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Black
Consciousness in
Brazil
By
Italo Ramos
Early last October,
the work of the last Brazilian census had not yet been
finished, but we already knew that our adult black
population had grown two percentage points, from 5% to
7%, over the last ten years. (In Brazil, black people
are officially considered a category apart from the
racially mixed population.) For those who know Brazil
and know that the country has the largest black
population in the world, after only Nigeria, these
numbers may seem surprisingly small. And these people
may also ask how could this have happened? The new
persons who were born in this so short period of time—10 years—are not adult enough to be included by the
census collector. So, where did those two percentage
points came from?
Before answering,
let’s explore another fundamental question: 7% is a
small, insignificant number?
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The answer may be
Yes and No, as it depends on whom is reading it. Numbers
are not geographic symbols but, as they don’t lie, they
are the most powerful kind of authority we have to prove
something, although our sense about their meaning may
vary according to different national criteria. If you
are Brazilian, 7% is very small, considering a
population of 190 million people. But for those people
in the world who deal with racial discrimination and
racism, it will never be insignificant.
The census, made by
the Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (BGE),
doesn’t explain, as it is not its official business to
make considerations about the development of racial
awareness, but that difference of 2 points shows that,
now, two million more people are accepting and
proclaiming their real color. Ten years ago, when
another census took place, they had said that were not
blacks, but “mestiços” or “mulattos,” a category more
favored, socially.
That difference is good proof that
racial consciousness is growing in Brazil, which means
that more and more black people are not ashamed of their
racial identity, and, not statistically but ethnically
speaking, two percentage points is a big and significant
number.
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But there is more
about that.
These 7% might be
added to 45% of those who said to the collector that
they are mulattos, and the result will be a population
of 52% of blacks and mulattos, and 49% of whites. So, in
an American sense, the Brazilian black population is now
larger than the white one. In the Brazilian sense, as
was said, blacks and biracial are two different
categories.
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Another number that
Census shows, 2%, refers to people who, ten years ago,
said to the collector that they were white, but, now,
they want to change their category, some choosing to be
mestiços, some mulattos, some indigenous. These are very
light-skinned black persons who used to pass as white,
but now are not ashamed to declare their real origin.
They don’t want to be white, anymore.
(A good question
would be “Why would a light-skinned person want to pass
as white?” Well, I don’t want to answer, because my
words wouldn’t be sympathetic to them.)
So, the Brazilian black population
not only is the second largest in the world, but also
exhibits the record of being the most mixed. In this
sense, it reserves first place. Mulattos, in Brazil,
are, mainly, a product of the Portuguese, who colonized
the country, and the Africans, brought there to be
slaves. |
And this mixture was always so dense that,
in slavery times, there were more mulattos than today,
proportionally to the total population. But the readers
must not take this last information as a sign of racial
liberalism from the Portuguese side, because it actually
hides violence, a crime.
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Speaking about
crime, in this aspect, Brazilian and American slavery
histories are similar. Both are full of cases of rape.
At that time, it was common among landlords to take
enslaved women as concubines. In Brazil, this practice
was more open than in U.S., but, to take the best of
American examples, we can ask: Did Sally Hemings love
Thomas Jefferson? Those seven children were sons of
sexual consent? If Sally really loved him, would she
impose some conditions to return from France to Virginia
with him, as she did? Jefferson agreed with those
conditions and set her (their) children free, just like
Brazilian landlords used to protect their bastard sons,
giving them much better treatment. This was a natural
behavior, so common that until today both societies make
a difference between blacks and mulattos, giving to the
latter a higher social status.
What contemporary
Brazilian and American whites don’t realize is that, by
doing so, they are simply modernly repeating what their
ancestors, owners of slaves, used to do. In Brazil, in the
time of slavery, the mulattos were chosen to be what was
called Capitães do mato (bush captains), the
leading hunters of fugitives slaves in the forests and
responsible for chasing those ones walking in the
streets in the cities. That was a job that gave some
privileges to them, as they were not in the fields nor
in the big houses, but seen as the protector of the
interests of white owners of slaves. But the position
also gave them the very bad reputation of being enemies
of black people. |
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The social order is
self-reproductive. If nothing is done to change it, in
terms of a revolt, the imposition of a law or the
exposure of positive role models, the social order
repeats the same pattern of the society, eternally, just
like it is. So, as changes don’t happen overnight, the
culture of slavery perpetuated many old customs, making
that institution not as remote as we would like. And,
today, the capitães do mato have disappeared, as
they are not necessary, anymore, because of the end of
slavery, but, more than one century later, in their
places, a big majority of soldiers of the Brazilian
military state police, is comprised of mulattos.
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These are the police in charge of
invading huts in favelas
and of chasing poor people in the streets, mainly
blacks, asking them for identification cards and
arresting those who cannot prove that they have a
regular job. Black people hate them. It is history, if
not just repeating itself, making a kind of parody.Until today, there is not an explanation
for that change of attitude made by the “new blacks.” Can it
be an effect of the Affirmative Action? Maybe. Affirmative
Action came to Brazil around 2003, when a university in Rio
de Janeiro adopted the first Brazilian system of quotas for
students originating from public schools, blacks and
indigenous people.
Since then, the discussion about race,
discrimination and racism provoked remarkable changes in the
false image of a racial democracy Brazil has maintained
since the abolition of slavery. Slowly but consistently, white people are
admitting the real face of a segregationist and racist
Brazil. |
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But the
quota system is also a university success. The last
research made by the Universidade Federal da Bahia
states: “. . . the quota students’ performance improves
every year. The poorer the students, the better their
progress.” Brazil is a young
country, with a juvenile enthusiasm in many senses,
without answers or even research, yet, about its most
important questions, like those about “new blacks.” Few
people care about who makes Brazil what it is, and for
whom. Of course, we are not so innocent as to not know
that Brazil is evolving within a permanent conflict of
huge cultural, political and economic interests that we
have already identified and we are learning how to deal
with its resistances, changes and tricks, like the
disguised face of the modern capitaes do mato.
Slowly but consistently, we are pushing ahead and
improving an Affirmative Action that came late. And, for
a developing country, it is comforting to know that some
difficult questions, so important for tracing a right
and quick road to a really democratic future, are not
being answered even in developed countries. |
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Italo Ramos is a Brazilian
journalist. He can be contacted at
iramos@cy.com.br.
Source:
BlackAgendaReport
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Brazilian Novelist
Joaquim
Maria Machado de Assis (1839-1908) was the son of a
mulatto painter and an Azorean
washerwoman. Born in Rio de Janeiro and educated by
a priest, Machado de Assis became one of Brazil's most
famous novelist. He was familiar with the works of
Swift, Sterne, and Leopradi. He is started his career
first as a typesetter, a proofreader, and finally a
journalist. her worked laeter as an official of Brazil's
Agricultural department.
Machado
de Assis' writings include poetry, theater, chronicles, short stories and
novel. |
His trilogy Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas (1881), Quincas
Borbas (1892), and Dom Casmurro (1900) have received
considered emphasis of critical studies and public interest. His
novels are distinguished by psychological insight and a profound
awareness of social conditions; their objective attitude stands
in sharp contrast to the prevalent romantic tendency of the
time.
His major realistic novels Memórias póstumas de Brás
Cubas (1881, tr. Epitaph of a Small Winner, 1952, The
Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas, 1998), Quincas Borba
(1891, tr. Philosopher or Dog?, 1954, 1998), and Dom
Casmurro (1900, tr. 1953, 1998) are still in publication and
have been translated. His pessimistic view of life and
criticism of Brazil's high bourgeoisie is impelled by irony.
Machado's poetry and fiction show an indifference to enslaved
blacks and is lacking in black themes. Some suggest however that
more investigation and analysis into Machado de Assis' identity as an Afro Brazilian writer would be
illuminating.
Bibliography
The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas by
Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, translated from the Portuguese by
Gregory Rabassa Oxford University Press, 219 pp., $25.00; $12.95
(paper)
Quincas Borba
by Joaquim Maria Machado de
Assis, translated from the Portuguese by Gregory Rabassa Oxford
University Press, 290 pp., $25.00; $13.95 (paper)
Dom Casmurro by Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis,
translated from the Portuguese by John Gledson Oxford University
Press, 258 pp., $25.00; $12.95 (paper)
Esau and Jacob by Joaquim Maria Machado de
Assis, translated from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Lowe Oxford
University Press, 276 pp., $35.00; $16.95 (paper)
A Master on the Periphery of Capitalism: Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis by Roberto Schwarz, translated
from the Portuguese and with an introduction by John Gledson
Duke University Press, 194 pp., $54.95; $18.95 (paper)
Machado de Assis: Reflections on a Brazilian
Master Writer edited by Richard Graham University of Texas
Press, 134 pp., $25.00; $11.95 (paper)
Source:
The New York Review of Books
July 18, 2002.
Review
"Master Among the Ruins" By Michael Wood
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Brazil commemorates
Black Consciousness Day
recalling fugitive slaves’ leader
Hundreds of cities, towns and villages throughout Brazil
commemorated Saturday Black Consciousness Day with different
festivities and cultural activities. Brazil is considered the
second Black Country in the world behind Nigeria, with 75.8
million African-Brazilians and is still exposed to the
consequences of racial discrimination.
A hundred twenty
two years after the abolition of slavery in 1888, Brazil
recalls and honours on November 20th “Zumbi dos Palmares,”
the last chief of a republic of fugitive slaves.
Killed on November 20, 1695
by the big landowners of the time he has become a symbol of
resistance against slavery and has only lately been recalled as
such. |
According to Brazil’s statistics
office, IBGE, of the 10% poorest and indigent Brazilians, 74% are black or
coloured.
Afro-Brazilian organizations admit that
some progress has been achieved by Afro-Brazilians in publicity or in
less-demeaning roles in the country’s famous soap-opera industry. Similarly
the colour of skin is less linked to household cleaning and maintenance
services.
In Rio do Janeiro Black Consciousness
Day inspired three plays in local theatres, with one of them particularly
touching. ”The whip revolt” occurred a century ago, 22 November 1910 when a
black officer from the Brazilian navy,
Joao Candido, the son of former
slaves and crew members of the cruiser “Minas Gerais” mutinied in the bay of
Rio do Janeiro.
Candido and the 1.173 men on board
threatened to bombard the city with the powerful guns and cannons of the
cruiser unless the long established practice of corporal punishment and whip
lashing were not abolished by the navy.
It was all triggered when a crewmember
was sentenced to a punishment considered exaggerated: instead of the
customary 25 whip lashes he was to receive 250 lashes.
United States also adhered to the
celebration with a message from the State Department.
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“The United States
Government and the American people congratulate the
people of Brazil as they recognize Black Consciousness
Day, also known as Zumbi dos Palmares Day, on November
20. The life of Quilombo leader Zumbi and his
unrelenting struggle against slavery stands as an
enduring symbol of freedom and justice.
“Today, both Brazil and the
United States recognize the important contributions of
Afro-descendants in our societies and the imperative of
combating discrimination, which has negatively impacted both of
our countries. Just last month, our governments, in partnership
with civil society and our private sectors, met for the third
time in Salvador da Bahia under the historic U.S. – Brazil Joint
Action Plan to Eliminate Racial and Ethnic Discrimination and
Promote Equality. Together we are celebrating the diversity of
our heritage and developing and sharing best practices to ensure
equal opportunity for Afro-descendants and indeed all citizens
of our nations. |
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“On this significant day, we congratulate the people of
Brazil and look forward to a long and fruitful
partnership as, together, we provide leadership and
examples of democracy, diversity, and social justice to
our Hemisphere and to the world.”
Monday, November 22, 2010
Source:
MalaysianDigest
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Brazilian Slavery an Inconvenient Portuguese History 1 /
Brazilian Slavery an Inconvenient Portuguese History 2
Brazilian Slavery an Inconvenient Portuguese History 3 /
Brazilian Slavery an Inconvenient Portuguese History 4
Brazilian Slavery an Inconvenient Portuguese History 5
This is a history that is not main
stream. Brazil has today & back then the most black people x-slaves in the
world next to Africa. This documentary tells you the Evils of Portuguese &
there ungodly geed for power & exploitation by any means. This video will
show you the beginnings of slavery before the Americas. To the mutilation
rape killed by working to death or by the hands of the Portuguese all the
way to the 19 century.
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Abdias do Nascimento
(b. March 14, 1914, in
Franca,
Sao Paulo state)—a prominent
Afro-Brazilian scholar, artist, and politician—
became a leader in Brazil's black movement, and
was forced into exile by the military regime in 1968.
From 1968-1981 Nascimento
was very active in international
Pan African Movement and elected Vice-President and
Coordinator of the Third Congress of Black Culture in the
Americas. For the next decade Nascimento held positions as a
Visiting Professor at several universities in the United States
including Yale University’s School of Drama (1969–1971), and
University at Buffalo, The State University of New York,
where he founded the chair in
African Cultures in the New World, Puerto Rican Studies
Program in 1971.
He currently holds the position of Professor
Emeritus at SUNY-Buffalo.Nascimento returned to Brazil in 1983
was elected to the federal Chamber of Deputies. There his focus was
supporting legislation to address racial problems. In 1994 he was elected to
the Senate and served until 1999. In 2004 he was nominated for the
Nobel Prize for Peace.—Wikipedia |
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Brazil, Mixture or Massacre?
Essays in the Genocide of a Black People
By Abdias Do Nascimento
Abdias do Nascimento is a
black Brazilian scholar and a very interesting writer. In this
book, he claims that all these ideas that Brazil is wonderful
because it is so racially-blended are nothing but a racist
attempt to erase the contributions of and downplay the struggles
faced by black Brazilians. Now that even white American
conservatives are embracing multiracial people and activism, do
Nascimento's thoughts may rub many the wrong way, especially
mixed-race individuals. Still, this is an important Afrocentric
text. Black Americans know too little about their brothers and
sisters in Brazil. |
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This book introduced me to the term "Quilombismo,"
a Brazilian concept paralleling Afrocentrism or
Negritude. Do Nascimento is trying to change the
defaults through which people see his country in
order to help the blacks there. He called
African Americans "African at heart, but kind of
cold like their white English-speaking peers"; I
laughed hard reading that. Every Afrocentric
reader will learn much by grabbing a copy of
this text.—amazon
reviewer
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Africans in Brazil: A Pan-African Perspective
By Abdias Do Nascimento
I liked this book and
Abdias had a lot of great ideas on improving conditions for
people of African descent. I would say that he is a mix of
Malcom-X and Du Bois in his thinking. Many Brazilians say that
his big error was pushing for too many changes too fast! Abdias
actually taught at several universities in the US while in
exile. I think that it may come as a surprise to many that he
never learned how to speak English and his wife has had to
translate his lectures as he spoke. Also surprising is that his
wife is a white American woman
Imagine if
Amiri Baraka or
Nathan McCall were Brazilian: you'd have Abdias do
Nascimento. Do Nascimento argues that the portrayal of Brazil as
this race-mixing paradise is a racist myth meant to deny how
much the country owes to African people and influences. It's a
strong tail about African pride. Many people that argue for
integration and miscegenation will be turned off by this book,
but hopefully they will find it a provocative read as well. This
book really gave me an idea of how Pan-Africanism is global. If
you're an angry Black person like myself, then you are really
going to like this book.—amazon
reviewer |
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posted 18 November 2010
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