Yuhupdeh in Brazil

The Yuhupdeh have only been reported in Brazil
Population
Main Language
Largest Religion
Christian
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge

Introduction / History

The Yuhupdehs live in the far northwestern Amazon of Brazil, in remote forest areas near the border with Colombia. Their territory is crisscrossed by narrow rivers, footpaths, and forest clearings rather than large navigable waterways. This geography has influenced how Yuhupdehs relate to the land—quietly, attentively, and with deep familiarity.

Their language belongs to the Naduhup (Maku) family, a group distinct from the tongues spoken by nearby river peoples. Historically, the Yuhupdehs oriented life around the forest itself, maintaining distance from larger settlements and outside authority. Contact with the broader world increased gradually through trade, mission presence, and government outreach, introducing new pressures and new possibilities while leaving much of traditional life intact.


What Are Their Lives Like?

Yuhupdeh life is shaped less by villages and more by movement. Families often live in small clusters, adjusting locations as hunting, gathering, and garden needs change. The forest is not simply a resource but the setting of daily instruction. Children learn by walking alongside elders—watching how animals are tracked, plants are handled, and paths are remembered.

Food comes from several sources rather than one central activity. Hunting, fishing, gathering, and small gardens work together to sustain families. Items are shared freely, reflecting a strong ethic of dependence on one another rather than accumulation. Time is measured by seasons, light, and the success of daily effort, not by calendars.

Community life gathers around work, storytelling, and ritual moments rather than formal leadership structures. Authority tends to rest with those who carry knowledge—of the forest, of relationships, and of spiritual matters. Life is rarely hurried, but it is rarely idle.


What Are Their Beliefs?

For the Yuhupdehs, the spiritual world is immediate and active. Forest beings, animal spirits, and unseen forces are believed to shape daily life, influencing sickness, danger, success in hunting, and the balance of relationships. These beliefs are not symbolic traditions but living faith—trust placed in the spirit world to maintain order and survival.

Ritual knowledge is essential. Spiritual specialists guide responses to illness and misfortune, helping restore harmony when something goes wrong. Fear is not abstract; it is practical, tied to the uncertainty of forest life and its unseen powers.

Within this setting, the gospel has begun to take root among a small number of Yuhupdehs. A minority identify as followers of Jesus Christ and have begun learning a different way to interpret suffering, protection, and hope. This Christian presence is real but fragile, existing amid a worldview where traditional spiritual trust remains dominant.


What Are Their Needs?

The Yuhupdehs face challenges that extend beyond material scarcity. While access to healthcare and education is limited by isolation, their deeper vulnerability lies in spiritual fear—fear of forces believed to govern health, safety, and survival.

Spiritually, the Yuhupdehs need clear and patient gospel witness that addresses fear at its roots. Many continue to place trust in spirits who cannot remove guilt, restore relationship with God, or grant lasting peace. Believers among them need Scripture?centered teaching and discipleship that helps faith grow strong enough to stand within their own culture rather than outside of it. Over time, the Yuhupdeh church will need leaders raised from within the people themselves.


Prayer Items

Pray for physical protection and daily provision for Yuhupdeh families.
Ask God to open hearts among those who live under fear of spiritual forces.
Pray for Yuhupdeh believers to grow firm through Scripture and discipleship.
Ask the Lord to raise up faithful Yuhupdeh leaders who can teach others.
Pray that confidence in Christ would replace fear of the unseen world.


Scripture Prayers for the Yuhupdeh in Brazil.


References

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuhup_language
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadahup_languages
https://www.britannica.com/place/Amazon-Rainforest


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Yuhupdeh
People Name in Country Yuhupdeh
Alternate Names Maku; Yuhup
Population this Country 700
Population all Countries 700
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached No
Frontier No
Pioneer Workers Needed
PeopleID3 20114
ROP3 Code 115958
Country Brazil
Region America, Latin
Continent South America
10/40 Window No
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Location in Country Amazonas state: Rio Chié.   Source:  Ethnologue 2016
Country Brazil
Region America, Latin
Continent South America
10/40 Window No
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Location in Country Amazonas state: Rio Chié..   Source:  Ethnologue 2016
Primary Religion: Ethnic Religions
Major Religion Estimated Percent
Buddhism
Unknown
Christianity
40.00 %
Ethnic Religions
60.00 %
Hinduism
Unknown
Islam
Unknown
Non-Religious
Unknown
Other / Small
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Primary Language Macuna (700 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code myy
Ethnologue Language Familly Tucanoan
Glottolog Language Family Tucanoan
Written / Published Yes   ScriptSource Listing
Total Languages 1
Primary Language Macuna (700 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code myy
Ethnologue Language Familly Tucanoan
Glottolog Language Family Tucanoan
Total Languages 1
People Groups Speaking Macuna
Map Source Rodrigo Tinoco / CONPLEI  
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.