Brazil

Mira Rosa with produce from the farm she and her husband set up on a legalised settlement [Marcella Haddad]
Mira Rosa with produce from the farm she and her husband set up on a legalised settlement [Marcella Haddad]

Brazil is the fifth largest and ninth-wealthiest country in the world, yet 54 million Brazilians live below the poverty line

The gap between rich and poor in Brazil is one of the most extreme in the world, with the wealthiest 10% enjoying more of the national income than the poorest 50%.

Responding to urban poverty

CAFOD set up an Urban Livelihood Programme in São Paulo with local organisations MDF (The Movimento de Defesa dos Favelado), APOIO (The Associacão de Auxilio Mutuo da Região Leste) and CCJ (The Centro Capacitacão da Juventude).

CAFOD spent £908,000 in Brazil in 2008

Its aim is to push the government to fulfil the legal obligation to provide good quality housing for people living in the favelas and tenements - which then, in turn, provides better access to education, work and health facilities.

The programme works to ensure people know their housing rights, and are involved in developing their own communities.


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Jacir José de Souza is one of the founding members of CAFOD partner CIR (the Indigenous Council of Roraima), an organisation representing indigenous communities in the state of Roraima [Joelle Hernandez/CAFOD}

Fighting for the right to land

After struggling for decades to secure land rights for his people, Jacir José de Souza thought victory had finally been achieved – only to find it could be turned into defeat instead

Jose Oscar Beozzo, director of CAFOD partner CESEP [CAFOD]

Linking faith and action

Jose Oscar Beozzo, director of CAFOD partner CESEP in Brazil, explains how his organisation links faith with action

Father Henri Burin des Roziers (right) works for CAFOD partner organisation CPT, the Pastoral Land Commission of the Brazilian Catholic Church - he is pictured with his bodyguard [Sue Branford]

Defending justice and human rights

Father Henri de Roziers, of the Catholic Church’s Pastoral Land Commission (CPT) in Brazil, talks about his award-winning human rights work, which has resulted in him being targeted with death threats

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Simon Giarchi, diocesan manager for CAFOD Plymouth, visits indigenous villages in Brazil fighting for their right to land
(Video made by BBC TV Southwest)
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A film about the fight of the Macuxi people in the state of Roraima, Brazil, to safeguard the land rights they were legally granted, which powerful rice farmers are trying to have overturned

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Joênia Batista de Carvalho, the first ever indigenous person allowed to submit arguments to the Brazilian Supreme Court [TV Justiça]

Battle for indigenous land goes on

The fight to save the indigenous lands of Raposa Serra do Sol in Brazil is continuing after the country's Supreme Court delayed its final decision

Published on 30/07/2003, last updated on 18/08/2008
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