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 : 33088420

Who's Online

We have 506 guests online



Genoíno's Path from Guerrilla to Socialist Lite in Brazil's Congress PDF Print E-mail
2007 - November 2007
Written by Ted Goertzel   
Wednesday, 14 November 2007 16:11

Brazilian congressman José Genoíno José Genoíno's life covers the trajectory of the Brazilian left over the last half century. Born to a poor family in a small town in Ceará, Genoíno wore shoes for the first time when he was fifteen years old. A priest helped him get an education and IBM offered him a chance to enter a management training program.

But Genoíno turned away from both religion and the chance for a corporate career to become a leader in the student resistance to the military dictatorship. He joined an ill-fated guerrilla band along the banks of the Araguaia river where he was captured, imprisoned and tortured.

On his release, he broke with the Communist Party of Brazil because be believed the party was distorting history and misleading its followers by glorifying the guerrillas instead of learning from their defeat.

Ostracized by his former comrades, he joined a splinter group called the Revolutionary Communist Party which functioned as a Leninist faction within the Workers Party. At the time, he opposed democratic reform within the bourgeois system in favor of building towards socialist revolution.

Entre o Sonho e o Poder (Geração, 2006) is a fascinating set of interviews with Genoíno by Denise Paraná, a writer best known for Lula: O Filho do Brasil - www.brazzil.com/p135may03.htm. Paraná skillfully uses the interviews to tell the story of a movement that failed at revolution, but succeeded at democratic politics.

The memoirs are well supplemented by Maria Francisca Pinheiro Coelho's José Genoíno: Escolhas Políticas (Centauro, 2007), a well researched biography. Coelho details Genoíno's life from his days as a student radical and guerrilla fighter to his leadership in the Workers Party and in the Brazilian legislature.

She does not, however, try to judge his alleged involvement in the mensalão scandal, a matter which is still before the courts. Instead, she allows him to present his account in his own words.

The break with the Communist Party was not the only ideological shift in Genoíno's life. In 1989, he moved in the opposite direction and broke with Leninism largely because of the collapse of "actually existing" socialism in Eastern Europe.

He recalls that he was deeply moved when he watched television coverage of "the scene on Tiananmen Square when students were massacred singing the International and Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and the tanks of the socialist state rolled over them. I spent the whole night without sleeping, remembering colleagues who died in Araguaia and who, when they died, took China as their reference point." (from Fernando Portela, Guerra de Guerrilhas no Brasil: A Saga do Araguaia (Terceiro Nome, 2002, p. 29).

When Genoíno broke with Leninism he gave a long interview to journalist Mauro Lopes", which was published in the Folha de S. Paulo and widely discussed at the time. The interview is reprinted in Repensando o Socialismo (Brasiliense, 1991) which is hard to find today.

In it, he emphasizes that the question of liberty must be placed at the center of the socialist project. He rejects one-party dictatorship and states that socialists must be open to many kinds of property ownership, including that of private entrepreneurs. He challenges the left to find a model which is to the left of European social democracy but without compromising democracy rights.

Once again Genoíno was ostracized by many of his comrades, this time because he had gone to the "right" instead of the "left". As Maria Francisca Pinheiro Coelho observes, "with rare exceptions, the Brazilian left refused to critically analyze the events [in Eastern Europe]. In order to not enter in crisis with their theory, they preferred not to learn from practice." (p. 317).

Genoíno was at a low point in his life when Denise Paraná interviewed him. He had given up his seat in the federal legislature to run for governor of São Paulo, and, when he lost that race, he had become president of the Workers Party. But he had to give up the party presidency when he was indicted in the mensalão scandal, although he denies any wrongdoing.

As party president, he did sign for some loans that were used for payments to legislators. He insists that these payments were campaign contributions, not bribes. He was also tarnished by some of his brother's problems, although he was not directly involved with them. He feared that his reputation was being destroyed.

When I interviewed him earlier this year, his spirits had recovered. He had been reelected to the federal legislature, and was looking forward to returning to Brasília. The legislature had always been the perfect outlet for his political and rhetorical talents.

The Workers Party, also, had moved very much in his direction with a new national program that aspired to socialism but insisted that democracy cannot be compromised.

As for Genoíno, he says "if they ask me what I am today, I reply: I am a democrat and, after being a democrat, I am a socialist." Marxists often aspire to combine theory and practice in their lives. Genoíno has done it.

Ted Goertzel, Ph.D. is Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey. He is the author of a biography of Fernando Henrique Cardoso, available in English and in Portuguese. He can be contacted at goertzel@camden.rutgers.edu and his WEB page can be found at http://goertzel.org/ted.



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 (4)Add Comment
Genoíno's Path from Guerrilla to Socialist Lite in Brazil's Congress
written by João da Silva, November 17, 2007
Ted Goertzel, Ph.D. is Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey. He is the author of a biography of Fernando Henrique Cardoso, available in English and in Portuguese.


After successfully writing the biography of FHC, does the distinguished professor and scholar Dr.Goertzel intend publishing the biography of Genoíno soon?
João
written by The Guest, November 18, 2007
I am still here, this time in Charleston, South Carolina. I arrived here yesterday, the 17th and will leave today to begin the journey across the big pond.

"As for Genoíno, he says "if they ask me what I am today, I reply: I am a democrat and, after being a democrat, I am a socialist." Marxists often aspire to combine theory and practice in their lives. Genoíno has done it."

While I do not know his whole life story from what I read here, I admire him for his will to change. He is a social democrat in the making although he is not yet willing to admit that fact.

The Guest
written by João da Silva, November 18, 2007
I am still here, this time in Charleston, South Carolina. I arrived here yesterday, the 17th and will leave today to begin the journey across the big pond.


A surprise to get your message. Thought you were already on the high seas. Will you be sailing around the Cape or through Suez? Have a great trip. Merry X-Mas and New year to you too.

While I do not know his whole life story from what I read here, I admire him for his will to change. He is a social democrat in the making although he is not yet willing to admit that fact.


Well, his boss changed to the right and may be he will too. I guess it depends on which direction the wind blows. smilies/grin.gif

I am sure by the time you return from the ME, you will have more topics to catch up with.Hope you are taking plenty of reading material with you. All the best and smooth sailing.
Here's To
written by Ric, November 20, 2007
Another resident of Quixeramobim besides Genoino, Tenente Sobrinho, a true patriot who did much for the NE in the area of aviation.

Wonder if Genoino ever met him. Probably took a Dim View of tenentes.

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack