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The Obvious Act of Refusing a Bribe Has Become Heroism in Brazil. And This Is a Shame PDF Print E-mail
2011 - December 2011
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Thursday, 08 December 2011 02:48

Lieutenant Disraeli Last month, Brazil took pride in Rio de Janeiro's police: some of them for their heroism in refusing a drug dealer's bribe and others for their competence and heroism in occupying the Rocinha favela. But, surprisingly, the pride in some Brazilians' heroism provokes a sense of shame about the country's social structure.

After all, where have we gone wrong if honesty has become a heroic gesture? Where have we gone wrong if it is necessary to hoist the Brazilian flag in Brazilian territory, as if this signified the conquest of foreign land?

If honesty were to be adopted as a fundamental value in Brazil, the refusal of a bribe would not be publicized nor would it be a proof of heroism. Neither the heroism of the police nor each Brazilian's satisfaction and pride can be denied, but we must also reflect why that sense of pride is a source of embarrassment.

Had Brazil invested in its public policies in an efficient, egalitarian manner throughout the country, the military occupation of Rocinha would not now be necessary.

Today's military occupation, as if we were invading a foreign territory, stems from the fact that, throughout the decades, we have treated Rocinha as if it were a foreign territory. From the point of view of public investments, the social data of Rocinha contrast so sharply with those of the wealthy in Rio de Janeiro that they appear to correspond to a different country.

This can explain the raising of the national flag in Rocinha after the occupation, as if the world's seventh economic power had invaded the territory of another country in 84th place on the Human Development Index.

The idea of the Police Pacification Units (UPPs) is to occupy militarily and then later confront the disparity in the quality of public services, transforming a favela into a neighborhood. If in the past Rocinha had been treated as a Rio neighborhood, today the military occupation would not be necessary to initiate the favela's transformation into a neighborhood.

This does not diminish - it even increases - the importance of the decisions made and the successful operations carried out by the Military and Civilian Police, the Secretary of Security, the Governor and Vice-Governor. Above all, by Lieutenant Disraeli, who turned down the bribe.

But the pride in each individual's behavior shames the country as a whole, since it is proof that, while tolerating the wrong, we are a factory of isolated heroism, of persons who do right by swimming against the current.

Refusing a bribe should be a simple, obvious act, just as investing equally in the quality of life in all the regions should be an obvious act. But we have become accustomed to the corruption and inequality; heroism is the exception, and military occupation, the solution.

The coexistence with the corruption - corruption in behavior as well as in priorities - obscures the perception of the fragility of our pride last month. We have lost the desire for pride for different reasons than those of that week. So much so that we do not believe it possible to take pride in the abolition of illiteracy, in the guarantee of quality schooling for everyone.

That same week in which we applauded Rio police for occupying favelas, the Chinese occupied outer space; they coupled up two spaceships created by their own technology and production. Decades ago, we were ahead of China and India in space research.

Now, our pride is in the occupation of urban soil, while they occupy outer space. In a short time, Iran, South Korea and countries smaller and with less economic potential than ours will surpass us.

In the same way that we stopped perceiving the absurdity of our ethical backwardness - that we consider those heroes who do not let themselves be corrupted, and in fact they are heroes - we have stopped comparing our technical backwardness in relation to the rest of the world.

We have become so accustomed to our backwardness that we are proudly commemorating a personal gesture that should be considered normal and an urban pacification that we should have accomplished long ago.

All this is occurring because we do not consider to be heroes the two million teachers who go without decent salaries, basic labor conditions, or a favorable work environment.

Brazil will be on a good path when honesty is not considered heroic and when a favela is not a favela, but merely a neighborhood. But this will only happen when a teacher is also not a hero, but merely a teacher, dedicated, well paid and well prepared.

Had this already happened, perhaps long ago we would have passed from the time in which being honest is a heroic act and it would not be necessary to commemorate the military occupation of part of our own territory.

Cristovam Buarque is a professor at the University of Brasília and a PDT senator for the Federal District.  You can visit his website at www.cristovam.org.br/portal2/, follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/SEN_CRISTOVAM in Portuguese and http://twitter.com/cbbrazilianview in English and write to him at cristovam@senado.gov.br

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome (LinJerome@cs.com).



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Comments (5)Add Comment
Teacher in Canada
written by romo, December 08, 2011
I have read your articles for years. Sir,you exhibit a profound love and understanding of your country. I have the utmost respect for your articles. It would be an honour to meet you one day.
...
written by João da Silva, December 09, 2011

Considering that today is the "International Anti Corruption" day, my kudos to Sen.Buarque for publishing this article. As far as I know, the Senator is not associated with any corruption scandals. That speaks volume for his personal integrity.
latin girls dream the american dream
written by proud gringoe, December 19, 2011
american students are taught the monroe doctrine in the 4 th grade and its importance and permemanence in our interests...that said americans have been taught that latin america is a cry baby and to immature to get it right and blames its problems all its problems on imaginary things like the big bad gringoes..it is a perpetual looser and stuck in the third world mud of false propaganda which is evident in its donkey cart infrastructure .if a beautifull educated well bred latin girls dream of meeting a handsome beautifull american prince to their cinderalla then so be it ..the men can allways start a farm and f**k their donkeys yeehaw !!..
Please start explaining Brazil to the semi-educated!
written by jan z. volens, January 17, 2012
Brazil is not Switzerland, just like the USA is not Switzerland (even like Canada) - the societies have different origins, evolved from different circumstances and that while the USA and Brazil certainly attempt to evolve into more "civic" societes (like Switzerland), the process takes time, perhaps generations. Brazil was inhabited by numerous indigenous ethnicities on the verge from the paleolithic to the neolithic. The Portuguese arrived in 1500, from a small nation removed from mainstream Europe, "periphercial" to contemporary development. For centuries, a distant monarchy, commanded not respect and relied on the rewards which its concerssions would acrue on those it delegated to administrate Brazil: With other words "You get yours in Brazil and you sent me my share!" Cortez in the 1520's sent 20% to Emperor Charles in Madrid - the other 80% went directly to Cortez and his associates, and trickeled down to the supporting cast. The 80% consisted, after the looting of Aztec treasures, of licensing indigenous districts for the "administration" (exploitation via taxes and services) of Cortez' cronies and fellow Conquistadores. Thus "corruption" was simply a "distributory" system in colonial culture: "Gimme something and I let you do this, or I let you have that!" This was differently from the civic equality of homogenous village societies in Switzerland. In 1820 - there were 300,000 "Whites" in Brazil, and 3 million black people - mostly in slavery. The monarchy was still month' of travel distant, as it had been in 1500. Thus - three different races, coming under chaotic circumstanes, and from different sociieties and development levels, in a remotely governed continental-sized land - by a "peripherical" small nation on the edge of Europe. But nobody can deny now, that there is a steady trend in Brazil towards a more civically organized society which over time will improve the defects that propagate corruption.
The turning point will come...
written by me, February 11, 2012
The turning point will come when offering a bribe is seen as a sin, not when refusing a bribe is seen as a virtue.

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