Hosting the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics — which has never happened in the same country within three years — has been touted as Brazil's chance to "show the world it has more to offer than just street parties and first-rate football."
But over the past week, amid the World Cup's ongoing preliminary tournament, the people have told their government that public services trump even"O Jogo Bonito" (i.e. "The Beautiful Game").
"What am I protesting for?" Savina Santos, a 29-year-old civil servant in Sao Paulo, said to Reuters. "You should ask what I'm not protesting for! We need political reform, tax reform, an end to corruption, better schools, better transportation. We are not in a position to be hosting the World Cup."
It's telling, given how much Brazilians love fútbol, that more than a million of them are embedding their message in the fabric of the World Cup experience.
Here a protester/fan at the Confederations Cup Group A soccer match between Brazil and Mexico holding up a sign that reads, "We want hospitals up to FIFA's standard":
The "Fifa standard" is a reference to the "first world standard" required by FIFA for World Cup arenas, which has not extended outside of the massive stadiums.
"Ending the Cup next year, we'll be forgotten again in our reality typical of the outskirts of Fortaleza," Professor Raymond John Smith, 55, who lives tens of meters from $520 million Estadio Castelao, told BBC Brazil (translation via Google).
Not only that, but construction has caused situations like losses of running water in nearby neighborhoods — forcing the poor to sacrifice for the pomp.
"Since we started the works [near my street], my house started flooding whenever it rains," 31-year-old domestic worker Lucineide Cavalcanti Lima told BBC. "The World Cup did not help the residents, only worsened our situation."
Despite all that, the protests are still remarkable given Brazilian culture. Isa, a blogger who grew up between New York and Bangkok before living in Sao Paulo (i.e. Latin America's largest city), eloquently explains:
Brazilians don't like to get worked up about things. They like to sit back, and relax, and would rather sweep issues under the rug if they can possibly avoid confronting them and as long as things look pretty. This has allowed corruption to run wild in the background as the government prepared a pretty face for the world in the foreground. ...
The trigger for the protests was a small increase in bus fare, but the real reasons for discontent lie in decades of corruption and high taxes coupled with low services - I once heard it described as "France's taxes but Somalia's services". Most cities have already rescinded the hike in transportation fares - a small victory - but the protests continue.
Importantly for protestors, the confluence of bubbling public gripes and the hosting of the world's two biggest sporting events in three years suggest that the vigorous movement may have staying power.
From Isa:
The protestors are primarily young, white, upper-class students with few strong political ties ... The question will be whether they have the conviction to keep this up, and whether those that suffer the true consequences of corruption in Brazil - the poor, the lower-class, the uneducated - will join them. Let's hope their what-can-we-do attitude doesn't get the better of them.
Editor's note: This 10-second clip is a pithy illustration of the connection between the people and O Jogo Bonito:
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