Wednesday, July 18, 2012

1808 and Yesterday’s Rain





Torrential rains happened upon São Paulo yesterday.  It was the perfect day to hide and read, something this Arizonan is always wishing for. But as it often happens with wishes, this one had a tragicomic way of coming true. Before I could curl up with the book, I had to drive through flooded streets where the unlucky pedestrians sunk their feet in calf-high muddy water and carried their shoes in their hands. Afraid of getting stuck, I, like most drivers, did not venture to drive into the lateral lanes, choosing instead the center one where it was still possible to occasionally see the ground.

Except for the presence of motor vehicles, it could have been 1808, which was the first year of the stay of D. João VI in Brazil after having escaped from Napoleonic troops. 1808 also names the excellent book by Laurentino Gomes that I was hurrying home to read.

But it was not 1808. It was 2012 in the largest metropolis in South America, where the streets still flood when it rains and where stray dogs are still emblematic of underdevelopment despite the recent economic growth and the numerous skyscrapers constantly sprouting from the ground as if nurtured by the rain.

1808 explains many things as does 1822, the next book on my list. With his knack for details and historical anecdotes, Gomes creates a very clear picture of the cultural history of a period that once more paves the way (or sometimes does not pave anything) to present day Brazil, a place full of idiosyncrasies. From the unplanned development of megacities like São Paulo, to a culture that at times promotes a take-what-you-can mentality toward the land, the book delineated the historical roots of certain problems that seem to never go away.

I love Brazil. Always have and always will. But the fact that I left it gives me the sometimes-uncomfortable position of a pseudo-outsider. If a geopolitical limbo exists, I inhabit it. In many circles, critiquing any aspect of Brazil’s being is taboo; it is as if the act of tolerating every-day injustices enhances and strengthens the Brazilian spirit.  Although I was born several years after the slogan “Brasil, ame-o ou deixe-o” (Brazil, love it or leave it) was made ubiquitous by the military government in 1964, its words still ring in my ears, my personal actions (motivated by personal rather than political reasons) assessed by the merciless message of that motto.

1808 entertains while it educates. The roots of problems are often deep and well established, and in the case of Brazil, it is no different. Brazil is an improvised nation, put together ad hoc, like the great works of engineering displayed in bridges and tunnels in São Paulo, built to alleviate traffic but which, in the end, funnel it into one-lane streets unable to accommodate the ant colony-like flood of cars. Gomes does not judge; he simply tells of a country caught between being a colony and the center of an empire, between greatness and mediocrity, between development and underdevelopment. And in telling he says much more than political rhetorical discourses or late night bar philosophies ever could.