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  • The Prestes Maia occupation gate, closed, after the removal of all the families..It has been almost 5 years of occupation..Mixed feelings appeared while I photographed the main door of the building, now covered with concrete and blocks. If on a hand, important development and conquests had occurred in the debate and process about the city housing, calling attention for the social exclusion imposed by the real estate speculation and the preconception between social classes, on the other hand, looking to this door closed, and everything what it iconically represents, brings me some sadness..It was like looking a giant tomb with 22 floors, sealed up without life, in the heart of the city.
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  • The ground. The home.<br />
Prestes Maia apartment.
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  • An artist support the protest against the forced eviction in front of the Prestes Maia occupation. (February, 2006)
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  • The Prestes Maia building has 22 floors, and no elevator. (February, 2006).
    PM_TCardeal_8459.jpg
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  • Roberta on a room of the Prestes Maia Occupation.
    PM_TCardeal_8584.jpg
  • An inhabitant of the Prestes Maia occupation, speeching in a day of protests while military police watch, in front of the occupation. (February, 2006)
    PM_TCardeal_8747.jpg
  • Front door apartment decorated with an image of fashion advertisement.
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  • Ivaneti de Araujo, one of the most important leader of the Downtown Roofless Movement (Movimento dos Sem Teto do Centro), informing Prestes Maia families about a new suspend of the eviction at the Prestes Maia Genereal Assembly. They won more two months to stay (February, 2006).
    PM_TCardeal_8878.jpg
  • Two boys from the 315 children that lived at Prestes Maia occupation. (February, 2006)
    PM_TCardeal_8639.jpg
  • Tia Romilda lights Prestes Maia's coordinator  Jomarina, cooking in an improvised kitchen at the encampment. Both of them were residents at Prestes Maia occupation, and  were cooking pasta for hundreds people of the Downtown Homeless Movement, at a camping they did to protest about their condition in front of the Sao Paulo's city hall. (May, 2006)
    Prestes Maia_1099.jpg
  • Couple living at the Prestes Maia occupation, waiting news from the eviction.<br />
13 days to left home.
    IMG_8652.jpg
  • A boy that has a minor learning deficiency problem and his grandmother at their apartment, a family of three adults and two boys.
    IMG_8533.jpg
  • "What supports this building it's not the building in itself, but this people".<br />
General Assembly from the Downtown Homeless Movement (MSTC) at Prestes Maia building. (July, 2005)
    PM_TCardeal_2229.jpg
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  • The dark of the halls in mostly floors, a common scene through many apartments entrances.
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  • Jomarina, coordinator at Prestes Maia gives an interview in from of the occupation. The graffiti on the wall says: "The people on the street"
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  • Roberta cooks in the dark. A week without light.
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  • Two brothers and a sister, a few kids of the 315 children that were living at the Prestes Maia building, in a day of protests.
    IMG_8725.jpg
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  • A poem for Prestes Maia Occupation by Roberta.
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  • Eggs and bread: his lunch at home that day.
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  • A week without light.
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  • Divisions of the apartments, usually built with wood, painted by local artists.
    IMG_8611.jpg
  • Bolivians immigrants, residents of the Prestes Maia occupation.
    IMG_8454.jpg
  • Ivaneti de Araújo, leader of the Downtown Roofless Movement (MSTC) gives an interview.
    IMG_8399.jpg
  • The boy was looking for new stories at the Prestes Maia Collective Library. The library started with a couple from Prestes Maia occupation, who were recycling the garbage from the streets in downtown. Mostly of the books were found in the garbage.
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  • Children posing for artists during a meeting that joined inhabitants of the occupation, students and supporters of their cause.
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  • A poem for Prestes Maia Occupation by Roberta.
    IMG_9052.jpg
  • The Prestes Maia building was an old textile factory abandoned more than 20 years and occupied by the Downtown Roofless Movement. Sao Paulo, Brazil.(February, 2006)
    PM_TCardeal_8372.jpg
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  • A week without light.
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  • Some kids living at the Prestes Maia building were praying for the positive decisions of a meeting at the town council that afternoon at the town council.
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  • Severino, resident and co-founder of the Prestes Maia Library, shows a book about basic electricity. He was the responsible person from the maintenance of the building electricity. He didn't know to read.
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  • The boy Aquiles with his father Lamartine, residents of the Prestes Maia, in a day of protests.
    IMG_8668.jpg
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  • Prestes Maia's families celebrating the last suspend of the eviction. A day of barbecue at the street, in the Prestes Maia Avenue, but still with tension in the air.
    IMG_7429t.jpg
  • Tia Romilda lights Prestes Maia's coordinator  Jomarina, cooking in an improvised kitchen at the encampment. Both of them were residents at Prestes Maia occupation, and  were cooking pasta for hundreds people of the Downtown Homeless Movement, at a camping they did to protest about their condition in front of the Sao Paulo's city hall. (May, 2006)
    IMG_1101.jpg
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  • A homeless was sleeping at street, just in front of the Prestes Maia occupation, bellow a graffiti with ironic words: "Brazil, world's champion of the mess!" (October, 2006)
    PM_TCardeal_8377.jpg
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  • Vendedora(s) de Mangaba na calçada externa do Mercado Municipal de Aracaju..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Maria Plácida de Jesus, 76 anos, (Dona Pracida) .considerada pelo povo a primeira vendedora da fruta no mercado público de Aracaju..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Maria Domingas da Anunciação, a Ninha, 52 anos, moradora do assentamento São Sebastião, no povoado de Alagamar, em sua casa..
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  • Entrada da propriedade de particular, cercada recentemente para impedir a colheita livre de mangaba..Ao fundo, a casa nova para os vigilantes da fazenda.
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  • III Congresso Mundial de Enfrentamento da Exploração Sexual de Crianças e Adolescentes - Riocentro, Rio de Janeiro - Brasil (novembro, 2008).
    WCF_Congresso455.jpg
  • Catadora(s) de mangaba, colhem em áreas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Ivanice Martins dos Santos, 52.<br />
Each year these women pick 280 tons of mangaba and sustain an intense network of small businesses at fairs and markets.
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  • Catadoras de mangaba, colhem em areas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal, Indiaroba.<br />
Sergipe, Brasil.
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  • Catadoras caminham longos trechos, equipadas com baldes e varas com um gancho na ponta, para chegarem a áreas mais fartas ou não cercadas..© Tatiana Cardeal.
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  • Mangabas de vendedoras, expostas em baldes, em frente ao Mercado Municipal, para venda aos coemrciantes..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Flôr da mangaba no pé..© Tatiana Cardeal.
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  • Mangaba no pé..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Grupo de mulheres sobe nas jangadas que cruzam o rio Real, divisor dos estados de Sergipe e Bahia..
    catadoras_0196.jpg
  • III Congresso Mundial de Enfrentamento da Exploração Sexual de Crianças e Adolescentes - Riocentro, Rio de Janeiro - Brasil (novembro, 2008).
    2008_WCF_Congresso213.jpg
  • Catadora(s) de mangaba, colhem em áreas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Catadoras do Povoado de Alagamar..
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  • The fruit collecting activity is done predominantly by black and native women, often heads of families responsible for maintaining the home.
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  • Mangabas vendidas em barracas, no interior do Mercado Municipal de Aracaju...© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • "I raised all my children and grandchildren on the mangaba. I was born here. I had nine children and later raised nine more from my husband. What we know how to do is gather mangaba, pick cashew fruit and fish. I have done this for 46 years. We are the generation of mangaba here in Pontal.",  tells Maria Rivalda dos Santos, 66.
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  • Vendedora(s) de Mangaba na calçada externa do Mercado Municipal de Aracaju..© Tatiana Cardeal
    mangaba_9469.jpg
  • Mangaba no pé..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Mangaba no pé..© Tatiana Cardeal
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  • Catadora(s) de mangaba, colhem em áreas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal..© Tatiana Cardeal
    catadoras_0084.JPG
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  • In Sergipe State, one of the most beautiful regions of the Brazilian coast, 90 percent of the mangaba is found in areas of native forest, where the traditional populations gather the fruit as a means of survival.
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  • As a strong tradition passed on from generation to generation: "My children gather mangaba, my grandchildren. We teach them when they are young. I began, I taught my daughters and now they teach their daughters".
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  • Women from Pontal community travel sometimes more than 3 hours up river in search of preserved free areas. With the privatization of the areas and environmental devastation, they need to go farther each day.
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  • No povodado de Pontal, áreas com mangabeiras cercadas pelo proprietários..
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  • Catadora(s) de mangaba, colhem em áreas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal..© Tatiana Cardeal
    catadoras_0017.JPG
  • Catadora(s) de mangaba, colhem em áreas ainda permitidas no povoado de Pontal..© Tatiana Cardeal
    catadoras_0004.JPG
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  • Árvores de mangaba, cercadas por proprietários, nos arredores de Barra dos Coqueiros..© Tatiana Cardeal
    mangaba_9614.jpg
  • catadoras_02.jpg
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