Fighting Poverty, Plagued by Violence: Why 10,000 Black Women in Brazil Marched for Their Rights
Black women from all over Brazil, of different
backgrounds, education and socioeconomic status, came together to
protest widespread inequality.
More than 10,000 women from all over Brazil participated in the
nation’s first March of Black Women in Brasilia, the country’s capital.
The women marched 5 kilometers Nov. 18, 2015, toward the Praça dos Três
Poderes, a plaza in the capital.
They were lawyers, feminists, Christians, transgender women, domestic workers, militants, favela dwellers,
politicians, students and many more. Despite their differences in
beliefs, education and income, on Wednesday they came together behind
the one thing they had in common: being a black woman in Brazil. On that
day, more than 10,000 black women from all over the country gathered in
Brazil’s capital city, Brasilia, for the first national black women’s march—Marcha das Mulheres Negras. The march’s tagline was, “Against racism and violence and for the well-being.”
“This is the first time black women coming from all parts of the
country came to Brasilia with the same message,” said Ivana Braga, a
march organizer from the state of Maranhão. “It doesn’t matter if a
black woman is in Congress, is a civil servant, in academia or is a
domestic worker; their skin color will continue to play a part in how
their rights are denied.”
Braga, 38, marched alongside her 63-year-old mother, Maria dos Rosana
Moraes. “It was important for me to bring my mother because she has
been a domestic servant since she was 13 years old,” said Braga, who
promotes women’s rights in Maranhão and is a Fulbright scholar. “She was
denied rights her entire life.
“This isn’t just my fight or her fight. It comes from generations of women who were denied their rights,” Braga added.
During a national black women’s march Nov. 18, 2015, in Brasilia,
Brazil, a group of young women chanted, “I want to see a black woman
from the favela in power.”
Statistics show that black Brazilian women suffer some of the highest
rates of violence and poverty in Brazil. A study released last week
found that violence against black women in Brazil increased 54 percent (pdf) between
2003 and 2013. In 2013 alone, more than 2,800 black women died from
violence. Violence against white women in the same 10-year period
decreased 18 percent.
Black women are also losing their children, husbands and family
members to violence. Of the 60,000 homicides in Brazil each year, more
40,000 of the victims are blacks. From 2002 until 2012, the number of
black victims of homicide increased from 29,656 to 41,127. Black women
even suffer in the workplace. Statistics show
that on average, they earn $364 per month, which is about 44 percent of
the average pay for white men, 75 percent of the pay for black men and
60 percent of the pay for white women.
National organizers planned the march for almost two years. It had
been originally scheduled for earlier this year on May 13, the day
millions of slaves were freed in Brazil in 1888. But organizers changed
the date to Nov. 18 to coincide with the National Week of Black
Consciousness in Brazil.
During this week, Afro-Brazilians celebrate the life of Zumbi dos Palmares, the leader of a community of escaped slaves in Brazil that existed more than 300 years ago. Nov. 20 is the Day of Black Consciousness in Brazil.
During this week, Afro-Brazilians celebrate the life of Zumbi dos Palmares, the leader of a community of escaped slaves in Brazil that existed more than 300 years ago. Nov. 20 is the Day of Black Consciousness in Brazil.
Members of the Sisterhood of Our Lady of Good Death cheered on the
black women during the march. The Afro-Catholic religious group is known
for its annual Festival of the Good Death, held every August in
Cachoeira, Brazil.
For the march, volunteer organizers in every state in Brazil worked
closely with local communities for more than a year to promote the event
and to raise money to bring thousands of women to Brasilia. Organizers
in Niteroi sold feijoada dinners
and T-shirts. Rio de Janeiro organizers even held a local premarch on
Copacabana beach July 26 to celebrate the Day of the Black Woman in
Latin America and the Caribbean.
As a regional organizer, Braga spent months visiting local
communities of black women to talk to them about racism, violence and
socioeconomic issues. Her work paid off. Five busloads of women departed
from São Luis on the Monday before the march and arrived in Brasilia
Wednesday in the early-morning hours. The marchers slept in a local
stadium, and by 11 a.m. the same day, they started to march.
Priestesses of Candomblé, an Afro-Brazilian religion, led the
marchers for 5 kilometers toward Brazil’s congressional building. Along
the way, the women, coming from every state in Brazil, sang, chanted and
danced to inspirational music.
“I cried when I was marching,” said Jamille Sepol, vice president of
the Justiça Negra collective.
“But I was crying because I was happy to experience this moment for black people, black women, the black movement, for black youth and children. We needed this pride, and this day was a day to be proud of.”
“But I was crying because I was happy to experience this moment for black people, black women, the black movement, for black youth and children. We needed this pride, and this day was a day to be proud of.”
When the marchers arrived at the congressional building, some of them
encountered another group of Brazilians who had been protesting against
President Dilma Rousseff. Shots and tear gas were fired, but no one was
hurt.
Shortly after the march, a group of black women met with the
president and Nilma Lino Gomes, Brazil’s minister of women, racial
equality and human rights. The goal of the march was to amplify the
voice of black women in Brazil, and activists say they have no doubt
that they succeeded.
“As we leave this march, I know that the black woman’s fight in
Brazil is stronger,” Braga said. “We won’t be as invisible any more, and
our concerns and needs will start to be addressed on the political
agenda.”
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