

By Dr. Robert Muggah
Co-Founder, Igarapรฉ Institute and the SecDev Group
Associate Lecturer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)
The expression โevangelical drug traffickerโ may sound incongruous, but in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro, itโs widespread.
Charismatic Christianity is on the rise across Brazil. Slightly less than a third of all Brazilians identify as evangelical, up from 5% in the 1960s. The 2020 national census is expected to show significantly more growth.
In Rio, where the evangelical population increased 30% in the first decade of this century, even some of the most notorious drug dealers claim to be spreading the gospel.
Brazilโs evangelical turn
I study violence in Latin America, and Iโve observed a sharp increase in reports of religiously motivated crimes in Rio de Janeiro since 2016, in particular attacks on โterreirosโ โ the temples of the Candomblรฉ and Umbanda faiths.
According to Brazilโs Commission to Combat Religious Intolerance, over 100 Afro-Brazilian religious facilities nationwide were attacked by drug trafficking groups in 2019, an increase on previous years. A national emergency hotline created to report such attacks finds that 60% of incidents reported between 2011 and 2017 occurred in Rio de Janeiro.
Persecution of these Afro-Brazilian religions, whose adherents are largely poor black Brazilians, has been around since at least the 19th century.
But the current wave of religious bigotry is more personal, and more violent, than in the past. As the Washington Post recently reported, Afro-Brazilian priests are being harassed and murdered for their faith. Candomblรฉ and Umbanda practitioners fear leaving their homes. Terreiros have closed due to death threats.
Rioโs Commission to Combat Religious Intolerance, a group created in 2008 by religious minorities, reported about 200 such incidents in the city between January and September 2019 โ up from 92 in all last year.
Evangelicalism on the rise
The increase in religious hate crimes coincides with the growing political and cultural clout of evangelicals in Brazil. Evangelical lawmakers currently hold 195 of 513 seats in Brazilโs lower house of Congress, giving them the power to shape the national debate on abortion, religion in schools, gay marriage and other social issues.
Many Brazilian Protestants attend mainstream services, and are horrified by rising discrimination against those who practice other faiths.
But the fastest-growing denominations in Brazil are the harder-line Pentecostals and Neopentecostal churches โ including the wildly successful Assembly of God and the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
Both spread whatโs called the prosperity doctrine, promising personal salvation and financial success to people who trust God, work hard and cut out all alcohol, gambling and other vices.
For many poor people in the Rioโs hardscrabble โfavelaโ neighborhoods, this is an appealing offer.

As ever more Brazilians convert to evangelicalism, traditional religions there are losing members. Between 2000 and 2010, when the latest national census was taken, the number of Catholics in Brazil dropped 9%. Followers of the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomblรฉ and Umbanda declined 23%.
Good vs. evil
Some evangelical leaders who preach the prosperity doctrine also see these Afro-Brazilian religions as dangerously un-Christian, even evil.
Edir Macedo, the multi-millionaire bishop of Brazilโs Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, wrote in his 1997 book โOrixรกs, Caboclos and False Gods or Demonsโ that Afro-Brazilian religions โseek to keep us from God. They are enemies of Him and the human race.โ
โThis struggle with Satan is necessaryโฆto eternal salvation,โ he added.
The book sold 3 million copies before it was banned by federal authorities in 2005. But Macedo still peddles his message to his estimated 5.2 million followers at 13,000 affiliated churches.
For preachers espousing a binary spiritual worldview, โgoodโ Christians must wage holy war against โevilโ practitioners of Candomblรฉ and Umbanda.

Though black commentators point out that this theological interpretation is just thinly veiled religious discrimination, some parishioners are heeding the call to โcleanseโ the world of Satanโs work.
That includes a handful of drug kingpins, who prohibit adherents of Afro-Brazilian religions from practicing their faith in gang-controlled neighborhoods. Residents caught wearing the religious garb of Candomblรฉ and Umbanda may be expelled from the community.
The prison-to-church pipeline
My research suggests that Brazilโs chaotic, overcrowded prisons exacerbate the evangelical-gang connection.
The government is only nominally in control of most public prisons in Brazil. In practice, they are essentially governed by one of two competing Brazilian drug trafficking organizations, which run their trafficking and racketeering businesses there and recruit their rank and file from behind bars.
Faith groups, too, have a long tradition in Brazilโs prisons. Previously, these prison ministries were predominantly Catholic. Today, however, 80 of the 100 faith-based organizations subcontracted to run social programs in prisons are evangelical churches.
As a result, charismatic Christianity has spread quickly through the criminal justice system.
Jailhouse conversions are common. Inmates who adopt evangelicalism are frequently housed in separate prison wings that stand out for their order and cleanliness. Some have even established their own ministries inside jail. Developing positive relationships with local Rio pastors while in jail can tighten a gangโs grip on power once released.
Converted traffickers control many Rio de Janeiro favelas, particularly in Baixada Fluminense, a sprawl of townships in the cityโs poor northern outskirts.
Over the past century, the area has seen waves of migration from Brazilโs north and northeast, where Afro-Brazilian religions have traditionally prospered. Baixada Fluminense has at least 253 Candomblรฉ and Umbanda terreiros, more than any other municipality in the state.
Baixada Fluminense is also one of Rioโs most dangerous corners. Murder rates have fallen slightly across most of the city over the past decade, but not in Baixada Fluminense. According to Brazilโs Institute for Public Security, 2,147 of the 6,714 murders reported in Rio state so far this year occurred in Baixada Fluminense.
Described by locals as a โWild West,โ the area is home to famously corrupt public officials who have long worked with militia and mafia groups to intimidate their rivals. This patronage relationship allows drug traffickers, evangelical or otherwise, to operate with impunity.
More than a third of violent attacks on Afro-Brazilian temples this year occurred in the Baixada Fluminese.
Fighting back
The Brazilian government has started taking notice. In November 2019 the federal public prosecutorโs office urged Rio de Janeiro authorities to compensate victims of religious intolerance both โmaterially and symbolically,โ particularly in Baixada Fluminense. But proposals on how, concretely, to support them remain on paper only.
Brazilian faith communities, in contrast, are actively fighting back against rising religious discrimination in Brazil. In September, an estimated 100,000 people joined Rioโs annual walk for religious freedom, one of the largest gatherings since the processionโs inception 12 years ago.
Evangelicals, Catholics, Baha’i, Buddhists, Jews and Hari Krishnas packed Rioโs iconic Copacabana beach. Dressed in white, the traditional color of Candomble and Ubanda religious celebrations, they marched in solidarity with Afro-Brazilians.
There may be conflict in Brazilโs religious diversity, but there is unity, too.
Originally published by The Conversation, 12.16.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.
