Repeating Islands

Jamaica for Sale: FIlm produced by Jamaican filmmaker Esther Figueroa BLOG

Norman Girvan

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Interesting article: Obama win forces Brazil to take a tolerance check

Obama win forces Brazil to take a tolerance check
By BRADLEY BROOKS, Associated Press Writers
Bradley Brooks, Associated Press Writers

> RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil – What struck the Brazilian woman most forcibly as she
watched U.S. election returns on television was seeing Barack Obama 's two young daughters.

> "I can't believe those two little girls with hair like mine will be in the
White House ," said 31-year-old
Carolina Iootty Dias, putting her hand to her head, tears in her eyes as she
watched the screen.

> Black Brazilians such as
Dias, a human rights worker ,
celebrated Obama's election as giving hope worldwide. But the country that
prides itself on racial mixing and tolerance is also being forced to take a
reality check.

> Though half of Brazil 's 190
million people are black — the world's largest black population outside Nigeria
— power remains firmly in the hands of whites. The country has few blacks in top
political positions, and government studies consistently show blacks in Brazil earn half as much as
whites.

> "This Brazilian hypocrisy that says racism does not exist is one of the
things that keeps the nation from advancing," said Stepan Nercessian, an actor
and Rio de Janeiro city
councilman , who is white.

> Latin America's largest country has long looked down its nose at the racial
discord in the U.S. — segregation laws, civil rights battles and a strained social dialogue that continues
today.

> But Obama's election is making Brazilians look inward, with some arguing that
an American-style struggle is exactly what Brazil is missing.

> "I think it is important for young black Brazilians to know how the civil rights movement progressed in
the U.S. and how it produced not just Obama, but blacks at the highest levels of
American businesses," said Edson Santos, Brazil's minister of racial equality,
who is black. "It is important that they have contact with this reality."

> Glaucia Carvalho Oliveira is one of those young people.

> "All of a sudden, Obama has arrived and taken us to the next level," she
said, sweat glistening on her face as she assembled her snack stand on Rio's
Copacabana beach. "We black Brazilians need him as much as the Americans
do."

> Brazil and the U.S. were two of the largest slave-owning societies in the
Americas — some 4 million shipped to Brazil and 500,000 to the U.S. — and the
two countries that benefited most from the slave trade.

> Brazil freed its blacks in 1888, the last country in the Americas to do so.
In that year it abolished all its race laws, while American blacks had to fight
for more than 100 years after they were freed to gain full rights as
citizens.

> Black and white Brazilians
mix easily in both marriage and social venues, from soccer matches to samba
clubs. Beyond the half of the population that is black, most Brazilians are of
mixed ancestry and have a census category, "parda."

> No such category exists in the U.S. census. Obama, who is half white and
identifies as black, could call himself parda if he were Brazilian.

> Despite Brazil's social ease around race, many argue that its blacks simply
moved from the slave quarters to the slums.

> They are only 3 percent of Brazil's college graduates. Only one senator among
81 is black, which mirrors the U.S. breakdown, except that blacks are only 13
percent of the U.S. population. Twelve of Brazil's lower house's 513 members are
black, compared with 46 out of 435 U.S. house members.

> With Brazil's history of authoritarian governments and extreme poverty, blacks
only started organizing in the last 40 years, said Reginaldo Lima, who is black
and directs AfroReggae, which works on race and violence issues in Rio's
slums.

> Six years ago the country elected its first blue-collar president, Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva, a white man who enjoys huge support among blacks. But only
two of his 28 government ministers are black.

> In 2003 Brazil appointed its first black Supreme Court justice, Joaquim
Barbosa, whom some consider a future presidential candidate . Barbosa traveled to
Washington to watch the U.S. elections.

> Many whites play down the level of prejudice in Brazil, saying the
inequalities are economic, not racial.

> "We see people not as black or white. We don't look at a black person and
think they are not as capable as whites," said medical secretary Liliane Lyra,
43. "It is more a social problem that separates the races here, a lack of
opportunity for the poor."

> But Alannah Xavier, 26, says her black skin, not her economic status, keeps
her from getting work as a model in Brazil.

> "You know where I work the most? In Germany ... a nation that is supposedly
so racist with its Nazi past," said Xavier. "Here in Brazil they only have work
for blondes. Crazy, no?"

> Since Silva took office, there have been positive changes, notably
affirmative action in the university system, said Jose Vicente, director of
Ciudadana Zumbi dos Palmares University, who is black.

> Lima says Obama's election will help that struggle.

> " Barack Obama represents
what every black person in the world has been hoping for: that the fight of the
dream for racial equality in North
America can spread to the entire world," he said.

> Others doubt there will be an "Obama effect."

> "This is a very racially mixed country, but all the elites are white. Things
have been so bad for so long, I think people just accept it," said Carlos Eduardo Antones , 21, a waiter
and part-time student who is black.

> Either way, Emmanuel Miranda is happy to savor the moment.

> The 53-year-old Rio de Janeiro
policeman , who is black, sipped an espresso in a cafe off Copacabana
beach, lit his first cigarette of the day, and declared a new era.

> "The U.S. is a country to dream about, and for us black Brazilians it is even easier to do so now," he
said. "God bless you and your beautiful country."

1 comment:

Antigonum Cajan said...

To dream is always fun.
Reality is what gives
some difficulties.