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 : 33088493

Who's Online

We have 479 guests online



Gaza Gets All Attention, But Brazil Favela's Tragedy Is Much More Gruesome PDF Print E-mail
2007 - July 2007
Written by David Wainer   
Tuesday, 24 July 2007 19:59

A favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil It's no great assumption that there is disproportionate coverage on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. But how are other conflict-ridden regions of the world affected by this? For more than 20 years, various areas of my city - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - have been constantly doubling from residential neighborhoods to war zones.

The utter poverty of our shantytowns has lead much of our forlorn youth to narcotrafficking and violence from an early age upending any hope for progress. The situation in the favelas (slums) of Rio de Janeiro is a humanitarian disaster that since the 1980's, seemingly carries on endlessly and unrestrained.

Yet while poverty, violence, disease and death occur at outraging numbers turning my city into shambles, the tragedy of the hillside slums in Rio are largely accepted as the status quo by the media, the international community and the Brazilian government.

A recent documentary about the favelas in Rio, "Favela Rising", was nominated for an Oscar and decorated with several awards including Film of the Year by the International Film Association for its glaring look at the violence of a favela called Vigário Geral. 

The film, which offers powerful imagery of the brutality of the gangs and the police in Rio while tracing the mission of a local music group AfroReggae to inspire youngsters to stay away from drug-dealing, has received excellent reviews in the Boston Globe, New York Times, and the Washington Post.

Interestingly, at the very beginning of the acclaimed documentary, a screen shot of bold white letters printed over a black background offers perturbing statistics. It notes that while 467 minors were killed in Israel and Palestine from 1987 to 2001 (date which includes the first Palestinian intifada), 3,937 minors died as a result of gang warfare in Rio de Janeiro alone. An outstanding 8 to 1 ratio.

While many interesting reviews have been written up about the documentary, not one seems to give enough focus to this alarming fact and the message that the Brazilian directors intended to convey by this shot.

Why does a documentary that stresses the suffering and longing of the youth in the favelas of Rio care about the deaths of minors in Israel and the Palestinian territories? Because disproportionate media attention has been given to hyped conflicts such as the Israel-Palestine conflict and the Kosovo crisis, framing the public perception to believe that those conflicts are in fact the ones in most dire need of international aid.

Attesting to the public's misguidance, a questionnaire given at a War and Peace course at an Australian university, asked 37 students to list what they thought were the 3 deadliest conflicts in the world as well as the conflict they thought in terms of humanitarian conditions, was in most need of a solution. The most prevalent answer to the first question was the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with 9 students saying it was the deadliest conflict.

To the second question, 21 students responded that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was most urgently in need of a solution (1). In both cases, the students, who presumably study topics within international relations seem to have a misperception that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the most ghastly of all. The students are hazardously wrong.

In fact, since the 90's, conflicts in places obscure to the public consciousness such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Somalia, Sri Lanka, and my city, Rio de Janeiro, have been much more gruesome and claimed far more lives than the conflict in Israel-Palestine or Kosovo.

My city bleeds and the international psyche largely ignores its anguish. Instead, the world devotes a disproportionate amount of resources to places with far higher standards of living. To be fair, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Kosovo War have been tragic and are embedded with a significant dimension of civilizational fissure. But is a Palestinian or Israeli child more valuable than a Brazilian child? Is it fair to dump aid and diplomatic efforts disproportionately on one region of the world?

I blame it on the media. In an age where the news media has become increasingly influential in forming public opinion, it has failed at its task to distribute relevant information fairly. Instead, the news media today has ubiquitously become a supplier of a mélange of entertainment and information - sometimes emphasizing the former far more than the latter.

The portmanteau "infotainment" accurately describes the state of the mass media of today, carefully choosing stories that will attract the most readers and sell the most advertisements instead of stories that are gravely affecting the world.

If there is a humanitarian disaster in my city relatively comparable in suffering to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I challenge the publishers of mainstream newspapers to cover it more in depth. I dare editors and journalists to help students such as the aforementioned Australian students understand the precarious conditions under which children from favelas have to grow up with.

I commend the attention that has been given to the documentary "Favela Rising" and urge others to keep reporting on the subject. I know that every Kassam (home-made rocket) that kills an Israeli or every IDF missile that kills a Palestinian will most likely make it to the pages of the New York Times.

So I humbly request to Arabs and Israelis alike, will you compassionately share some space with my Rio de Janeiro compatriots?

(1) http://www.jha.ac/articles/a126.htm

Born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, David Wainer is a graduate from Boston University and a journalist. He has been published in The Nation, The Jerusalem Post, and New Voices.

 



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 (36)Add Comment
...
written by diviiii, July 25, 2007
First...there is no oil in those hills. Second...it's not in the US best interest like Israel and Iraq. This is on the jacks that run Brasil. Time put your people ahead of tourists and that nonsense that the South is just like Germany b/c it's not.
Oh Please
written by Ric, July 25, 2007
We´re sorry about Rio. But what does every problem have to be blamed in whole or in part on the International Community? Locally, the fault lies with the perps themselves. Regionally, with whatever keeps the authorities from cleaning it up, be it political or strategic. Historically, the fault lies with the gente boa, leftovers from the imperial era, who let this situation develop; and from more recent politicians who follow in their footsteps.

In terms of the latter, find the guy who thought up the idea of making voting obligatory and you´ve found your Most Likely Suspect.
Better to blame than take responsibility
written by Peter Pan, July 25, 2007
Like you said it's your city, do something about it. Don't blame the "International Community", the press, or other countries. Step up and humbly take responsibility for "your city".
...
written by Charles Scott, July 25, 2007
Truky well said. There is no doubt that western journalists have abdicated their roles as keepers of the light. At this juncture, news is determined by the amount of buzz it can generate. How else can you explain the Paris Hilton hysteria.
Sorry
written by REM, July 25, 2007
Sorry, but the time to fix this problem was when the city was getting overpopulated, it's too late now. You've got a problem that cannot be fixed. 100 years from now, when people have died off, maybe but for now your problem is there to stay. In the United States, we're having a smiliar problem with illegal invaders who are going unchecked. 20-30 million now. Someday, we too, will have the same problem you now have and then it's uncontrollable.
To Peter Pan !
written by ch.c., July 25, 2007
"Better to blame than take responsibility"
You said it all.

Brazil doesnt even want to recognize they are responsible for brazilians residing in Brazil !
Funnily, they want to teach other developing nations how to reduce poverty, build low cost housing, build paved roads in Palestine......BUT THEY ARE UNABLE TO DO IT...
IN BRAZIL !!!!!!!
Even more laughable is that Brazil has given US$ 1 million to Palestinians for their reconstruction, and try to get contracts to build homes and roads.
Ohhhhhh....the reconstruction budget totals several billion of US$, mostly given by the USA, the EU and the region oil producing nations.
watch what happens
written by FORREST ALLEN BROWN, July 26, 2007
as soon as the rich want a hillside in RIO or SP that the poor live on well then and only then will they build lula houses out some place and then the rich will build there condos
over the slum rubble.
then the roads , water , sewer , will all be brought in the right way

but as long as the poor vote can be had for beer hotdogs,
they will stay
...
written by dm, July 26, 2007
I am rather surprised at this high level of gang warfare in Rio. I thought it was only portrayed in the movies...just for the sake of making a movie...it was more like an exaggeration...and the ground situation was probably better. But may be I am wrong. I am an investor in Brazil and love the country and its people, based on my limited knowledge of the country. But I think the politicians everywhere are same- while on one side we hear the Brazilian government blowing its trumpet on the success of its poverty alleviation programs, the next time you get to read is that some government minister has been caught embroiled in some corruption scandal. And then this gang warfare. In my view, it has to do with urban planning which is just missing (or should I say, general strategy and vision, which is lacking) ..The recent airlines disaster...another newsitem about how only 10% of the highway roads are paved in the country...too many things to set right. Come on... Brazil....score a goal....
Observer
written by Doggy Daddy, July 26, 2007
The falvelas here here to stay.. There is no solution short of moving the folks to some deserted off shore islands and declaring a new republic! Would make a great movie!!!!
Wouldn´t it, tho.
written by Ric, July 26, 2007
Go back and read this article. He wants more media attention. He wants the international community to energize. Why?

One possibility would be some kind of foreign intervention, starting in the UN or in the US congress. Now, how do you think that would be responded to here in Brazil? With strikes, articles, protests, more anti-Americanism. "Stay out, we can handle it".

Another possibility is that he´s just regurgitating the common phrases, "Não foi (or fui) Eu", "Câdê o Meu", and "Porque Eu?". The end of the eighth paragraph tells the story:"....DIRE NEED OF INTERNATIONAL AID."

Nice try. You had a deadline, you wrote your story, we hope you got paid for it. But there´s enough money in Rio just among the Idle Rich to pay for fixing the Rio Situation, if it can be demonstrated that indeed any amount of money could fix it. It´s probably not a case of money at all, but mentality.
Hmmm
written by Mauro, July 26, 2007
I don't he is blaming the media and the international world for the problems in Rio, he does blame those entities for not paying attention the way they do to other conflicts that are so sensationalized. Why, does the press pay little to no attention to Rio. The answers are obvious but the question isnt asked enough. interesting piece.. i wonder what your answer to it would be/

BTW, of course the blame for the problems rests with the "idle" bourgeois as the comment above suggest.
...
written by Ric, July 27, 2007
He´s not blaming the media and the rest of the world for the status quo, but blames them for letting it continue, his idea being that publicity and foreign money could solve the problem. Which it wouldn´t.
...
written by Tomaz, July 27, 2007
Problem in Brasil is that there are too many too much rich people there that don't care anything about those poor people. Problem is also that Rio needs this people for working force - modern slaves that works for this rich people, they need them, they need people working in their buildings, cooking for them cleaning s**t from them.
Those rich Brasilians prefer to eat in only too expensive restorants and they don't care about money, but on other hand they don't care about their own people who are poor. Other problem is corruption. Unfortunately I don't see solution for this in short therm, but first of all something will have to change in mind of Brasilians about this.
...
written by A brazilian, July 27, 2007
First, whoever said "bourgeois" is probably contaminated by the leftist rethoric we have here. The problem are values and the ideology of those currently in power. If you live in Brazil and read newspapers you will see that there's a glamourization of the poor, as if they were pure and honorable always, and a constant attempt to transfer the guilt of their situation to the middle class and up. There's absolutely no notion of self-resilience, if you are poor then someone else is guilty, if you don't have a car then those who have are the blame, if you don't have a home then the government should give you one, if you don't have a job then capitalism is bad.

By saying "give you a house" I don't mean programs for helping the less fortunate to get back on track, I mean actually building houses and giving it away, to everyone, always. They actually believe that's the government role, to take care of everyone and distribute money. Movements like MST want exactly that, that the government give them land! It's their right, they think.

Isn't it interesting that since democracy started again the violence exploded? Why? Because Brazil is a false democracy and we have only leftist parties. If the military were in power those drug dealers would be probably killed and nobody would ever heard of them again, but the leftist prefer to defend them. Recently a 8 year old kid was dragged by 15 Km by a stolen car by the thieves, and people like Cristovam Buarque, along with his communist friends, wrote what? That the society was guilty of it, and by society they mean "middle class".

In the heads of the leftists, especially the ones from PT, if someone commits a crime then it's not his fault, it's society's fault.

David's text was pathetic.
...
written by João da Silva, July 27, 2007
Isn't it interesting that since democracy started again the violence exploded? Why? Because Brazil is a false democracy and we have only leftist parties. If the military were in power those drug dealers would be probably killed and nobody would ever heard of them again, but the leftist prefer to defend them. Recently a 8 year old kid was dragged by 15 Km by a stolen car by the thieves, and people like Cristovam Buarque, along with his communist friends, wrote what? That the society was guilty of it, and by society they mean "middle class".


Hear,Hear and pay attention. A Brazilian speaks for all the middle class victims who pay their taxes,honest and law abiding.Anyone defending the middle class Brasilians? Or is anybody defending small and medium sized businesses? Has anyone criticized the government for giving medals to the 4 directors of ANAC,before the end of the mourning period after the TAM disaster? The answer to these questions is a loud NO.

David Wainer,being so clever and educated at Boston University should realize that his articles are read only by the middle class and above, should write a little more about how we are being massacred by the leftist looneys.btw, who paid for his scholarship to study at the Boston University? Probably the Military government.
Loosing Sight
written by Lori Bocek, July 28, 2007
I can hardly believe some of the comments posted here!!!! This piece has been written out of love and surrounds the memories of a man who loves and has great concern for Brazil. Popular news has lost sight of injustice in many areas of the world due to U.S. media and government driven interests. I recently made a trip to Brazil which included community work in Sao Paulo & Rio's favela and I have learned an immense amount about poverty and the vast differences for those who live the "privileged" life. I'm pretty sure that most of these posts are made by those who are "privileged", who own computers, and who live well above the poverty line. I'm not trying to attack the posters and their comments, but I wonder if any of them truly know what it is like to live in or experience extreme poverty. There is nothing more powerful than experience, and my wish is that others could experience the power of poverty. My fear is that due to their lack of experience with poverty, Europeans and Americans continue to display ignorance and inaction.

Reading about an impoverished country and its standard of living can be shocking, looking at people in pictures who are hungry and affected by poverty can be more powerful, but experiencing the daily lives of those who are affected by poverty is almost indescribable. The experience of walking the same streets as the residents of a favela and seeing what life is really like for them is a humbling experience. Looking into the eyes of hopeful children who have never been to school and who will fall victims to the pressures of the social world that surrounds them is heartbreaking. Watching young girls sell themselves into prostitution is like watching a sister give a piece of her soul away that she will never be able to reclaim. My fear is that governments are not funding an improved future or improved living for the poor, but rather funding what the wealthiest desire.

However, my greatest fear today and tomorrow is that the world ignores injustice. This post isn't just about the favelas of Rio or even Brazil, it is about human responsibility, education, and action. There are many serious social problems in Brazil, but the people are happy and there is a strong sense of family. In the United States, individuals are obsessed with making money and climbing the pay scale. The United States is limited in unity and many factors seem to supersede the importance of family. However, for Brazilians, the importance of family is undeniable. Mother Teresa says, “ In some countries there is mostly material poverty, but in rich countries of Europe and America there is much spiritual poverty and it is much more difficult to cure” (17). Brazilians may not be wealthy like Americans, but strong families, religious values, sports, and an immense love for their country bond them. There is much spiritual poverty in the United States due divisions over war, financial status, and individualist ideals. It is the duty of privileged individuals to take care of fellow humans spiritually and financially. No matter where poverty and injustice exist it should not stop the world from listening to the needs of people who are suffering. So I wonder… Is the United States really RICHER than Brazil???
Lori Bocek
written by João da Silva, July 28, 2007
I recently made a trip to Brazil which included community work in Sao Paulo & Rio's favela and I have learned an immense amount about poverty and the vast differences for those who live the "privileged" life. I'm pretty sure that most of these posts are made by those who are "privileged", who own computers, and who live well above the poverty line. I'm not trying to attack the posters and their comments, but I wonder if any of them truly know what it is like to live in or experience extreme poverty.


Yes, I know what it is to be poor and live in extreme poverty. To call the middle class Brasilians who own or borrow computers to post comments "privileged"? For me, you are another leftist whiner,sorry about it.

Ah, you made a recent trip to Brasil to do community work in the favelas of Rio & S.Paulo. Great.Hope they all accepted you as the reincarnation of Mother Tereza and treated you well (and did not rob you off your money and the passport).If you did enjoy the work, please do come again.

btw, where are you from,Poland?
Lori
written by Ric, July 28, 2007
Just wondering why you slipped in to the familiar "comparison with the USA" material. The article talked about Israel, the Palestinians, some Africans, Australia, but not the USA. We´re tired of reading about the USA. Stick to the subject at hand. Rio, Kosovo, Sri Lanka. Forget about the USA.
Ric
written by João da Silva, July 28, 2007
We´re tired of reading about the USA. Stick to the subject at hand. Rio, Kosovo, Sri Lanka. Forget about the USA.


Something you said which is true. WE ARE TIRED OF READING ABOUT USA. Half arsed pseudo leftist intellectuals like this lady Lori, who spent a couple of weeks in the favelas of Rio and S.Paulo and passing judgement on the middle class Brazilians? I dont think she is an American but,probably from Kosov. The least she could do is to apolgise to people like me OR donate her entire money to the favelados.

You know Ric, it has become fashionable not only to bash the foreigners for all the ills of our country,but also to bash the Brazilian Middle class. Of course, the strategy of the leftist whiners has always been the same throught the history. f**k the middle class and make them poor and lose their dignity.
...
written by Lori Bocek, July 29, 2007
Hope everyone responding to my post is having a great time poking fun at what I have said... You all are pathetic and have no idea where I come from and the life I live. It hilarious that you assume I am Polish and that Bocek is ultimately my maiden name. For all you know I could be Brasilian. I was simply making a comparison of two very different countries and noting that the media has provided an injustice to the world by highlighting Kosovo, Palestine, ect. and not exposing Brazil or other countries that are overlooked due to politics. I feel sorry that you have nothing better to do than waste your time by posting such things and if you are going to post you could have the decency to spell correctly or grab a dictionary so as not look like an illiterate idiot!!!
Action needed
written by edson, July 29, 2007
There is only one solution to the favela problem. Build proper housing with necessary infrastructure including water/electricity/roads and schools for all favela dwellers on new locations in RJ and SP states and afterwards raze the slums to the ground. This will be the best solutions for all parties but the drug peddlers. These must be rounded up and sent to reeducation and labour camps.Most favela dwellers want only a decent life for themselves and their families. This is impossible today in the favela setting. And about time the Brazilian government deals with this and other problems, including the glaring problems associated with a total lack of family planning and lack of sex education in our schools. The catholic church and their archaic priests have with their "no contraception" and anti-abortion propaganda created untold tragedies in poor families who simply can't feed their large families....not to mention all our young girls who give birth to unwanted, unplanned children.
...
written by João da Silva, July 29, 2007
if you are going to post you could have the decency to spell correctly or grab a dictionary so as not look like an illiterate idiot!!!


I am sure that your "community service" in the Favelas of Rio and SP consisted of teaching the favelados how to spell correctly in English.

Sorry dear, we the vanishing middle class Brasilians,strive hard to spell correctly both in Portuguese and English,but without much success. I bet you spelling skill both in English and Portuguese is awesome.

Thanks for calling us pathetic. Really, I dont care where you come from nor the kind of life you live. It must be quite exciting though.
To:Lori Bocek
written by João da Silva, July 29, 2007
Loosing Sight


Talking about spelling errors: Is it "Loosing sight" or "Losing Sight",Mother Tereza of Calcutta? Better go refer to a dictionary.
You are so right, Lori
written by Ric, July 29, 2007
For all we know you could be an Indian woman studying medicine in Havana. We have nothing to do but waste our time. That is because we are part of the Vanishing Middle Class with discretionary schedules. If you are Canadian that´s shedules.
To:Ric
written by João da Silva, July 30, 2007
If you are Canadian that´s shedules.


You are bloody right smilies/grin.gif
Too right!
written by davidk, July 31, 2007
As a citizen of Israel I'd be more than happy to see less international media attention of 'the situation' here as it generally paints a pretty terrible, unfair picture of my country. This article only starts to show the disprportionate coverage of this region which leads to such a distortion of the facts and robs other world issues of their just attention and help.
Blame the middle class
written by Shelly, August 01, 2007
My father is a honest hard working man. He worked hard to put a roof over my head and gave me the best "possible" education. We are considered the "struggling middle class" and he pays everything twice. I never went to public school or used the public health service. However, we were taxed as if we were using the services provided by the state of Rio de Janeiro. He works his ass of and I am proud that he gave me every opportunity in the world. Instead of complaining about his situation when he was growing up, he decided to get out of poverty ( in the 60's). His mother had 10 children to raise, therefore money was short. He married early and had 3 daughters, finished his degree while working for Henckel. How can you blame my father for all the woes of this country? Go and blame the president and the corrupted politicians. He does more to help the poor than anyone I know. Every Sunday he goes to a favela-has done that for the past 15 years, in Jacarepagua and teaches, helps with construction, food and whatever that needs to be done. Favela do Anil, ask about it and you will see that there is a group of middle class people dedicated into trying to better the lives of the poor. I don't compare him or anyone else with Mother Theresa, but those of you wanting to criticize, get up and help the situation. I am sick and tired of listening to people put the blame the middle class-we are the one's supporting this economy, we pay more taxes than the average American and get ZERO in return,
correction/grammar
written by Shelly, August 01, 2007
put the blame on....
don't compare him or anyone to Mother...before some smart pants decides to correct me! smilies/wink.gif
...
written by bo, August 01, 2007
written by Ric, 2007-07-26 11:10:44
Go back and read this article. He wants more media attention. He wants the international community to energize. Why?

One possibility would be some kind of foreign intervention, starting in the UN or in the US congress. Now, how do you think that would be responded to here in Brazil? With strikes, articles, protests, more anti-Americanism. "Stay out, we can handle it".


Ain't that the truth! Think I've had my fill with blind, rabid, anti-americanism in this country. I'd much rather prefer for the U.S. gov't. and people just completely stay out of Brazil issues. Let them reap the "fruits" of their labor, or lack thereof. Sooner or later Brazilians need to get fed-up enough to take matters into their own hands. It's your country, it's your life, they are what we make them.



...
written by nesnej, August 01, 2007
I doubt Bocek speaks a word of Portuguese. The fact is there has been plenty of international coverage regarding the war in Rio one just needs to do a search on the Washington Post, BBC, New York Times ect. Of course the coverage isn't as high as that of the middle east conflict, but that is because the middle east conflict is one of the reasons sited by extremist groups for wanting to destroy the western world. When drug traffickers from the Rio favelas start blowing up the London Underground or flying planes into buildings then the world will start to give a s**t. Oh and if you want to read about how "great" mother Teresa was read this http://www.slate.com/id/2090083/
Or Not
written by Ric, August 06, 2007
Maybe you offended Lori with your comment on Mother Teresa. But Lori could learn Portuguese, hear it spoken, on 620 AM KIGS in Hanford. Just east on the 101 to the five, north to Kettleman city and turn north on 41, east on the 198, and look for it on your right as you head towards Visalia.

Of course they speak with an Azores accent, which sounds a little like Jader Barbalho might if he had a bad cold.
...
written by KaZeka, August 09, 2007
they make big cinema of favela in the television of the usa is also to be seen
why not to want to know the childs of the palestine? Brasilieros to ownselfs not to another natiuon
...
written by John Doe, August 09, 2007
I am sorry to hear of the tradgedy but when Brazilians enter the U.S or Europe as permanent citizens and get visa's the act like Brazil life is better and the country is better than U.S or europe. All they do is complain about how better things are back home. Instead of talking about what the article states and bring it to attention, that things are far worse in Brazil than in 1st world countries. Sure we have problems, but Brazilians who come to America and Europe think they are too high class to talk about the Favelas and crimes that happen. And fuss and complain about Our countries of how bad our countries are.
...
written by JustMe, August 10, 2007
After living in Rio for two years, I just cant get over how Cariocas like to speak about the violence in Rio as a WAR! It just always frustrates me because everytime that I try to explain that it is not, they just always point to the violence and the number of dead people to me as a proof...Is there a lot of violence in Rio? yes! But a war would need two camps with clearly defined lines and ideological claims...
But Cariocas like to speak about the situation in Rio as a War because it frees them from looking at what caused, perpetuates, and feeds the violence in Rio: social injustices and gross inequality. May I add that funny enough it is often the super priviledged ones who like to give the war talk like the author above: the ones who studied at the right school and have maid serving them since they were babies well into adulthood! And as the author above wants us to accept, the War (between who? the common poor favela resident and the rich??? with the police as the agent of the rich of course) is so violent and desperate that INTERNATIONAL MONEY is the only thing that can resolve it instead of all brazilians (especially the middle class) coming together to get the state and its representative to invest in its people of all races and class by providing social services and good housing as well as better jobs to them especially to people living in the favelas so that drug trafficking criminals (who exist in other parts of the world!) cannot convince youths to take the path of criminality and violence while at the same time punishing police corruption and violence all the while providing them with better trainings and equipments. But I guess it is easier to compare Rio to Gaza and the Israeli-Palestine conflict where two countries are striving to live on the same land and one people was expulsed from its home...Meanwhile as one priviledge Carioca would have me believe, a solution to ending the drug trafficking in the favelas is to allow the militias to control these territories!!!! what about going in the zona zul and entering those homes in the search of marijuana and coke??...
p.s. of course, not all Cariocas speak about the violence that way...I have had some very enlightening conversations with people who are willing to look into the mirror...they can still love their beautiful country. But as a foreigner, I would much prefer to live in Rio than in Gaza in terms of the violence...but then again, I never lived in the favelas and if someone in Rio should compare life there as living in Gaza it is someone who has lived and shared the plight of the favelas residents...and I doubt that the author above is one of them with all due respect...
Good article, but Rio's not alone
written by Marvin, October 22, 2007
I agree but there have been worse cases.

I point to the extraordinary number of homicides, youth gang warfare, drug-related violence etc. siginificantly worse than Rio's over time yet receiving far less attention than even the Brazilian cityu - namely Medellin, Colombia.

Also I'm not sure about ther comparison between Gaza and Rio, Viva Rio do talk s**t at times and it may be unscientific. We could definitely do with hearing less about American cities which seem incredibly over-hyped to me.
...
written by joe cusamano, January 06, 2008
The Brasilian government should start in one favela with an education program that includes the basics plus health, science and sex education. Distribution of condoms or other methods of birth control would help control the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, and the growing population. Most important, and probably the most difficult of all, would be a policy that would start to diminish the influence of the Catholic Church, and all the other christian or cult influences.
Why? Because as long as people are told they are helpless and are controlled by unseen forces/spirits/gods, or by the so-called or self-appointed human agents of those gods, the mess that has been created and allowed to fester in heart of the most beautiful city in the most beautiful country will never, NEVER, be cleaned up.

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack