Newsweek

Brazil's Black Power Outage

“It’s time Brazil wakes up to its blackness. The current climate will only make things harder.”
Yas Werneck, 24, shows her braid with her name, moments before going on stage to release her next EP. Werneck changes her hair fairly often. "I hated straightening when I was younger. So I took a more natural course," she says. From rappers to entrepreneurs, Afro-Brazilian women and men are rethinking the ways in which their blackness is shown, viewed and interpreted in Brazilian society. They aim to resist social "whitening" by wearing their hair without chemical straightening.
Black Power Girls Braid

On a windy October evening in Rio de Janeiro, newly elected city council member Marielle Franco stood in the middle of a packed rally with tears running down her face. As the election results came in, dozens of supporters danced around her, many of them wearing campaign stickers featuring a silhouette of Franco’s Afro. With her victory, the 37-year-old single mother had become one of the few black women in Rio’s history to hold a city council seat.

Franco and the 31 other black women who won city council seats in other Brazilian state capitals in October are part of a generation of young black Brazilians who have become increasingly vocal inside and outside statehouses. But these gains are now under threat, as a new government seems poised to undermine the social policies that have elevated so many black Brazilians, creating a new sense of

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