E/CN.4/1996/72/Add.1
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fail to mention the carnal ties between master and slave which produced the
first people of mixed parentage and were the origin of one of the features of
modern Brazilian society. 4/
14.
It was this early period, with the mingling of Amerindian, European
and African stock, that saw the beginnings of the demographic complexity of
Brazil, characterized by a long process of miscegenation between these three
population groups, while physiological miscegenation was largely the result
of domination and at times rape, a cultural miscegenation also occurred. The
dominant framework and the structure of production were European, but many
cultural features of the subordinate groups became assimilated: the Indians’
legacy was the growing of cassava, the use of the hammock and a large number
of place names. The African introduced gardening and metalworking techniques,
cooking, music and religions, which even today make the North-east a unique
cultural aggregate in Brazil.
15.
The gold cycle followed that of sugar, the price of which fell to a low
point on world markets because of competition from British and French output.
As a result, both free men and slaves were attracted to the mines in the State
of Minas Gerais, in the South-east region, a process that contributed to the
gradual decline of the North-east, symbolized by the transfer of the colonial
capital from Salvador to Rio de Janeiro in 1763.
16.
It was this period that saw the beginning of the dependency between
the North-east and the South-east and South. As the North-east became
progressively marginalized, the country’s centre of gravity would move south,
a trend that intensified with the expansion of coffee growing which would
ensure the economic prosperity of the South-central area. The coffee cycle
was not a delayed repetition of the sugar cycle from the point of view of
plantation management since the slave system was being challenged and the
abolition of slavery in 1888 was to lead to the replacement of slave labour
by a wage-earning or contractual labour force, largely made up of European
emigrants.
17.
Some people take the view that the process of exclusion of Blacks,
Indians and people of mixed parentage from the country’s economic and social
life began during this period - since nothing had been done to integrate the
former slaves - and was intensified by the industrialization of the country
(principally in the South and South-east in the twentieth century) and by the
increasing numbers of immigrants from Europe, but also from Asia (especially
Japan). By acquiring or receiving land and by obtaining skilled jobs or
establishing businesses, these immigrants were to form a prosperous,
predominantly white Brazil in the South-east and South, as opposed to the poor
regions of the North and North-east, whose interbred populations came to swell
the favelas of Rio and São Paolo. 5/ Regional imbalances, the product of a
history of contrasts, have also engendered ethno-sociological imbalances.
18.
The African contribution is particularly evident in the old plantation
areas, where there had been a concentration of African slaves. The sugar cane
cycle had left a large Black and Mulatto population in the North-east,
especially Pernambuco and Bahia and in part of the South-east, Rio de Janeiro.
These population groups are also found, to a less concentrated degree, in the
State of Minas Gerais, where the gold and mining cycle had brought many slaves