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Judi Lynn

(160,630 posts)
Thu Sep 8, 2022, 04:01 AM Sep 2022

Inside a Maya village where locals live without power -- and fight to preserve their culture

Lucy Sherriff, CNN • Published 7th September 2022



(CNN) — A bumpy, 10-passenger plane ride from Belize City takes you over lush green jungles, craggy mountaintops and skims along the vibrant Caribbean Sea, dotted with paradisiacal atolls, before coming to land on a one-strip airport, a slash of dusty red in the midst of thick treetops.
This is the airport of Punta Gorda, the southernmost town in Belize, population 5,000.

It's remote, but it's a bustling metropolis compared with Santa Cruz, a Maya settlement that lies a 50-minute trek inland. The humidity welcomes you like a warm embrace, and the jungle's bustling wildlife provide a looping soundtrack of birdsong, monkey howls and the occasional roar.

It's here, tucked into the safety of the jungle, that the Mopan Maya live. Native to Belize and Guatemala, the Mopans are one of the 28 subethnic groups of the Maya people. Roughly 10,000 people in Belize identify as Mopan, making up less than 3% of the country's population. So the culture is closely protected by its people.

Belize was the home of some of the earliest Maya settlements, and Maya today make up an estimated 11% of the country's population.

More:
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/belize-maya-village-santa-cruz/index.html

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