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Slavery Is Alive in Brazil While People Keep Living in Favelas and Streets PDF Print E-mail
2007 - May 2007
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Thursday, 24 May 2007 12:48

Favela in Rio, BrazilOvershadowed by the Pope's visit to Brazil, the 119th anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery passed without much pomp. At first it may seem strange that a date so important to Brazilian history would have passed unobserved. But there is an explanation. For these 119 years, we have been incapable of completing the act made by a princess on May 13, 1888.

The truth is that this magnificent law, consisting of a single article, abolished the sale of human beings, as well as the use of forced labor. But it did not put an end to slavery. We prohibited unremunerated labor done against one's will, but we have permitted unemployment.

We authorized the slaves to leave their slave quarters but freed them to go live in the favelas, in the open air under viaducts, in the tents of the Landless Workers Movement (MST). We stopped sending the leftovers from the manor house to the slave quarters but created a hunger not experienced by the slave.

And worst of all, although we abolished the prohibition against the slave's child attending school, we did not place them in the schools. Abandoned, they were left "free" to wander around the streets.

In that epoch, the Abolition Law - the Lei Áurea - was approved but the senators opposed to abolition greatly contested it. They affirmed that, yes, Brazil should eliminate the shame of the servile element but that the time was not yet right to do so. The agricultural sector, they argued, would fall apart. It was necessary to await the arrival of white immigrants in Brazil, they claimed.

Today we are hearing similar congressional arguments. We are not opposed to the abolition of illiteracy, but we are not finding the sufficient resources. A revolution in education is premature, we affirm, and should be gradual. Or, yes, we do need to improve education, but this is a task best left to the municipalities.

Let us imagine that Princess Isabel had given the mayors the task of abolishing slavery in their cities. Had this happened, even today we would probably still find slaves in all the Brazilian municipalities.

Why then do we refuse to make federal decisions so that all children will have a quality school? Why do we refuse to adopt a federal salary policy for the teachers? Why do we avoid a federal law that would set minimum standards of quality for a building to be considered a school, thus avoiding the utilization of buildings that have no water, no electricity, no bathrooms, no desks, no roof?

We must be frank and admit that, in these 119 years, we have been incapable of completing Princess Isabel's gesture. Human beings can no longer be sold but they remain abandoned. And the key to everything, I insist, is guaranteeing an equal school to the child of the rich and to the child of the poor.

A country does not have the right to promote an unequal education for children and young people, impeding them from freely developing their talent, their persistency, and their vocation.

Abolition will be complete only when the 164 thousand public schools in our country all have the same quality and each child has the same chances to build a future of dignity and freedom.

It is national - and not municipal - will that is lacking. Will like the Crown had in 1888, when a princess signed a law reading, "Slavery is extinct in Brazil." Now, a single law is not enough. We need a set of laws. And it will not be possible to promote a revolution in education in a single day. It will take ten or fifteen years to complete the Abolition. But it is possible. All we need do is put education in first place.

Cristovam Buarque has a Ph.D. in economics. He is a PDT senator for the Federal District and was Governor of the Federal District (1995-98) and Minister of Education (2003-04). He is the current president of the Senate Education Commission. Last year he was a presidential candidate. You can visit his homepage - www.cristovam.com.br - and write to him at mensagem-cristovam@senado.gov.br

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome - LinJerome@cs.com.



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Comments (13)Add Comment
...
written by aes, May 25, 2007
We are all abandoned, we come naked into the world and so shall we leave. We are all slaves, we drive cars to our bondage. It is only a matter of degree. The man that wakes under the bridge wakes free. The trouble with freedom is the responsibility of taking care of your own needs. We fear freedom, we know nothing about it. We are taught dependecy like so many sheep.
Robin Hood for president...
written by Luca, Roma, May 25, 2007
You need some Robin Hood policies in Brazil because the situation has really gone out of hand: urban centers have turned into criminal infernos with favelas and golden ghettos with vigilantes and peasants in the countryside live like slaves while landowners smoke their cigars at the local country clubs. Yet there can be no wealth redestribution through progressive taxation if corruption is so rampant. It's like the snake biting its tale. It becomes very difficult to fight poverty as long as there's corruption and ....it's hard to eradicate poverty in a situation such as Brazil where political life is one of the few ways to become rich. Politicians are more corrupted in poor countries than in rich ones, it's a world rule, it's nothing linked with Brazilian culture.
...
written by The Guest, May 25, 2007

Luca, Roma wrote: "Politicians are more corrupted in poor countries than in rich ones, it's a world rule, it's nothing linked with Brazilian culture."

No, No, No, Luca. Politicians in general are corrupt. There is no difference between poor or rich countries with the exception of the degree and how far some are willing to push the line before actually crossing it. In other words, some will cross the line, and some will push up against it. The out come however is the same, corruption.

In the USA corruption is called lobbying. "Democrats who campaigned successfully last year (2006) against a “culture of corruption” in the Republican-controlled Congress found themselves one-upped today when more than 30 of their own members voted for a GOP (Republican) motion to strengthen the package."
Lobbying has very little to do with the people whom the politicians were elected to serve and more to do with themselves. The Democrats won the last election partly by campaigning on corruption and now that they are in power the will to pass laws effecting meaningful change is an inconvience. Guess why.

In Italy, your country Berlusconi, "An Italian judge has thrown out some tax fraud and false accounting charges against former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi because the statute of limitations has expired."

In France Chirac's, " ambitious search for funds for his party is at the heart of corruption allegations, involving illegal party financing."

In England Blair, "The facts are simple and undisputed. At least four of Britain's richest men made loans worth millions to the Labour Party before the last election. The loans were kept secret and shortly afterwards Tony Blair recommended those same four men for peerages."

The above are but a few examples in the so called developed world. Please do not fool yourself, some may escape the long arms of the law but corruption is corruption. If it smells like a rat, looks like a rat, then it is a rat.

Most honest and trustworthy people do not get elected as polititicians. They are usually the ones who stay on the outside and effect change through agitation and protest. They are the one who are willing to give their lives, and NO, they do not use violence. Violence is however visited upon them by the corrupters and their hench-men.

The true success of these people is dependent upon the maturity of the people whom they try to serve and how badly they want change. In Brazil this is a problem since quite a number of the electorate continually elect politicians whom they know are corrupt.
NNNNNNOOOOOOOOO......there is nooooo slavery in Brazil !
written by ch.c., May 26, 2007
Just listen, read and swallow what Alencar your Vice President said : THERE IS NOOOOOOO SLAVERY IN BRAZIL !!!

Then why wonder that if there is no slavery.....why is there a government dept......against slavery ?
And if there is no slavery, why on a regular basis just a few slaves are....FREED..... ?????

HMMMMM...something stinks a great lie.....somewhat....somewhere !

If there is no slavery how can slaves be freed ?????

Only an idiot such as Alencar have NOOOOO explanation....curiously !

Smile
...
written by Acarajé, May 26, 2007
I agree that education is a point that should be in the first place.
With education, people would be more attractive when looking for a job. This way we would reduce unemployment.
With education, people would acquire more knowledge and would realize that some politicians are only taking advantages of their slavery, changing food or another things for votes. This way, people would pay attention to the politics and would vote with conscience.
It seems like some politicians don´t want to invest in education because they want to continue plundering the brasilians.
We need more serious people to govern our country...
Yes, this process of making a revolution in education will spend time, but it´s necessary.
...
written by Canadese, May 26, 2007
Review the history of slavery in every other country. The great United States of America abolished slavery generations ago and American favelas were abound.
DURA ISKRAVADURA :(
written by POBREZINHA DA ROCINHA, May 29, 2007
mermo aki na Rocinha tein muita ikravidaun, DURA ISKRAVADURA smilies/cry.gif
mia fia fujiu pra Sum Paulu, foi trabaliar comu dansarina, sum paulo eh mais justo ki o Rio, a cidadi vergonhosa
...
written by Dobrinho, June 01, 2007
If you're going to criticize in English, at least get it right. "Favelas abound"or "are abounding" in the US. Though that's not exactly true. There are projects, ghettos, hollers, trailer parks, and lots of other places in the US where poor people of all races (are forced to) live. Some even live in homes,which they can barely afford, or which are part of government housing and thus kept in very shoddy shape. But they are still in better shape than most of the favelas I've seen in Brazil.

Why hasn't Brazil ever stressed better urbanization policies? Even Curitiba, the jewel of the country, has "invasões" now and favelas. Why could the state of Paraná and the city of Curitiba, the conurbation of Curitiba, work things out to provide housing for the thousands who don't have it? Why do so few, especially in São Paulo, Rio, Paraná, Minas Gerais, Bahia, Pernambuco, etc., own SO much? Why isn't there better land distribution as in the far south of the country, or is it because only the "whites" gets the best options to buy and own land from the government and landowners, while the others must resort to the "Sem Terra" actions? Doesn't Brazil realize it will be stronger if all its people have the basics, including food, health care, old age pensions, a decent place to live, and an education?

But hey, the US still doesn't realize this, or its lousy right-wing and center-left politicians don't.
...
written by aes, June 01, 2007
It wasn't until the Watts riots, Martin Luther King, the Black Panthers, the burning of the American ghettos of the 60's that things began to change in the U.S.

Johnson's War On Poverty. Food Stamps, Meicaid.

Maybe if the people in the Favela's burned the Favela's down their would be a massive change.

Jim Crow in the South, integration in the South '59 National Guard called up to enforce integration, Kennedy calling in Federal Troops to enforce integration law, voting law. (Of course he got his head blown off in Dallas, the South, the very place he told people what they were going to do.)

Are things better, yes and no. The city scape doesn't quite look the same, the slums are different. Education is better, but there is access to free food, medicine. Blacks are now police, governors, mayors, Secretarys of State, Supreme Court Justices, but still there are problems, crime, drugs. And all this is forty years ago.

One mans ghetto is another man's house. FDR's New Deal was the beginning of solution, hell slavery didn't end but a 100 years ago at the end of the Civil War.

Everybody wants a Mercedez ergo everyone should have one.

Everybody wants the best dentist, ergo everyone should have one.

There is no Utopia, only approximations of it, degrees of it. You in the U.S. can work your way out of the ghetto, there is schooling for everyone. Many choose the Seven Deadly Sins, it is human nature.

Things improve. Different races in the U.S. adapt differently. There are few Japenese ghettos or Chinese ghettos, things evolve. Took a million years to make a dinosaur, probably take a million years to make a decent Civilization.
None
written by A. Mohammed, June 03, 2007
The race factor exists for Europe & America since their inception as nations and since their their early forays into the world in the 16th century. Islamic civilization at that time underrestimated the degree of fanatical racism and supremacy seeds they carried in their belly. This was for lack of a Mass Media to inform at that time and also, from a general disinterest in such a people and their practice. This time around, with the islamic Ascent underway, and the Greater Awakening across the globe, the issue of racism and oppression against african peoples and their descendents will be an issue to account for.
Mohammed
written by João da Silva, June 04, 2007
This time around, with the islamic Ascent underway, and the Greater Awakening across the globe, the issue of racism and oppression against african peoples and their descendents will be an issue to account for.



As a person who has studied all the relgions (not profoundly though), I discovered something interesting. The relgions were born to teach the people how to evolve in a civilized way. To my knowledge no relgion preaches violence,including yours. The problem is that some idiots use the religions as tools to attain power. The examples are the Mullahs in Iran, the Evangelical churches in U.S. and South America, the Orthodax Rabbis in Israel, the fanatical Hindus in India and other small sects spread all over the world.These fnatics have a way of interpreting their own religions for their own benefits.

I differ from you when you say that Islamic ascent is under way and the great global awakening is going to happen. I doubt it, as there are more non Muslims in this planet. I know a little bit of Koran and I think good Muslims will eventually shun violence and integrate into the Global Order.I really do not believe in Theocracy practised in Iran and it does oppress people in the name of religion.

As for me, I am happy to live in a secular country like ours, where nobody asks what relgion I belong to. We are tolerant to all the relgions and that is where our greatness lies.
don't do it
written by spencertheartist, July 22, 2008
Ok. Say you live in a favela. Disease, dirt, NOISE, poverty... and the local psycho can ruin your life in two seconds if you offend him. WHY WHY WHY would you conceive and raise a child (sorry, ten children) under those circumstances?

Get out of the favela - THEN have children. Can't get out of the favela? Ok, but WHY bring a screaming kid into that hellhole? Do you hate your kids that much that you have to put them through that horrible life?

OO senor, thee south amerrrrican music sooo sexy just got to make love, you know??????
Mr
written by Marco Borg, December 26, 2008
Brazil above everything else should avoid "learning" from Americans. As a European who travels quite often to the States, I always wonder what this "American dream" is all about. I am not impressed by their cities, their education, their loudness, their girth and their TV. And now that the American twin evils of Political Correctness (Roberta Aschenberg forcing banks to give mortgages to hundreds of thousnds of black non-hopers creating the notorious "toxic" assets) and uncontrolled Capitalist Greed have caused the Great American Blight everywhere I hope that the Americans (blacks, whites, Jews) have learned not to preach at other countries.

And if the people in the favelas want to improve their lot, they should like the Chinese, put their children's education above everything else. And perhaps the Brazilian Government can adopt the Chinese one-child policy.

As for Islam, it is incompatible with the cultures/religions of everybody who is not Muslim, be it in India, China, Thailand, Philipines, Spain, Britain, the U.S., France, Holland wherever. It is no wonder that most Muslim states are mired in poverty, corruption and even wars, and that so many Muslims have emigrated to Europe in spite of the fact that we don't want them.

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