Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Current News

‘Rebirth’ in Rio as carnival street parties return

Covered in golden glitter, Brazilian domestic worker Vera Lucia da Silva is bursting to be back parading through Rio de Janeiro in a carnival street party, after a three-year hiatus for Covid-19.

This year marks the full comeback of the world’s biggest carnival, after Rio hosted a watered-down version in 2022 — postponed by two months because of the pandemic, and held without the epic street parties known as “blocos” that usually swarm the iconic beach city this time of year.

“To people from Rio, street carnival is everything that’s good in life,” beamed Da Silva, as she paraded through the hillside neighborhood of Santa Teresa in a bloco known as “Ceu na Terra” — Heaven on Earth.

It was just after sunrise on a Saturday morning, but the beer was already flowing as revelers bounced to the beats of the bloco’s brass band, decked out in sequins, body paint, sparkly hot pants and masks — the costume-ball kind, not the Covid kind.

“Street carnival brings together people from all walks of life — everyone playing, everyone happy,” said Da Silva, 58, who plays a traditional percussion instrument known as the “ganza” in the bloco band.

Rio authorized around 400 blocos this year. They have been flooding the streets ahead of the main carnival event: the city’s samba school parade competition, scheduled for Sunday and Monday nights.

Many revelers are also celebrating because it is the first carnival since the election loss of ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right conservative whose critics accuse him of authoritarian tendencies and attacking numerous causes close to the carnival community’s heart, from diversity to gay rights to the arts.

Some revelers poked fun at the ex-army captain, whose slogan was “Brazil above all, God above everyone.”

“We’re for ‘carnival atop all, booze inside everyone,'” said 44-year-old teacher Amelia Crespo, who was sporting the Brazilian football team’s yellow jersey, a national symbol that Bolsonaro supporters attempted to claim as their own.

“This is a moment of rebirth,” said Pericles Monteiro, a founder of Ceu na Terra and conductor of its 200-member band.

“We went through a very dark period, in terms of both politics and the pandemic,” he told AFP.

Brazil was one of the hardest-hit countries in the world at the height of the pandemic. Its Covid-19 death toll stands at nearly 700,000 — a figure opponents blame on Bolsonaro’s unorthodox policies.

“We were feeling suffocated on every level: as a cultural group, as citizens, as people dealing with a health crisis that caused so many deaths,” said Monteiro.

– Parties and politics –

“Brazil is emerging from a period in which political power was anti-carnival,” said Adair Rocha, head of cultural programming at Rio de Janeiro State University.

“This year’s carnival is all about happiness, the re-embrace of democracy, the freedom to celebrate cultural and sexual diversity…. Carnival is all about democratic expression, the celebration…

You May Also Like

Business

State would join dozens of others in enacting legislation based on federal government’s landmark whistleblower statute, the False Claims Act

press release

With a deep understanding of the latest tech, Erbo helps businesses flourish in a digital world.

press release

#Automotive #Carbon #Canister #Market #Projected #Hit #USD New York, US, Oct. 24, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  According to a comprehensive research report by Market...

press release

Barrington Research Analyst James C.Goss reiterated an Outperform rating on shares of IMAX Corp IMAX with a Price target of $20. As theaters...