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Brazil: Rio, Stop the Civil War! PDF Print E-mail
2004 - July 2004
Thursday, 01 July 2004 08:54

 Brazil: Rio, Stop the Civil War!

According to United Nations' numbers, Brazil has 2.8 percent of the world's population and 11 percent of the planet's homicides. Brazil has the distinction of having 40,000 murders a year, a number much higher than the deaths in the Iraq war and in the whole Middle East. What a little sign can do against this?
by: Beatriz Kuhn


I'm a psychoanalyst for 20 years and for a few months now I have become an activist for citizenry, which, in Rio, is oddly divided in four tribes. The first one is composed by those who use alienation as defense mechanism against the horror experienced with the growing trivialization of evil.

As soon as the shootout at Rocinha favela ended, those who belong to the alienated club went back to the "normality" of our pathological daily life, indifferent to its perversity.

The second tribe is made up by those who get depressed due to the brutal violence and the feeling of having been abandoned. Hopeless, they keep on walking, resigned to our tragic reality. Exhausted and abulic, they simply refuse do fight. Here hopelessness is the mother of surrender.

The third group reacts in a paranoid way. The fear and the hate they feel in face of the danger produce a mental short circuit that makes them think that they will be victims of retaliations if they do protest. They look at the danger from far away, and terrified, take refuge in their private bunkers.

A minority is composed by those who resist and set out to work: they are relatives of the victims of violence, charity workers and indignant citizens. They sound off because they understand that "normality" in Rio de Janeiro is in reality a civil war.

They know that in an emergency it doesn't matter whose obligation is to take care of the problem or who is to be blamed. All that matters is who can do something—and now. And united the irreplaceable power of public opinion can make it happen. And a lot.

Recently, I changed my attitude and adhered to the fourth group. Luckily, my indignation wasn't determined by personal tragedy. It found its limit in the drama the city lived during Easter.

Depressed and leaning over my flat's balcony, opposite the Morro Dois Irmãos (Two Brothers Hills), I was lamenting my impotence face this unacceptable state of affairs.

Suddenly I became aware that I wasn't that impotent: after all, the "wailing balcony" is a huge billboard in an area with a heavy traffic in Rio's South Zone.

I decided to put a sign with the words "Basta" (Enough). And transformed my terrace into the "revendication balcony."

Since nobody is brave the whole time, in a first moment, I was apprehensive with the repercussion my act would have, and, emotionally went back a few steps, paying a visit to the third group.

A few residents in my building, and habitués of this tribe, feeling threatened by the sign, and fearing retaliation by the drug traffickers, asked me to take it out. Apart from them, nobody else seemed to have noticed.

From my viewpoint, the whole city seemed in a daze as in the fables. It seemed like a negative and collective hallucination (a hallucination in reverse with people not being able to see what was clearly obvious) prevented people from noticing a red, 23-by-7-feet sign. I landed without a parachute in the second group and, depressed, I started to lose hope.

I didn't pester anyone with "my" campaign, as I hear sometimes. Everybody thought the idea was great, but very few joined in heartily. I never insisted.

One week after the shootout, people, theoretically lucid, appeared to suggest that the expiration date in "my" issue was over. After all, everything had gone back to normal. I started to feel quixotic.

Ten days after having put the sign, disillusioned and running the risk of becoming a permanent member of the second tribe, I receive a call from a reporter from O Globo newspaper, asking me if anyone in my family had been killed for me to be doing that.

I laughed and answered that it was to prevent anyone from being murdered. Encouraged by the kind article she wrote, I started to recover hope. It didn't last long though.

That same day, residents from the building, frightened by the article's repercussion, gave me an ultimatum. The "Enough" sign had to go from my balcony.

That Friday night, even though I already had 1,000 stickers printed and a website being built, I took my indignation from my façade. And gave up.

The next morning I woke up with the scream of my six-year-old son.

"Rush to the balcony, mom, the neighbor across the street has put up a sign like ours."

That morning, suddenly, everything was worthwhile. Still on my nightgown and even before brushing my teeth, I started to jump and to cry while waving to the unknown neighbor who had definitely taken me back to the fourth group.

My sign is back, now high in the veranda, inside my apartment. Notwithstanding, I have already told my neighbors that I will not commit the violence of an imposition. It the majority so wishes, I will take it out so that democracy may prevail. I may remove my sign, but I won't do the same to my indignation.

The city, as if waking up from its fabular enchantment, starts little by little to offer its solidarity. The movement is beginning to get strength and to build an interesting interdisciplinary bank of ideas.

I'm hopeful, but I'm also realistic because I know how hard is to pull out people from their emotional bunkers.

But if I have to choose between utopia and surrender, I will pick the former without a second thought. Because for me it's Enough! Really.


Beatriz Kuhn is a member of Rio's Sociedade Brasileira de Psicanálise (Brazilian Association of Psychoanalysis). You can find the movement she started www.basta-ja.com.br. You can email her at faleconosco@basta-ja.com.br.
Translated from the Portuguese by Arlindo Silva.



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Comments (5)Add Comment
Asian Person
written by Guest, January 10, 2005
Hello now.. i think that Brazil Sucks! its got nothin but s**t!! hahaha naw im kidding i love Brazil hahaha not!! eh i hate Brazil.. the people smell, they all are stupid.. they suck.. most importantly.. SOCCER!! hahaha now thats funny.. they suck sooo bad.. it not even funny yall i mean thats sad.. im only 98 and even i can play better hahaha eh im out yalls latta BRIZIL!!! f**k YOU!! U ALL R f**kED UP MOTHER f**kASSSS!!!!!
Dresden
written by Guest, February 24, 2005
I must take issue with the term "drug traffickers". This normally refers to a criminal organization - though this favela violence clearly has 'common criminal' characteristics. They're drug dealers for sure, but common delinquent drug dealers, not a sophisticated crime empire. Have you ever wondered why they live in slums? That's normally the tell-tale difference between organized and common criminals. Add to that their illiteracy, young age and lack of business links/power/wealth and you have the classic common criminal.
Dresden
written by Guest, February 24, 2005
They also consume vast amounts of alcohol and drugs.
is ignorance bliss or what?
written by Guest, January 17, 2006
the first comment is extremely racist... and I don't think anyone but Brazilians really know what's happening. Let's see, FIRST OF ALL, Brazilians do no suck in soccer...Is that why they've won 5 world cups?? take a guess. Most people are just jeaulous, really. And Brazil has anything a tourist is looking for in a country. Now, that depends where you go.....if you guys go to favelas and everything, then don't expect to find the best the country has to offer..OBVIOUSLY
Josue
written by Guest, April 23, 2006
Ok, this is how it is.

Brazil has an army, but strangely it is not used to occupy and control the favelas in which more than 90% of the crimes occure.

Second of all, the reason why the army is not in there, is because the government or the politicians do not want them in there.

I heard once by some random guy that "If you got a donkey that s**ts gold, why kill the donkey?"

Do you see the connection ? The politicians are making money each day in the drug business. They got all the power in the world to send 400 000 trained soldiers and over 20 000 Armored Vehicles to make it all stop. But they do not send the troops in because the drug lords are paying them secretly on the side, with the objective for the government to not interfere in there.

Now of course every now and then a police squad or a few army troops go in and kill a few low drug traffickers so the people believe the government is doing all it can to stop the crime.

90 % of the people in the Favelas are normal people, like you and me (maybe not as intellectual) but they do no harm. Why do they harbor the criminals ? Well, the criminals give them a little more than the government does, so obviously they will harbor them and be on their side. The criminals actually have doctors and other individuals that help the civilians if they are sick. In return the civilians have to hide drugs, weapons and so forth. Well, after you have been to a public hospital in Brazil, you'd be better off being with the criminals, everyone knows that.

The crime will stop the second the brazilian army enters all major favelas (especially the ones in Rio, like Rocinha), occupies the locations (each favela has high points which could be used for the army to set up command points and overwatch positions like the Israelis do which is a basic military tactic), they can position sharpshooters on the roofs of buildings, have squads of 8 soldiers at a time patrole the streets and medium armoured vehicles patrole the streets and search house to house to confiscate all weapons.

Facts and figgures proof that the number of criminals in the favelas lay at an average of 2% of their population. Rocinho is the largest favela in south america and houses about 5000 criminals at an average.

So you are telling me that 5000 will drive out an army of 400 000 troops, vehicles with close helicopter air support ? It does not matter how well the criminals hide and ambush, if people think it would be another alamo, than they are wrong. Brazil has about 30 000 highly trained Special Forces soldiers that could alone deal with the 5000 criminals in each major favela.


You will believe the number to be low but it is not. There are many rival clans in Favelas and shootings between one another each day. The numbers of trained and armed criminals are in fact that low.

Why the hell is nobody in the government giving the green light? Civilian casualties would be minimal (due to the low numbers of criminals).

As this one person once said, if you got a donkey that s**ts gold, why kill it?

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