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Women in Brazilian Prisons

Incredible photo essay of a photographer Luiz Santos who made this project in order to show the situation of women in Brazil prisons and their children that live with them in prison and who are exposed to “violence, drug use and poor hygiene”
A detainee returns to prison after a visit to a local hospital. The prison itself has a surgery but major medical proceedings take part away from the main building. Moving prisoners can be a daunting business. Attempting escapes are commonplace.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)

Dona Maria is a former prisoner herself and comes to the prison to visit her daughter who waits trial for shop lifting. She is the main provider for her grandson Junior, 9, and granddaughter Vitoria, 4 – a responsibility she considers too great.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Dona Maria is a former prisoner herself and comes to the prison to visit her daughter condemned for drug trafficking. She fells humiliated every time she visits her daughter as the warders strip her naked and search her vagina for drugs with the help of a torch. She also struggles to maintain her daughter’s children.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Michele Damaces, 19 and Ingride. Michele was arrested with her partner both accused of trafficking crack cocaine.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Michele Damaces, 19, feeds her 9 days old baby.
The prison is open to visitors on Wednesdays and Saturdays. It is an opportunity to catch up with the world outside the walls. In the common area families meet to share not only stories, anxieties and experiences but also the physical space.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)

A mother waits to meet her son at a prison gate. Black poor children born in prison (or who have mothers in prison) are more likely to get involved in crime than those white, free and better off counterparts. The State in Brazil has the obligation to protect vulnerable children but rarely do so. At the end, grandmothers outside the prisons are, in fact, responsible for those left without assistance.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Rosangela, 33, and her 1 year old son Bruno. Rosangela was sent to prison for one year, eleven months and ten days convicted of international drug trafficking. Pedro was born in prison.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Pedro was born in prison. His mother Rosangela, 33, (on the left) was locked for international drug trafficking as she attempted to embark to Spain carrying cocaine. According to Brazilian law a child cannot stay in prison once completing two years of age but in many cases the detainees are abandoned by the family or are so poor that they can’t afford childcare so the children have to live with them.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Inmates look after themselves (and other inmates’ children) as long as internal disputes do not get on the way. Antonia Lucia, 29, is a crack cocaine addict – and my right hand on this assignment. She holds an inmates’s baby.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
No doubt prisons are tough places. It is also true that inmates find support and comfort amongst themselves as the State fails to assist them. Pregnant inmates are very vulnerable and cared for by other prisoners. Different from the general public’s perception, the fact that some prisoners are guilty of horrible crimes, it does not mean they lack of friendship and compassion.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
A prisoner has arrived one day prior my first day in the prison. On visit days she is kept locked in a small pavilion as she does not have friends or relatives in town. Some prisoners are from distant villages and relatives cannot afford to travel to the prison. Some others are simply abandoned.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Suelen Santos Medeiros, a 23 years old spent one year in prison for drug trafficking and now waits to be sentenced for storming a local hairdresser and throwing acid on her boyfriend lover’s face. She ended up injuring eight people – including herself. Wilames, her partner and also a drug dealer, was arrested on the same occasion for possession of a fire arm.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
During my time in the prison the inmates wrote a letter to the prison’s director to complain about the conditions in the prison as well as to demand the review of cases. Those accused of minor crimes, and waiting to be sentenced, live in the same cells as sentenced murders. Workshops were closed due political struggles at managerial level and the inmates complain of boredom as they spend the day doing noting but smoking weed or planing the next escape.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
These items were confiscated by the warders during a number of searches in the cells. Amongst them there are sex toys, hand made weapons and mobile phones (kept hidden away in the inmates’ vagina). Inmates complain that searches are carried violently by the police special forces in fully riot gear and balaclavas.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Sister Adele moved to Brazil from Milan/Italy in 1993. She quotes from the Bible ‘…I was in jail and you visited me…’ to justify her work with the families in the prison in Bahia/Brazil. Brazilian judges ruled, in 1999, that children over the age of two could not leave in prison with their mothers. As the inmates did not trust the State they decided to trust their children in the hands of Sister Adele. Her mission then begun.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Sister Adele administers a creche near the prison and looks after those who are too old to stay in prison or are from extremely poor backgrounds. The children receive good education and live like a family. In return they must accept Catholicism as their religion.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Dona Maria de Fatima contracted HIV while injecting cocaine – an addiction she has left behind. She has a daughter in prison and looks after Diane (pictured), one of her granddaughters. Her other daughter is a crack cocaine addict and her son works in security on a minimum wage.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Dona Maria de Fatima, 48 years old, who contracted HIV while injecting cocaine, looks after her granddaughter Diane as her daughter is currently in prison. Although very poor and sharing accommodation with drug dealers, drug addicts and thieves, Dona Maria de Fatima sends Diane to school and ballet and flute classes. She invests her energies in braking the cycle of violence, imprisonment and poverty that surrounds her and her community. She gave up her addiction to cocaine altogether.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Suelen Santos Medeiros, who was sentenced for burning her boyfriend’s lover with acid, appears on a television blood thirsty program. When that happens the community where she lives stops to watch. Crime is almost the only way for them to enjoy their ‘15 minutes of fame’.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Dona Maria de Fatima’s daughter (who did not want to reveal her name) is addicted to crack cocaine and has given birth to her seventh offspring. The only possessions the child has was given by the government as part of a program to assist extremely poor mothers who cannot afford the cost of maternity. The mothers must take part in pre-birth programs during pregnancy to receive the benefit. These programs aim to reduce levels of children (and mothers) mortality during labour. Her mother is HIV positive and her sister is currently imprisoned.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
Those inmates in long-term relationship have the right to have intimate encounters but only if they agree on receiving a contraceptive injection. The rooms where the encounters occur are as basic to say the least.
Women in Brazilian Prisons (21 pics + text)
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  1. elias.alberto
    April 24th, 2010 at 14:41 | #1

    This is sadly true. I am from Brasil and, luckily for me, I am kind of one of “those white, free and better off counterparts”. I’d risk saying about half of the Brasil’s population is poor and live in bad neighborhoods (google images for “favela”), what brings them closer to crime and to a marginal life. But only about 10% of these poor people actually resort to crime as a lifestyle, while the other 90% just carry on their lifes working hard on basic jobs (car mechanics, house cleaning), earning minimum wages for their entire life (R$500, about US$230 each month) and living in poor conditions. At the same time we are a country well developed in many fields, some other fields are just ridiculously underdeveloped, like you can tell from these photos. As our financial resources are limited, I truly believe our government should invest in improving the life of these 90% poor good people, instead of spending it with the 10% poor criminals. Like you’ve read, there are sometimes “breeds” of criminals, like the grandmother who was already imprisoned and has her two daughters currently imprisoned, so I’m not really sure if it would be worth to spend our limited resources trying to improve life for such people who don’t care about their own lives. My main idea to try to solve this problem is: there should be major efforts on reducing birth rates on these vulnerable classes, because it induces a neverending cycle – like you’ve read above, one young mother is already a imprisoned drug-addicted and has SEVEN children, while most “well-off” families have only two or three children because there is NO WAY a family can live with a minimum of dignity having an monthly income of less than $800 per person in the family. While mantaining a lower birth rate, there should be MAJOR efforts on improving public education, in order to TEACH these people how to think coherently, to develop intelligence, to choose the politicians they vote for, and to give them basic education that is essential to life. I believe this should star to solve the problem.

  2. elias.alberto
    April 24th, 2010 at 18:23 | #2

    I’ve just been reading some statistics from http://www.brazil-brasil.com/content/view/151/78/ and it sounded so absurd and irreal to me I had to check it from another more reliable source to believe.
    In fact, the situation is much worse than I could tell from what I see everyday. Wealth is so poorly distributed that “if the monthly income of an individual is greater than R$571 (US$326), then this individual is amongst the 10% wealthiest of Brasil”. In year 2000, one third of all people in Brasil had a per capita income of half of the minimum wage. I really can’t see this kind of thing on my everyday life, and I find it sad the little I do see.

  3. elias.alberto
    April 26th, 2010 at 11:10 | #3

    Found also a photoshoot of the conditions in a male prison in Brasil.
    http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/people-and-society/disturbing-brazilian-prison/

  4. elias.alberto
    April 26th, 2010 at 11:11 | #4

    I also found some pictures of prison for males in Brasil.

    http://wtf.thebizzare.com/offbeat/people-and-society/disturbing-brazilian-prison/

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