Is Neymar black? Brazil and the painful relativity of race

Brazil's forward Neymar stretches during a training session at Yug Sport Stadium, in Sochi, on July 4, 2018, during the Russia 2018 World Cup football tournament. PHOTO | NELSON ALMEIDA | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The year was 2010 and Neymar, then 18, had shot to fame in Brazil after a sensational breakout season.

  • The racial makeup of the Brazilian squad, in fact, generally reflects the demographics of the country.

The New York Times

Years before he became the most expensive player in the world; before his Olympic gold medal; before the Eiffel Tower lit up with his name to greet his professional move from Barcelona to Paris, Neymar da Silva Santos Júnior, the Brazilian forward known to the world simply as Neymar, faced his first public relations controversy.

The year was 2010 and Neymar, then 18, had shot to fame in Brazil after a sensational breakout season.

During an interview for the newspaper O Estado de S Paulo, in between a conversation about Disneyland and sports cars, he was asked if he had ever experienced racism.

“Never. Not in the field, nor outside of it,” he replied. “It’s not like I’m black, you know?”

His answer was heard like a record-scratch across the country. Was this young man in denial about his racial identity?

Particularly when in the same interview he outlined his meticulous hair care regime, which involved getting his locks chemically straightened every few weeks, then bleached blonde.

ALARMING EXPLANATION

Or was there a less alarming explanation behind his comment? Could Neymar merely be pointing out that, as the son of a black father and a white mother, his lighter skin tone shielded him from the racist abuse directed at other players? Had he, at least in his context, reached whiteness?

Whatever the interpretation, Neymar’s words revealed the tricky, often contradictory ways that many Brazilians talk, and fail to talk, about race in a country with the largest population of black descendants outside of Africa.

When audiences tune in to watch Brazil play, they are treated to a rich spectrum of skin tones flashing vibrantly across the screen.

The racial makeup of the Brazilian squad, in fact, generally reflects the demographics of the country.

According to 2017 data released by the census department, 47 per cent of Brazilians identify as mixed-race, while another eight per cent identify as black.

RACIAL BOUNDARIES

One third of marriages happen across racial boundaries. Such numbers confirm the common belief held by Brazilians, and the millions of international travellers who visited last year, that the country is a racially fluid society.

Unlike the national team, however, the upper echelons of most professions in Brazil — be it medicine, media, business, entertainment or government — are occupied by whites. The nation’s raw demographic data paints an accurate portrait of a diverse people; yet it also adds patina to the old myth, promoted for generations by the government and first intellectualised by sociologists nearly a century ago, that Brazil is a democracia racial, or racial democracy.

Because Brazil never had an apartheid system like South Africa, or a ban on mixed-race marriages like America, went the argument, a spirit of warm relations blossomed across racial divides.

APARTHEID

Never mind that Brazil was the last country in the Americas to abolish slavery in 1888; or that after abolition, the ruling class mounted a campaign to whiten the majority-black population, by fully subsidising the immigration of over four million white Europeans, giving them free land and compelling Brazilians to take up with them.

“The Brazilian people, more than any other, need the influence of advanced peoples in building a race,” read one 1914 pamphlet, “especially at the historic moment when the percentage represented by the African race is beginning to decline and must disappear into the whirlpool of the white race.”

Even once democracia racial was widely debunked by a new generation of social scientists, the enduring legacy of the myth was that, rather than engage with the race question, Brazilians had turned racism, and talking about racism, into a taboo. In concealing the problem from vigorous public debate, a hierarchy based on skin colour was allowed to congeal.

MIXED RACE

Today, the socio-economic consequences of Brazil’s “pigmentocracy” still reverberate: The top one per cent of Brazil’s economy is about 80 per cent white; three-quarters of the bottom 10 per cent, meanwhile, are black or mixed-race.

In 2016, more than half of black or mixed-race students between the ages of 18 and 24 hadn’t reached high school. And only 13 per cent of those in the same age bracket were enrolled in college.

Even that happier stat that a third of marriages are mixed-race comes with an asterisk: According to the sociologist Edward Telles, author of Race in Another America: The Significance of Skin Colour in Brazil, the rates of intermarriage are negligible among wealthier Brazilians.

Soccer is celebrated as one of the meritocratic spheres in Brazil where talent counts the most. But when the sport first took hold in the country, in the early 20th century, the major clubs and leagues barred non-whites.

CRUDE OIL

The most famous player of all time, Edson Arantes do Nascimento, popularly known as Pelé, had another nickname near the start of his career: “Gasolina,” the Portuguese word for “crude oil.”

To the frustration of some Brazilians, Pelé has long preferred a posture of attempting to ignore racism and he has largely resisted public alliances with activists.

In 2014, speaking on a Brazilian sports channel, Pelé chastised Brazilian club goalkeeper Aranha for confronting spectators who called him a monkey.

“If I had to stop or shout every time I was racially abused,” he said, “every game would have to be stopped.”

That same year, in Spain, a spectator threw a banana at Daniel Alves, Neymar’s fellow Brazilian and then-teammate at FC Barcelona. Alves jauntily ate the banana in defiance.

WE ARE ALL MONKEYS

Neymar responded by starting a viral campaign with the caption Somos Todos Macacos (We are all Monkeys).

The move was applauded as a cheeky response by some. But many black Brazilians weren’t impressed. His image was still haunted by the 2010 incident, in which he appeared to distance himself from his black heritage.

“This is the difference between Brazil and America,” Paulo César Lima, the 1970 World Cup champion and black rights activist, said during the 2010 episode. “Over there, if you’re black, you stand up and say you’re black.”

Lima’s words point to a painful and somewhat paradoxical consequence of Brazil’s racial fluidity. America’s politics of racial purity, which culminated in the notion that even one-drop of African blood made a person legally black, fostered solidarity among those targeted by discriminatory laws.

WHITENING LEGACY

In Brazil, however, the often admirable blurring of racial boundaries is a modern reality that — rather than stemming from colourblindness — is tainted with the sinister origins of state-sanctioned attempts to dilute, even dissolve, blackness.

When, in 1965, Ebony magazine set out to explore why, at the height of the US civil rights and African independence movements, black Brazilians had failed to mobilise in a similar fashion, it concluded that Brazil’s legacy of embranquecimento, or whitening, had a great deal to do with it.

In 2017, Neymar addressed racism in a speech at the United Nations, as a representative for the non-profit Handicap International. Back in Brazil, the public applauded his speech, interpreting it as a turning point in his willingness to wrestle with the issue.

“This has been a problematic theme for years,” he said. “And it is prevalent within soccer. But incidents are occurring less and less. People are changing. The world is changing.”

HUMAN ACHIEVEMENT

When spectators — whether they be from England, the United States or India — see Brazil playing, they should resist any urge to romanticise the country as a living illustration of racial harmony. What they’re seeing, rather than a post-racial society, is a different country with distinct racial quagmires of its own.

The World Cup is a wonderful event, showcasing the best of human achievement. And Brazil, with Neymar leading the way, have a good shot at winning it.

But this pageant of nations is also a reminder, on the 130th anniversary of slavery’s abolition, that the modern world, in all of its globalised splendour, still lacks a truly equal, multiracial society.

Cleuci de Oliveira is a journalist who has reported both in the United States and South America. Her work on race and Brazilian law has appeared in Foreign Policy, The Guardian and other outlets.