FULL ADMISSION WITH DIGNITY - a conversation about the Brazilian context and movements for reparations
A conversation exploring the unique history of Brazil, the nation with the most people of African descent outside of the African continent, and how the movement for reparations and healing is a continual struggle and challenge. -The conversation will be led by Alabê Nunjara Silva, born in Rio de Janeiro and currently lives in Bahia. Alabê plays the harp and clarinet, sang in operas and choirs, was an athlete, played capoeira, fought, and played the drums in samba schools. He served in the Army and the Navy, studied Mathematics at the Federal University Fluminense (UFF), and has a Master's degree in Political Science from the Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro (UNIRIO). He also has a Bachelor's degree in International Relations from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) and also started studying for his Masters' in International Relations at the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA). He has done research on Africa, Defense, and Foreign Policy. He did a study exchange in the Caribbean, interned at the UN and the French Embassy, organized a movement for action toward racial affirmations and quotas at UFRJ, and was the coordinator in a national movement for student assistance and housing. He is currently part of the Foundation's Talent Bridge programme Lemann / Opportunity USA to pursue graduate studies in the United States of America and is a diplomacy award fellow from the Affirmative Action Programme of the Rio Branco Institute in Brazil. Eustáquio Lawa or Eustáquio José Rodrigues, was born in Ponte Nova, Minas Gerais, Brazil. An electrical engineer (UFMG, 1970) and Psychologist (UERJ, 1980), he worked, from 1971 to 1991in large electric power companies in Brazil and abroad. From 1995, after a Masters’ degree in Public Administration from Fundação Getúlio Vargas - FGV, he joined the Public service, where he retired. He has been an activist in the Black Movement since 1977 where he was a member of the Black Cultures Research Institute - IPCN and of the Negrícia poetry group. He chaired the Antiapartheid Committee of Brazil and currently, he is a consultant for the National Institute of the Peoples - INP in the fight for Reparations for descendants of enslaved African peoples. Marize Conceição de Jesus is a History Teacher at Elementary and High School in the public school system in the state of Rio de Janeiro and the municipality of Nova Iguaçu/Rio de Janeiro. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Social History at the PPGHS-FFP programme at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. She holds a Master in Education from the Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro and did her research in Education and Ethnic-Racial Diversity and specialised in the History of Brazil. She is an Institutional Coordinator and one of the founders of - GESTAR, a Racial Study and Action Group, created in Nova Iguaçu in 2005; she was a Counselor of Comdedine-NI (Municipal Council for the Defense of the Rights of the Negro de Nova Iguaçu) between (2005-2017); was a member of the Executive Commission of the Permanent Forum on Ethnic Racial Education and Diversity of the State of Rio de Janeiro (2009-2016); was a pedagogical advisor in the areas of CEPAENI History and Geography. She works with and for the implementation of the 10.639/03 and 11.645/08 Laws (laws mandating the teaching of Afro-Brazilian and Indigenous history and culture nationally) and with Education for Ethnic Racial Relations at Schools. She interacts with the Carioca Network of Black Ethnoeducators.