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...brazil's
untold stories
éia,
the domestic servant at Daniela's school, introduced O'Leary to many women in
and around the city of São Carlos. O'Leary taped interviews with 22 women — white,
black, and mulatta — from a variety of backgrounds. There were
women who had worked in domestic service from the time they were 12 years old,
women who had left domestic service jobs because of illness or better job opportunities,
women who worked as head domestic servants managing a team of other servants.
She found that all are very poor but live with a sense of dignity that surprised
her. "I had this stereotypical idea that poverty meant filth," O'Leary
says. "From the road, it looks very filthy. There's garbage on the ground.
But then you walk into a house — and I went into many unannounced — it
was such a contrast from being outside in the street to being inside these very
poor but immaculately clean homes."
In her research, O'Leary discovered that there are more women in domestic service in Brazil than in any other occupation, and most make the equivalent of $150 a month. For O'Leary, the question became, how do they make ends meet?
When she sat down with domestic servants to discuss their budgets, they always reported spending more than they brought into the household. How was that possible? Certainly the government wasn't making up the difference.
"Local officials would go in and bribe the poor for votes," O'Leary says. "The feedback from the community was, 'They only come around and tell us they are going to help us when they want our votes.'" She says that candidates come into poor neighborhoods and promise such things as electrical lines, new sewer systems, and running water.
"If they do some of those things," she says, "it's only a very small portion of what they originally promised. And then as time goes on and they are in office, those problems are forgotten. It's a vicious cycle, and it's been going on like this for years."
O'Leary found that while they often cannot rely on government institutions for assistance, people establish their own networks. If they don't have the money for things they need to do, they will find a way to make it happen. She says that the two most-used resources for women are family and the Catholic Church.
Néia's story provides an example. Néia is a domestic servant, and her husband
is a road construction worker. Their combined income is about 700 Reis
($350) a month. They have three children, a son-in-law, two grandchildren, and
a cousin and her husband living with them. Only Néia and her husband work on a
regular basis. They are able to pay the bills and provide enough food for everyone
living under their roof by relying on other family members who live close by.
"They live so close to each other," O'Leary says, "that they can
yell across the street at each other, 'Lucia needs 10 Reis to make up
the rest of her electric bill,' and they come over and give her the money."
hen
Néia's son needed eye surgery, she got together with her family and several people
from the Catholic Church to throw a barbeque. They charged 10 Reis ($5)
a piece, which O'Leary says is a lot of money for them, and were able to raise
enough money for the surgery. "I find that they are very innovative, that
they have this amazing strength to be able to get beyond the fact that they are
poor, oppressed, and illiterate. And they just sort of figure it out. They find
a way to do it," she says.
O'Leary wants other people to have the opportunity to see and understand the poverty among domestic servants and their families in Brazil. "I think that Americans are very unaware of what's going on in the rest of the world," she says. "Latin America is in our backyard. I don't think I'll take for granted ever again that I'm an American living in this country. I feel extremely fortunate to have been born here and to be afforded the opportunities that I've been afforded."
What's next? Graduate school in anthropology or history, she says. And her focus — domestic servants in Brazil. "It's really important to listen to these people," she says. "Their voices get lost in the shuffle. So that's my mission. I want to give them a voice and let them tell their story."
O'Leary says that being an undergraduate and a mother is the hardest thing she's done in her life. But, she says, "Had I gone to school when I was younger, I would not have accomplished all this. I would not have understood what education has to offer."
O'Leary's research was funded through a Smallwood Undergraduate Research Grant. She majors in Latin American studies and will graduate in December 2002.
Mary Alice Scott is editorial assistant for Endeavors magazine.
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