Ancestral Recipes from Camba Cuisine | Recetas ancestrales de la cocina camba

By El Deber: Urucú We celebrate Camba cuisine, inspired by ancestral recipes with native ingredients such as urucú, avocado, tamarind, and achachairú. Camba Heart of Palm Salad with Avocado and Tomato A variation of our traditional salad with fresh ingredients Ingredients (4 servings) PreparationMix the heart of palm, avocado, tomato, onion, parsley, and optionally, some…

Congratulations, Santa Cruz! | ¡Felicidades, Santa Cruz!

By German Huanca: On this special day, I want to greet my friends from Santa Cruz and join in celebrating all the achievements reached so far—undeniable in the economic, social, and political spheres. However, one challenge still remains: to lead development, not only of Santa Cruz, but of the entire country. After the 2024 census—marked,…

TUTO AND THE RURAL SECTOR | TUTO Y EL SECTOR RURAL

By Oscar Antezana: Tuto has great possibilities of being the next president of Bolivia, unless there is fraud. His political courage, his technical capacity, and his knowledge about the economic, social, and institutional reality is superior to that of the other ticket. This will be confirmed in the debates, if Paz and Lara do not…

Heritage 101: Museum of Mother Earth Showcases the Legacy of Bolivia’s Ancestral Culture | Museo de la Madre Tierra muestra el legado de la cultura ancestral de Bolivia

By Dehymar Antezana, Brújula Digital: The first Museum of Mother Earth was inaugurated in Oruro with the main goal of preserving, showcasing, and preventing the ancestral cultural legacy of Bolivia—specifically the tradition of ritual “mesas” or “q’owa”—from being forgotten. View of the Mother Earth Museum/Dehymar Antezana White mesas, mesas for the souls, mesas for prosperity,…

The Masiosare of Zunzunegui in Bolivia | El Masiosare de Zunsunegui en Bolivia

By Fabian Aguirre: If Mexican writer Juan Miguel Zunzunegui had been born in Bolivia, he would have written a book similar to Masiosare, The Strange Enemy using Bolivian language. The book refers to a phrase from the Mexican national anthem: “But if a foreign enemy dares to profane your soil with their foot, think, oh beloved homeland, that…