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AFRO BRAZIL: The African Diaspora In BRAZIL

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    Hey guys, I'm Faheedah and today
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    we're going to be talking about
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    the African diaspora in Brazil
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    [Humming] Freedom is...
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    mine.
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    Did you know that Brazil has the biggest
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    African Diaspora Community
    outside of Africa?
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    The 2010 census in Brazil
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    shows that for the first time,
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    the majority of the Brazilian population
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    identified as afro-descendant.
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    50.7% of Brazilians.
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    the equivalent of over
    a hundred million people
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    self-identified as black or mixed-race.
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    The statistics I'm about to give you
    are truly staggering.
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    The trans-atlantic
    slave trade as we know it
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    began when the Portugese
    completed the first
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    trans-atlantic voyage to Brazil in 1526.
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    From 1501 to 1866,
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    an estimated 4.9 million enslaved Africans
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    were trafficked to Brazil.
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    That's nearly 40% of all slave traded
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    in the trans-atlantic slave trade,
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    and at least four times
    the number of slaves
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    that were trafficked
    to the United States.
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    Brazil was last country
    in the Western Hemisphere
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    to abolish slaver in 1888.
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    Slave labour was the driving force
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    behind several key industries in Brazil,
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    including sugar production,
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    golden diamond mining,
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    cofee production and agriculture.
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    As was the case across Latin-America,
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    enslaved Africans in Brazil escaped
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    and formed maroon settlements
    called "Quilombos".
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    The most famous of which was
    Quilombos dos Palmares,
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    which existed for most of
    the 17th century.
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    It was a relatively large Quilombo,
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    with a population of several
    thousands escaped slaves
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    and indigenous people,
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    who formed a complex
    and structured society.
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    At its height, it had
    a population of 30,000 people
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    and spanned over eleven villages,
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    occupying a landmass the size of Portugal.
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    The most famous afro-brazilian
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    slave resistance leader was Zumbi,
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    the last king of palmares,
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    who led the fierce
    counter-attack against the Portuguese
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    forces trying to seize the Quilombo.
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    Although the settlement
    was captured in 1695
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    and Zumbi was decapitated,
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    today he is a powerful
    symbol of resistance
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    against slavery in Brazil
    and Portuguese colonial rule.
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    To this day,
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    the descendants of Afro-Brazilians
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    living in Quilombo settlements
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    fight for the right
    to their ancestral land.
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    In 2018, for the first time,
    a Quilombo community
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    was given land titles,
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    when a community of 500 people
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    was formally granted
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    220,000 hectares
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    of Amazonian rainforest.
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    A key turning point
    was the Haitian Revolution,
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    which ended in 1804.
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    Whereby the afro-descendant
    population of Haiti
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    rebelled against the white French elites
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    and claimed their independence,
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    both from French colonial rule
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    and their European slave masters.
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    This sent shockwaves across Latin America,
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    which were felt as far as Brazil.
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    Some Afro-Brazilians even wore
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    portraits of Haitian revolutionary leader,
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    Jean Jacques Dessalines
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    in pendants around their necks.
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    However, after the collapse
    of the sugar industry in Haiti,
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    it was Brazil that catered
    to the increased demand for sugar.
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    Enslaved Africans continued to be imported
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    in large numbers to the region of Byir.
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    From the Haitian Revolution onwards,
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    slave rebellions became
    more frequent and more brutal.
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    The largest rebellion occurred
    in 1835 in Salvador,
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    and was known
    as "The Malê Uprising."
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    It was orchestrated
    by African-born Muslim slaves
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    who intended to free
    all of the slaves in Bahia.
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    However, the rebellion was crushed
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    and many participants
    were arrested, executed,
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    flogged or deported.
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    Relations were tense
    between enslaved Africans
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    who had recently been imported
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    and the enslaved Afrio-Brazilians,
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    who had been born
    into slavery on Brazilian soil.
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    The Afro-Brazilians
    were comprised of blacks
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    and mulattoes who were mixed with the
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    European ancestry of their slave masters.
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    They were treated better,
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    were more likely to be emancipated,
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    often because they were
    the slave master´s children
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    and had great opportunity
    for social mobility
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    once they had been freed.
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    In fact, it was not uncommon for wealthy
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    free blacks and mulattoes in Brazil to
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    have slaves of their own.
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    It was arguably these
    internal divisions that held the
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    enslaved population back
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    from staging a successful revolt.
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    Although Brazil gained
    its independence from Portugal in 1822,
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    slavery wasn't formally
    abolished until 1888,
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    when Princess Isabel of Brazil passed
    the Lei Áurea,
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    The Golden Act.
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    This made Brazil the last country
    in the Western Hemisphere
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    to abolish slavery.
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    The amount of slaves
    that had been trafficked to Brazil
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    during the slavery era
    meant that the Brazilian population
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    was now majority
    black and afro-descendant.
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    At a time when
    scientific racism was gaining popularity,
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    the Brazilian government tried
    to whiten the country´s racial profile.
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    It implemented a tactical whitening,
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    whereby from the late 1800s
    to the early 1900s,
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    Brazil encouraged and even subsidized
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    the mass influx of white
    European immigrants to Brazil.
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    The countries with the
    highest numbers settling in Brazil
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    were Italians, Portuguese ans Spanish.
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    Although this didn't eradicate
    blackness from Brazil,
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    it reinforced the trope that whiteness
    should be aspired to
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    and that marrying someone
    whiter was an instrument of
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    social mobility.
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    In the 20th century,
    the black movement in Brazil
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    gained momentum.
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    A defining moment was in 1931,
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    when the Frente Negra Brasileira
    was formed.
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    the first black political party in Brazil,
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    organized by Arlindo Vega dos Santos.
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    The party put forward candidates
    for political office,
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    run literacy classes,
    health clinics and legal services
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    for black communities across Brazil.
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    They also published a newspaper called
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    A Voz da Raça, which circulated news about
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    black communities both
    in Brazil and overseas.
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    The party was short-lived,
    however, when in 1937
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    the Brazilian dictator,
    Getúllio Vargas dissolved all
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    political parties
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    From the 1950s onwards,
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    there were a number
    of black social movements in Brazil
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    that lobbied for black rights.
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    One of the most famous
    was the Unified Black Movement,
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    also known as the MNU,
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    founded in 1978,
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    which is arguably the most influential
    black organization in Brazil
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    in the second half of the 20th century.
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    Among things, the organization spoke out
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    against police brutality,
    the oppression of black women
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    and discrimination against
    the LGBTQ community.
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    In 1995, the MNU helped organize
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    the march for Zumbi
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    in the capital of Brasilia.
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    The event protested racism
    in Brazil and also celebrated
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    the anniversary
    of the death of Zumbi,
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    the slave resistance leader
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    who was the last king of the
    Quilombo dos Palmares.
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    With a turnout of over
    40,000 people,
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    it was the largest national
    black demonstration in Brazil.
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    In recent years,
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    social media has played a pivotal role
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    in black political activism in Brazil,
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    particularly amongst
    afro-brazilian millennials.
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    Social media platforms such as
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    YouTube Instagram
    and Facebook have allowed
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    afro-brazilians to connect
    and mobilize online.
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    Social media provides a forum
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    to discuss the collective struggle,
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    but crucially, it has also allowed
    the dissemination
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    of photos and video footage
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    showing police brutality
    against Afro-Brazilians.
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    One such example is the murder
    of Cláudia da Silva Ferreira,
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    who passed away in 2014,
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    after a police van dragged her
    down the road
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    for over a thousand feet.
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    The grisly incident was captured on camera
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    and circulated on social media,
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    sparking national outrage.
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    The Black Lives Matter
    movement, in particular,
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    gained traction
    with afro-brazilian youths,
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    who coined the #vidasnegrasimportam.
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    In fact, an unprecedented number of people
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    self-identified as black and mixed-race
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    in the 2010 Brazilian census
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    shows that Brazilians
    are prouder and more willing
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    to claim their African heritage
    than ever before.
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    However, the census also brought to light
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    the grave disparities between
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    the distribution of wealth
    amongst white
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    and afro-descendant Brazilians.
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    The socio-economic gap
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    between white
    and black Brazilians persists.
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    The 2010 census found
    that, in major cities,
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    white Brazilians earn
    2 to 3 times more than
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    their black counterparts.
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    The wealthiest strata
    of Brazilian society remains 82%
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    white and the poorest rata is 76% black.
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    Afro-Brazilians have far less
    access to quality education,
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    health care or fair wages,
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    and they are underrepresented
    in the government.
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    The most prominent
    African derive religions in Brazil
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    are candomblé and umbanda.
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    Umbanda centers on the belief in spirits,
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    both good and evil.
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    Candomblé is derived from
    the belief systems
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    of a number of African ethnic groups,
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    particularly, the Yorubá-Fun and Bantu,
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    similar to the Orishas of Santeria
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    practiced in Cuba and other regions.
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    The deities of candomblé
    are called "Arishas".
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    Over time, they have become
    syncretized with Roman Catholic saints.
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    This dates back to when enslaved Africans
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    were forbidden
    by the European masters
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    for practicing their African religions.
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    And they had to do so in secret,
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    under the guise of praying
    to Catholic saints,
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    because of the historical ties
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    between candomblé and catholicism.
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    Catholicism is also widely practiced
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    amongst afro-brazilians.
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    One afro-descendants Saint
    venerated in Brazil
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    is Escrava Anastásia,
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    a slave woman of African
    descent who is depicted
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    wearing a metal facemask.
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    The story goes that her
    master's wife accused her
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    of flirting with her husband,
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    and as a punishment forced
    her to wear an iron mask
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    over her face for
    the rest of her life,
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    until she died from tetanus from
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    the rusty metal.
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    The biggest afro-brazilian festival
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    is the Festival of Iemanjá,
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    celebrated every February 2nd
    in Rio Vermelho.
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    The festival brings toghether
    members of several religions,
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    including Catholics and practitioners
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    of the afro-brazilian religions,
    candomblé and umbanda.
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    Iemanjá is the Arisha of the sea
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    and loosely corresponds
    to the Cuban Arisha, Iamanha.
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    It is custom to lay offerings for
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    the goddess, of flowers jewelry and food.
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    And of course, Brasil is famous
    for its Carnaval around the world.
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    There are celebrations across the country,
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    but the most famous
    is hosted in Rio de Janeiro,
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    where over 5 million people participate in
  • 10:26 - 10:27
    the street parties.
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    One key element of the Carnaval
    is the Samba music and dance,
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    a clear vestige of African
    influence in Brazilian culture.
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    The fast footwork
    of Samba dancing originated in
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    the dancers practiced
    by the enslaved Africans
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    trafficked to Brazil.
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    And the singing style derives from
    the traditional call-and-response style
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    the Africans would use to evoke their
  • 10:47 - 10:49
    Arishas during religious ceremonies.
  • 10:49 - 10:52
    Another afro-brazilian style of dance is
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    capoeira, which combines martial arts
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    moves with elements of dance and
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    acrobatics to create graceful and
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    flowing sequences.
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    It's originated amongst enslaved Africans
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    in Brazil who sought to hone their combat
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    skills without arousing the suspicions
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    of their masters.
  • 11:07 - 11:11
    In 2014, it was declared
    an expression of intangible cultural
  • 11:11 - 11:12
    heritage by UNESCO.
  • 11:12 - 11:15
    The Afro-Brazilian Museum,
    located in São Paulo,
  • 11:15 - 11:18
    is home to over 6,000 works
  • 11:18 - 11:20
    pertaining to a afro-brazilian history,
  • 11:20 - 11:21
    culture and heritage.
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    It seeks to celebrate
    the arts and accomplishments
  • 11:24 - 11:26
    of Africans and Afro-Brazilians,
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    and it´s the largest collection
    of artifacts of Afrcian descent
  • 11:29 - 11:30
    in Latin America.
  • 11:31 - 11:33
    Black Awareness Day has been celebrated
  • 11:33 - 11:36
    annually in Brazil since the year 1960.
  • 11:36 - 11:39
    It's held on November 20th
    to honor the live
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    of afro-brazilian slave
    resistance fighter, Zumbi.
  • 11:42 - 11:45
    Famous afro-brazilians
    include the footballers
  • 11:45 - 11:46
    Pelé and Ronaldinho,
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    the scholar and politician,
    Abdias do Nascimento,
  • 11:50 - 11:51
    actress Suzanna Mota,
  • 11:51 - 11:54
    and the politician Benedita de Silva
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    she became the first black woman in the
  • 11:56 - 11:58
    Brazilian center that brings me to the
  • 11:58 - 12:00
    end of our video on the African Diaspora
  • 12:00 - 12:02
    in Brazil for more videos don't forget
  • 12:02 - 12:05
    to subscribe and follow me on instagram
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    at freedom is mine official I'll see you
  • 12:07 - 12:10
    in the next video
  • 12:11 - 12:20
    [Music]
Title:
AFRO BRAZIL: The African Diaspora In BRAZIL
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Black History
Duration:
12:19

English subtitles

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