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Topic: Confederate Flags Fly celebration
no photo
Sat 08/19/17 03:42 PM
Confederate Flag Flies As Brazilians Celebrate Heritage With Dixie Festival



Thousands of Brazilians attended a celebration in Americana, Brazil, last Sunday for the “Festa Confederada,” the Confederate Festival. Most are descendants of the thousands of Confederates that left the United States after the end of the Civil War in the 1860s. Eager for educated white colonists, Brazilian Emperor Dom Pedro II advertised in newspapers across the Southern States offering free land to immigrants. In the aftermath of the Civil War, as many as 10,000 Americans took the offer, leaving behind postbellum Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi.

"I don't speak English and the only place I've been to in the U.S. is Disneyworld, but I feel the heritage," said Alcina Tanner Coltre, 77, whose great-great-grandparents migrated from Mississippi. "My great-grandfather married a Brazilian woman, so he integrated into Brazilian culture pretty quickly, but it's really important to me to come out every year to remember where we come from."

American tourists -- some from the South -- visited this year’s Festa Confederata on the 150th anniversary of the end of the Civil War. They learned about how Confederates lived and died (many from tropical disease), 5,000 miles away from home, creating a hybrid culture. While slavery was legal in Brazil until 1888, decades after colonists arrived, historians say that few of the white immigrants would have held slaves because they were too poor. Instead of recreating a plantation culture, they intermarried with Brazilians of Portuguese, indigenous and even African descent.



Many visitors, Civil War buffs themselves, were impressed with the event’s costumes, dancing and decorations.

“It feels really authentic,” said Gwen Gray, a 69-year-old retiree originally from Greeneville, Tennessee, who came all the way from New Mexico.

Attendant danced to country music, waved Confederate flags and watched a performance of “Amazing Grace.” Many showed up in Civil-War-Era garb, even mixed race Afro-Brazilians.

"Imagine if I were to show up dressed like this in the middle of New York," he said. "I would get beaten! But not here. For us in Brazil, it has no political meaning at all," said 34-year-old João Leopoldo Padovese, dressed in a grey Confederate battle uniform.

mightymoe's photo
Sat 08/19/17 04:59 PM
pretty cool... i wonder what the cupcakes think of that from their safe places?

msharmony's photo
Sat 08/19/17 05:58 PM
Edited by msharmony on Sat 08/19/17 05:59 PM

Confederate Flag Flies As Brazilians Celebrate Heritage With Dixie Festival



Thousands of Brazilians attended a celebration in Americana, Brazil, last Sunday for the “Festa Confederada,” the Confederate Festival. Most are descendants of the thousands of Confederates that left the United States after the end of the Civil War in the 1860s. Eager for educated white colonists, Brazilian Emperor Dom Pedro II advertised in newspapers across the Southern States offering free land to immigrants. In the aftermath of the Civil War, as many as 10,000 Americans took the offer, leaving behind postbellum Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi.

"I don't speak English and the only place I've been to in the U.S. is Disneyworld, but I feel the heritage," said Alcina Tanner Coltre, 77, whose great-great-grandparents migrated from Mississippi. "My great-grandfather married a Brazilian woman, so he integrated into Brazilian culture pretty quickly, but it's really important to me to come out every year to remember where we come from."

American tourists -- some from the South -- visited this year’s Festa Confederata on the 150th anniversary of the end of the Civil War. They learned about how Confederates lived and died (many from tropical disease), 5,000 miles away from home, creating a hybrid culture. While slavery was legal in Brazil until 1888, decades after colonists arrived, historians say that few of the white immigrants would have held slaves because they were too poor. Instead of recreating a plantation culture, they intermarried with Brazilians of Portuguese, indigenous and even African descent.



Many visitors, Civil War buffs themselves, were impressed with the event’s costumes, dancing and decorations.

“It feels really authentic,” said Gwen Gray, a 69-year-old retiree originally from Greeneville, Tennessee, who came all the way from New Mexico.

Attendant danced to country music, waved Confederate flags and watched a performance of “Amazing Grace.” Many showed up in Civil-War-Era garb, even mixed race Afro-Brazilians.

"Imagine if I were to show up dressed like this in the middle of New York," he said. "I would get beaten! But not here. For us in Brazil, it has no political meaning at all," said 34-year-old João Leopoldo Padovese, dressed in a grey Confederate battle uniform.



'it has no political meaning at all',,,says it all

there was no civil war over slavery fought in Brazil, it means about as much as thankgsiving probably means to Italians,,,,it would be very economically viable if there were a great many americans migrating to Italy, to hold THANKSGIVING celebrations for them,,,,

but go to an Indian reservation dressed in pilgrim garb and the welcome might not be so abundant,,,,

no photo
Sat 08/19/17 06:44 PM
Yea, I thought it was kinda weird but interesting.

IgorFrankensteen's photo
Sat 08/19/17 06:58 PM

Yea, I thought it was kinda weird but interesting.


Me too. Meaningless relative to the United States.

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Sun 08/20/17 07:08 AM
I'm curious to know the current attitude of the Confederates (or those who support them ) right now about critical and sensitive issues like slavery, what do they think about the history of the USA, and what are their main goals and mottos nowadays?

Rooster35's photo
Sun 08/20/17 07:48 AM
Edited by Rooster35 on Sun 08/20/17 07:49 AM
They're just a bunch of racists, they fly the racist flag.
laugh

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Sun 08/20/17 10:04 AM

They're just a bunch of racists, they fly the racist flag.
laugh

That could be the opinion of many people on the Confederates (or new Confederates if you will) but the Confederates themselves won't call themselves racists and might have some explanation, I even doubt that any of them would agree with slavery nowadays, that's why I would like to know how they think (if there are any of them on this website).

Conrad_73's photo
Sun 08/20/17 10:27 AM
Edited by Conrad_73 on Sun 08/20/17 10:28 AM
now THERE is a Target for ANTIFA!
Wonder if Papa Soros will finance the venture!laugh

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Sun 08/20/17 10:57 AM
The globe is full of targets on both sides nowadays, this decade is gonna be so interesting to live, hold on to your seats ladies and gentlemen!

msharmony's photo
Sun 08/20/17 11:00 AM
I think the globe has always been full of targets

it just hasn't impacted the right people enough for them to care.


another human condition, people tend to not care about other peoples problems and only see the problem when it impacts their life somehow.

Rooster35's photo
Sun 08/20/17 11:03 AM

now THERE is a Target for ANTIFA!
Wonder if Papa Soros will finance the venture!laugh

That crazy sob just might! laugh

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Sun 08/20/17 11:08 AM

I think the globe has always been full of targets

it just hasn't impacted the right people enough for them to care.


another human condition, people tend to not care about other peoples problems and only see the problem when it impacts their life somehow.

yeah but it started to get polarized once again, it always starts like that, as individual incidents here and there, but these incidents are just the tip of the iceberg!

msharmony's photo
Sun 08/20/17 11:11 AM


I think the globe has always been full of targets

it just hasn't impacted the right people enough for them to care.


another human condition, people tend to not care about other peoples problems and only see the problem when it impacts their life somehow.

yeah but it started to get polarized once again, it always starts like that, as individual incidents here and there, but these incidents are just the tip of the iceberg!



in certain places, it just started to grow, its been around most of the 'non industricalized' or 'third world' countries for quite a while though


In our country its a swinging pendulum it goes far towards the side of polarization, swings back towards an ideal of unity and then back to polarization,,,




yellowrose10's photo
Mon 08/21/17 10:13 AM
Well Six Flags has taken down all flags and replaced them with all American flags. Next we can take down the pyramids because they were built by slaves

Rooster35's photo
Mon 08/21/17 10:51 AM
Edited by Rooster35 on Mon 08/21/17 10:53 AM

Well Six Flags has taken down all flags and replaced them with all American flags. Next we can take down the pyramids because they were built by slaves


There's new evidence that the pyramids were actually built with skilled Egyptian labor and not slaves.
The citizens would work the crops when the Nile permitted then switched to pyramid work when the Nile flooded.
It was considered a privilege to work on pharaoh's project who was, after all, seen as a god.
I tend to believe that. If I wanted a project like a gigantic pyramid made out of huge bricks that heigh several tons each done to perfection, I wouldn't rely on a bunch of slaves who had neither the interest nor the skills to make it happen.
We do not know exactly how the pyramids were built so how can we be sure they were built by slave hands?

mightymoe's photo
Mon 08/21/17 11:16 AM

I'm curious to know the current attitude of the Confederates (or those who support them ) right now about critical and sensitive issues like slavery, what do they think about the history of the USA, and what are their main goals and mottos nowadays?
the thing the i don't like about it the libtards are wanting to rewrite history for some reason... Seems the ISIS is doing the same thing... coincidence? indifferent

yellowrose10's photo
Mon 08/21/17 11:23 AM


Well Six Flags has taken down all flags and replaced them with all American flags. Next we can take down the pyramids because they were built by slaves


There's new evidence that the pyramids were actually built with skilled Egyptian labor and not slaves.
The citizens would work the crops when the Nile permitted then switched to pyramid work when the Nile flooded.
It was considered a privilege to work on pharaoh's project who was, after all, seen as a god.
I tend to believe that. If I wanted a project like a gigantic pyramid made out of huge bricks that heigh several tons each done to perfection, I wouldn't rely on a bunch of slaves who had neither the interest nor the skills to make it happen.
We do not know exactly how the pyramids were built so how can we be sure they were built by slave hands?



Maybe but six flags was named that for a reason

Rooster35's photo
Mon 08/21/17 11:37 AM
Edited by Rooster35 on Mon 08/21/17 11:39 AM



Well Six Flags has taken down all flags and replaced them with all American flags. Next we can take down the pyramids because they were built by slaves


There's new evidence that the pyramids were actually built with skilled Egyptian labor and not slaves.
The citizens would work the crops when the Nile permitted then switched to pyramid work when the Nile flooded.
It was considered a privilege to work on pharaoh's project who was, after all, seen as a god.
I tend to believe that. If I wanted a project like a gigantic pyramid made out of huge bricks that heigh several tons each done to perfection, I wouldn't rely on a bunch of slaves who had neither the interest nor the skills to make it happen.
We do not know exactly how the pyramids were built so how can we be sure they were built by slave hands?



Maybe but six flags was named that for a reason

I know, I can't believe the lunacy has gone as far as changing the flags at Six Flags.
I guess they'll have to print new money with NO face on it... OH, Trump's face on the 100's, lol, that ought give a few bleeding-heart libtards some knee-jerk reactions laugh

yellowrose10's photo
Mon 08/21/17 11:39 AM




Well Six Flags has taken down all flags and replaced them with all American flags. Next we can take down the pyramids because they were built by slaves


There's new evidence that the pyramids were actually built with skilled Egyptian labor and not slaves.
The citizens would work the crops when the Nile permitted then switched to pyramid work when the Nile flooded.
It was considered a privilege to work on pharaoh's project who was, after all, seen as a god.
I tend to believe that. If I wanted a project like a gigantic pyramid made out of huge bricks that heigh several tons each done to perfection, I wouldn't rely on a bunch of slaves who had neither the interest nor the skills to make it happen.
We do not know exactly how the pyramids were built so how can we be sure they were built by slave hands?



Maybe but six flags was named that for a reason

I know, I can't believe the lunacy has gone as far as changing the flags at Six Flag.
I guess they'll have to print new money with NO face on it... OH, Trump's face on the 100's, lol, that ought give a few bleeding-heart libtards some knee-jerk reactions laugh


Yeppers. Waiting for people to tear up money because (gasp) people that owned slaves are on it. Nope....won't hold my breathlaugh

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