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Carolina Maria de Jesus
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“... will there ever be a drama more beautiful than that of eating?”
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“We have only one way to be born and many ways to die.”
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“Life is just like a book. Only after you've read it do you know how it ends. It is when we are at the end of life that we know how our life ran. Mine, until now, has been black. As black as my skin. Black as the garbage dump where I live.”
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“I adore my black skin and my kinky hair. The Negro hair is more educated than the white man's hair. Because with Negro hair, where you put it, it stays. It's obedient. The hair of the white, just give one quick movement, and it's out of place. It won't obey. If reincarnation exists I want to come back black.”
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“... I classify Sao Paolo this way: The Governor's Palace is the living room. The mayor's office is the dining room and the city is the garden. And the favela is the back yard where they throw the garbage.”
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“[On Brazil:] In our country everything is weakening. The money is weak. Democracy is weak and the politicians are very weak. Everything that is weak dies one day.”
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“... a poet will even face death when he sees his people oppressed.”
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“... we are slaves to the cost of living.”
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“... they want to know everything. Their tongues are like chicken feet. Scratching at everything.”
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“Who has gone hungry learns to think of the future and of the children.”
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“When I am in the city I have the impression that I am in a living room with crystal chandeliers, rugs of velvet, and satin cushions. And when I'm in the favela I have the impression that I'm a useless object, destined to be forever in a garbage dump.”
Carolina Maria de Jesus, Brazilian diarist, lecturer
(1914 - 1977)