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Monday, March 23, 2026

Racism In Brazil (2023 YouTube Video With Discussion Thread Comments From Black Brazilians & From Other People Throughout The World))




WODE MAYA, Nov 11, 2023

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Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post showcases a 2023 YouTube video of racism in Brazil that was produced and narrated by Ghanaian influencer Wode Maya.

This post also presented some comments from that video's discussion thread.  

The content of this post is presented for historical and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to Wode Maya and all those who are associated with this video. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this post.

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SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THIS VIDEO'S DISCUSSION THREAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wwBv_ar2QY&t=2s

(Numbers are added for referencing purposes.


2023

1,@almonnirvana
"WODE MAYA is a think-tank. He creates some of the videos which you can never skip when YouTube suggests them to you. I've been exploring the whole earth just sitting on my coach in Kenya. Keep on keeping on bro."

**
2. 
@tshepomoletsane9764
"Wode, your Kenyan co-host did a great job with this episode, perhaps in bridging the gap we need affiliated content for Portuguese speaking Afro-Nations both in continent and diaspora.

An ideal opportunity for her to explore and travel, it also aligns with Pan-Africanism conversation and bridging the 6th region."

**
3.
@NinaSimone24U
"Unite African Diaspora 🤎✊🏽"

**
4.
@Vincity1183
"I’m happy that a African brother like you are able to travel the world & show people back in Africa the truth of how blacks are treated outside of Africa & Europe welcome to this side of the world"

**
5.@alexbento7378
"As a black Brazilian who has lived in the United States for 12 years, I see that black Brazilians have to learn some things that black Americans did, they built their own structure of TV, radio, University, schools and much more, I don't say that to to segregate but to show respect, because here in Brazil white people respect black Americans a lot because they recognize everything they have achieved, here in Brazil there is a lack of black filmmakers to tell our stories in a beautiful way, where are the black filmmakers in Brazil? We are a large black nation but we are still small in purchasing power, you don't see engineers, doctors, or technology companies with black people prominently featured.Black Americans are a reference of success for the whole world, where in the world there are so many black people on TV in the cinema, hundreds of hundreds of films, there has been a black president, here in Brazil the only black person who is world famous was Pelé many years ago , without this we are invisible in the world, and in Colombia does anyone know? There is no comparison between the United States and the world reference .Today I live in Brazil and I see the big difference between black people in the United States and the rest of the world"

**
6.
@ashleychemise
"I'm watching this as a Black American woman and it's sad, not surprising, I, too have experienced racism...In times past I've wondered how many African families were ripped away from each other during the transatlantic slave trade when some Africans were sent to South America while others were sent to North America...I feel them...I am them. Great video Wode Maya🙏🏾❤️"

**
7.
@YouTubeBlueButterflies
"I'm African American and I have distant family in the Caribbean and my heritage in the "new world" started in Barbados"

**
8.@FierceLeo
"
Colorism, light skin and dark skin is an issue every where, no matter the hair texture or not.  The old Willie Lynch strategy to keep slaves divided. Right ?"

**
9. @Lady1M365
"Thank you for the education we would never get in schools. They have been on a mission here in the US to eliminate the history of slavery in our schools. Keep going Wode Maya. I appreciate you.❤"

**
10. @georgehosea139
"I think that black people have to learn to love each other, be there for each other, empower each other through education and training and learn to be self reliant and hard working. With such virtues they will be able to uplift their lives and if necessary live in their own communities and run their own lives. This is a very enlightening vlog Wode Maya keep them coming, I pray for the equality of all races in the world, because we are indeed equal, is humanity. 😅"

**
11. 
@AliveBlessedGrateful
"I traveled to Brazil in 2002 as a volunteer with Habitat for Humanity and I was shocked to encounter racism there. One dude walked up to our group and started talking to us. He said he’s not black, he’s not African. I just stared blankly and thought… why’d he even say that? 🤣 Secondly… dude was darker than me talkin bout he’s not black 🤦🏽‍♀️🙄"

**
12. 
@tshepomaph8201
"Brazil has so many similarities with my country South Africa 🇿🇦 where there is always a concerted effort to keep economic activity and opportunities only within white communities, Which is the main reason for racial inequalities in these countries."

**
13. 
@kingkweku9761
"I was in Sao Paolo in 2012 and i can truly say that the people are one of the nicest in the world...very diversell!!! beautiful city, very friendly people and you can literally ask anyone on the streets for help with anything ....i personally didnt experience any racism and i was there only a few weeks so i cant speak for everyone but i felt at home and will definitely visit again"

**
Reply
14.@Omar-kl3xp
"I think racism in Brazil is more systematic and institutional, the people might be nice but the government is making sure that the black population in Brazil remain poor"

**
Reply
15. 
@Boomarrang
"Great elaboration. Because what he asked only meant direct racism from human to human. But Systemic racism where the system is set up to oppress or restrict the black people is strong. Because you cannot really point a finger at it or describe it clearly because it is intertwined in the system. It is a silent racism. It is in the West as well. It exists in the UK more than the direct racism so I can relate to what to mean."

**
Reply
16. @lammuri
" @Boomarrang yes, UK indeed. A UN Human Rights Expert Group visited the UK and described the country as structurally, systemically and institutionally racist. The Conservative Government denied it."

**
Reply
17. 
@segundent3680
"Structural racism - where every floor gets whiter the closer you go to the top."

**
Reply
18. @felityf1
"
Exactly, the Black people in Brazil is only now, in the present generation, getting go to universities."

**
19. 
@dcbelle01
"Loving your coverage of Brazil, Maya!! 🇧🇷 I notice that you are asking people to recall moments of racism. While these moments do exist… and often, I challenge you to think of racism as systems. In places like Brazil and here in the US, the exception of racist incidents is what many point to to say that it doesn’t exist. Structural racism - education, healthcare, housing, etc. is the most brutal form. Keep doing what you are doing, dear brother! ❤️🖤💚

**
20. 
@justinkatangila5417
"We have been divided by the distance for so long but grounded by the roots called black ❤️

I love you more my people❤️"

**
21. @belvedere92
"That young lady on the train who says she feels lost as an Afro-Brazilian is totally understood by me. I lived for many years in the USA and in my conversation with Afro-Brazilians they tell me that there very few organizations that cater to organizing Afro-Brazilians culturally or functionally with respect to things like quality of schools, demanding government actions in their areas, etc., etc. So yes you will feel lost in such situations."

**
Reply
22. @gildahernandez3557
"So sad but it’s the story of our Black history all over the world.. The only way our people become aware of our plight, is through education…  if we don’t know who we are, we won’t know where we are going…I have learn so much of our history within the past 10 years, simply because of self interest….The greatest self inflected wound upon ourself, is ignorance… Life is Spiritual… 🤷🏽‍♀️💕🙏🏽💕🙏🏽💕🙏🏽💕🙏🏽"

**
23. @elizamasilva502
"I'm a black Brazilian living in the UK. The experience within the Brazilian community here where I live feels like an extension of life in Brazil, but not all for the good reasons..

I often hire people to help me with cleaning/ironing at home.

It gets interesting every time  it happens to be a white Brazilian because they are the only people to volunteer information of what they used to do/be in Brazil. Some seem so ashamed and misplaced by cleaning for me I almost feel sorry for their struggle.

These aren't bad or unpleasant people just normal friendly hardworking white Brazilians which means it doesn't take a horrible person to be that way.

 

I believe it was not up to them how those beliefs formed foundation in their minds given that it's learned the moment you come into the world.

BUT,  it is up to each person to shine a light on those beliefs and be brave enough to acknowledge their racism.

Own it. Then change it."

**
24. @kerry-annwatson6104
"very insightful...I didn't know that racism was so prevalent in Brazil. I was moved by the words of the young lady who said that every day she fears for her life and the lives of her family members. I'm from Jamaica and I've also lived in the Bahamas. I have not traveled extensively nor have I been exposed to some of the atrocities that have been meted out to other people of African descent/ancestry(on the merit of one believing that he is superior to the other) so I cannot relate to the narratives that are being told. I am in awe! This touches me to the core. Thanks for enlightening us, Wode Maya. I can't wait to meet you in Jamaica."

**
25.  @afiganyo5678
"
I am Ghanaian-American and have been studying Brazilian Portuguese for 4 years and I just came back from Sao Paulo (my first trip to Brazil). I definitely felt the racism.

It wasn't the kind of racism I feel in parts of Europe where people have never seen blacks before. It was more a situation where people were confused why I was where I was and why I looked like an entitled person with money.  It made me think of how America was before the civil rights movement.

The fact that they took so much black culture and then discard black people is tragic and I have a mixed feeling about going there. I will definitely go again but now my eyes are opened."

**
26. 
 @DolphineAchonga-gn6kn
"
I agree with the young lady. Being taught that Brazil is color blind keeps them from tackling racial issues head on and demanding for institutional changes. However, Afro community also failed to build global networks and invest in each other. That's something to learn from Jewish and Irish communities who were once just as hated and looked down on. The fact that the mother continent itself has leaders who refuse to build it for the better creates an unfair perception of Afro peoples everywhere. Not all Europeans, are smart. Not all Chinese or Japanese are smart. Not all Jews are billionaires. But their mother countries' economic successes creates a halo effect that accords them the esteem of others everywhere they go. We celebrate individuals but also judge them as part of a community. It's the animalistic part of us that we'll probably never outgrow no matter how advanced human society becomes. The day Africa climbs from the bottom of the global ladder it'll automatically buy esteem, for all Afro peoples everywhere. So do your best wherever you are to give a good reflection of your peoples. Build networks and push each other to succeed intellectually and economically."

**
27.@Keesha
"
Lived in São Paulo for about 3 years as a NYC transplant and I loved it…. I stayed close to Ave Paulista and it often felt like I was back home in Manhattan. Brazilians are beautiful people ❤️. As a black woman though, I was treated very differently from locals, though we looked the same. The minute I opened my mouth and they hear English I get received differently. It’s sad because even your own black people are racist to each other , but it is the heritage of a former slave state  and colonial society."

**
Reply
28. @SilVia-hs2kb
"You were treated differently because you're American and therefore your social status changed in their minds. That will happen anywhere even in Europe. Being Black American gives you immediate upgrade. This has little to do with color and all to do with money or persecption of higher financial status."

**
Reply
29. @anndeecosita3586
"@SilVia-hs2kb I agree. Most places I go they don’t assume I’m American based on looks because I’m not white. But once they realize I’m American the whole dynamic changes. I have seen people be very disrespectful to poor locals while kissing my ass because I’m American because they figure I have money. This makes me uncomfortable. That’s I typically primarily speak Spanish when I go to countries where English isn’t the primary language unless I am traveling with someone who only speaks English. When I went to Peru, most probably assumed I was Brazilian."

**
Reply
30. @FindYourFree
"Spent some years and Bahia and SP with my kids and returning to SP to live soon.  They always said the $$$ whitens you in Brazil and I saw this to be true"

**
Reply
31. @FierceLeo.
"Are we taking about racism or prejudice?"

**
Reply
32. @robertkessel8184, 2024
"@FierceLeo.  Racism is the cause of prejudice.  So we are talking of both."

**
Reply
33. 
@DC-dudu
"
No it's not. I've been to 20+ African countries. Black people are racist against each other ( different ethnicities) and against other races. To blame it on a already extinct colonial state is just to give an excuse. There should be no excuse for any type of racism."

**
Reply
34.
@lammuri
"
​ @DC-dudu you are talking about tribalism and classism not racism."

**

35.@chinatownboy7482
"
@ashleychemise   What can we do moving forward?  We know the history.  We can't change the past.  We can craft and shape the future."

**
Reply
36.
@ashleychemise
"@
chinatownboy7482  I'm not sure of  your ethnicity, but judging by your name if you are Chinese you start by calling out present day racism  in your culture and openly standing against injustice for Black/African people. Since you referenced the present tense, remember, North and South African Americans are not in power on a dominant level... it takes those on a dominant level to be brave and fight along side of us. We are the only group that can not easily go back to "family in our homeland". So much more I could say...I'm tired and will no longer post on this thread."

**
37.
@HendrikMaison
"
I was in Brazil just 3 weeks ago, i went to Sao Paulo and then Salvador, and in less than 48 hrs i was able to recognize the racism immediately and i was very sad. I lost all my joy for Brazil i had for brazil, I loved Brazilian soccer.  To see afro Brazillians living in such a state I was so hurt. It made me appreciate what African Americans have done for black people. The struggle to fight for freedom. As a born African living in the United States, I have come to cherish the African-American struggle for justice and economic justice. Going to Brazil told me how far back the black man in Brazil is, he is told to accept his position and never question it because he or she is lucky to be Brazilian."

**
Reply
38. 
@koimt6732, 2024
"
Yes. It's oppressive.

I commented that I felt better in Europe, where I was treated better than in Brazil, but people don't understand. I came here in 1987, to free my mind and also to help my mother who was sick. I was able to buy medicines, food and pay condominium fees with the money I received. My sister was able to stay at home helping my mother.

It's very hard for you to live so unhappy, especially when you live in the only country you know. Many Africans are not aware of what racism is."

**
Reply
39. @learningtheworld.5255, 2024
"
Yours is a very good comment. I am a black Cuban. I am seeking a nice destination to relocate as a black person, and I was actually thinking about Brazil. But this video only made me realize even more what I already was kind of suspecting, how far behind black people are in Brazil. Way farther behind than in Cuba.

I am nearly ruling out Brasil."

**
Reply
40. 
@donramonn12, 2024
"
 @learningtheworld.5255  yes,. Brazil is very racist.Europe is a better choice."

**
Reply
41. @acilenecardoso7330, 2024
"
@learningtheworld.5255  Brazil is one of the countries with the lowest rates of racism in the world."

**
Reply
42. 
@andy-wz1fi, 2024
"
As a black brazilian, this is true and it comes from years of what we call "embranquecimento" (whitening) of the population. Contrary to what happened in the US, in Brasil the way white people found to discriminate was trying to make black people mix with the white population and therefore lose its identity. It worked very well, many lightskin black brazilians believe they are not black, there's hardly any idea of belonging to our race, this was substituted by the feeling of being brazilian, which often lacks the political aspect of being black and ignores the cultural and socialeconomical differences of being a black brazilian."

**
Reply
43.
@dondadaa404, 2025
"
​@andy-wz1fi other Latin American countries practice the same thing."

**
Reply
44.
@difenix1, 2026
"
@andy-wz1fi deixa de mimimi que já tá ficando chato, o branco casa com a negra o negro casa com a Branca o japonês casa com a Branca com a negra e assim vai Isso é Brasil Se você quer a segregação você sofrerá as consequências das suas escolhas aqui é Brasil somos todos mestiços e Vida que Segue quem quiser se dividir em grupos que se divide mas não chore as consequências não reclame."
-snip-
Google translate from Portuguese (Brazilian) to English:
"@andy-wz1fi  stop whining, it's getting annoying. White people marry black people, black people marry white people, Japanese people marry white people, black people, and so on. This is Brazil. If you want segregation, you will suffer the consequences of your choices. This is Brazil, we are all mixed-race, and life goes on. Whoever wants to divide into groups, let them divide, but don't cry about the consequences, don't complain"

**
Reply
45.
@DJM-new52, 2024
"
@Junseld

Not entirely true. Many of our ancestors were not slaves already in Africa. Most enslaved people were prisoners of war in the many conflicts between African kingdoms and empires. That is how slavery worked in most places from the beginning. People war on each other and either kill them, drive them out, or enslave them. Anyone could be enslaved from royalty, priests, nobles, warriors (POW’s most commonly) all the way down to commoners. There was slavery in Africa but it was not the completely dehumanizing chattel slavery which was practiced in the Americas by the Europeans colonial powers such as Portugal, Spain, England/UK, France, and The Netherlands. In Africa, you could at least have a chance to work yourself out of it and not have it follow down your family line multigenerationally even though there still is a certain stigma attached to it. It was more akin to indentured servitude. I am of both Fulani and Yoruba descent. The Fulani made war on many other African ethnic groups in the name of Islam and the Yoruba kingdoms such as Oyo Empire warred with Dahomey and sometimes the Ashanti Empire. They both took slaves from their defeated enemies as did the Romans did with the Celts, Germanics, Greeks and many other European ethnic groups as well as the aforementioned Europeans warring on each other.  Even after 250 plus of that, Black Americans became a new people composed of the descendants of those captured and enslaved Africans that were former enemies as well as our enslavers and the indigenous peoples of the Americas. No one is claiming to be the sole recipient of ill treatment nor are we feeling sorry for ourselves. If we talk about slavery,  it’s to address the ripple effect of that foul institution that continues to impact us as a people. We are still fighting even if it’s not as openly as in the 1960’s. If we had not,most of the rights we and many others now benefit from have in America would not exist. If people truly knew the real story about Black American as well as African history you would have a different perspective."

**
Reply
46. 
@dpeasehead, 2025
"
@HendrikMaison: Thank you for being honest and for sharing your observations. A lot of people are blinded to the endemic anti-black racism by Latin American color blind multi-racial propaganda. White supremacy is white supremacy no matter which part of the Americas it resides in and it is always toxic to black people. A lot of outsiders don't like the more aggressive approach of black Americans in the US when it comes to confronting anti-black racism and white privilege but the Latin American "alternative" of being in a state of permanent subjugation while living in a perpetual state of denial is not at all appealing."

**
47.
@koimt6732
"
I keep commenting on it. I'm Brazilian and I feel better in Europe than at home.

I want to come and live in Africa, but I don't know where I come from and if the Africans will accept me as an African. We have a suffering that never goes away. It’s horrible what colonialism did to our ancestors and to us."

**
Reply
48. 
@texvor6949
"
You should go to Popo Aguda in Lagos nigeria. Its the settlement where a lot of Afro brazilians went to after slavery ended and left brazil to go or return to Africa. Many of their descendants are still there."

**
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49. 
@koimt6732
"
@texvor6949  Oh thank you. I just finished watching a video about Popo Aguda and immediately felt at home. I got so emotional.You helped me a lot."

**
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50. 
@texvor6949
"
@koimt6732  No problem and good luck. Maybe you can become a bridge and reconnection to Popo Aguda and those of Afro Brazil. That will be your peoples gateway to the motherland by using the same path those of the afro brasilians ancestors crossed to create a home back in africa."

**
51.
@moa5351
[In the] "
Bahia province of Brazil they still use a lot of Yoruba words like Acaraje, efó and still practice Yoruba traditional religion worshipping deities like exu, sango, yemoja and osun."...

**
52. 
@faithbiyapo9297
"
Charity begins at home. Nobody will love and accept us, when we haven’t loved and accepted ourselves. Until we put pride, ego, religion, greed, social class, tribalism, etc away and embrace each other as brothers and sisters, nothing will ever change. Every negative thing we do to one another devalues us as a group. Our leaders sell us out. We’ve got no infrastructure, quality education, enabling business environments to create jobs and innovation for the young. How can we be valued by outsiders? Everything starts with us. It is well. Peace and love to all! Keep up the great work, Maya!"

**
53.
@SechabaLSA
"
As someone who grew up in Lesotho 🇱🇸 , a country with more than 98% black people and one tribe, I have a huge fesr of relocating to a place where I'll suddenly become a minority.  My most comfortable countries that I've lived in are South Africa 🇿🇦, and Botswana  🇧🇼 . I don't think I'm brave enough to relocate anywhere besides South Africa, Botswana, eSwatini and Zambia"

**
54.
 @PHlophe
"
I am half eSwatini . I was born and raised in the EU so, if you are born a minority it is part of your life.

i am biracial  .  I love being in the african continent as i have family there . I am comfortable identifying myself as a Black male.  my favorite african nation is Angola although Kenya comes close second"

**
55.
@gerrytushh
"
Good and informative video. I visited Rio de Janeiro city Brazil and just a few hundred meters behind my 5 star beach high-rise hotel was a huge favelas (slum) with so many people packed in tiny shacks ....it was so sad 😢"

**
56.
@Layla-fr7mf
"
Racism in Brazil is so real and I experienced it visiting Brazil already seated on the plane on my way to Rio with my husband as being one of the only Africans/black people on the plane there and back because the Afro Brazilians are so marginalised they cannot even afford to leave the county or a plane ticket.

We stayed in an area called Leblon and after that Ipanema.

Sadly, we were the only non Europeans/Caucasians in most of the restaurants and at the residences in these areas.

The stares from the Europeans were so blatantly rude until they would hear us speak English and realise that we were tourists which was already a guess because of the fact that we were eating at these restaurants and staying in such areas. They would feel so emboldened to treat non Europeans with disdain which seems rooted in the culture I could tell that the Afro Brazilians as majority are definitely abused and marginalised to the extreme.

We would be amongst the only black people at most of the restaurants in many of these areas such Ipanema, Leblon, Lagoa and such as if the Afro Brazilians also accept that they should not be seen at certain restaurants while we made sure to book an experience to learn about the history of Afro Brazilians with an Afro Brazilian who took us to different neighbourhoods and explained the history of the black people, the racism and places like Leblon that were known to be “wealthy” areas that purposely kept the black population far away from these areas unless they are in nearby favelas or working in restaurants or hotels or as maids.

It is expected but sadly there are no laws to fight that kind of discrimination that is extreme in Brazil unlike other nations. It is still slave like in nature with slavery still taking place in remote areas so we as Africans need to be a safe haven to many of our own people. It is the only way."

**
57.
 @KillahManjaro
"
15:27. That old lady say she only experienced racism twice. it's so normalized that she doesn't recognize racism.

People confuse prejudice with racism. When African Americans were marching in the 50s-'60s, they weren't marching for white people to stop calling them names or like them, or care how white people feel about them, they were marching for access to resources of the society, Education, Jobs, Freedom of movement without harm, Bank Loans, Houses, etc. all things required to accumulate power and be competitive in the USA like all groups.

It's the same in brazil. The black population doesn't control anything in the society to accumulate power.  if you have power you don't care or think about what people say about you."

**
Reply
58. 
@afrakanaswahilitv5520
"
It looks like you don't understand racism in America. It's institutionalized in away that it's very difficult to break through. It's in colleges, police, judiciary, and even in simple stuff like public transportation. Imagine most of the jobs are in the suburbs and first bus to get to the suburb leaves the city at 8am while those from the suburbs to the city starts at 4:30am. Majority of the black people live in the city and you have to be at work by 7:45am. So technically if you can't own and finance a car you will have hard to make it"

**
59. 
@stevenolasite9644
"
Wode Maya, you make it sound like it’s all uhuru here in Africa.

I am Nigerian and I can say categorically that there is discrimination and xenophobia in Africa. South Africans kill their black brothers from other countries under the excuse that they are taking over their land.

As Ghanaian, I am sure you recall the “Ghana-must-go” saga, when Nigeria sent Ghanaians out of Nigeria in the early 1980s.

The genocide in Rwanda wasn’t perpetrated by white people.

In Nigeria, there’s the ethnic rivalry between the Yorubas, Ibos and the Hausas. No Ibo man has been President of Nigeria since 1966! In some families, they forbid their children from marrying from other tribes.

The more I think about this, the more I find facts that support the notion that evil is innate in humanity, and you will find discrimination everywhere you find human beings.

If these Africans in diaspora starts trouping to Africa en masse, I can assure you that it will lead to another conflict/discrimination between the locals and the new arrivals."

**
60.
 @Ivan-f7, 2024
"
No no no... I'm 47 years old, I'm a native Brazilian and I can say that this video does not convey the reality of our people, there is prejudice against poor people, not against ethnic groups, very little."

**
Reply
61. 
@florbella2213
"infelizmente, existe racismo no Brasil." -snip- Google translate from Portuguese (Brazilian) to English: "
Unfortunately, there is racism in Brazil".

**
Reply
62.
@isobel95, 2024
"You're part of the old generation who always learned and taught we live in a racial democracy.

How can you say that when the Yanomamis are left to die by the previous government?

How can you say that when CAPOEIRA WAS A CRIME until less than 100 years ago. Like, people were getting arrested just for practicing Capoeira  only because it was a black cultural element.

Capoeira saiu do Código Penal em 1930!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Não faz nem 100 anos e pessoas eram de fato presas pelo ESTADO BRASILEIRO por praticar capoeira. É o Estado mostrando o próprio racismo.

Consegue entender o racismo estrutural que existe desde o início da escravidão? A escravidão acabou mas a mente das pessoas continuou a mesma até pouco tempo atrás. Agora, falando sobre racismo, poderíamos tentar curar essa ferida. Mas, tem que reconhecer o crime e essa ferida. Fingir que o Brasil não é racista é por uma venda para não ver os próprios problemas.

Então, NÃO FALE que não existe preconceito contra grupos étnicos, pelo amor de deus!!"
-snip-
Google translate from Portuguese (Brazilian) to English: ..."How can you say that when the Yanomami were left to die by the previous government?

How can you say that when Capoeira was a crime until less than 100 years ago? Like, people were getting arrested just for practicing Capoeira only because it was a Black cultural element.

Capoeira was removed from the Penal Code in 1930!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It hasn't even been 100 years and people were actually arrested by the Brazilian State for practicing Capoeira. It's the State showing its own racism.

Can you understand the structural racism that has existed since the beginning of slavery? Slavery ended, but people's minds remained the same until recently. Now, talking about racism, we could try to heal this wound. But, we have to acknowledge the crime and this wound. Pretending that Brazil isn't racist is like putting on a blindfold to avoid seeing our own problems.

So, for God's sake, DON'T say that prejudice against ethnic groups doesn't exist!!"

**
63. @groovdiva9417
"@wodemaya what you said at 12:35 made me cry. I have never heard someone from West Africa say this & it was like the healing of a wound I never knew I had. I have had many friends from all over the diaspora, and I have also had a few foes who made fun of me & my family with the same ugly stereotypes created by American propagandists such as DW Griffith, Ronald Reagan, Joseph McCarthy, Al Jolson, & many more. It felt worse, more like betrayal, to hear those ugly stereotypes from someone who looks like my family. I know the history of who-sold-who is not as simple as “you betrayed us, & that’s it,” especially in Angola, but it still felt powerful to hear you acknowledge the role of our Continental family, even under the duress of continued colonial pressure in the economies & cultures of former colonies.

I, among many, cannot wait until healing"

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64. 
@SilvioSamuge
"Amazing video. I think you just inspired me as a Mozambican (we speak Portuguese in here) to dedicate comments to educate the Brazilian nation and empower them with knowledge. Thank you brother"

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65.@Jqzd3000
"Dont have a victim mentally wise words from the elder woman. If you believe you are a victim you will always be and die has a victim."

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66.@nazsolomon8164
"I visited Brazil for a month earlier this year (2023), and sadly, i can confirm that Brazil is indeed a very unequal country. There are a lot of lovely people there but there aren't enough opportunities for them to change their lives. Also, sadly most of those people are either black, mixed or indigenous.

I visited the US straight after that and was blown away by the freedom and abundance of opportunities that were available there."

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67. @afiganyo5678
"I am Ghanaian-American and have been studying Brazilian Portuguese for 4 years and I just came back from Sao Paulo (my first trip to Brazil). I definitely felt the racism.

It wasn't the kind of racism I feel in parts of Europe where people have never seen blacks before. It was more a situation where people were confused why I was where I was and why I looked like an entitled person with money.  It made me think of how America was before the civil rights movement.

The fact that they took so much black culture and then discard black people is tragic and I have a mixed feeling about going there. I will definitely go again but now my eyes are opened."

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68.@WeAreInXanadu1969, 2024
"This is so disheartening.  I had NO idea it was like this in Brazil.  I thought Black people there were running things and more successful than African Americans.  I just didn’t realize how they are treated and that they’re so far behind.  Very sad to hear this as I feel like they are the majority there."

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2024

69.@dorothysiaw-lartey2889
"Whitening also happened in Argentina too.

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70. @LuisClaudioTheTagarela
"I am a Black Brazilian, not an Afro-Brazilian—this is just my perspective, of course. I acknowledge that my ancestors came from Africa. It's important to note that not all Black Brazilians, or Black people in general, share the same viewpoint.

Due to my job, I lived in Haiti for two years and in Angola for three years, where I experienced discrimination in both countries. Discrimination exists even in countries where Black people are the majority. I have traveled to all continents except Antarctica, and I've found that there is no place on Earth where Black people are not discriminated against—though the extent of discrimination varies from place to place."

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71.
@chigozienwankwo234
"The context of discrimination you "experienced" in Haiti and Angola should be analysed. I live in Africa and I don't believe, you will be discriminated against the same way a white person can discriminate against a black person"

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72. @arlenecharles8762, 2025
"@chigozienwankwo234 I was born in Birmingham uk my parents were from the West Indies, I went on holiday with my Son who was Five at the time we were on holiday in Barbados went to a posh restaurant the black door man did not want us in the restaurant."

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73.@renslinemerv8338
"hi i am Haitian, i am curious to know what happened to you in Haiti, because  they might mistaken you for a Haitian, im not saying nothjing happen to you, i kow my country. but htings like that happen to only us , no foreigners"

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74. @LuisClaudioTheTagarela
"@renslinemerv8338  I entered a shop in Pentionville, not sure about the sorry, but If you're Haitian you know what I am talking about. I was not well dressed, I was coming from a football game. The lady said to me what you are doing here it's not a place for you and you can't afford to buy anything here anyway, I said, excuse me, then she realized I wasn't Haitian. Is it discrimination or not?"

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75. @LuisClaudioTheTagarela
"@renslinemerv8338  I am black, and if I keep my mouth shut it's difficult to know which nationality I am. The point is, they should not discriminate against anybody, including Haitians."

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76. 
@SherilynPeters
"I totally understand. I no longer describe myself as Afro. Either i am black caribbean and refuse to call myself Afro. I live in the UK and was told by Africans that Carribbean people are not Africans  and they need to stop callibg themselves what they are not. The first time i was told, i ignored it. But when i was told numerous times i stopped😢"..

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77. @saintsrown
"
In Brasil, we call Afro Brazilians: Brazilians."

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78.@nolife2325, 2026
"While simultaneously looking down at them as lesser which is why I’ll take US racism any day compared to the Latin America type. At least there isn’t this veil of “racial harmony” which is really a caste system that makes it difficult for pretos to unite and talk about the rampant racism 😅"

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79. 
@AleneHill-l2f
"We are in the US California, not far from Los Angeles. I would love to see Copacabana Beach, Recife, and Salvador. We are large Carribean families from Trinidad and Barbados; and color plays a big part in the social light. In India, the darker Indians are very poor. Alot of poor Brazilians live in the favelas, the Caribbean, parts of Europe and in the US. You see it in commercials, music videos, magazines, etc. Whenever one goes in this world; try to engage the positive and  discard the negative like garbage. Life is short for us🍍🥥

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2025

80@primeiroultimo1726
"I was born and lived in Brazil until I was 18. I have lived in Portugal for 21 years and here I have not suffered a tenth of the racism that I suffered in Brazil. However, I still do not feel like I belong anywhere. I am very inspired by this movement of the diaspora returning to the Motherland and I hope to one day achieve this goal."

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81. @NewsWithNicola
"Reminded that Brazil was the largest importer of enslaved Africans and the last country to finally stop."

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82. @0900370pian, 2026
"If you are talking about Latin America and the entire Western Hemisphere, then Brazil was the last country to abolish slavery in 1888. But the last country to abolish slavery was Mauritania. Slavery in Mauritania was only officially abolished in 1981, and it was criminalized as late as 2007. So, between 1981 until 2007 owning a human slave was technically not illegal."

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83. @BRUSEMISSIONTRAVEL
"13:19 Yes, Ghana was one country that made an official apology for its participation in the slave trade. Ghana has done more than any other African country to bridge that gap. It’s not perfect but the effort is appreciated. 🖤🖤🖤

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