Brazzil

Since 1989 Trying to Understand Brazil

Home

----------

Brazilian Eyelash Enhancer & Conditioner Makeup

----------

Get Me Earrings

----------

Buy Me Handbags

----------

Find Me Diamond

----------

Wholesale Clothing On Sammydress.com

----------

Brautkleider 2013

----------

Online shopping at Tmart.com and Free Shipping

----------

Wholesale Brazilian Hair Extensions on DHgate.com

----------

Global Online shopping with free shipping at Handgiftbox

----------

Search

Custom Search
Members : 22767
Content : 3832
Content View Hits : 33087879

Who's Online

We have 460 guests online



Brazil: Delmiro's Legacy in the Backlands PDF Print E-mail
2003 - August 2003
Friday, 01 August 2003 08:54


Brazil: Delmiro's Legacy in the Backlands

Known locally as the crossroads of the sertão, Petrolina in Pernambuco, and Juazeiro in Bahia, have joined a few other select urban centers to become high-tech islands in the Brazilian backlands. They were inspired by Delmiro Gouveia, a visionary from Ceará state who died in 1917.
by: AB

 

More than a hundred years ago, at the beginning of the 20th century, he was exporting goatskins from the backlands of Brazil's semi-arid region (caatinga or sertão) to New York where they were part of haute couture long before haute couture became haute couture.

In 1913 he plugged in the backlands by inaugurating Brazil's first hydroelectric power plant on the São Francisco River. He "inaugurated" a few other things in Brazil, as well: cars, a factory, irrigated crops, roller-skating, the cinema and ice.

Such were a few of the feats of Delmiro Gouveia (1863-1917), born in Ceará state, a skinny kid from the sertão who made it big in Recife as a captain of industry. He also believed that by marrying agriculture and cutting edge technology, the semi-arid backlands of Brazil could flourish. He was right.

Gouveia's fingerprints are all over today's Brazilian backlands. His ideas thrive throughout the Northeast semi-arid nation of Brazil. For example, farmlands around the twin urban centers that straddle the São Francisco River, Petrolina in Pernambuco, and Juazeiro in Bahia, have become one of Brazil's main fruit exporting areas. And the source of fine wines and goat cheese.

Known locally as the crossroads of the sertão, Petrolina in Pernambuco, and Juazeiro in Bahia, have joined a few other select urban centers to become high-tech islands in the caatinga, such as Campina Grande, Paraíba state, which exports software to China, and Sobral, Ceará state, near where Delmiro Gouveia was born, which is a footwear manufacturing center.

Gouveia was also a pioneer in the Brazilian textile industry, setting up South America's first factory in 1914, in a small backlands town. He was, to say the least, an innovative executive: the factory's one thousand employees worked eight hours a day and had housing, daycare centers, schools and medical assistance.

It was so successful that in 1930 the factory was purchased by Scottish interests. Right after they bought it, the Scots came to Brazil, disassembled the factory and tossed it into the São Francisco River so it would not compete with them. Today a new factory operates there, employing 620 people, and the town is now called Delmiro Gouveia. The geography has not changed at all; it is still very much semi-arid backlands.

A local poet (sertanejo Raimundo Pelado) pays tribute to Delmiro Gouveia in verse: "When Delmiro came to that place so sad / it was all desert and just dry air. / No houses, no roads. So bad/ nobody wanted to live there..." ("Quando Delmiro chegou,/naquele triste lugar,/ aquilo era deserto/ de ninguém querer morar,/não tinha casa nem gente,/ nem estrada pra passar").

Another sertanejo, Virgílio Gonçalves de Freitas, adds: "It was the great Delmiro Gouveia who evangelized the sertão nation, staved off hunger, opening the doors to salvation" ("Foi o grande Delmiro Gouveia/ que evangelizou o sertão/ que matava a fome alheia/ abrindo as portas à redenção").

 

This article was prepared by Agência Brasil (AB), the official press agency of the Brazilian government. Comments are welcome at lucas@radiobras.gov.br



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack