Daily Times (Primos, PA)

New app reveals little-known history of Rio de Janeiro port

- By Renata Brito

RIODEJANEI­RO» Rio de Janeiro’s port area may be one of the city’s most inviting spots since being renovated for the Olympic Games last year. But while the area is home to attraction­s that include two museums and an aquarium, its rich history remains unknown to most locals and tourists.

A new app seeks to educate visitors about the area’s role in Brazilian history, from colonizati­on and the arrival of slave ships to recent cases of corruption.

Launched in late June by the nonprofit investigat­ive journalism agency Agencia Publica, the app called “Museum of Yesterday” offers tours of the port in Portuguese and English.

But there’s a catch. Inspired by Pokemon Go, the app detects users’ geo-location and only reveals the stories once users arrive at the location where the story took place.

With over 160 points of interest, the app offers five options. The terror tour explores slavery, colonizati­on and the country’s military dictatorsh­ip, along with other incidents like the 1993 Candelaria massacre in which eight people — many of them teenagers — were killed while sleeping on the steps of the Candelaria church. The corruption tour investigat­es bribery from the time of King John VI of Portugal to recent kickback schemes. The samba tour explores the roots of Rio’s traditiona­l Carnival music. Finally, the tour of ghosts explores important historical figures that are sometimes forgotten.

“Rio’s port carries a lot of the history of Brazil,” said Gabriele Roza, a journalist at Agencia Publica who contribute­d to the stories in the app. “What we realized was that these stories present here.”

Indeed during the Rio Olympic Games, local authoritie­s emphatical­ly promoted the port’s new attraction­s such as the futuristic looking Museum of Tomorrow designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava that cost $55 million, and a new boulevard decorated by internatio­nally acclaimed street artists.

But the city neglects other historical attraction­s located a few blocks away such as the Valongo Wharf, an archaeolog­ical site where hundreds of thousands of slaves debarked after their harrowing journey across the Atlantic.

Francesca Declich, an Italian anthropolo­gist visiting the Valongo Wharf on July 9, the day it was named a UNESCO World Heritage site, complained that the wharf was hard to find and that there was only basic informatio­n available on a three-paragraph-long plaque are not next to the pit.

The port is also connected to the present-day Car Wash corruption investigat­ion. For example, Eduardo Cunha, who led Brazil’s impeachmen­t effort against former President Dilma Rousseff, is now being investigat­ed over allegation­s that he received $16 million in kickbacks related to the port renovation, which cost the city of Rio over $4 billion.

Rio’s former mayor Eduardo Paes is also being investigat­ed for taking bribes in the port renovation. Despite the scandal, the revitalize­d area is considered one of the few positive legacies from the Rio Olympics.

The app, which has been downloaded over 2,000 times so far, tells these and other stories through text but also through illustrati­ons, photograph­s, audio, videos and a map from the 1830s when most of today’s port was still ocean.

“As you start walking along the port area you can actually capture the stories from Rio’s past and put them in a vault,” explained Mariana Simoes, another journalist from Agencia Publica who was part of the team that developed the app.

“You are actually being encouraged to walk and discover the area, discover these elements of our past as you walk through them.”

 ?? RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, women sit in front of a mural by street artist Kobra in the renovated port area in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A new app called “Museum of Yesterday” seeks to educate visitors about the history and role of Rio de Janeiro’s revitalize­d port...
RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, women sit in front of a mural by street artist Kobra in the renovated port area in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A new app called “Museum of Yesterday” seeks to educate visitors about the history and role of Rio de Janeiro’s revitalize­d port...
 ?? RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, boys ride their bikes in front of houses that were once slave deposits in the late 18th century in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Before abolishing slavery in 1888, becoming the last country in the Americas to do so, Brazil was the world’s...
RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, boys ride their bikes in front of houses that were once slave deposits in the late 18th century in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Before abolishing slavery in 1888, becoming the last country in the Americas to do so, Brazil was the world’s...
 ?? RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
RENATA BRITO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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