Brazils dictatorship: Repression, torture, slaughter of Indigenous people and censorship – EL PAS USA
On the night of March 31, 1964, the Brazilian military deposed the legitimate president, the leftist Joo Goulart, in a bloodless coup. A dictatorship began that would last more than two decades. In the midst of the Cold War, the elites were furiously anti-communist and Goulart promised agrarian reform and public policies for the working class. Four years later, the generals closed Congress and toughened repression through Institutional Act number 5. Brazil would not return to democracy until 1985.
For the many supporters of the coup, it was a revolution so that Brazil did not fall into the clutches of communism, in an interpretation of the constitutional breakdown backed by far-right ex-president Jair Bolsonaro. During his presidency, the 1964 coup was officially celebrated in the military. The current president, the leftist Luiz Incio Lula da Silva, wants the events of 60 years ago to be marked with a low-key anniversary so as not to ruffle any feathers in the Armed Forces. The president is treading carefully, as Bolsonaro and several military officials have been accused of plotting a coup in the most serious attack on democracy since the end of the dictatorship. Their alleged actions indirectly resulted in the assault on the headquarters of the three branches of government in Braslia in January 2023.
This is a review of some of the key moments from the military regime and the transition to democracy.
The Truth Commission published the official account of the dictatorship in 2014 after listening to victims and witnesses and holding public hearings. The report holds the regime responsible for 434 deaths and missing persons, in addition to documenting the systematic practice of arbitrary detentions, torture, executions, and forced disappearances. And it also left for posterity the names of 377 instigators and participants in the repression. The amnesty law that exempted them from sitting on the bench freed thousands of political prisoners. One of the most infamous torture centers in So Paulo was converted into the Memorial da Resistncia center.
The 1,300 pages of the final report include shocking passages such as the testimony of Isabel Fvero: On the third or fourth day of being imprisoned I began to feel like I was having a miscarriage I was two months pregnant. I was bleeding a lot, I had no way to clean myself. I used toilet paper, and I already smelled bad. I was dirty, so I think Im almost certain that they didnt rape me because they constantly threatened me. I disgusted them. () Surely it was that. They got angry when they saw me dirty, bleeding, and smelling bad, and that made them even more angry, and they hit me even more.
The Truth Commission did not include Indigenous people in the official number of those murdered by the dictatorship, but it did record that at least 8,350 died due to the acts or omissions of state agents between 1946-1985. They killed them to plunder their lands or to evict them. They died from contracting diseases they had not been vaccinated against and from torture and mistreatment in prison. With thousands of deaths each, the towns of Cinta-Larga and Waimiri-Atroari were the most affected.
The most detailed information about the ruthless persecution of Indigenous people at that time is an official report prepared in 1967 and which was missing for almost half a century. The Figueiredo Report concluded that withholding assistance is the most effective way to commit murder. Hunger, plague, and mistreatment are decimating brave and strong people.
After traveling nearly 10,000 miles, prosecutor Jader de Figueiredo prepared a chilling document of more than 5,000 pages that took his name. The Indian Protection Service has degenerated to such an extent that it persecutes them to the point of extermination, he wrote. The militarys policy to clear the Amazon included machine-gunning from the air, launching explosives, smallpox inoculation, and donations of sugar mixed with strychnine. In 2013, a researcher, Marcelo Zelic, rescued the report from oblivion in the government archives and disclosed its brutal content.
Dilma Rousseff went down in history as the first female president of Brazil in 2011, but what is not usually mentioned is that she was the first head of state that was also a survivor of state-sponsored torture during the dictatorship. It was she who created the Truth Commission in 2012, a decision for which the military did not forgive her.
A far-left militant, she never fired a single shot, but that did not save her from going to prison for three years in her early twenties (between 1965 and 1968). She suffered torture sessions that marked her forever, both physically and psychologically. They beat her so severely that her jaw was dislocated and several of her teeth were knocked out. The torture marks are part of me. They are me, she testified in 2001 before a commission that managed compensation for those who were retaliated against. The worst thing about torture was the waiting. Waiting to be beaten, she revealed.
At the worst moment of her political career, when Congress was voting on her impeachment, then-deputy Jair Bolsonaro, a historical revisionist and retired military man himself, voted in favor of impeachment in honor of Rousseffs torturer, Colonel Carlos Alberto Brilhante Ustra.
The biography Lula, by Fernando Morais, recalls that the current president did not think badly of the military when they came to power in 1964 to restore order. But he was not spared from going to jail either. When he stood for election for the first time in 1989 while the country was in its transition to democracy the Air Force intelligence service developed a glossary, published recently by the newspaper Estado. In it, authorities had gathered statements from Lula, so that those in the barracks knew who this unionist was who had fought against the dictatorship. The confidential report concludes that the charismatic union leader has acquired a political personality in the [Workers Party] and, leading a fierce and noisy party, has drawn up more daring plans. Lula lost three presidential elections before winning in 2002.
In 1972, censors arrived at the Estado editorial office. They reviewed the news and editorial content that would go into the next days print edition. They erased anything that bothered the regime. As usual in dictatorships, what was striking was the newspapers reaction. Its staff refused to change the design and resorted to ingenuity. Every time a news item or an opinion column was censored and, therefore, left a gap in the printed paper, they would fill it with verses from Os Lusadas, by the celebrated Portuguese poet Lus de Cames. The idea was put forward by Antnio Carvalho Mendes, the journalist in charge of the papers film and obituaries sections.
The first verse replaced a news story about the episcopal conference and Pedro Casaldliga, the so-called bishop of the forgotten and preacher of liberation theology. They published verses from the great epic of Cames 655 times.
When Jair Bolsonaro won the elections in 2018, Caetano Veloso released a list of songs on Spotify that included Proibido Proibir (Forbidden to Forbid), composed half a century earlier in the wake of the May 1968 protests and in the leaden years of the Brazilian dictatorship. Brazilian popular music and the guitar rock that came from the United States fought a tough duel when Caetano sang it at a concert in So Paulo that ended with loud boos. The composer and singer burst out with a you dont understand anything! followed by a speech against the conservatism of the public.
At the end of that year, President-General Artur Costa e Silva passed Institutional Act Number 5, known in Brazil as AI5, which shuttered Congress and consolidated the dictatorship. Days later, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil were arrested, banished to Bahia months later, and then sent into exile that took them to London.
In 2013, the newspaper O Globo part of Grupo Globo, Brazils largest media group published an editorial titled Editorial support for the 1964 coup was a mistake. It recalled the text that O Globo agreed with the intervention of the military along with other large newspapers, such as O Estado de So Paulo (known as Estado) and Folha de S.Paulo, among others. A large part of the population did the same, with express support in demonstrations. The editorialist concludes that in light of history, there is no reason not to recognize explicitly today that the support was a mistake (). Democracy is an absolute value. () Only [democracy] can save herself.
The newspaper claimed that this conclusion was the result of years of internal discussions, but the definitive decision to publish it, specifically in August 2013, was the massive demonstrations against everyday politics and a chorus that shouted: The truth is hard, Globo supported the dictatorship.
On July 29, 1985, at eight in the evening, some 700 artists and intellectuals gathered at the Casa Grande Theater in Rio de Janeiro to hold a funeral for censorship. The new civil government had been in office for three months. The Minister of Justice had called them to make it official that the persecution of culture that displeased the military was at an end. The fearsome censor Solange Hernandes, who silenced 2,500 songs, would have to focus her ire on something else because the minister declared censorship extinct and announced that from then on a council in defense of freedom of expression would study books, records, plays, and soap operas to classify them by the age of their intended audience.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get more English-language news coverage from EL PAS USA Edition
- Congress Is Considering Abolishing Your Right to Be Anonymous Online - The Intercept - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- The public deserves to know when Iran war reporting is stifled - Freedom of the Press Foundation - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- The Greenville Eight and Library Discrimination, Then and Now: Book Censorship News, March 6, 2026 - Book Riot - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Berlin Golden Bear Winner Ilker Catak Reacts to German Government Recommendations For Festival: We Would Have to Call It What It Is: Censorship -... - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- End User: Users should be aware of censorship on social platforms - The Ithacan - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Press must be transparent about wartime censorship - Freedom of the Press Foundation - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Oklahoma, Florida, Idaho Propose More Restrictive Book Bills | Censorship News - School Library Journal - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- The Toronto Film Critics Association Is Falling Apart - Vulture - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Golden Bear winner warns of possible German government 'censorship' - Euronews.com - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Censorship is a tool of the state but it's also a tool of the censored - Independent Australia - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Censoring Courses Isnt the Law in Texas. Public Universities Are Doing It Anyway. - The Chronicle of Higher Education - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Workshop on Investigating Prison Book Bans - The Marshall Project - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Elle-Mij Tailfeathers Rejects TFCA Award Over Alleged Censorship of Acceptance Speech Mentioning Palestine - TheWrap - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says in deposition that he resisted censoring platforms - ABC News - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- The Unseen Cost: Media Censorship and the Human Face of War - Devdiscourse - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Roblox is censoring chats with AI - The Verge - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says in deposition that he resisted censoring platforms - chronicleonline.com - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Europes global censorship threat, spare us the moral posturing, lefties and other commentary - New York Post - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- WhatsApp officially names Mullvad and Amnezia VPN as go-to tools for bypassing censorship - TechRadar - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Inside Scoop: America off the rails, Colbert censorship controversy, Royal Reckoning - Washington Examiner - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Two Views on AI in Chinas Censorship and Influence Operations - China Digital Times - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Internet blackout is tool of desperate regime to isolate Iranians, say experts - The Guardian - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- The Right Expands Its Campaign to Censor College Professors - The Progressive - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Author Sandra Cisneros to Texas A&M: The word is watching you censor education - Houston Chronicle - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says in deposition that he resisted censoring platforms - Traverse City Record-Eagle - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- More than 200 schools sign a manifesto against the censorship of Catalan and island authors - Diari ARA - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Advocates: Prohibit Admin From Censoring ICE Reporting Tools 03/02/2026 - MediaPost - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- CNN reporter's live 'gaffe' in Iran war coverage from Israel goes viral; did she admit censorship? | Watch | Hindustan Times - Hindustan Times - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Lost in Translation: How Misunderstanding Free Speech Undermines the Very Purpose it Claims to Serve - Verfassungsblog - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Susan Sarandon Says She Was Banned From Hollywood After Calling for Gaza Ceasefire: I Feel Repression and Censorship in United States - Variety - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Trumps Selective War on Censorship - Human Rights Watch - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- The View censors Whoopi Goldberg during on-air discussion about Bill Gates and Jeffrey Epstein - AOL.com - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Opinion: Another year, another school censorship bill - Concord Monitor - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Inside Texas A&Ms Scramble to Censor Its Curriculum - The Chronicle of Higher Education - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Rep. Boyle calls for federal protections for Independence Mall and other sites - WHYY - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Lawsuit targets censorship at Grand Teton, other national parks - KHOL 89.1 FM - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Is the FCC 'equal time' rule leading to media censorship and self-censorship? - NPR - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Free speech is the casualty in Ukraine war - Index on Censorship - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- The Personal is Political: M. Lin on Censorship and The Memory Museum - see you next tuesday media - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- A professor challenged the Smithsonian. Security shut the gallery. - The Washington Post - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Colbert, CBS, censorship, and the FCC - Drexel Triangle - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Academics and students face censorship for Palestinian support - Times Higher Education - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- More Censorship May be Heading Our Way (Does Hollywood Care?) - Hollywood in Toto - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Letter: Library display highlights the rise in challenged books - Squamish Chief - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Press Release: Congressman Brendan Boyle Introduces Legislation to Protect American History from Censorship - Quiver Quantitative - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Geeses Acceptance Speech Got Censored at the BRITS - Vulture - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Apple News is censoring conservatives; Republicans are fighting back - Elizabethton Star - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- They Helped Women Fight Online Abuse. They Were Barred From the U.S. - The New York Times - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- TikTok Returns to Albania After Ban Expires, Safety Debate Grows - Global Banking & Finance Review - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- US to unveil platform aiming to bypass internet censorship in China, Iran and beyond - Fox News - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Chinas King of Banned Films Wants to Change the Subject - The New York Times - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- The whole world has been saying it for years: the EU Commission weaponized its censorship law against Elon the second he bought Twitter and turned it... - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Film shot inside Iran breaks censorship ground with intimate scenes - - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Berlin Film Festival Rejects Accusation Of Censorship On Gaza - Barron's - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- University of North Texas Students Withdraw Thesis Shows, Citing Censorship - Hyperallergic - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Coalition Files Lawsuit to Challenge Censorship, Erasure of American History and Science at National Parks - Union of Concerned Scientists - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- ACLU of Texas, NCAC Urge University of North Texas to Apologize and Uphold Academic Freedom after Apparent Censorship of Art Exhibit Critical of ICE -... - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Censoring gender in higher education impacts more than just trans people - The University News - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Announcement Concerning the Recent Censorship of Former President Jos Jer - Dentons - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- AG Drummond demands answers from YouTube over alleged conservative censorship - News 9 - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- 'Ethereum Is Going Hard': Vitalik Buterin Backs Censorship Resistance Upgrade - Decrypt - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Accusations of Censorship Mark the First Month of American-Owned TikTok - hercampus.com - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- FCC's Carr weighs in on the feud with Colbert, vowing to 'hold broadcasters responsible' - Business Insider - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Sixteen Attorneys General Demand Answers on YouTube Censorship - Focus on the Family - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Drummond demands answers from YouTube over alleged censorship of conservative voices - Ponca City Now - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- No Censorship Here at All, Carr Says as FCC Opens Equal-Time Probe Into 'The View' - Law.com - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- More than 100 film artists condemn Berlinales censorship of opposition to Israels Gaza genocide - World Socialist Web Site - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Berlin Film Festival rejects accusation of censorship on Gaza - The Killeen Daily Herald - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- FCC Chair Reacts To Censorship Claims Over Colbert-Talarico Interview - Newsweek - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Censorship, Control, and the Far Right: Berlinale Confronts Europes Anxiety - - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Few American writers have proved so alluring to the censors as Toni Morrison. What made her one of our greatest and most dangerous novelists was her... - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- US to unveil platform aiming to bypass internet censorship in China, Iran and beyond - WFMD - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Forget the critics, censoring the media in Gaza wont harm democracy - Israel National News - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- The Streisand effect and how CBS censorship of Rep. James Talarico was a win-win for him and Stephen Colberts - Diario AS - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Too sinister to be pathetic, too pathetic to be wholly sinister: FCC, CBS accused of censorship - MS NOW - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Fandoms lighthouse in a sea of censorship - FIRE | Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- As internet in U.S. and China looks more alike, she wrote a book on 'dancing' around censorship - KJZZ - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- FCC commissioner condemns censorship following Stephen Colbert comments on Talarico interview - Editor and Publisher - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Prison-Style Free Speech Censorship Is Coming for the Rest of Us - The Intercept - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- State censorship shapes how Chinese chatbots respond to sensitive political topics, study suggests - Phys.org - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]