drive the last of the Pan-American highway right through their territory. They also face constant threat from descendants of former Negro slaves
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June 15, 1971
4. War of the Gods
Protestants and Catholics compete to enforce their religion on the traditional Maku and Barasana people of the forests of Colombia.
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June 22, 1971
5. The Tuareg
The Tuareg live in the Sahara dessert at the foot of the mountains of Algeria. After a couple of invasive visits by white troops, very few remain living the traditional life of status veils and tea drinking.
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April 18, 1972
6. The Meo
Originally Aborigines in North and Central China, the 250 000 remaining Meo have been forced southwards, and now live in villages around Southern China and South East Asia.
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July 4, 1972
7. Kataragama: A God for all Seasons
At the shrine of the god Kataragama in the jungle of Ceylon, there is a festival of payment for help received. This film focuses on one family who need his help to find their missing 11-year old son.
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November 20, 1973
8. Dervishes of Kurdistan
The Dervishes are a group of Kurds, a people who have no homeland, who are being allowed to live in Iran.
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November 27, 1973
9. The Mursi
The Mursi are a tribe in Ethiopia who, when not worshipping Allah, are at constant war with their neighbours, the Bodi.
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November 13, 1974
10. Mehinacu
In the Shinghu National Park in Central Brazil live the 70-strong Mehinacu, a tribe in which men and women have distinctly different roles, almost like two communities sharing the same land.
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November 20, 1974
11. Masai Women
The Masai live along the Rift Valley near the Kenya-Tanzania border. They keep large amounts of cattle, for whom they have great respect, and the men have many wives, who they also see as a form of wealth.
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November 27, 1974
12. Quechua
High up in the Andes of Peru, live the Quechua, who breathe the thin air and grow potatoes far away from the rest of the world.
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December 4, 1974
13. Ongka's Big Moka - The Kawelka of Papua New Guinea
The influential leader of New Guinea's Kawelka tribe spends five years amassing an abundance of valuable items including 600 pigs and a motorbike only to give them away in a festive ceremony called the Moka.
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December 11, 1974
14. The Sakuddei
The Sakuddei are a small clan of traditional people living in the rain-forests of Siberut in The Mentawai Islands off the west coast of the mainland of Sumatra. But modernized Indonesians want to inflict their culture and religion upon them.
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December 18, 1974
15. Masai Manhood
In east Africa, across the borders of Kenya and Tanzania is Loita, where we now follow the Masai men during their ritual in preparation for mandatory moranhood, which means serving as a warrior.
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April 8, 1975
16. The Kirghiz
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December 29, 1975
17. The Shilluk
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January 5, 1976
18. Eskimos of Pond Inlet - The People's Land
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January 12, 1976
19. Some Women of Marrakesh
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January 26, 1977
20. The Rendille
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February 23, 1977
21. Sherpas
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April 13, 1977
22. Umbanda
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November 23, 1977
23. The Pathans
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February 20, 1980
24. Witchcraft among the Azande
Presents the role of witchcraft among the Azande in spite of their acceptance of Christianity. Focuses on its usage in adjudicating disputes, curing illness, assuring success in the hunt, and purification of the newborn.
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March 9, 1982
25. Asante Market Women
Examines the matrilineal and polygamous Asante society of Ghana through interviews with women, who exercise complete authority in the wholesale produce market, and with their husbands and children.
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March 16, 1982
26. The Kwegu
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March 23, 1982
27. Inside China: Living with the Revolution
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April 27, 1983
28. Inside China: The Newest Revolution
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May 4, 1983
29. Inside China: The Kazakhs of China
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May 18, 1983
30. The Migrants
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October 14, 1985
31. The Kayapo
Documents life among the Kayapo Indians of central Brazil, a fiercely independent tribe, who were forced to become "businessmen" or see their traditional way of life destroyed.
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June 3, 1987
32. The Basques of Santazi
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June 10, 1987
33. The Lau of Malaita
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June 15, 1987
34. The Whalehunters of Lamalera
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July 13, 1988
35. Across the Tracks: Vlach Gypsies in Hungary
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July 20, 1988
36. The Wodaabe
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July 27, 1988
37. The Kayapo: Out of the Forest
Documents the opposition of the Kayapo Indians of central Brazil to the construction of a hydroelectric dam at Altamira.
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June 13, 1989
38. Villagers of the Sierra De Gredos
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June 20, 1989
39. The Herders of Mongun-Taiga
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June 27, 1989
40. The Mende
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July 18, 1990
41. Trobriand Islanders of Papua New Guinea
A description of a village on Kiriwina Island, in the Trobriand Group, including their yam cult, fishing, life, traditions and, especially, the position of women in Trobriand society.
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July 25, 1990
42. The Kalasha: Rites of Spring
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August 1, 1990
43. The Mursi - The Land Is Bad
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July 17, 1991
44. The Mursi - Nitha
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July 24, 1991
45. The Albanians of Rrogam
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July 31, 1991
46. Cakchiquel Maya of San Antonio Palopo
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August 7, 1991
47. War: We Are All Neighbours
In a Muslim/Catholic village near Sarajevo, rumors fly and suspicions spread. When Catholic Croats assert control, Muslim businesses are attacked, villagers arrested and harassed, and homes threatened.