You might have to go to prison for that.
Beauty contests in Rio de Janeiro prisons
By Lucy Ash Crossing Continents, BBC Radio 4 |
As I show my ID and hand in my mobile phone at the entrance, I hear a low rumbling like distant thunder.
The Talavera Bruce beauty contest helps boost inmates' self-esteem |
The sound gets louder and increasingly frantic as a guard escorts me through a series of gates and a maze of corridors.
I am in Talavera Bruce, Rio de Janeiro's only maximum security prison for women.
It
sits inside the Bangu penitentiary complex, once notorious for riots.
For a moment I wonder if I am heading straight into one.
But
inside the main courtyard, I see where the noise is coming from. Three
rows of inmates are hammering away - in perfect time - to drums hung
around their necks.
Instructors wearing bright orange t-shirts
and baseball hats blow ear-splitting whistles and shout commands. Every
now and then, the women jump, yell and wave their drumsticks in the
air.
Protest
This is Afro Reggae's "cultural rebellion" - a percussion project for prisons and youth detention centres.
Today they are giving a concert for visitors including relatives and prison officials.
Afro
Reggae is a campaigning music collective. It was formed as a protest
movement after Rio police killed 21 people in a favela or shanty town
15 years ago.
Barbara is one of the drummers. She has short, bleached blonde hair and a hard face that seems at odds with her dazzling smile.
"Hitting
that drum as hard as I can makes me feel better," she says. "I get rid
of all my anger and my bad feelings and then I am much more relaxed."
"The percussion workshops on Tuesdays are the highlight of the week," says a guard.
"They
seem to attract some of our most disruptive prisoners who might
otherwise have been sent into solitary confinement because of their bad
behaviour," she says.
As she is talking, I catch sight of a man
armed with two aerosol cans. He is spraying graffiti onto one of the
prison walls and nobody tries to stop him.
It turns out that
he, too, is part of Afro Reggae's cultural rebellion. His tag reads "Re
Socialise To Conquer the Future" in big, brightly coloured letters the
length of the prison courtyard.
The drum lessons are popular with both the inmates and the guards |
Meanwhile prisoners in evening gowns are strutting down a red catwalk as a sound system belts out pop anthems and funk music.
Dione Normando Pires is crowned Miss TB (Talavera Bruce) and presented with her prize - a television set.
Simone Vilela, the governor of the prison, says that the projects boost the women's self esteem.
"These
teach them important lessons which can help outside the prison walls,"
she says. "They understand the value of teamwork and they learn how to
set themselves goals and how to strive for them."
Lock-up
If
the situation for Rio's convicted prisoners is not as bad as it was a
few years ago, the plight of remand prisoners is desperate.
The
number of people being held in custody awaiting trial has almost
quadrupled over the last decade. This has massively stretched the
capacity of the already overcrowded Brazilian penal system.
Remand conditions have deteriorated as prisoner numbers have swelled |
In Rio, more than 4,000 people are now being held in 17 police
lock-ups or improvised detention centres. These lack even the most
basic hygiene and ventilation.
In the Polinter de Neves
station, 800 men are squeezed into 10 small cells in a low ceilinged
building, originally built as a stable for police horses.
Inside it feels like an oven. The prisoners are drenched with sweat and the temperature often exceeds 55 degrees centigrade.
Rafael
Khalil, a Rio musician, has spent the last three years visiting these
police lock-ups in an attempt to make the lives of the men held there a
little more bearable.
'Keep sane'
Khalil and his
friends teach guitar and have set up a network of small libraries
staffed by volunteers with donated books. The initiative is called the
Caravan of Freedom and Expression.
"At first the authorities
weren't convinced," he admits. "But after our visits, the inmates were
much calmer, there were fewer fights and they started calling us to
find out when we were coming back."
Ana, the lock-up boss, certainly seems pleased when Rafael steps through the door.
Capoeira lessons offer a respite from crowded cells and teach new skills |
She takes us downstairs, where a group of men are singing and
dancing in a big circle as part of a lesson in capoeira, a unique
Brazilian art form combining martial arts and dance.
Ana has a
difficult job and admits the music and dance help to "keep everybody
sane". She claps enthusiastically at the end of the capoeira class, and
tells the prisoners that every week they are becoming more skilled and
agile.
On the drive back, I ask Rafael Khalil what his musician
friends in the upscale Rio neighbourhoods think about him visiting
police stations four or five times a week.
"They think I am crazy," he says.