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Czech Brazilians

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Czech Brazilians
Tcheco-brasileiro  · Český Brazilec
Total population
5,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Brazil: Mainly Southeastern and Southern Brazil
Languages
Predominantly Portuguese. Some also speak Czech
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic
Related ethnic groups
Other White Brazilians, Czech people

Czech Brazilians refer to Brazilians of Czech descent who were born in or who trace their ancestry to the territory of the historic Czech lands or succession states, now known as the Czech Republic, and are residents and/or citizens of Brazil.

Czech people in Brazil

Although Czech Jesuits such as Valentin Stansel had been working in Brazil since the 18th century, the first Czech immigrants arrived in 1823. Among these early immigrants was Jan Nepomuk Kubíček, a Catholic carpenter from Třeboň and one of the great-grandfathers of Juscelino Kubitschek de Oliveira, the 24th President of Brazil (from 1956 to 1961).[2][3]

In the 20th century there were three large waves of Czechs who moved to Brazil: in the 1930s, after the Communist takeover (1948) and after the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact troops (1968). Most of those immigrants settled down in Southern Brazil.[4]

Though Czechs correspond to a small proportion of all immigrants who landed in Brazil, the Czech immigration is significant if counted in absolute numbers. An evidence of such representativeness is that a search in the 2007 phone book of São Paulo reveals that all the 10 commonest Czech male surnames can be found among the inhabitants of the mentioned Brazilian city.[5][6]

Southern Brazil

More or less influence of the Czech immigration can be noticed in the three states of Southern Brazil (Santa Catarina, Paraná, and Rio Grande do Sul). In such states, the Czechs arrived since the 19th century and were often a minority in areas predominantly settled by Germans or Poles.[7][8]

In Santa Catarina, the Czech immigrants occupied the regions of Vale do Itajaí[7] and Northern parts of the state, e.g. Joinville,[9] São Bento do Sul[10][11] and Mafra.[12]

In Rio Grande do Sul, most Czechs settled down in the Serra Gaúcha (notably in the town of Nova Petrópolis), the North Coast, the area of Missões and the Central Lowlands.[13]

In Paraná, the Czech immigration is noticeable in the Northern areas, e.g. Rolândia and Londrina, where in 1932-1940's Czechs and Poles used to dispute the available lands for coffee cultivation, particularly in the rural district of Warta (Northern Londrina).[14][15]

Central-Western Brazil

In Central-Western Brazil the Czech immigrants arrived mostly in the 1940-1950's led by the entrepreneur Jan Antonín Baťa, a Czech shoe manufacturer who left Czechoslovakia after the Nazi occupation of the Sudetenland.[16]

The colonization of part of the Southeastern region of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul was made possible thanks to the Companhia Viação São Paulo-Mato Grosso (São Paulo-Mato Grosso Transport Company) owned by Baťa and managed by another Czech immigrant, Vladimir Kubik.

Institutions and Cultural Organizations

Notable Czech Brazilians

See also

References

  1. ^ Czech in Brazil
  2. ^ Fňukal, Miloš RNDr. Ph.D. - Regionální geografie Ameriky: Brazílie
  3. ^ Os quatro irmãos - Do Presidente Juscelino Kubitschek
  4. ^ Embaixada da República Tcheca no Brasil - Relações Bilaterais
  5. ^ Ministerstvo vnitra - Statistiky: Mužská příjmení - 20 nejčetnějších
  6. ^ Telelistas.net - Serviço de busca de assinantes telefônicos no território brasileiro
  7. ^ a b Modernell, Renato - O Vale dos Imigrantes. Revista Terra, São Paulo, v. 63, p. 26 - 33, 01 jul. 1997
  8. ^ Ruiz, João H. W. - Warta "nasceu" antes mesmo de Londrina, Jornal Comtexto, Londrina, Ano III. Edição nº 072, 16 mar. 2006
  9. ^ Tourism in the Joinville area
  10. ^ São Bento do Sul, Santa Catarina - Official Website
  11. ^ Brazilian Association of Hotel Industry (ABIH) Santa Catarina
  12. ^ Mafra, Santa Catarina - Official Website
  13. ^ Prefeitura de Nova Petrópolis - Etnia tcheca é homenageada na Assembléia Legislativa
  14. ^ Ruiz, Glacy Weber - Londrina
  15. ^ Prefeitura de Rolândia (PR)História do município
  16. ^ "Kelpsidra". Retrieved May 20, 2012.

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