Experience
the Wonders of Brazil:
Brazilians
often say they live in a continent rather than a country,
and that's an excusable exaggeration. The landmass is bigger
than the United States if you exclude Alaska; the journey
from Recife in the east to the western border with Peru is
longer than that from London to Moscow, and the distance between
the northern and southern borders is about the same as that
between New York and Los Angeles. Brazil has no mountains
to compare with its Andean neighbours, but in every other
respect it has all the scenic - and cultural - variety you
would expect from so vast a country.
Despite the immense expanses of the interior,
roughly two-thirds of Brazil's population live on or near
the coast; and well over half live in cities - even in the
Amazon. In Rio and Sao Paulo, Brazil has two of the world's
great metropolises, and nine other cities have over a million
inhabitants. Yet Brazil still thinks of itself as a frontier
country, and certainly the deeper into the interior you
go, the thinner the population becomes. Nevertheless, the
frontier communities have expanded relentlessly during the
last fifty years, usually hand in hand with the planned
expansion of the road network into remote regions.
Other South
Americans regard Brazilians as a race apart, and language
has a lot to do with it - Brazilians understand Spanish,
just about, but Spanish-speakers won't understand Portuguese.
More importantly, though, Brazilians look different. They're
one of the most ethnically diverse peoples in the world:
in the extreme south, German and Italian immigration has
left distinctive European features; Sao Paulo has the world's
largest Japanese community outside Japan; there's a large
black population concentrated in Rio, Salvador and Sao Luis;
while the Indian influence is most visible in the people
of Amazonia and the Northeastern interior.
Brazil is a land of profound economic contradictions.
Rapid postwar industrialization made Brazil one of the world's
ten largest economies and put it among the most developed
of Third World countries. But this has not improved the
lot of the vast majority of Brazilians. The cities are dotted
with favelas, shantytowns which crowd around the skyscrapers,
and the contrast between rich and poor is one of the most
glaring anywhere. There are wide regional differerences
, too: Brazilians talk of a "Switzerland" in the
Southeast, centred along the Rio-Sao Paulo axis, and an
"India" above it; and although this is a simplification,
it's true that the level of economic development tends to
fall the further north you go. This throws up facts which
are hard to swallow. Brazil is the industrial powerhouse
of South America, but cannot feed and educate its people.
In a country almost the size of a continent, the extreme
inequalities in land distribution have led to land shortages
but not to agrarian reform. Brazil has enormous natural
resources but their exploitation so far has benefited just
a few. The IMF and the greed of First World banks must bear
some of the blame for this situation, but institutionalized
corruption and the reluctance of the country's large middle
class to do anything that might jeopardize its comfortable
lifestyle are also part of the problem.
These
difficulties, however, rarely seem to overshadow everyday
life in Brazil. It's fair to say that nowhere in the world
do people know how to enjoy themselves more - most famously
in the annual orgiastic celebrations of Carnaval , but reflected,
too, in the lively year-round nightlife that you'll find
in any decent-sized town. This national hedonism also manifests
itself in Brazil's highly developed beach culture ; the
country's superb music and dancing; rich regional cuisines
; and in the most relaxed and tolerant attitude to sexuality
- gay and straight - that you'll find anywhere in South
America. And if you needed more reason to visit, there's
a strength and variety of popular culture , and a genuine
friendliness and humour in the people that is tremendously
welcoming and infectious.
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