BEIJING, July 20 -- Brazilians in Beijing are finding
it takes a global village to raise a child.
BRAPEQ (Brazilians in Beijing)
cofounder Raquel Martins, who has lived in China for 38 years and brought up
three kids in the capital with her Swiss husband, says she founded the group
partly to help her children - Karolina, 17, and twins Valtter and Idalina, 14 -
understand their heritage.
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BRAPEQ holds events to help newcomers
adapt.(Photo Source: China Daily) Photo Gallery>>> |
"If I don't show my children the Brazilian flag and
teach them the national anthem, they'll only be proud to be Brazilian every four
years when there's a World Cup," Martins says.
She says it's different for Brazilians than for
people from English-speaking countries, whose culture pervades the international
media.
And a lot of newly arrived adults from Brazil also
need the help BRAPEQ, which now has more than 600 members, has been providing
since its 2007 founding.
"We get some calls from people crying, saying, 'I
need help'," she says.
"Many people are shocked when they first come to
China, mostly because they can't read, they can't write, they can't talk, can't
communicate at all. This shock's very big for Brazilians, because (most) don't
speak English."
The group emphasizes the similarities between the two
cultures - closeness of extended family, responsibility toward elders, sense of
face and even similar cuisine - to help newcomers adapt.
BRAPEQ hosts events introducing China to Brazilians,
such as lectures and trips. It also hosts Brazilian events, like Carnival, Festa
Junina and a weekly happy hour, to bring Brazilians together and engage in their
homeland's culture, while also introducing it to their children, Chinese and
other foreigners.
BRAPEQ volunteer Iolanda Comptdaer says these events
are important to her family, especially the two of her three children - Rafael,
13, and Gabriella, 11 - who live in Beijing.
"My kids can meet other kids who are Brazilian, eat
our food and speak Portuguese," says Comptdaer, who has lived in China for four
years.
Joao Lemos, who works for Embraco in Shunyi district
and has lived in China for about 8 years, says his 12-year-old daughter Giulia
speaks English and Chinese better than Portuguese.
"But her Portuguese is good, too, and a lot of it
came from the group."
BRAPEQ member Simone deLaTour, who has lived in China
for 10 years, coordinates activities between BRAPEQ and the Sino-Brazilian
Academic Exchange Center (IASB), which brings Brazilian scholars to China.
"(Brazilians) sometimes come with a negative
impression of China but that changes," deLaTour says.
"That says a lot about the Chinese people."
She said she believed last week's meeting between the
two countries' leaders would help the center's work.
Lemos also believes the meeting would boost ties,
which are important to him as a Brazilian living in China.
"China and Brazil are both developing countries in
almost the same stages," Lemos says.
"We can learn many things from each other. The future
belongs to us."
(Source: China Daily)