Small children are climbing 60-foot trees to harvest your acai [View all]
CURRALINHO, Brazil The sun had barely risen, but José Armando Matos de Lima, 11, was already on the job. As his sisters slept in their hammocks, the boy fired up the familys longboat, headed upstream and collected the order of the day: 15 buckets more than 450 pounds of açaí.
He was dreading the task ahead. The day was shaping up to be another scorcher. The jungle was full of scorpions, one of which had bit his hand months before. A girl across the river had been hospitalized after a recent fall while harvesting the fruit. But he was the best climber his family had. Açaí was their primary source of income. And this was his life: Toiling on the bottom rung of an industry that connects some of Brazils poorest people to Americas health-absorbed elite.
Lets go, José said.
A brooding child with a shy smile, he tucked a serrated blade into his ripped shorts and headed out to perform what researchers and labor officials describe as one of the most dangerous jobs in Brazil, the worlds principal producer of açaí. At harvest time, tens of thousands of Brazilians, equipped with nothing more than knives and swatches of burlap to protect their bare feet, climb the wild açaí palm trees every day, ascending without harnesses to heights that can top 65 feet.
Because the trees trunk is tall and thin, and because the weight of an adult can snap it, often those who make the climb are children. Its unknown how many assume the deadly risk; the government has never counted. But researchers agree the practice is widespread among the estimated 120,000 families who work the harvest.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/11/28/brazil-acai-child-labor/