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The Discovery of the Brazilian Turks by Jorge Amado PDF Print E-mail
2010 - April 2010
Written by Isabela Barros   
Monday, 19 April 2010 04:19

Brazilian writer Jorge AmadoWelcome to a universe of strong men and sweet, sensual women with strong personalities. Crooks, heroes, colonels, workers, mothers, wives, girlfriends, prostitutes. A wide array of characters that became richer and more interesting with the inclusion of Arabs and their descendents in the plots written by Jorge Amado, one of the best known Brazilian writers.

And one of the most talented when it came to describing the people and landscapes of his homeland: the state of Bahia, in Northeast Brazil. The author of 32 books, Jorge Amado was the Brazilian novelist that placed immigrants from the Middle East in evidence the most, as was the case with the Syrian Nacib, owner of the Vesúvio bar in Gabriela Cravo e Canela (Gabriela Clove and Cinnamon, 1958).

"Jorge Amado gave magnitude and space to the figure of the Arab among us, portraying him as an integral part of our nationality and culture," explains Ana Ramos, a professor at the School of Languages at the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA).

"The love story between the Syrian immigrant Nacib and the mulatto woman Gabriela charmed readers all over the world," she says.

According to the director of Fundação Casa de Jorge Amado (House of Jorge Amado Foundation), in Salvador, the capital of Bahia, Myriam Fraga, Nacib is surely the most famous Arab character created by the writer, but there are other equally important ones, such as Fadul Abdala, in Tocaia Grande (Showdown, 1984), and Fuad Maluf, in Farda, Fardão e Camisola de Dormir.

"As a measure of the author's fondness for the Arabs, who are often mistaken by the Turkish in Brazil, according to him, we may cite the book A Descoberta da América Pelos Turcos (How the Turks Discovered America, 1994), featuring unforgettable characters such as Adma, Raduan Murad and Jamil Bechara," she claims.

According to Myriam, the writer's novels have been translated to 49 languages and sold in 55 countries. The foundation's collection includes Arabic copies of Capitães da Areia (Captains of the Sand, 1937), São Jorge dos Ilhéus (1944), Gabriela Cravo e Canela (Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon, 1958), Seara Vermelha (1946), Dona Flor e seus Dois Maridos (Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands, 1966), Farda, Fardão e Camisola de Dormir (Pen, Sword and Camisole, 1979), O Cavaleiro da Esperança (The Knight of Hope, 1942), Tenda dos Milagres (Tent of Miracles, 1969), Tereza Batista Cansada de Guerra (Tereza Batista: Home from the Wars, 1972), Terras do Sem Fim (The Violent Land, 1943), and Velhos Marinheiros (Home is the Sailor, 1961).

The number of works translated into Arabic would not be so high, had Amado not been so close with the community. And where does such affinity come from? "It stems from friendship ties between the author's family members and families of Middle Eastern immigrants that settled in Bahia, such as the Nazals, the Adamis, the Medauars and the Soubs', for instance," says Ana.

"It is also worth highlighting the description that he makes of the contacts he had since childhood with representatives of the Arab people, through the figure of street vendors, who used to bring dreams and "civilization" to the cocoa farms, explains the professor.

It was due to cocoa, by the way, that this group ended up in Bahia, a state that alongside São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul and Pará received the most immigrants, who started arriving in Brazil in the late 19th century.

"The height of the cocoa-based economy boosted trade in the southern region of Bahia, which in turn attracted the Arabs," explains History professor Augusto Spínola. "Now, even in Feira de Santana, in the northeast of the state, there are records of families of Arab origin," he claims.

To the History professor and coordinator of the Center of Documentation and Regional Memory at the State University of Santa Cruz (Uesc), in Ilhéus, André Luiz Rosa Ribeira, the Arabs who settled in Bahia used to work mainly in trade, but some owned land, and others still had strong participations in local politics.

Economic activities aside, according to him, the main legacy of Arab presence in the state was cuisine. "You can eat a kibbeh in any bar in the city of Ilhéus, the most famous being that of Bar Vesúvio, which appears in Gabriela and actually existed, and still does until this day in the city," he explains. "Those immigrants adapted themselves to local culture very fast," says André.

It is precisely this integration that the writer's literature reflects. "Characters such as Nacib and Fadul Abdala, another character filled with humor and joy, represent two values that constitute the Brazilian nation, in the author's opinion: labor and solidarity," says Ana.

"To the author, the sentiment of national identity is formed through diversity," she explains. The same diversity that enabled Bahia and Jorge Amado to welcome the Arabs with open arms.

Anba


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Comments (11)Add Comment
....................................
written by fried CHC, April 19, 2010



I knew that... DUH!!!!

Example: Shelly, Brasilian born, is a prime-cut of TURKEY!


Costinha
Dont mention the jewish "young turks" conspiracy
written by Donna da casa do Jake McCrann, April 20, 2010
Of course you know, its not good to confront the truth when you feign yourself off as an investigator. The revolution in Turkey was all Jewish of course as for example was the theft of my iphone last week which I could explain to you in Australian law and prove was liable to the National Australia Bank for maliciously cancelling all my accounts with them because one of the directors was jealous of my affair with one gorgeous woman who also happened to work in his office.

Jake McCrann
Diggers Underground
Australian Civil War Movement
Scotch College
Melbourne University
Masters of Business Systems (Monash)
Bachelor of Science (Melbourne)
Bachelor of Engineering (Melbourne)
Jake McCrann
written by João da Silva, April 20, 2010

Mate, your scholastic accomplishments are quite impressive. But..but..., I have one question for you:

What does the "Scotch College" teach? To make different kinds of Scotch Whiskey? Pardon my ignorance.smilies/sad.gif
...
written by Charles Scott, April 20, 2010
Pls can anyone tell me where to find Brazillian books(by Brazillian authors) and dvd's that have been translated to english or have english subtitles. Pls help
-------
written by The Southern Cross, April 20, 2010
What does the "Scotch College" teach? To make different kinds of Scotch Whiskey?


anti-Semitism. Horrible sculling team also.
...
written by Mark Nickerson, April 29, 2010
Why do Brazilian (and seemingly formally educated ones as this author is) call Arabs, Lebanese, Egyptians, Iranians and every other Middle Eastern people Turks?

The Discovery of the Brazilian Turks by Jorge Amado


The same goes for calling every asian Japas, including both Chinese, Vietnamese, Koreans, Indonesians, etc.

Likewise it seems equally offensive and insensitive and just plain dumb that they call every light skinned person Alemao, whether they are from Canada, the US, Austrialia, and any other EU nation, whether they are from Italy, Spain, Greece, etc. ?

And Blacks, whether african or Brazilian are referred to as monkeys.

I often hear at this site that Americans are racist, and Brazilians not racist and are a diverse culture, accepting and affirming other cultures. That's a fairy tale.

I found the Brazil monolithic with little genuine regard or interest in other cultures or languages.

The Chinese friends I had there resented being called Japa, and actual Arabs, I have known are offended by being lumped in together as Turks and vice versa.

I guess it would be like Americans calling Brazilians Mexicans? Would that offend you as a Brazilian? Would that bother you? Yes, most likely it would, so why is there not more questioning for such simple-minded stereotyping in Brazil?
...
written by Daniel Romero, May 01, 2010
"written by Charles Scott, April 20, 2010

Pls can anyone tell me where to find Brazillian books(by Brazillian authors) and dvd's that have been translated to english or have english subtitles. Pls help"

Have you tried using Amazon search? Usually the ISBN is the same for translations.

About the dvds it's easy! Buy any american movie sold in Brazil. Set the language to portuguese but use english subtitles smilies/wink.gif
...
written by Daniel Romero, May 01, 2010
Mark Nickerson, in Brazil, racists believe racism doesn't exist. They will insist until the end that racism never existed in Brazil. It's only a myth for them. They will use every excuse in the book to get around it. They will make every dirt joke out of you by what you are, but will deny it's racism. It's only "humor". On the other hand, if you are black and you are searched for no reason at 12 am, they will say it's your fault for being late at night. If you were white, they would blame the opressive police (Like what happened with Daniel Dantas and the hand cuffs, check it out).
...
written by Starker, June 06, 2010
Ironically, many of the Arabs, if not most that immigrated to Brazil were Christian Arabs: Syrian and Lebonese and they cited religious persecution as the reason. At that time the Turks, the Ottoman Empire did rule the Arab world. Turkey is 99% muslim so to refer to Brazilian Arabs as Turks is bizarre both from a religious and ethnic perspective. My guess is the title of this article is not from the author.
f**king that cunt Jake McCrann has been on the CIA watch-list since 911 and they still cant find him!
written by Jake Mc,Crann for the bot, August 20, 2010
jOAO DA SILVA - All our elites come from three secondary schools in my country. One of them is scotch college.

If I go back to Australia they will try arrest me for something.
Either way know they will arrest me and punch me up at the airport, their thugs will, not them but their little thugs will.
Sailing into Australia on a 22footer
written by Jake Mc,Crann for the bot, August 20, 2010
I would be better doing that so they cant plan a border attack on me.
their little thugs are still scarey enough for me to be scared to go back to Australia.

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