CHILDREN OF BRAZIL
One of the biggest social challenges faced by the Brazilian government
and society today is the lack of education, housing, health care and nutrition
for homeless children in Brazil.
Thousands of children are abandoned on the streets and left
to fend for themselves, as parents are unable to provide for them financially.
These starving children living in deplorable conditions resort to doing
activities that exploit them on being coaxed by street sellers and other
adults. Such as abuse/sell drugs, petty theft, commit crimes and prostitution
to earn them quick money.
For shelter, these children aged between 5 to 18-years-old
live in abandoned buildings, cardboard boxes, and parks or on the street
itself. Most of them do not even live to see their eighteenth birthday, due to
the atrocities they suffer in life. Drug taking, particularly sniffing glue is
common and a cheaper alternative. This adversely affects their mental and
physical stability and reduces their life-span.
With the highest number of people living with HIV and AIDS
(estimated 660,000); poor families are unable to provide their children enough
attention. Parents that are murdered or die in death related cases also can’t
pay heed to young ones they leave behind.
A staggering 200,000 to 8 million live off the street in
Brazil and 609 in Sao Paulo alone. Police that regularly picks up street
children for petty crimes have nowhere to take them but jail, but after a
period of time released and sent back to the same place. There are a few
outreach programs that provide shelter, but are already always full.
Known to be a nuisance to the society, they are even shunned
by politicians because they have no voting power or voice. Children that live
with their parents have benefited with the policies introduced by government
that provides free education and medical check-up. However those that stay on
the streets are rejected and neglected.
There are more women than men in Brazil.
Contributing factors for male deficiency is that men die at a younger age due
to crime, motorcycle/car accidents and gang violence. Many men also have
migrated to countries like Europe, Asia and America for better life opportunities.
Brazil has become a land of women but sustaining the power to rise was an
uphill battle.
Brazilian society was originally strongly
patriarchal because of property transmission and religion. They put Roman
Catholic values into effective practice where men were expected to demonstrate
their masculinity by being the head of household and women were supposed to
stay virgins before marriage and stay faithful to their husbands. Consensual
unions, illegitimacy and prostitute still being a part of the society, people
were not entirely acceptable but tolerant of such a lifestyle. Women achieved
equal footing with men for all legal purposes under the constitution of 1988.
Female participation in labor force grew dramatically
in the 1970s and 80s, resulting in new employment patterns and expansion in
service and economic sectors. There were also several feminist movements which
threw light on violence against women during this time which resulted in getting
them specially dedicated for women police stations. From the 90s, focus shifted
on reproductive health and rights along with increase of female participation in
professions. They entered the formal and self-employed market with the increase
of education. Status of women in Brazil is still going strong in various fronts
such as law, medicine, dentistry and engineering. Now, growing economy and
rising prices have propelled women to aim higher.
Brazilians simply call her Dilma. Dilma
Rousseff is the first female president of Brazil was a onetime Marxist
militant, technocrat, economist and handpicked successor to the highly regarded
Lula da Silva. In just 11 months since her entry in the presidential palace,
she has emerged for his shadow to prove herself at the helm of the world’s
seventh-largest economy at the time of global crisis. She has appointed women
to high-profile positions like chief of staff, planning minister and minister
if institutional relations, making them up to one third of her cabinet. This has
injected a new tone in the presidential office and is influencing the country
overall.
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