This year, I only needed to open my window in Brazil to witness the climate crisis | Eliane Brum
My snapshot of 2022 shows the Amazon burning - but what it doesn't communicate is the pain
I have covered the Amazon as a journalist for almost 25 years. It started in 1998, with a trip along the Trans-Amazonian Highway. In 2017, I moved to the city of Altamira in Para, northern Brazil; it is the centre of the deforestation, forest fires and social devastation caused by the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam. I moved here because I no longer wanted to be just a special correspondent to the Amazon", but so I could describe what was happening to the largest tropical forest on the planet from the inside. Despite this long experience, 2022 was the first year in which I watched the forest burn from the window of my home. I didn't need to go to the fire, as journalists normally do. The fire had come to me.
The photo I've chosen, taken by my husband, is from the night of 27 August. Later, Brazil's National Institute for Space Research revealed that it was the worst August for fires in the Amazon since 2010. Fires and deforestation rose considerably under Jair Bolsonaro who, this year, was narrowly defeated in the presidential election by Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, or Lula, as he is better known.
Eliane Brum is one of the creators of the trilingual news platform Sumauma and the author of Banzeiro Okoto: the Amazon as the Centre of the World, which is published in the UK in 2023. This article was translated by James Young