00:06The territory of Urabá is very rich, very flurietnico.
00:11Urabá is a very strong and powerful sector.
00:15It's a frontier sector,
00:18it's a serranity of La Vive,
00:20it's humid, it's river, it's mar.
00:23So, we have a large variety of possibilities.
00:27To come to the region of Urabá,
00:29we have to live the imperdibles that we have.
00:32If you start from this road that you bring from Medellín
00:36to the region of Urabá, you will find out with Mutatá.
00:39You have to know those beautiful rivers that we have.
00:42We have 16 rivers in the middle of a majestic landscape,
00:46in the nature of a crystalline color,
00:49as well as green and yellow.
00:50We have more than 515 kilometers from the coast
00:52around this beautiful region,
00:55Mar Caribe, where, of course,
00:58all the marine ecosystems are living
01:00and it makes us very strong,
01:01not only to have a sea,
01:03but also to have a sea,
01:05but also to have a delicious gastronomia.
01:08For us,
01:09it's a secret that the region of Urabá
01:11had difficulties for years,
01:12and all these people and communities
01:14learned with this resilience
01:16to be strong,
01:17but also to show their territory
01:18and to show what beautiful,
01:20how are the communities indígena,
01:21the Afro,
01:22and they understood that
01:23from the sustainable tourism,
01:25the amicable tourism,
01:26the tourism that generates
01:28reconciliation with everyone,
01:30that they can recognize Urabá
01:32within an interesting process
01:33for them,
01:34not victimizing,
01:35but generating their investments
01:36and ingresos
01:38from the tourism.
01:40Well, I think that the tourism
01:42represents territories like this
01:44in all these visits
01:48that they have,
01:48all the potentiality of the tourism,
01:50because this has to be shown
01:52to all the world,
01:54that Urabá,
01:55Apartado,
01:56and Puerto Ayrón
01:56have also developed
01:58a natural tourism
01:58etnical of nature.
02:01Our communities,
02:02indigenous communities,
02:04Afro communities,
02:04have been resaltating
02:06that history
02:07that they have been
02:08doing generation
02:09in generation
02:10of their ancestors
02:11and have preserved
02:12these cultures
02:13and these traditions
02:14and this is what we show
02:15to many tourists
02:16and visitors
02:17who come to the region
02:18in all that resilience
02:19and transformation
02:20that they have lived
02:21from the violence,
02:22but that today
02:22is an opportunity
02:23to develop Urabá
02:25as a tourist tourist
02:34to do
02:36the region
02:36called
02:37The purpose of the tunnel
02:38is not to be able to
02:38to the people
02:39and it is also
02:44to be able to
02:47I invite you first to know the wealth that the territory has, beyond a story of violence.
02:55People are very entrepreneurs, very push-ups, very workers.
02:59And with all the development that comes to Urabá,
03:03I think it's very important to visit everything that we offer the territory,
03:07and also to know the people who have a lot of desire to go ahead
03:10and take advantage of the opportunities that are coming.
03:14Invitarlos a venir a Urabá es invitarlos a un contact profundo con lo verde,
03:19a un contacto con los bosques, con los humedales, con los ríos, con el mar.
03:24Nosotros aquí queremos educarlos para que aprendan a amar el planeta,
03:29aprendan a respetar la vida y a relacionarse con los animales de tú a tú como iguales.
03:34La invitación es, vengan a Urabá a conectarse realmente con la naturaleza.
03:41No me canso, no me canso de invitar a Colombia, al mundo, a Antioquia,
03:45que por favor visiten a Urabá y no dejen de venir a Puerto Girón,
03:48para que se den cuenta de la magia, de la naturaleza que tiene Puerto Girón.
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