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Rio Carnival: a parade in honor of Afro-Brazilian women rewarded

2024-02-15T10:20:27.673Z

Highlights: Rio de Janeiro's annual carnival celebrates its 50th anniversary. The theme of this year's carnival is Afro-Brazilian women and their culture. This year's theme is the theme of luck and chance, which was chosen by the jury. The jury chose the theme based on the story of a girl who fell in love with a man. The winner of the competition is the school from Niteroi, Rio de Janeiro, which founded the carnival in 1872. The school is the only one in the world to have won the title.


The symbolic performance of the samba school, Viradouro, was named world champion of the annual festive gathering in Rio de Janeiro.


The Viradouro samba school was crowned champion of the Rio de Janeiro Carnival 2024, Wednesday February 14, after its superb parade on the strength of black women through the myth of a sacred snake from Benin.

A third title (after those of 1997 and 2020) greeted by an explosion of joy in Niteroi, a suburban town of Rio where this school founded in 1946 is located.



Viradouro led the race from start to finish, while the scores jurors were screened one by one for more than an hour, during a ceremony broadcast live by TV Globo, the most watched channel in Brazil.

She was the last of the 12 groups to parade when the sun began to rise on Tuesday, after two nights of a grandiose spectacle at the Sambodrome, a 70,000-seat venue created 40 years ago by architect Oscar Niemeyer.

Also read: Rio Carnival delves into Brazil's slavery heritage

The great champion of this edition of the carnival made an impression from the start of the parade, when an enormous articulated vermillion-colored snake crawled as if by magic between the dancers.


The theme of the parade was the cult of a sacred serpent venerated by the Mino warriors, who defended the Dahomey kingdom, where Benin is located today, from where many slaves were sent by force to Brazil.

Viradouro wanted to pay tribute to Afro-Brazilian women, in a country still hit hard by racism, even if 56% of the population is black or mixed race.


Second place in the ranking goes to the Imperatriz Leopoldinense school, last year's champion, which evoked the theme of luck and chance through the story of a gypsy girl.


This year, several schools have decided to pay tribute to Afro-Brazilian heroes or indigenous peoples, such as Salgueiro, ranked fourth with a parade on the tragedy of the Yanomami, who are facing a serious humanitarian crisis caused by incursions by gold miners illegal in the Amazon.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-02-15

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