EditorialVisitors at Manifesta Nights x Hap?sira, a series of events celebrating Pristina, Kosovo’s nightlife as part of the 14th edition of Manifesta, Oct. 21, 2022. (Armend Nimani/The New York Times)
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...
EditorialKarfa Sira Diallo leads a tour group around sites associated with the colonial era slave trade in Bordeaux, France, June 18, 2020. (Andrea Mantovani/The New York Times)
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...
EditorialThe last of the Charruas. The Charrúa were an indigenous people of South America. After a massacre at Salsipuedes, four surviving Charrúas were captured. They were Senacua Sénaqué, a medicine man; Vaimaca-Pirú Sira, a warrior; and a young couple, ...
EditorialThe last of the nomadic Charrua people, Uruguay, 1833. Medicine man Senacua Senaque (perhaps drinking yerba mate tea), warrior with bow and arrow Vaimaca-Piru Sira, and young couple Laureano Tacuave Martinez and Maria Micaela Guyunusa. The Charrua were...