The concept of illiteracy in Brazil was born as a political question.<\/q><\/aside>\nLike its counterparts in the United States and Europe, the Brazilian ultraright views education and culture as playing a central role in the creation and consolidation of public consensus. These culture wars are especially useful for conservatives because they push public attention away from economic policy and material struggles, instead prioritizing fights over \u201cworldviews.\u201d<\/p>\n
In Brazil, the Escola Sem Partido (Nonpartisan School, or ESP) group was the first organized movement, before even Bolsonaro, to step boldly into the culture wars. Their founding charter is the idea that Brazilian schools are ground zero for ideological manipulation, and that the Left \u2014 via Freire, in particular \u2014 has sealed its cultural hegemony there.<\/p>\n
Of course, Freire was bound to become an adversary of the ESP movement: after all, it was his position that schooling and literacy were important fronts in the fight against capitalism. Beyond the far-right ideologues, there were even respected pedagogues who accused Freire of going too far and confusing education with politics. Whether right or wrong, that characterization overlooks the fact that education has been one of Brazil\u2019s central political problems for more than a century. And without some knowledge of that history, one can\u2019t fully appreciate all that Freire represents to Brazilian society.<\/p>\n\n \n\n \n \n
\n Illiterate and Disenfranchised<\/h2>\n \n In 1882, an electoral reform bill known as the Saraiva Law introduced a new form of political exclusion into what was already a rigidly hierarchical Brazilian society: illiterate people were barred from voting. In truth, the \u201cliterary census,\u201d as politician Ruy Barbosa called it, was not a Brazilian invention. It was common in many Latin American republics to use \u201cignorance\u201d \u2014 rather than income or property, as was common in Europe \u2014 as a pretext to disenfranchise the population. According to the 1890 national census, 82.63 percent of the overall population of Brazil fell into the \u201cilliterate\u201d category.<\/p>\n
The concept of illiteracy in Brazil was thus born as a political question, although it wasn\u2019t recognized as such. In fact, in its earliest years, literacy was defined by the imperatives of maintaining law and order rather than promoting the public good. Brazil\u2019s turn-of-the-century agrarian elite was at the time engaged in a power struggle with an increasingly centralized state administration, the consolidation of which depended on creating a more respectable \u2014 and manageable \u2014 civil society.<\/p>\n
Against the backdrop of an expanding civil society and the recent abolition of slavery, illiteracy came to mean much more than an individual\u2019s inability to read or write. It was deeply bound up with efforts \u2014 anti-vagrancy laws, public morality clauses included \u2014 to control an unruly working-class majority in the nascent public sphere that might actually represent a threat to the still forming social order.<\/p>\n
Whereas Brazil\u2019s 1824 Imperial Constitution had enshrined a racially defined social hierarchy, the 1891 Republican Constitution sought to convey the idea that through education, anyone could become an active member of the political community. However, crucially, the 1891 Constitution also removed the previously existing guarantee of primary-level instruction for all citizens. This was a brazen case of giving citizens formal rights while surreptitiously depriving them of the material means to achieve them.<\/p>\n
The state called on Brazilians to leave behind their ignorance and embrace their newfound civic rights by educating themselves, while at the same time restricting access to education (or, what amounted to the same, doing nothing to address the social inequalities that frustrated access). Education thus became a key ideological edifice for the grossly unequal Brazilian republic born in 1889: entrenched economic and social inequalities were made to look like transitory differences that would be overcome through \u2014 ultimately illusory \u2014 education opportunities.<\/p>\n
Disenfranchisement of the illiterate remained in effect until 1985 (the final year of the military dictatorship), making Brazil the last country in the Americas to give illiterates the right to vote. Freire\u2019s drive to politicize education makes much more sense in light of this historic exclusion of the Brazilian masses, based on their lack of access to formal instruction. If illiteracy was a way to naturalize inequalities, literacy campaigns became, for Freire, a way to upend the supposedly \u201cnatural\u201d order of a society where ignorance and poverty were seen as synonymous and mutually reinforcing.<\/p>\n\n \n \n
\n The National Literacy Program<\/h2>\n \n In 1962, Brazil was enjoying an all too rare period of democratic rule. Progressive president Jo\u00e3o Goulart was especially concerned with improving social indicators in Brazil\u2019s poorest states in the country\u2019s northeast, and he invited agrarian and urban social movements to join in the effort. However, in his quest to politically empower the country\u2019s poor, he ran up against the 1891 Constitution and the hard reality that most workers in Brazil, the majority illiterate, could not vote.<\/p>\n
Meanwhile, Calazans Fernandes, secretary of education for Rio Grande do Norte \u2014 one of the states with the highest illiteracy races \u2014 had invited Freire the same year to design a literacy project for the poor municipality Angicos. The project was conducted in collaboration with the SUDENE (Superintendence for the Development of the Northeast) and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) through the Alliance for Progress.<\/p>\n
The project that Freire oversaw catered to 380 residents of Angicos who attended classes totaling forty hours. The final class in April 1963 was attended by president Jo\u00e3o Goulart, the economist Celso Furtado of the SUDENE, and general Humberto Castelo Branco, later to become the first military president after the 1964 coup. According to Calazans Fernandes, Castelo Branco approached him after the class and said: \u201cyoung man, you\u2019re fattening up rattlesnakes here in these backlands [sert\u00f5es].\u201d The project managed \u2014 astonishingly\u00a0\u2014 to teach literacy to three hundred participants in just over a month.<\/p>\n
The adult literacy methods of Freire would soon be applied in the state of S\u00e3o Paulo, a pioneering project conducted by the S\u00e3o Paulo State Student Union. Soon, similar projects spread across the country. On January 21, 1964, Presidential Decree No. 53.464 enacted a \u201cNational Literacy Program [PNA] based on the Paulo Freire System to be implemented through the Ministry of Education and Culture\u201d.<\/p>\n
Education Minister J\u00falio Sambaqui decided that Freire and other members of the Angicos Literacy Project should be included in a committee responsible for implementing the initiative. The project called for the creation of 60,870 \u201cculture circles,\u201d the term Freire preferred to literacy classes, throughout the country, each one lasting three months, and attending to 1,834,200 illiterate individuals between the ages of fifteen and forty-five.<\/p>\n
During that same time period, Freire\u2019s methods were turning heads internationally \u2014 President John F. Kennedy had even scheduled a visit to Angicos in December 1963 (cancelled after his assassination on November 1963). The National Literacy Project was scheduled to launch on May 13, 1964, promising to be one of the greatest educational achievements of the twentieth century. However, the coup d\u2019\u00e9tat in April 1964 brought those plans to an abrupt halt. The armed forces ousted Jo\u00e3o Goulart, and in June 1964, Freire was imprisoned for seventy days. Following his release, he went into exile.<\/p>\n
This was to be the closest Freire ever came to altering the gross inequities of Brazilian society.<\/p>\n\n \n \n
\n Education for the Masses<\/h2>\n \n The Freire method was not just about teaching literacy \u2014 it was also, simultaneously, a process of politicization. From his earliest days, Freire had thrown overboard all preconceived notions of the illiteracy problem: the idea that the illiterate person is an ignoramus just waiting to be given the necessary, missing instruction. Freire himself was reluctant to even use the term \u201cilliterate,\u201d citing an insight brought to his attention by one of his own students: one cannot say that an Indian, for example, is illiterate. The Indian comes from a reality that does not know writing, and for someone to be considered illiterate they must first live in a context which knows writing and where they were deprived access to it.<\/p>\nThe specific problem that concerned Freire in Brazil was oppression and the fact that literacy abetted it.<\/q><\/aside>\nIn other words, illiteracy exists and is a problem only vis-\u00e0-vis the social relations that surround it. The specific problem that concerned Freire in Brazil was oppression and the fact that literacy abetted it. Freire was not concerned with combatting social exclusion per se \u2014 as though literacy were a magic portal to inclusion \u2014 but with a whole elitist paradigm that could exclude people by labelling them as ignorant and denigrate any knowledge they might have as meaningless or \u201cprimitive.\u201d Freire was there to remind Brazilians that the poor were not excluded because their \u201cignorance\u201d could somehow disturb the political system; it was because they were a threat to the political system that working-class Brazilians were branded as ignorant and consequently disenfranchised.<\/p>\n
This new perspective was not lost on radical pedagogue Henry A. Giroux, for whom both literacy and illiteracy are \u201cideological constructions\u201d: ways of separating individuals and groups while assigning them different social functions. Freire\u2019s cultural circles were about literacy first and foremost, but they were also about pulling back the ideological veil and questioning the social relations that produce and sustain literacy and illiteracy (i.e., those who read and those who don\u2019t; those who know and those who don\u2019t; those who give orders and those who follow).<\/p>\n
Freire always argued that in the teacher-pupil relation, \u201cNo one teaches another, nor is anyone self-taught. People teach each other, mediated by the world.\u201d Dialogical pedagogy, the term Freire preferred, meant taking as a starting point a radical equality between individuals and social groups.<\/p>\n
This was not just an ethical or political stance for Freire, but a way to revolutionize our approach of what it meant to know the world. Following in the anti-hierarchical spirit of 1968 and the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Freire wanted to break down the barriers between high and popular culture, academic and popular knowledge, which he saw as expressions of inequality in education and knowledge. And, as Freire always liked to remind, he was not interested in just elevating popular culture and knowledge to a respectable position; he wanted to break down the oppressive system responsible for making those distinctions in the first place. Or, as he put it: \u201cWhen education is not liberatory, the dream of the oppressed is to be the oppressor.\u201d<\/p>\n
It was not Freire who politicized the issue of education in Brazil. Education was political from the outset: formal education was one of the foremost tools for social exclusion and political disenfranchisement, and, most egregiously of all, it was presented in the guise of democratic reform. By articulating his own political vision of education, Freire was in one sense simply giving the lie to Brazil\u2019s supposedly democratic system and announcing the need to rethink public instruction so that schools could be an institution of<\/em> the masses, not simply another elite tool for managing them.<\/p>\nA Federal Court in Rio de Janeiro recently issued a ruling against Bolsonaro, stating that the government cannot make defamatory remarks against Freire (and there have been legions of such remarks). This is an encouraging sign, especially since the varying fortunes of Freire\u2019s name \u2014 vilified or championed \u2014 is a good thermometer of where politics are in Brazil. Along with other radical intellectuals in Brazil, like An\u00edsio Teixeira, Florestan Fernandes and Darcy Ribeiro, Freire\u2019s name is still associated with the idea that, despite all odds, democracy can be revived and society transformed. And so long as Brazilians continue to struggle for a more egalitarian society, any mention of Freire will continue to send the right wing into fits of panic.<\/p>\n\n \n \n \n\n \n
\n \n\n\nThis post was originally published on Jacobin<\/a>. <\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"In 2012, Dilma Rousseff signed into law Decree No. 12.612, making socialist pedagogue Paulo Freire the official patron of education in Brazil. It was a fitting tribute to one of the international left\u2019s most beloved icons, and a seemingly uncontroversial one considering the grandfatherly Freire, who today would have turned one hundred years old, is [\u2026]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8590,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/317805"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/8590"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=317805"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/317805\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":317806,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/317805\/revisions\/317806"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=317805"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=317805"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=317805"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}