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Once again: Brazilians Are Not Hispanic PDF Print E-mail
2003 - October 2003
Wednesday, 01 October 2003 08:54


Once again: Brazilians Are Not Hispanic

A number of the diverse populations who migrated to Brazil include: Portugal, Italy, Poland, France, Germany, Lebanon, Syria, Japan, Russia, Austria, Turkey all of which are disengaged from the Hispanic-Latino paradigms. Brazilians don't belong to an illusory Hispanic or Latino "race."
by: Alan P. Marcus

 

The terms "Hispanic" and "Latino" within the USA are conflicting. On the one hand they empower Spanish-speaking communities such as Puerto Ricans, Mexicans and Cubans, but on the other hand, they grossly oversimplify Latin America and "racialize" Latin Americans.

Not all Latin American surnames are "Spanish surnames" nor do they end in "ez", (i.e.; Martinez, Lopez) particularly in Brazil. Here are a few examples of surnames of some of the several Brazilian presidents in the past 40 years, who do not have "Spanish surnames" nor do there surnames end in "ez": Kubitchek, Medici, Geisel, Sarney, Collor. In addition, here are some other examples of surnames of presidents from Spanish-speaking Latin American countries that also do not end in "ez" nor do they have "Spanish surnames": Stroessner, Fujimori, Menem, Pinochet, Fox, Kirschner.

A number of the diverse populations who migrated to Brazil include: Portugal, Italy, Poland, France, Germany, Lebanon, Syria, Japan, Russia, Austria, Turkey all of which are disengaged on several levels; medically, culturally, and ethnically from the "Hispanic-Latino" paradigms.

The Brazilian Immigrant Center (Centro Imigrante Brasileiro), in Allston, Massachusetts, was founded in 1995, and serves as a centralized office for Brazilian worker's rights, as well as a general information guide to new Brazilian immigrants. According to the founder and director of the Center, Fausto Mendes da Rocha, the Brazilian population in Massachusetts is calculated by estimating the number of Brazilians in church membership, attendance and services, Brazilian businesses, the telephone and e-mail inquiries received by the Immigrant Center in Allston, and the number of Brazilian newspapers in Massachusetts.

Rocha estimates that there are approximately 231,000 Brazilians living in Massachusetts in 2003, and approximately 1.2 million Brazilians living in the entire USA. These figures are higher to the unrealistically low US Census 2000 figures of 212,428 Brazilians living in the entire USA, and of 36,669 Brazilians living in Massachusetts. The estimated figures of 784,000 Brazilians living in the entire USA, and 200,000 in Massachusetts, from the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs are likely to represent more realistic figures.

The Brazilian population, according to Rocha, has changed since the 1990's, from a transitory one to a more stable and permanent one. This is because, according to him, during the 1990's, Brazilians were working for a year or two and then returning to Brazil, and now, he has noticed a large increase in the number of Brazilian home-ownerships as well as business-ownerships in the past four years, also indicating that Brazilians are no longer returning to Brazil.

According to an article ("O Eldorado Brilha Menos"—The Eldorado Shines Less), written by Eduardo Salgordo on January 16, 2002, in the Brazilian magazine Veja, there are an estimated 800,000 Brazilians living in the USA and 17,000 Brazilians living in Framingham, MA. These population figures for Framingham, MA, are also in accordance with the estimate figures given by The Brazilian Immigrant Center in Allston, MA.

The US Census does not list Brazilians as part of their breakdown of South Americans of "Hispanic" or "Latino" origin living in Massachusetts.

In 2003, the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has estimated that about 100,000 Brazilians leave Brazil per year, and about one-third of the 2 million Brazilians living abroad are illegal residents (Brazilian Times, Massachusetts, By Paulo Torrens, Aug. 15, 2003).

The studies of anthropologist Maxine Margolis (1998) "An Invisible Minority: Brazilians in New York City" point that in 1996 there was an estimated figure of over 600,000 Brazilians living in the entire USA. The official US Census 1990, estimated that there were 94,087 Brazilians living in the USA. According to Margolis, this figure was severely undercounted and the Brazilian population figures ought to be at least eighty percent higher. This undercount is attributed to several reasons, primarily because of the large unaccountability of undocumented Brazilians, who overstay their tourist visas to continue working in the USA, and fear that revealing any information will result in detection.

Another reason for the undercount, according to Margolis, is the confusion concerning the Census forms, since Brazilians are not Spanish-speaking Latin Americans and hence cannot and do not call themselves "Hispanic", they end up checking other options appears that if Brazilians are not counted, then in effect, they don't exist. For this reason, Margolis has called them the "invisible minority".

Problem of Terminology

The confusing terminology used by the US Census Bureau that give contextual life to a "Hispanic Population", that is, the term semantically migrates from the realm of the "imaginary" to the realm of "reality". Given the confusing semantic context of the interchangeable terms "Spanish", "Hispanic" and "Latino", as seen in US Census 2000, Brazilians mark the "No" box as instructed (i.e., "Mark the No box if not Spanish/Hispanic/Latino").

The US census in 1970 was the first to include a separate question specifically on "Hispanic origin". The term "Latino" appeared on the census form for the first time in 2000. The 1980 and 1990 censuses asked people if they were of "Spanish/Hispanic origin or descent" and then, to choose "Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, or other Spanish/Hispanic". A review of such ethnic categories would indicate the need for addressing a problem in order to establish the accurate count of Brazilian populations living in the USA. The misguided semantic problem, based on misinformation on Brazilian ethnic identities and complexities, is that Spanish language or ancestry, "Hispanic" and "Latino" are interchangeable.

"The terms "Spanish," "Hispanic origin," and "Latino" are used interchangeably. Some respondents identify with all three terms while others may identify with only one of these three specific terms."

Source: US Department of Commerce, US Census Bureau 2000, "Massachusetts: 2000 Summary Population and Housing Characteristics", Page B-8, Issued 2002: http://www.census.gov/prod/www/abs/briefs.html

The manifestations of the interchangeable terms "Spanish/Hispanic/Latino" give life to the perpetuation of Latin American inaccuracies, stereotypes, and ascriptions particularly dissimilar to Brazilians.

The exclusion of Brazilians within the "Hispanic" and "Latino" paradigms in the US occurs for several reasons and in various ways. Firstly, Brazilians are not actively integrated or engaged within the US "Hispanic" or "Latino" political process, nor are they part of the significant US Spanish-speaking public discourse. Secondly, from a geo-political perspective, Brazil is further away from the US than countries such as Mexico, Puerto Rico, or Cuba; and in addition, the former three countries have shared a longer historical and political relationship with the US than Brazil. Thirdly, Brazilians are distinctly dissimilar from other Latin Americans within many dimensions (i.e., linguistically, culturally, historically, ethnically).

The Portuguese language spoken in Brazil, Brazilian ethnicity, and Brazilian culture are not interchangeable with "Spanish/Hispanic/Latino". The Jeitinho Brasileiro ("The Brazilian way"), the Jogo Bonito ("The Beautiful Game", a Brazilian reference to Brazilian-style soccer) and Samba (Unique Brazilian Samba music), are not interchangeable with "Spanish/Hispanic/Latino". In addition, the Brazilian raison d'être is devoid of any relationship within the "Hispanic-Latino" paradigms.

In a sense, "Hispanic" and "Latino" have inaccurately "racialized" all Latin Americans, and have thus "latinamericanized" all of Latin America monolithically and homogenously.

The implication is that there is an illusory "Hispanic" or "Latino" "race" or that there is a single imaginary country where "Hispanics" and "Latinos" come from, and of course, neither is true.

 

Alan P. Marcus (Master's of Science in Geography in progress) is a Brazilian living in the USA. He has also written other articles on Brazilian issues on identity, "race", ethnicity, and animal ethics for Brazzil magazine, available online: www.brazzil.com  E-mail contact: amarcus@geo.umass.edu



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Comments (13)Add Comment
U DONT KNOW s**t !!!
written by Guest, May 22, 2005
Im brasilian & that makes me Latino. We are from south America & also cosidered Hispanic because of our similarities!!! So dont be saying that wer not Latino or Hispanic because we are & i can prove it dumb ass !!!!
Great Article
written by Guest, October 31, 2005
I really liked the article. As a brazilian living in the USA I have found myself defending my ethnicity several times. i do not consider or have ever consider myself a "latino'. Nor will I ever. I am a Brazilian and that's pretty much it.
You are RIGHT! We are not Hispanic!
written by Guest, January 06, 2006
For more info read the following published by Helen Marrow from the University of Harvard.
http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~ma...hispanic'
hispanic is who speaks spanish
written by Guest, January 08, 2006
we speak portuguese and not spanish
...
written by Guest, March 30, 2006
Brazilians are latinos but not hispanics, americans cant seem to understand this
...
written by Guest, June 01, 2006
I cant believe americans dont know, even professors like this man dont know what a latino is and what a hispanic is

it's shocking
...
written by Guest, June 04, 2006
well, this guy is *not* a professor, he is a graduate student. and he doesn't know a lot of geography either: there's immigrants from "turkey, poland..." in all of latin america! And he uses his phrases all wrong "raison d'etre."

i think many more brazilians are proud to be latino than people let on!
Confused
written by Washington Medeiros, September 08, 2006
Brazilians can be Latino and Hispanic. If your father is Brazilian and your mother Spanish and you were born in the USA what am I?
One World Order
written by One World Order, November 28, 2006
Its all about the emergence of the One World Order. Ever since the end of slavery, the coorperations have been looking for ways to find cheap labor. The coorperate elites both democrat & republican want to erase all borders and sovereignty. First by labeling all people from south america Hispanic, thus over a generation joining them together. Then finally they want to open U.S., Brazilian and Canadian borders. This will create an American Union just like the European Union. The whole aim is to use socialist ideas to create a two class system and dissolving the middle class. The rich and powerful will get richer and the poor will get poorer.
One World Order
written by One World Order, November 28, 2006
Look at how president Bush refuses to do something as simple as control the U.S. Border. He turned his back on all of his Republican peers. During the last North American Sumit, Bush and the presidents of Canada and Mexico made secret trade deals that would bypass congress (all while the war in Iraq was diverting our attention). Look at Hugo Chavez and his socialist ideas, his country has an 80% poverty rate. Its all about the slow emergence of the One World Order. Theirs nothing we can do about it. It is written in bible profecy (revelations). Sadly, Brazil will suffer the same fate.
a question
written by temitayo bastos, June 25, 2007
Hello my name is Bastos Temitayo, im Nigerian but i have a portuguese surname .
i was just wondering if you could give me some insight as to the meaning and origin of the name "bastos".
id very much appreciate it if you could get back to me atwith the afore listed email ad.thank you
...
written by braziliankid, October 24, 2009
I agree with the fact that Brazilians are not Hispanics, but we are Latinos. We live in Latin American and have latin roots. Like many nations in latin america we are a mixture of european, indigenous, and african races. I think this makes us latino.
I'm very passionate about this because I want to be included in the "Latino" race for colleges, and I truly feel that we are classified as Latinos, even if this term isn't completely correct for all latinos in general.
Brqzilians are Latinos
written by Kenneth, May 28, 2010
I truly feel that Brazilians are classified as Latinos. Not Hispanic. Brazilians have been on spanish television shows and movies and even in spanish magazines. Their Culture is similar to other Spanish Cultures and most Brazilians look Latin. Brazilians are Latinos. Sexy Latinos smilies/cheesy.gif

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