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By the late 20th century, though, the Lacandon were in frequent contact with outsiders within the area that had been their heartland.
This resulted in territorial shifts, disease, and new powerful cultural influences.
As logging began on a massive scale, the Lacandon came into contact often with forest workers, which resulted in wage work for some and an overall transformation of their culture, a process that continues to the present time.
As development in the area took place, the Catholic Church established mission churches which converted many Lacandon.
The Lacandon were drawn into the revolt of indigenous peoples that took place in the area in the 1980s and 1990s.
They endured the pressure of cultural change as never before in their history.
Their strategy of many generations to withdraw into the forest to preserve their traditional way of life now failed them.
The outside world came crashing in.

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