Showing posts with label Brazil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brazil. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

Artist Thomas Allen Harris on Black Gay Identity

via Advocate, by Neal Broverman

The varied issues of Africans and African-Americans is the point of "AfroPoP: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange," an innovative series that airs on the documentary channel WORLD and is hosted by The Daily Show's Wyatt Cenak.

Each episode is really a full-length documentary telling a different story, from the effort to get Africans hooked on solar energy to a profile on the queen of Calypso music.

Sunday's episodic film, That's My Face, is directed by Thomas Allen Harris, a prolific gay artist and producer who's shown work at the Whitney Biennial and won Guggenheim and Sundance fellowships.

Harris spoke to us about his Brazilian-based film, his childhood in Africa, and some of the projects he's working on through his company, Chimpanzee Productions.

The Advocate: Can you talk about "AfroPoP" and your film in it?
Harris: "AfroPoP" is a series being produced by the National Black Programming Consortium, a part of the minority consortium of PBS.

They’ve had this series for the last three years where they pick a certain number of films for the show. This year there are four different films, and my film, That’s My Face, is one of them. (Click here to find out where "AfroPoP" is airing near you.)

In the movie, I go to the Bahia region of Brazil. I was looking for another way of experiencing myself, kind of like a spiritual journey that Gertrude Stein and James Baldwin had when they went to Europe.

I lived in Europe and knew what that was like, so I went to Brazil. I was looking for what being black in the Americas was like outside of the U.S.

Brazil has more African-Brazilians than the U.S. has African-Americans. It’s also been interesting to me because I partly grew up in East Africa.

The Black-Brazilians were able to keep a lot more of their African roots through language and, most importantly, through religion.

I was very intrigued by their religious practices, some of which are very welcoming to gays and lesbians. It’s very different than what you hear in the press about what’s going in regards to the persecution of gays and lesbians in Africa.

Had you been to Bahia before?
I had been there before so I had experienced it. The time I went to make That’s My Face was the beginning of December.

From December all the way to February in the south coast of Bahia are all these public festivals that are inspired by these African deities and also Carnivale.

I was really doing my search in the middle of all this spectacular stuff. These Bahia festivals are very different than the Carnivale in Rio.

The latter is sort of a show and the Carnivale in Bahia takes over the whole city—all the shops close, with the exception of places selling beer and food.

It becomes a whole different world. Everything was sped up during the festival because the drums play all the night. In Brazil, the drums weren’t outlawed when Africans were brought over, like they were in the U.S.

So people in the U.S. weren’t able to pass on certain aspects of religion and communication. The drum is an important part of religious expression.

Through the drums, people start dancing and enter this trance. It’s transformative, and you’ll see that in the film.

You lived in Tanzania as a child. What do you remember of that time?
I remember people living close to the land. I went to a national school, with the local Tanzanians. We had to clean the toilets and work on the farm.

It was an African socialist country at the time, so the kids had to clean and cook.

When I was growing up there, intimacy between men was permissable.

With my friends, we could walk down the streets holding hands. Even if you hold your hands with brother in the U.S., you could get killed.

There's a very narrow way of how men can act in the U.S. What was also interesting, is that the capital of Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, is so cosmopolitan.

I had friends from India, Uganda, the Philippines, England, China. It was very different than the picture we have in our minds of Africa. It made me really want to see the world and played into me wanting to go to Brazil.

The U.S. and the U.K. have started applying pressure on African nations to end the criminalization of homosexuality. Do you think that’s helping?
It’s really important that the West get clear and articulate that attacks on gays and lesbians are human rights violations. The marriage equality effort here, it legitimizes the struggle in Africa, and also in Eastern Europe and the Middle East.

These countries are using gays and lesbians as scapegoats. In Africa, it’s not simply the African leadership that makes the violent crimes possible, it’s the missionaries who say homosexuality is an evil import from the West.


Read the rest

Friday, May 6, 2011

Brazil Supreme Court awards gay couples new rights

via BBC

Brazil's Supreme Court has voted overwhelmingly in favour of allowing same-sex couples the same legal rights as married heterosexuals.

The decision was approved by 10-0 with one abstention.

The ruling will give gay couples in "stable" partnerships the same financial and social rights enjoyed by those in heterosexual relationships.

Brazil is the world's most populous Roman Catholic nation and has an estimated 60,000 gay couples.

The ruling makes Brazil one of very few South American nations, after Argentina and Uruguay, to allow gay unions with benefits similar to those afforded a heterosexual married couple.

"The freedom to pursue one's own sexuality is part of an individual's freedom of expression," said Justice Carlos Ayres Britto, the author of the ruling.

Gay activists welcomed the decision, saying it marked an "historic day" for the country.

"The degree of civilisation of a country can be measured by the way people in a nation treat their homosexual community," Claudio Nascimento, head of Rio de Janeiro state's Gay, Lesbian and Transsexuals Committee said, according to O Globo.

From now on same sex couples will be able to register their civil partnerships with solicitors and public bodies, giving them proper inheritance and pension rights.

However, the landmark ruling stops short of recognising gay marriage, which could involve public or religious ceremonies.

Brazil's Roman Catholic Church had argued against the decision to allow civil unions, saying the only union referred to within Brazil's constitution was that between a man and a woman.

But the country's recently elected President Dilma Rousseff has made the issue one of her big social policy reforms.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Kobe, This is How You Respond to A Gay Slur

By Andrew Sharp via SBNation.com

After Kobe Bryant's homophobic comments last week, the NBA's fined him $100,000, Kobe apologized, and Wednesday, the Lakers released a public service announcement to promote gay rights. And all of that's well and good. But just for perspective's sake, here's a story that's 1,000 times cooler.

Recently, during a Brazilian volleyball match, the home crowd began chanting "bicha" at a visiting player, the equivalent of a bunch of Lakers fans calling Kevin Garnett a "faggot."

But here's what's worse—unlike the ref that Kobe called gay, the Brazilian player was actually gay, and after the game, he admitted as much publicly. So... a pretty terrible story all around. But that's when it starts getting good.

At the next match, the players joined together to wear pink warmup shirts to show solidarity. One of them even wore a rainbow-colored jersey.

Read more...

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

The best Rx ever - More Sex, Dancing For Better Health, via Brazil



Brazil's health minister has a remedy for the nation's high-blood- pressure problem: More sex.

Minister Jose Temporao says adults should be exercising more to help keep their blood pressure down – and he says a good cardiovascular workout includes sex, "always with protection, obviously."

Temporao also recommends dancing, a healthy diet and regular blood-pressure checks.

The minister made the comments Monday while launching a national campaign against high blood pressure in the Brazilian capital of Brasilia.

The Health Ministry says that 21.5 percent of Brazilians had high blood pressure in 2006. That jumped to 24.4 percent in 2009.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Brazilian President: Opposition to Homosexuality is a "Perverse Disease"


BRASILIA, Brazil, June 9, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - June 5 was a landmark day for the international homosexual movement. For the first time in history, the president of a nation officially launched a conference with the sole purpose of promoting and defending the homosexual agenda.

Brazilian President Luiz Lula had the First National Conference of Gays, Lesbians, Bisexuals, Transvestites and Transsexuals (GLBT), inaugurated by presidential decree, and called for "a time of reparation" in Brazil.

Accompanied by six ministers, Lula exhorted all those opposed to the gay-rights movement to "open and purify their minds." Lula then announced his complete support for the homosexual movement, saying that he is "going to do all that is possible so that the criminalization of homophobia and the civil union may be approved."

After calling for a universal embrace of the homosexual movement, the president affirmed that "homophobia" is perhaps "the most perverse disease impregnated in the human head."

Read the rest.


Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Brazil's Condom Factory - Good for Sex, Good for Trees


[via Kaiser HIV/AIDS Daily Report]

The Brazilian government on Monday opened a condom factory in the northwestern state of Acre that will produce condoms using rubber from trees in the Amazon rainforest, Reuters reports. The factory will help reduce the country's dependence on imported condoms to fight the spread of HIV and will help preserve the rainforest, the government said.

The factory will produce about 100 million condoms annually (Colitt, Reuters, 4/7). According to the Ministry of Health, the factory will produce the only condoms worldwide that are made of latex from a tropical forest. The condoms will be sold under the name Natex (Duffy, BBC News, 4/8). The condoms will be distributed at no cost throughout Brazil as part of the country's efforts to fight HIV/AIDS.

The factory will provide about 150 jobs for rubber tappers in the region and will increase demand for latex, currently at about 6.2 million tons annually, by about 500,000 tons annually, the health ministry said (AP/International Herald Tribune, 4/8). More than 550 families will earn a total of 2.2 million Brazilian reais, or $1.3 million, annually by producing the condoms, Reuters reports. According to some environmental advocates, the income generated by the factory will help reduce pressure to cut down trees (Reuters, 4/7). In addition, the latex used to manufacture the condoms is widely available and can be obtained without destroying large sections of the rainforest, according to officials (BBC News, 4/8).

According to the Brazilian government, it is currently the largest single buyer of condoms worldwide. A health ministry spokesperson said that the government imported one billion condoms so far this year, which will be distributed during the next two years (Reuters, 4/7).


Thursday, March 27, 2008

"Do whatever you want, but do it with a condom"

[LOVE IT]


This new ad campaign directed at gay men was just launched by the government, yep, the GOVERNMENT, in Brazil. It says, "Do whatever you want, but do it with a condom."


Thanks to Made in Brazil for putting this on our gaydar.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

We Heart Brazil THIS MUCH


Brazil To Distribute 19.5 Million Condoms During Carnival

Bishop - Condoms "encourage orgiastic behavior"

Health officials in Brazil on Sunday began distributing millions of condoms ahead of the country's five-day Carnival in an effort to reduce the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, the AP/San Diego Union-Tribune reports. The Ministry of Health plans to distribute about 19.5 million condoms before the end of Carnival on Feb. 6, according to the AP/Union-Tribune.

Health Minister Jose Gomes Temporao during the launch of the condom-distribution program at a cultural center in Rio de Janeiro said the government has to "let society know the importance of prevention." According to a recent health ministry survey, about 80% of young men in the country reported using condoms, compared with 40% of young women.

Church officials in the country, which has the largest Roman Catholic population worldwide, opposed the condom-distribution program, as well as another program in the Brazilian city Recife that will distribute emergency contraception during Carnival. "The church has nothing against having fun during Carnival, but the banalization of human sexuality is something we cannot tolerate," Bishop Antonio Augusto Dias Duarte of the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops' Life and Family Commission, said, adding that the programs "will only serve to diminish inhibitions and encourage orgiastic behavior."

About 600,000 Brazilians are living with HIV/AIDS, and about 200,000 have access to antiretroviral drugs, Temporao said (AP/San Diego Union-Tribune, 1/27)

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Brazil launches delightfully gay condom campaign

The new safe sex campaign developed by the Brazilian government targets teenagers, and one of the commercials takes a cool and honest approach to gay relationships.



Singer Negra Li is the spokesperson for the campaign. Here are subtitles in English for the commercial. Thanks to Made in Brazil for putting this on the LifeLube radar.

Boy: Am leaving...
Dad: Be careful.
Mom: Don't forget to take a condom with you.
Dad: Son, take it just in case. You never know if your boyfriend is going to have one or not.
Boy: Thanks dad, thanks mom.
Negra Li: You don't expect all parents to be like this, right? Wearing a condom should be your attitude, and it is important in the fight against AIDS.


Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Brazil Puts HIV+ People Before Patents


The Mad Professah - a regularly clicked blog by LifeLube, has some nice, quick coverage on this important news.
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