The race to extract an Indigenous language from its last lucid speaker

The race to extract an Indigenous language from its last lucid speaker
Nelita Campos, an Iskonawa woman in Ucayali, Peru, is the last lucid speaker of the Iskonawa language. (Florence Goupil for The Washington Post) CALLERÍA, Peru — It’s a ritual that Roberto Zariquiey and Nelita Campos have engaged in for more than a decade. The odd couple — Zariquiey, a university linguist conducting postdoctoral research at Harvard; Campos, the last lucid speaker of her Indigenous language — sit at the roughhewn kitchen table of her raised cabin, overlooking a muddy stream in the village of Callería, deep in the Peruvian Amazon. “You complain a lot,”…Read more …

Peru is reeling from record case counts of dengue fever. What’s driving the outbreak?

Peru is reeling from record case counts of dengue fever. What’s driving the outbreak?
LIMA, Peru – For Lorena Vigo, getting dengue, the virus once known as "breakbone fever," was like no illness she had previously experienced. On top of the headache, upset stomach and aching joints, she bled from her gums after coming down last month with the mosquito-borne virus in Piura. That's the city of 600,000 residents in northern Peru that is the epicenter of the Andean nation's record-breaking dengue outbreak. "There were no beds at the hospital," says the 43-year-old, explaining how she was unable to use the public health insurance that she pays into monthly…Read more …