The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Women at Brazil Carnival push back against harassment

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Ana Lobo, who is six months pregnant, was at a pre-Carnival street party last weekend when a man started yelling and calling her names.

“Whore!” she remembered him saying, apparently because she was wearing a revealing top.

“Some men have this feeling that they can do whatever to your body,” said Lobo, a 29-year-old artist who later that night attended one of the many feminist-themed parties. “It’s time for women to take advantage of this moment” to push back.

Many women in Latin America’s largest nation are doing exactly that during this year’s Carnival celebratio­ns, with block parties of allfemale musicians, shirts, necklaces and crowns with messages like “my breasts, my rules” and several campaigns to report and crackdown on harassment.

The #metoo movement against harassment that is roiling the U.S. has yet to catch on in Brazil, which has one of the world’s highest homicide rates for women, according to the Brazilian nonprofit Mapa da Violencia.

But while women’s groups say that Brazil has a long way to go to address inequality and ingrained machismo, they see glimmers of a potentiall­y bigger movement in the public dialogue about harassment during Carnival and what authoritie­s and several organizati­ons are doing to crack down on it.

The massive party officially begins Friday and goes through Wednesday, but in some cities, such as Rio de Janeiro, it’s a multi-week event. The hundreds of block parties often include heavy drinking and round-theclock samba dancing and they come during the Southern Hemisphere’s sweaty summer month of February, when the heat drives many to wear few clothes.

Debora Thome, who in 2015 co-organized a block party called “Mulheres Rodadas,” or “Women Who Get Around,” says Carnival is a good time to focus on fighting harassment because it forces the question of respect amid scantily dressed partygoers.

“A woman can be naked in the street and nobody should be allowed to touch her,” said Thome, a former reporter currently working on a doctorate on female participat­ion in Brazilian politics.

Mulheres Rodadas began as a reaction to photo that went viral on Facebook of a man holding a sign in Portuguese saying he “didn’t deserve a woman who gets around.”

Thome and co-founder Renata Rodrigues announced plans for a block party protest as a joke, and within 24 hours more than 1,000 women said would attend. They knew they had struck a nerve.

“Carnival is just a small piece of a much larger problem,” said Rodrigues.

Since then, several other feminist-themed street party groups have been formed in cities nationwide.

They include all-female bands and edgy themes that push back at traditiona­l gender roles and even make fun of derogatory names. At one recent feminist-themed block party, hundreds of women dressed up as animals they said they had been called on the streets: cows, piranhas, hens and cobras, among others.

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