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6 - Meet Some Friends of Domingos Sodré

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

João José Reis
Affiliation:
Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil
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Summary

The police accused two people of consorting with Domingos Sodré in relation to Candomblé in 1862. They were Manoel Joaquim Ricardo and Antão Pereira Teixeira, also African freedmen. In searching the archives, I have found another freedman who enjoyed Domingos' friendship and had been arrested about ten years earlier for running a small Candomblé terreiro in the sugar plantation Recôncavo. His name was Cipriano José Pinto. A summary of the biographies of these three supporting characters, their strategies for survival and success in Bahian society, their victories and defeats, sheds further light on the complex experience of a segment of the African community, the freedpersons or libertos, to which Domingos belonged and in which he circulated. Slave/master relations, family, work, property – including property in slaves – business acumen, intra-African solidarity, competition, and conflict, relations with state authorities, especially the police, spiritual afflictions, and religious affiliations are some of the themes explored in the lives of the three individuals portrayed here. Through them we will further explore the complexities of both slavery and freedom in nineteenth-century Bahia.

MANOEL JOAQUIM RICARDO

João, the young slave arrested in Domingos' home in 1862, belonged to a successful transatlantic merchant, businessman, and slaveholder, Manoel Joaquim Ricardo, a Hausa freedman who then lived in Cruz do Cosme, the rural district ruled by subdelegado João de Azevedo Piapitinga, which was also home to Libânio José de Almeida and others charged with practicing witchcraft and Candomblé in Chapter 1 of this book. Manoel Joaquim, for instance, met Libânio in church, having at least once, in 1862, performed a baptism together in which the latter stood godfather and the former “touched Our Lady's crown” – meaning that the Mother of God was the godmother – on behalf of a creole child. Ricardo, it should be recalled, was a friend and neighbor, but also a compadre of Elias Seixas, who chose him and his wife as the godparents for his baby daughter.

Type
Chapter
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Divining Slavery and Freedom
The Story of Domingos Sodré, an African Priest in Nineteenth-Century Brazil
, pp. 210 - 252
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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