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Brazzil Online Magazine
May 2004
CultureBrazil is the Main Dish Here
Community Culture at Praia do Flamengo
Visitors to Bahia, Brazil find tranquility and
entertainment among the many outdoor cafes, restaurants and bars, located in close proximity to Salvador’s wonderful array
of beaches. Praia do Flamengo (Flamengo beach), a popular location north of Salvador, not far from the airport, is a good
example. Within a two or three minute walk of the beach is a cozy outdoor shopping mall with a bread bakery, a small
almost-deli / almost-grocery store, a florist, a pizzeria, an açai fruit compote vendor, a video/DVD-rental, an internet
café, a newsstand and one of my favorite outdoor restaurants “Di Tereza”..
Di Tereza typifies neighborhood culture in Flamengo, which is similar to other nearby communities like Lauro de Frietas, Stella Mares, and Itapua. It does so through owner, Luiz Carlos Martins de Oliveira, whose life and personality interestingly mirror the evolution and character of present-day Brazilian society. .
Fifty-two year old Luiz has been married for 26 years and has three boys, ranging from 15 to 26 years of age. Nearly 30% of Brazil’s population is 14 years and under, and most of the remainder have more the appearance of youth than age. I was recently approached by an American expatriate who complained that “there are an incredible number of beautiful women in Brazil, but finding one over thirty isn’t easy”. Brazil’s demographic youth is consistent with the age of its democracy, which supplanted Brazilian military rule in March of 1985. Each exhibits a nervous vitality in which the fear and optimism of youth fade to the background when festivities are underway.
Brazil’s struggle to overthrow military rule, which began in 1964, was led by the political left. Luiz acknowledges that he is a socialist and a fan of socialist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. “Lula” played much the same role in Brazil that Solidarity labor organizer Lech Walesa played in Poland. As head of the steel workers union he marshaled the political will of Brazilian labor and inspired the population to rally behind them. Lula is following in the footsteps of Walesa, who assumed the Polish Presidency in December of 1990 and served until 1995. But Walesa was awarded the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize and is widely regarded as a hero in the United States, whereas Lula is regarded by many with suspicion in the U.S. where socialism is often confused with communism.
For the record, Lula is not a communist, and neither is Luiz Oliveira. But communists played an undeniable role in
Brazil’s transformation from Military Republic to fledgling Confederated Republic and, ironically, free-market economy. The
father, and an uncle, of Luiz were communists in São Paulo, where his uncle was an editor for “A Voz Operária”, or “Voice of
the Workers Class”. Both were arrested and Luiz’s uncle spent six-months in prison. He would doubtless have suffered a
harsher fate but the government was unable to prove the connection between the clandestine publication and the defendant.
Luiz, in any case, was far more focused at that time on his love of music. He picked up a guitar at age six and began taking lessons a year later. While in high school he participated in a theatre group where he performed, played guitar and sang. Inspired by the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and other sixties rock groups Luiz and several friends formed a band called “The Tigers”, which was well received by fellow classmates.
The Tigers performed at school functions and, periodically, at private functions around the community where they were sometimes paid. Although apparently talented, it was their choice name that opened a door of opportunity for them. Petroleum giant Exxon was about to unveil it’s “Put a tiger in your tank” campaign in Brazil and was taken with the idea of putting a public face on the little high school band with the matching feline moniker.
The Tigers were signed to a contract with Exxon which had them performing on the road all over Brazil for three years. Luiz was only about 16 when the contract took effect. The band appeared, on average, three times per week in the early months of its contract with Exxon and they were still performing weekly when the contract expired. Luiz eventually completed high school but never attended university. But that didn’t prevent him from carving out a career.
For 15 years Luiz sold technological instruments, most
frequently for research and medical enterprises, throughout the country. It wasn’t the most satisfying time of his life.
But his extensive travels, both as a young band-member and as a salesman, exposed Luiz to the extraordinary diversity of
regional Brazilian culture and music. It also introduced him to his eventual home, Bahia. But although he liked Salvador it
did not initially exert a pull on him. Like most “Paulistas” (people from São Paulo city or state) it was Porto Seguro,
Trancoso and other southern Bahia communities that drew him. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, bar or pousada (bed and
breakfast) in one of those places.
Turning 40 profoundly affected Luiz, who realized that he wasn’t finding the happiness he had been seeking. Within the context of stable finances he sat down with his family, shared his feelings and considered alternatives. While looking for an opportunity more closely aligned with his dreams he accumulated capital and bided his time.
Luiz eventually relocated with his family to Salvador, and established Di Tereza. Now his presence in the community seems to be as inherently a part of the natural landscape as the sun, the sand, the palms and the water at Flamengo. On Friday and Saturday nights Luiz books performances of regional bands, performing everything from Bossa Nova to classical Spanish Flamenco to Jazz to “forro”, a country-western/klezmer/polka like hybrid popular throughout the semi-arid interior are remarkably good. And, periodically, the talented Luiz is himself the featured performer.
I find myself returning frequently to the little Di Tereza oasis of local culture in the last days of this, my most recent, stay in Brazil. Here I encounter and converse with “locals” of virtually every class of society … faveladinhas (slum children) stopping to beg a treat, businessmen and women, maids, laborers, store clerks, lawyers, artists and students. I can’t help but feel how little Brazilian culture can be understood in the absence of such close contact with Brazilian society.
For those traveling to Salvador, Bahia Di Tereza can be found in the small shopping center adjacent to the main Praia do Flamengo bus stop. The address and phone are 1a Ponte – Final de Linha da Praia do Flamengo, ITA Center – Loja 11 – CEP 41.600-000 and (71) 374-3252.
All photographs by Phillip Wagner
Phillip Wagner - copyright 5/28/2004
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