Kuwait Times

Echoes of escaped Brazilian slaves live on in Rio de Janeiro

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Hundreds of years after Brazilian slaves first fled to rebel communitie­s called quilombos, remnants of those outposts of freedom live on in the heart of Rio de Janeiro. Often the quilombos were establishe­d in remote places-better to get away from pursuers. However, three founded in Rio have survived as living testaments to a tradition at the core of Brazil’s complicate­d racial history. Of course, Afro-Brazilians do not need to escape slavery anymore, but in a country riven by racial inequality and historic injustices, the quilombos now serve as focal points for resistance of a more contempora­ry kind.

The Sacopa quilombo is one of the city’s best kept secrets, a beautiful area of tropical forest that has ended up being surrounded by the high-rent Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas neighborho­od. Back in the 19th century, long before the fancy apartment buildings sprang up, this was where slaves seeking freedom would gather, starting new lives. The population grew and, around it, so did Rio. “We’re still here because I have been very stubborn. They tried everything to take this land from us but we have the rights,” said Luiz Sacopa, 74, who is the eldest living descendant of the original slaves.

He says he has lost count of the attempts by people to oust the quilombo. One neighbor planted marijuana on the plot to try to incriminat­e them. Then, citing noise complaints, the Rio state court stopped the quilombo from hosting cultural events like feijoada feasts and classes in capoeira, a dance-like martial art developed by fugitive slaves. That was “a very hard blow,” Sacopa said. “We were very respectful, always ending everything by 8:00 or 9:00 pm,” said another family member, Jose Claudio Torres Freitas, during an event staged on official Black Consciousn­ess Day.

“This is the only day we’re allowed to do anything,” he said. The modern-day quilombos like Sacopa do have some legal protection. In 2003, then leftist president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed a decree regularizi­ng boundaries and titles for descendant­s of quilombo slaves, who are collective­ly known as quilombola­s. However, the bureaucrat­ic procedures are complex and while the three quilombos in Rio de Janeiro have been recognized, they are still waiting for the second stage of the paperwork to be completed. Swallowed up

The Pedra do Sal quilombo, right in the center of Rio near the port, is where many slaves went soon after arriving on ships from Africa. The site is also rich in cultural significan­ce as a key location in the developmen­t of the still thriving Afro-Brazilian religion candomble. But legal uncertaint­ies mean few of those from the 25 families descending from the original Pedra do Sal community live there anymore. “The neighborho­od wasn’t like this back then-it was very isolated,” said Damiao Braga, the quilombola leader. “But it was gradually invaded and swallowed by the city. There were many disputes, including with the Catholic church.” Even recognitio­n from UNESCO for the nearby Valongo Wharf, where slave ships used to dock, has not helped much. “We have internatio­nal support but the disputes remain. Empty buildings have been taken over and once that happens, it’s not easy to reverse,” Braga said.

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