Yesterday, the evangelical preacher Marco Feliciano, new President of the Commission for Human Rights and Minorities of the Brazilian House of Representatives, could not preside over the session. Dozens of demonstrators protested against the presence of Feliciano in the presidency. His session lasted only eight minutes.
Sources in Brasilia say that the congressman suffers great pressure to leave office. Feliciano was also subpoenaed to testify next April in the Federal Supreme Court on a charge of embezzlement.
According to the UN, “most discrimination in Brazil is subtle and includes slights, aggressions and numerous other informal practices, while consciously egregious and overt racism directed at particular individuals, especially in the form of racial insults, is more commonly recognized as racist. Even though Brazil’s anti-racism laws target such incidents, which have long been considered un-Brazilian, subtle individual and institutional practices maintain and reproduce racial inequalities. Racialist ways of thinking, in which racial hierarchies are accepted as natural, are apparently as culturally embedded in Brazil as they are throughout the world”.
Feliciano is a product of this racialist way of thinking and he did not seem to regret his remarks on Twitter. Feliciano wrote that “Africans are descended from ancestral cursed by Noah. That's a fact”. The worst is that racist ideas like these receive support from many people in Brazil, especially evangelical fundamentalists. For a multiracial nation with a rich African influence like Brazil, that's a shame.