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"la abundancia do Brasilia!” By Brazil is a colossal country with more beaches than all of California and Florida put together, so where to begin? I started by visiting expatriates Jim and Debbie in the mountains in Teresopolis, 3,000 feet above Rio.
Jim emailed me in the U.S. saying that he and girlfriend Debbie had bought an estate in Brazil which included four buildings, one house, a spring-fed swimming pool, a vegetable garden and enclosed tennis court for $30,000. Was he joking? This was something I had to see.
Loves to Argue
Jim is a Libertarian who loves to argue. We discuss everything from insurance laws (a crock of shit, in his words), to health care (a crime! he says), to circumcision (pure idiocy!), to politics (more idiocy!!!). About politics, Jim says, “ The Republicans want to put a camera in your bedroom and the Democrats a hand in your back pocket. I've had it with them both.” Debbie sits on the couch knitting, and just smiles. Before the week is over, I will have joined the ranks of those who no longer try to change Jim’s mind about anything.
Trying to be Brazilian Aussies and Yanks A man in a café speaks to me in Portuguese, I reply in bad Portuguese,
“I don’t speak Portuguese”. “A e’ Francesa?” he asks. “No”. “E’ Americana?” “Yes”. The Australian man (it turns out) says that he never would have guessed. I’m going to have to learn to speak Portuguese if I hope to blend in.
We are invited to the neighbors' for lunch today. Kathy and JaJa’s live across the cobblestone street from Jim and Debbie and at the top of a steep hill. I stop to catch my breath and to admire the hobbit-like house they built themselves over half a dozen years. Just below their's is the fairytale castle of Kathy's sister, Christiana. At the bottom of the hill is the equally charming house of Herman, Kathy's father. Skol Beer JaJa has laid out a table for us topped with farofa (baked and grated cassava from the Amazon), sliced linguisa, cauliflower, white rice, a stew of beans and chunks of beef called feijada, and a brilliant plate of shredded carrots and beets. There is also Skol beer, and JaJa’s premium cache of cachaca (sugar cane alcohol that is to Brazilians as tequila is to Mexicans and just as deadly.). Debbie rings to say she’ll be late. JaJa announces that we will wait. I say I'll be at home writing until then and I head for the door.
JaJa pours me a shot of cachaca and asks me what I think about the conflict between Bush and Saddam Hussein. JaJa says that Americans think they are free, but that they are not. He says it will take South America hundreds of years to recover from US intervention during the seventies. Kathy lightens things up by saying, “But we love Americans. And the men don’t dislike all American politicians. They love Prezedenche Cleentone and Moe-neeka Lewinschay”. The men guffaw.
Muito Bonita! I mention my surprise at the diversity of Brazilians’ physical characteristics. Jaja says that after Holland invaded Brazil they held it for seventy years during which time they intermarried with the former black slaves and Indians. “Muito bonita!” he says about the resultant blue-eyed, chocolate colored Brazilians that came from those unions. He says about his blonde haired son, “Luan, is a mixture of German, Spanish, Portuguese, Indian, and African. We are proud of our diverse make-up. But above all, we are Brazilian.” One morning the rain stops. And so we pile into Kathy and JaJa’s car to drive the ten minutes into the national park. Following their lead, Jim and I (Debbie is working at the internet café) hop over rocks, under trees, stepping lightly over the spongy ground to the water’s edge where a cascade of water meets the creek. Then we are standing under a roaring fall, the sound of crashing water filling our ears. We paddle across the cool stream to a large granite slab which the two scramble up agilely.JaJa offers me his hand while Kathy holds his ankle. Back at Debbie and Jim's that night, I climb into bed in my unheated cabin fully clothed, with the hood of my coat pulled up around my ears, and three wool blankets piled on top. It is summer in Brazil, but in Tere', the air is thin and offers little warmth once the sun has slid from sight. I’m growing restless for the heat of Brazil’s beaches. The next morning we pore over maps and discuss my next stop. I tell them that I’m looking for towns within two hours of a major city, a sizeable expat population, bohemian community, and aesthetically tasteful architecture. They suggest Buzios on the Golden Coast north of Rio, and Parati on the Green Coast located half way between Rio and Sao Paulo. And I cannot come all this way to Brazil without going to Rio.
until a week ago, I knew no one.
On to Rio Rio is my next stop. My friends in the U.S. expressed great concern before I left about me going alone to Rio de Janeiro, reportedly one of the world’s most dangerous cities. What they don’t know is, that in spite of the fact that I haven’t lost my Pollyanna belief that down deep everyone has the same basic need for love and respect, I have developed a modicum of street smarts. It’s called blending in. In Rio I will heed Jim’s advice about dressing as if I’m headed for a day at the beach and I will carry no more than 50 Reals in my pocket.
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