PDA

View Full Version : Brazil's slave descendants seek justice


Felix the Cat
01-21-2006, 07:02 PM
Brazil's slave descendants seek justice (http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0595F2E1-C72F-405C-B593-5F4AEA0468E2.)

Brazilian descendants of runaway slaves, known as quilombos, are hoping a new law will finally give them the right over their own land.

Last week, they marched on the capital, Brasilia, with other black groups demanding racial equality.

The march, called Zumbi+10 Against Racism and for Equality and Life, was the second modern mobilisation of the largest black population in the world after Nigeria.

According to the federal police, an estimated 7000 people participated in the march which was backed by the Roman Catholic Church, trade unions, the landless and several political parties, notably the governing Workers' party.

At the end of the march, black leaders met the heads of both parliamentary chambers and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

In 1995, a similar march commemorated the 300th anniversary of the killing of Zumbi, the iconic leader of Quilombo dos Palmeres, a community of 30,000 people quashed by the military.

Racial democracy

The proposed racial equality law is expected to bring together a host of measures for Afro-Brazilians, including combating illnesses that effect only the black population, introducing quotas in private and public education, and recognising the quilombos' rights to their settlements.

Currently, only 119 of more than 1000 Afro-Brazilian communities have been given titles to their land.

Aldo Rebelo, President of the House of Deputies, said he hoped the statute for racial equality would be voted on as soon as possible during November, the month of black consciousness.

"I have an absolute conviction that Brazil will only be a true, profound and enduring democracy when it is a political, social economic and also racial democracy.

"When all Brazilians, independent of their colour, their social condition, culture or religion have access to citizenship," he told Aljazeera.net.

Quilombos, who are descendants of three million African slaves brought to Brazil, formed their own communities in remote parts of Brazil, keeping their own distinct traditions and culture.

Segregated, many of these communities have not changed in centuries living on subsistence agriculture and self-medication from passed-down knowledge of preparing herbs. Language, religion and culture survive from their African roots.

Land rights

In the past decade, quilombos have been linking up with black non-governmental organisations and pressure groups to press for rights, winning their first land recognition in 1995 in Oriximina in the northern state of Para, covering 665,000 hectares of Amazonian forest.

Maria do Carmo de Oliveira de Jesus, 42, a quilombo mother of six, says the land victory led to other progressive moves, such as the setting up of a women's rights group.

"There I go to search for my rights, I didn't know I had them and I didn't know them. Now I go certain that I will know much more," she said.

More quilombos have started to integrate with the rest of Brazilian society, like the simply-named Quilombo in the state of Rio de Janeiro.

The first of only two in the state to win their land rights, the community has a shop to sell artists' crafts and to teach visitors of their rich history.

Brazils' blacks in general suffer from extreme inequality - on average earning half of their white counterparts, and illiteracy rates of 33% compared to 7% for whites.

Blacks also have 87% more chance of being assassinated, according to IBGE, the Brazilian Institute for Geography and Statistics.

Race-poverty link

Half the country's 180 million people are of African descent. The correlation between race and poverty is all too evident - 70% of those living below the poverty line, principally in favelas, or slums, are black.

Since it became the last country in the Americas to abolish slavery in 1888, Brazil has prided itself in evolving into a racial democracy, an idea the holds fast today. But black organisations are few and far between and debate about racism is rarely heard.

Only 6% of Brazilians consider themselves black, most opting to be described as mestizo, or mixed race.

In a 1991 census when asked to describe their colour, the government documented more than 300 different hues in the responses.

"I think it is a lie about racial democracy because the powerful still have an interest in this idea. It's a kind of fantasy and a kind of camouflage," says Joni Anderson, who set up a black model agency, Agencia Noir, in 1998.

Only one black woman has won the title of Miss Brazil in 50 years.

Black media

"Racism in Brazil is very subtle. Maybe people don't call me 'nigger' but if I went to Jardims [a rich area of Sao Paulo] maybe the people would see me as a thief," Anderson said.

"In the elections you don't see black politicians. If you turn on the TV you will not see black people acting."

Helio Vargas is the director of programming for Record TV, which boasts one of the very few programmes to have a black presenter, Netinho, and feature black issues.

"We have a lot of black people here; we try to do everything that we can to make things right in terms of discrimination," Vargas said.

"Racism is everywhere so we have a very important mission. Everyone who works with communication should work to fight against racism."

On November 20, Netinho launched Brazil's first black channel TV da gente, which featured Pele, football's first black superstar, and Nelson Mandela on the transmission's launch.

As for the Zumbi+10 march, which ended last week with performances by Afro-Brazilians in front of the National Congress, it took place during the national year for the promotion of racial equality in Brazil.

raven
01-21-2006, 07:10 PM
Oh dear more afro-brazilians and mulatos trying to leech money off the euro-Brazilians keeping the country afloat. Brazil should reintroduce segregation (and enforce segregation to the full extent) and do something to overthrow the current corrupt anti-european establishment in the government. Brasil is already a majority non-euro nation, what more do they want? The Portuguese settlers (along with the Italians, Germans and Spaniards there) have bent over backwards way too much for these "descendants of slaves." You want freedom? Get on a boat and head on out to your "homeland" in the former colonies of Africa.

Ambrosio Spinola
01-21-2006, 07:20 PM
Brazil is quite a weird nation. I have friends who go in winter to Brasil for business and they keep telling me how white actually the southern areas are close to Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina.

Jimbo Gomez
01-21-2006, 07:23 PM
What the hell is racial democracy?

Ambrosio Spinola
01-21-2006, 07:25 PM
What the hell is racial democracy?

You get to vote what non white race gets to destroy your people.

Jimbo Gomez
01-21-2006, 07:35 PM
You get to vote what non white race gets to destroy your people.

Heh, that's more than what we have here in Europe.

Fade the Butcher
01-21-2006, 09:07 PM
Race-poverty link

Half the country's 180 million people are of African descent. The correlation between race and poverty is all too evident - 70% of those living below the poverty line, principally in favelas, or slums, are black.I suppose they would be better off in a homogeneous black society where the white racism that is obviously responsible for their socioeconomic misfortune has been rendered irrelevant. I would therefore politely suggest that Brazilian blacks seriously consider emigrating to thriving and altogether marvelous African paradises such as Haiti or Rwanda.

Fade the Butcher
01-21-2006, 09:10 PM
What the hell is racial democracy?A society in which the material wealth of the nation has been redistributed along racial lines in accordance with mimetic representation.

Fade the Butcher
01-21-2006, 09:11 PM
Brazil is quite a weird nation. I have friends who go in winter to Brasil for business and they keep telling me how white actually the southern areas are close to Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina.The white areas in Brazil are generally the nicer ones, yes?

Fade the Butcher
01-21-2006, 09:15 PM
The Portuguese settlers (along with the Italians, Germans and Spaniards there) have bent over backwards way too much for these "descendants of slaves." You want freedom? Get on a boat and head on out to your "homeland" in the former colonies of Africa.The easiest way to fight racism would be to do away with the multiracial societies that generate such racial tension.

raven
01-21-2006, 09:21 PM
The easiest way to fight racism would be to do away with the multiracial societies that generate such racial tension.
Pretty much. Which is why it is absurd that the euro-Brazilian leaders up top started pushing this pro-multiculturalism on the general population while they live in their cozy, high-security, affluent neighbourhoods. Brazil was once an attractive nation for european immigrants to settle in. However now with all this racial egalitarianism it seems to be the opposite... I have noticed that many euro-Brazilians are now settling in Europe. I have no idea why the societies can not remain seperated. It was the best this way.

Ambrosio Spinola
01-22-2006, 06:23 AM
I have noticed that many euro-Brazilians are now settling in Europe.

Very true. There are a few recent Brazilian inmigrants around where I live and they are all very much white (Even Nordic in some cases). They are in fact the upper classes from Brazil who just have enough, close shop and go home. To bad these returning people find here the place overrun with Morrocans and Equatorian mestizos.

Atlas
01-22-2006, 06:28 AM
Very true. There are a few recent Brazilian inmigrants around where I live and they are all very much white (Even Nordic in some cases)

I think there are still several millions of white in Argentina, Brazil, and a bit less but still a few in Mexico, and they are not to be forgetten. I'd want to see them emigrate to Europe, like I support eastern Europeans to move to our countries.

Lenny
01-22-2006, 06:50 AM
The march, called Zumbi+10 Against Racism and for Equality and Life, was the second modern mobilisation of the largest black population in the world after Nigeria.

According to the federal police, an estimated 7000 people participated in the march which was backed by the Roman Catholic ChurchIs this a surprise to anyone? :rolleyes:


I think there are still several millions of white in Argentina, Brazil, and a bit less but still a few in MexicoArgentina for one is close to 100% European-descent. The population of Chile is also overwhelmingly European-descent

raven
01-22-2006, 03:04 PM
Very true. There are a few recent Brazilian inmigrants around where I live and they are all very much white (Even Nordic in some cases). They are in fact the upper classes from Brazil who just have enough, close shop and go home. To bad these returning people find here the place overrun with Morrocans and Equatorian mestizos.
Yep. In Portugal especially they started immigrating a lot in the mid-90s on up. I don't blame them. Unfortunately there are many muslim immigrants now in Spain (my friend went to Barcelona one summer and said they were everywhere). I don't know the exact number.. I think I heard there was around 2% over there. In Portugal they number at about 50,000 out of 10.5m+ (~0.5%). Not sure if this includes illegals (a big, big problem). Most of them being Morrocan in Portugal. Spain is in immediate danger now unfortunately and the Portuguese have to do something soon before the muslim population increases in number.

Petyr Baelish
01-24-2006, 01:30 PM
Brazil should reintroduce segregation

I wasn't aware that Brazil ever had any (institutional) segregation to begin with.

Excorcism
01-24-2006, 04:32 PM
I wasn't aware that Brazil ever had any (institutional) segregation to begin with.

they do in their own way, mainly in terms of wealth distribution. Alot of blacks and natives live in poor areas while alot of the european whites live either middle or upper class. Besides from all that, Sao Paulo is a city in Brazil that has the second highest amount of Japanese.

Petyr Baelish
01-24-2006, 04:47 PM
they do in their own way, mainly in terms of wealth distribution. Alot of blacks and natives live in poor areas while alot of the european whites live either middle or upper class. Besides from all that, Sao Paulo is a city in Brazil that has the second highest amount of Japanese.


Notice my use of the term "institutional".

Felix the Cat
01-24-2006, 05:22 PM
Bear in mind that Brazil has only been a democracy since 1985

The mulattos are in the process of using their new power to wreck the Brazilian economy, which will eventually force the military to overthrow the democratic system and reimpose dictatorship on the country

Brazil has been through this cycle multiple times since independence, and the future will be no different to the past