00:00:06
UFERSA presents...
00:00:13
In 1963, the educator Paulo Freire developed a pioneering literacy project
00:00:17
for youth and adults in the state of Rio Grande do Norte.
00:00:20
After 50 years, the alumni remembered how everything happened and what this experience represented in their lives.
00:00:24
Angicos, August 1st 2013.
00:00:50
40 HOURS IN MEMORY
Rescue of the Experience of Paulo Freire's Students in Angicos/RN
00:00:57
WHAT WAS ANGICOS LIKE?
00:01:03
Once in the town of Angicos
00:01:07
In the path of passign people
00:01:10
Many were the sort of trouble
00:01:11
In that unmerciful moment
00:01:13
The drought over the dry land
00:01:14
Calamity, only tragedy
00:01:16
And the lack of oportunity
00:01:18
Made everyone’s heart impatient
00:01:19
Here’s my place’s thankless present
00:01:22
There was nothing except difficulty
00:01:24
Oh… life in Angicos
00:01:26
was worst in the past.
00:01:28
It was a very hard life…
00:01:31
we fought for living.
00:01:33
We had no rights… we could only work.
00:01:38
Since I was young, I worked hard,
00:01:41
sowing the land with my father… in the countryside,
00:01:43
you know?
00:01:44
I was a farmer, I was 20 years old, you know?!
00:01:47
I was in my twenties and worked in my father’s farm.
00:01:52
It was more than 4 miles to get to work.
00:01:56
It was a hard and poor life. A… hum… very hard life.
00:02:03
It was a poor land.
00:02:05
Our place was very poor.
00:02:06
In the morning,
00:02:08
we used to harvest “pêlo”
00:02:10
and then peel
00:02:12
it and market it on the streets.
00:02:14
We’ve done that for living.
00:02:16
It was very sad… the poverty in Angicos.
00:02:20
But there were the poorest people
00:02:22
who used three little rocks in the clay pot to cook beans,
00:02:27
potato and pumkin which were grown in the farms.
00:02:33
Plant beans, corn, watermelon, watermelon seeds and clear the land…
00:02:39
That’s our life… working… like this.
00:02:42
We went through many difficult things in life, you know?!
00:02:45
We had one baby per year… and we struggled…
00:02:49
For us to go to work, we had to walk for three hours every week [sic]
00:02:52
Many things lacked in Angicos that time.
00:02:56
There wasn’t electricity. There wasn’t running water.
00:03:01
There wasn’t anything.
00:03:02
They were backward times, madam… and now I think it’s too forward.
00:03:07
It was very dificult to go to school. There were a few schools.
00:03:13
THE 40 HOURS
00:03:20
Meantime there came a new fact
00:03:23
After the wonderful voice
00:03:24
Tell we all now have a choice
00:03:26
Then a teacher and a friend Educators in the end.
00:03:30
Unexpected invitation
00:03:32
Long awaited education. Lay in each and every building
00:03:36
Likewise the winged education. For everybody’s formation. Freire’s participation.
00:03:40
A Jeep with speakers passed on the streets. It was a Jeep. I remember it.
00:03:46
With big round speakers, you know?!
00:03:49
Then someone spoke live, inviting people to enroll in school.
00:03:57
Then I said we wanted to study, me and mom.
00:04:00
Then my father agreed
00:04:02
and said: “Oh! I go there too!”
00:04:03
He joined mom and we went to school.
00:04:08
There came some girls for meetings
00:04:10
and they said about Paulo Freire, 40 hours …
00:04:14
I went to enroll and study at school.
00:04:18
I didn’t know anything. The first class had Paulo
00:04:23
Someone invited me to study. I said: “I’ll go!”
00:04:31
Then they said there would be classes and a teacher
00:04:36
would help the illiterate.
00:04:38
When this stuff of schools came up, they went there at my home…
00:04:44
and the people liked as classes started, you know?!
00:04:46
So, every night, they were crazy to go to school.
00:04:49
After I got married
00:04:51
as I was working on the roads
00:04:53
from Angicos to Afonso Bezerra
00:04:55
there came a lady called Maria Bezerra…
00:05:11
then she called our attention…
00:05:15
and, among us,
00:05:17
with a book in her hands,
00:05:19
she said there were schools here in the city… and we should consider them our schools.
00:05:33
Then we went there at night.
00:05:36
We came and enrolled right on the road.
00:05:40
I didn’t know anything.
00:05:41
Then I, foolish, as the others from the past times,
00:05:46
was afraid of everything
00:05:48
I was afraid of going to school.
00:05:50
At 7 PM we took the book and the pencil and went
00:05:54
to this house
00:05:56
whose room served as classroom…
00:06:02
we were so pleased to go to school.
00:06:05
When my father was very tired, he said: “Go! I’m not going today.”
00:06:10
As we got to school, the teacher went our home.
00:06:12
“Come on, Mr. Severiano!
00:06:14
Let’s learn it! If you leave one day back it’s harder to learn the other days…”
00:06:20
Then he was convinced.
00:06:22
When we were sat in the classroom, she (teacher) looked and said someone was missing.
00:06:27
“I’m gonna take him now!”
00:06:29
She went people’s home and insisted to make them go.
00:06:31
“Come on, man! It’s quick. You can go!”
00:06:34
She came affectionately, like this. And we went on studying…
00:06:39
Everyone in my group remained until the end,
00:06:41
and as it ended we celebrated it with a party…
00:06:44
The teachers liked us as much as we liked them, you know?!
00:06:49
She was very kind! She didn’t treat us differently.
00:06:57
As she arrived in classroom, she hugged everyone, black, white, poor, rich…
00:07:00
she loved us all. That’s why we get emotional.
00:07:06
The classroom was lamp and candle-lighted…
00:07:10
there were lamps and a great lantern that we called “lampião”.
00:07:17
Each one of us took one chair to the school.
00:07:20
At the end, there were many of us outside, you know?!
00:07:22
It looked like a celebration.
00:07:23
We went there every night.
00:07:25
There was only one light generator in Angicos, you know?
00:07:29
Then they brought some machines
00:07:32
they called projector.
00:07:34
And they turn them on and a movie passed on the screen,
00:07:37
and we kept watching it.
00:07:38
We had books but we couldn’t read yet.
00:07:41
We’ve been learning and we had everything for that.
00:07:44
All we could take to know the alphabet, to learn it correctly.
00:07:50
At that time, the one who couldn’t read was a fool, you know?!
00:07:53
I learned to read and write my name.
00:07:57
In class, he (teacher) just wrote on the blackboard
00:08:02
and told us to write the words, fill in “tile”, “brick”, these things.
00:08:12
So he wrote the (first) letter and we filled in.
00:08:16
They taught us the writing on the screen, you know?!
00:08:20
The words “brick”, “belota”
00:08:25
and many other ones.
00:08:26
They taught us letter by letter, and we followed them and learned them.
00:08:31
I knew neither the letter A.
00:08:33
So there came this Paulo Freire’s project.
00:08:38
Then they passed on the streets to enroll people, you know?!
00:08:42
And everyone did.
00:08:44
There were Paulo Freire’s school everywhere in Angicos.
00:08:48
We learned through some objects, words in a little book.
00:08:55
It showed the word “brick”, so there was a picture of a brick.
00:08:59
“House”, and a picture of a house… and several words.
00:09:03
Classes were… At that time, they started speaking about craftwork, you know,
00:09:12
made of clay, brick, how it’s made, how we can make a clay pot.
00:09:19
Everything was in the film on the wall.
00:09:22
The clay pots.
00:09:23
There was a crazy one
00:09:26
who wanted to take the pots as they appeared on the wall.
00:09:30
We laughed a lot.
00:09:32
There were the words… he wrote on the board.
00:09:33
They were “belota”, “shoes”…
00:09:35
and that’s how we learned them.
00:09:37
Slowly, little by little.
00:09:42
They were politicization classes, in which people knew about their rights.
00:09:49
These 40 hours were great for me,
00:09:50
for all of us.
00:09:52
I’ve learned to teach my name’s spelling.
00:09:54
But these few months represented many, many years for me.
00:09:59
They were two months of classes.
00:10:02
And they taught us to write “eye”, “sauce”, “people”.
00:10:07
I liked that too much. I just didn’t like because it lasted only two months.
00:10:10
It was in 1963.
00:10:12
It shouldn’t have ended
00:10:14
because there were many illiterate people.
00:10:17
It encouraged people very much.
00:10:20
My teacher’s name was Valquiria.
00:10:23
She showed that film and told us to spell
00:10:26
those old words: “chiquichique”, “brick”
00:10:32
We spelled the words and then we kept saying them.
00:10:35
The classroom had about 20 students.
00:10:36
I consider it a full class because… you know
00:10:40
it appeared unexpectedly.
00:10:43
I’ll never forget
00:10:44
she (teacher) applied herself
00:10:46
to make us write at least our names.
00:10:52
That’s what she applied her mind to.
00:10:54
I liked most the classes on what my father already knew about.
00:11:03
For example, the class about brick.
00:11:05
He could make it.
00:11:07
He knew how to market it.
00:11:10
He knew how much was to make it.
00:11:15
He knew everything about bricks.
00:11:18
Then I loved because he could answer everything.
00:11:22
Classes at that time had old words.
00:11:25
Words like “brick”, “tile”, “belota”, you know, the old words.
00:11:36
Today, no one knows them anymore.
00:11:39
“Belota”, he said. Can you make a “belota”?
00:11:42
And we made the “belota”.
00:11:44
Do you know what it is?
00:11:45
It’s that stuff of the hammock.
00:11:48
It’s suspended both sides of the hammock.
00:11:51
I remember many classes because they used films
00:11:55
and, as they appeared on the wall, they’re too difficult to forget.
00:11:59
The films passed according to the word studied.
00:12:09
For example, the word “brick”.
00:12:11
Then the film was on a man in a construction
00:12:16
placing a brick on another brick.
00:12:19
They showed the film
00:12:22
and then explained it
00:12:25
they showed the images right on the board
00:12:30
and then explained how it serves for.
00:12:33
He said we could write anywhere, even on the ground.
00:12:36
The classroom was just like here.
00:12:40
We’re all sitting in pairs
00:12:43
two ones ahead and the other two behind.
00:12:46
Then the teacher was in front of us writing the numbers on the blackboard
00:12:53
and he asked us to say those numbers.
00:12:56
And we said them. If we knew them, we promptly spoke
00:12:59
but if we didn’t know, he erased them for us to try them again.
00:13:01
Before this school, I couldn’t even write my name
00:13:05
because I have never atended any class.
00:13:06
The hoe and the sickle had been our school… just farming.
00:13:10
I worked the whole day, I left home before sunrise.
00:13:14
And when it arrives, I would go to class.
00:13:21
PAULO FREIRE
00:13:28
Paulo Freire, decent memory
00:13:29
Wisdom and humble combined
Must be always laid in mind
00:13:33
Through his own belief of literacy
Spread and teach the known democracy
00:13:37
It shall never be abandoned
00:13:39
Once it is all people needed
To remember what has happened
00:13:42
And the way it has proceeded
Our cry, Lord, you can listen
00:13:47
I remember well when Paulo Freire came here, you know?!
00:13:49
When he arrived at the town. It was a great joy for the people.
00:13:53
He came so gently.
00:13:55
He hugged all students and spoke to them.
00:13:57
Then he shook my hand and hugged me… Paulo Freire.
00:14:02
He was very, very polite.
00:14:05
So, the politeness he had
00:14:08
was taught to the teachers and then to us, you know?!
00:14:14
I remember everything.
00:14:15
I remember everything at that time.
00:14:17
Because all that’s been taught was something very useful
00:14:22
something very… very well planned.
00:14:24
He planned everything very well.
00:14:25
I remember his type. He was kind of bearded, you know?!
00:14:28
Sometimes, as a bearded man passes by, I use to say:
00:14:31
“Look! He’s Paulo Freire!”
00:14:32
He was a wonderful man.
00:14:34
He wouldn’t have died so early.
00:14:36
Paulo Freire was a wonderful teacher.
00:14:39
He was thin.
00:14:42
I thought he was a down figure
00:14:45
but his voice was strong…
00:14:48
He told us it is important for us to know our rights… to understand them…
00:14:55
I remember my mother wrote a letter saying:
00:14:58
“I’m not mass anymore, I’m a person!”
00:15:01
That came from what she learned there, you know?!
00:15:04
He just wished people to know their rights by the time of the military dictatorship.
00:15:11
The military didn’t want people to claim their rights.
00:15:14
When Paulo Freire came here
00:15:16
it was a time of… when we went to school.
00:15:22
We walked holding a book.
00:15:24
Our little books hidden under our shirts because
00:15:26
they told no one should go to those classes
00:15:29
or they would arrest us all once Paulo Freire was communist.
00:15:33
They asked if we liked Paulo Freire’s classes.
00:15:36
“We do! We do!”
00:15:37
They said he was communist, but he wasn’t.
00:15:41
When he has been exiled
00:15:44
they said everyone who met him should also be arrested.
00:15:51
Then people burned and buried books, the papers.
00:15:55
Everyone did that because
00:15:58
we were all afraid.
00:16:00
They burned the papers, everything… but the words remained.
00:16:03
The seed had already been planted.
00:16:06
And it grew.
00:16:07
I’ve put them on the yard and burned them. No one kept them
00:16:11
you know?!
00:16:14
Because people disapproved Paulo Freire, and the school.
00:16:18
But people didn’t know the benefits.
00:16:20
The good things, you know?!
00:16:23
He wasn’t communist. He was a good teacher.
00:16:26
I wanted to say to Paulo Freire…
00:16:29
I wanted to thank him, to say thank you very much
00:16:32
because you took my fear away.
00:16:34
You made me confident…
00:16:37
I can read thanks to God, first, and to Paulo Freire, second.
00:16:42
I thank them both, God and Paulo Freire.
00:16:46
Thank you very much!
00:16:51
For this opportunity that helped many ones…
00:16:56
There isn’t anything more important than the knowledge.
00:17:01
WHAT MADE
00:17:08
Afterall and in the end
It was recorded in memory
00:17:12
Grand and endless testamentary
Of accurately even signing
00:17:15
The people’s citizenship feeling
Handling the paper and pen
00:17:19
And ever defeat a sachem
With no study, no instruction
00:17:23
Even refuge or protection
Of a strong right-hand henchman
00:17:27
The most memorable moment, the most important one was the first days of classes.
00:17:31
When we started them, you know?!
00:17:33
We’ve learned enough so that we could write and read everything right in the first days.
00:17:39
It was much important!
00:17:41
We were all hicks!
00:17:45
As the saying goes, we were all hicks
00:17:48
but we’ve learned we also could be someone like the other people, right?!
00:17:54
I’ve learned a lot because I can write my name and some other words.
00:17:59
It was a seed that grew and gave me the knowledge I didn’t have before.
00:18:03
I’ve learned. It was so remarkable, you know?!
00:18:06
The most important thing I’ve learned was to write my name.
00:18:14
When Paulo Freire appeared, he said “Look, girls!
00:18:17
You’re going to write these letters.
00:18:20
You’re going to learn reading and writing
00:18:24
so that you can write letters to your boyfriends…”
00:18:27
Paulo Freire used to say.
00:18:29
Like reading and writing my name
00:18:32
spelling, knowing the letters. I didn’t know the letters in my youth.
00:18:35
After 11 days I could write my name and I didn’t forget that anymore.
00:18:40
He taught us to write mom’s name
00:18:46
and others…
00:19:02
Sorry!
00:19:04
I learned it and I can write
00:19:07
my mother’s name: Maria das Dores de Andrade.
00:19:11
He taught us to read, the alphabet…
00:19:17
a, e, i, o, u, then the first syllables.
00:19:22
He wrote our names and we followed him…
00:19:25
it was very hard, but I thank God I learned
00:19:30
and today I can write my name.
00:19:32
In the last class, the president, João Goulart,
00:19:37
came for the closing
00:19:39
then they said I could read, a kid could, and he called me there
00:19:43
he took a pen and pointed to the newspaper…
00:19:48
As I finished reading he said: What do you want to earn?
00:19:51
Then I said: A handbag for me to carry my books to school.
00:19:55
I think he was João Goulart…
00:19:56
we were all there, and he arrived.
00:20:01
Then we hugged him, and he shaked our hands
00:20:03
Pleased and happy.
00:20:05
i understood many things, right?
00:20:08
Because I couldn’t read anything
00:20:12
And this was an advantage for me. Hail Mary!
00:20:16
It was very good! A school like that seems… I’ll tell you what… sent by God.
00:20:21
I required my documents and I could sign them
00:20:24
not only stamp my fingerprint.
00:20:25
People used to sign their documents with the fingerprint, you know.
00:20:28
It helped me a lot… I’m literate.
00:20:32
I’m not that blind.
00:20:35
It helped a lot, not only me but everyone studying there.
00:20:41
There were many classrooms.
00:20:43
Some people didn’t know an “a” or “b”.
00:20:46
My father liked that a lot.
00:20:50
He was a quite old man, but he didn’t care about it.
00:20:53
He said “I want to learn how to write my name”
00:20:56
and he did. So did Mom.
00:20:59
They could vote too.
00:21:01
When there was election, we couldn’t vote.
00:21:06
I learned to vote as I learned to write my name.
00:21:10
I went to get the title at the registry office.... Then I started voting
00:21:13
I still vote today.
00:21:14
That time I didn’t know who the president was
00:21:18
or deputy, senator, councilor, whatever.
00:21:24
I knew nothing!
00:21:25
I was a complete
00:21:28
hick. I knew nothing.
00:21:30
But after Paulo Freire
00:21:33
gave us those lessons
00:21:36
I learned a lot and I knew who they were.
00:21:43
We had to fight for our rights.
00:21:48
And that time we had none.
00:21:53
And through education we had to meet our needs.
00:21:57
"What does the rich do with the poor?”
00:22:00
So I answered: “Just like a mosquito
00:22:03
which sucks one’s blood while he’s sleeping”
00:22:05
Paulo Freire insisted on the land
00:22:08
hat God never gave it to us.
00:22:10
Then the rich fence it, take possession of it
00:22:14
and the small farm worker has nowhere to work
00:22:18
no beans or corns to eat
00:22:19
because the rich fence the land to raise cattle
00:22:23
if there is a grassland on it. Is that fair?!
00:22:28
To grow some mango, banana, but can’t eat them?
00:22:36
They never told me the meaning of “people”.
00:22:37
I didn’t know what that was.
00:22:39
But I knew that through Paulo Freire’s lessons
00:22:41
We are the people.
00:22:44
They want us to learn and be like the others.
00:22:48
They wanted the best for us.
00:22:50
Brazil took the lead… the world turns on wheels
00:22:53
you know?
00:22:54
They taught us that learning
00:22:57
may turns us citizens
00:23:01
everywhere.
00:23:02
She told us to write on the blackboard: “I can read!”
00:23:08
Then I wrote it.
00:23:10
It was great!
00:23:12
And we all cheered because each one wrote it.
00:23:17
Many people evolved because they couldn’t vote and today they can. Why?
00:23:23
Because they studied in Paulo Freire’s school.
00:23:25
I’ll vote until I die because I like it.
00:23:29
I’m too old but it’s not forbidden, is it?
00:23:33
Because I like voting.
00:23:36
I’m Brazilian!
00:23:37
To open people’s minds
00:23:39
there was no experience like that so far.
00:23:44
Then there came this chance and
00:23:48
we could open our minds a little.
00:23:50
After forty hours with Paulo Freire
00:23:53
I learned to write
00:23:56
required my documents to vote. I couldn’t write.
00:23:59
I’m so grateful because of these lessons
00:24:03
Because of his willingness and interest
00:24:06
dedicated to us that time
00:24:09
when we learned what we didn’t know.
00:24:12
If I saw Paulo Freire today
00:24:14
I’d thank him so much for what he did.
00:24:18
Today I can read
00:24:21
and write a little thanks to God, firstly, and secondly to Paulo Freire.
00:24:28
THE LEGACY
00:24:35
As the history reechoes
It remains both the experience
00:24:39
And the cognizance and sense
00:24:40
It is really worth education
Gift lives with signification
00:24:44
Education is the only
Having citizens to live freely
00:24:48
Our future, solid ground
00:24:49
For the learning we have found
00:24:51
And, thus, reach the wanted freedom
00:24:53
I have good memories about the lessons
00:24:55
Sometimes I remember Paulo Freire. As I’m here I use to remember him.
00:25:00
They’re all good memories.
00:25:03
I think I was nobody. And I’m someone today.
00:25:07
My name is far away
00:25:09
overseas.
00:25:11
It was important for me.
00:25:13
I guess everyone was important
00:25:15
because I learned not to fear things.
00:25:19
Education is the most important thing.
00:25:22
Because if we can’t read and write we know nothing
00:25:29
We only repeat what others say.
00:25:32
And if we learn that, take some paper and read it.
00:25:37
We know even a document is signed.
00:25:40
This experience was important
00:25:42
Paulo Freire’s ideas opened our eyes.
00:25:48
There were some people who didn’t know the vowel “a”.
00:25:51
I already knew “a”, “b”, “c”, “d”, “e”.
00:25:55
There’s nothing more important than education.
00:25:57
Knowing is the best thing in life…
00:26:01
Education?
00:26:03
It’s everything in life
00:26:05
Education is above all. God, health and education.
00:26:08
If go somewhere and they tell me to write my name
00:26:13
I do it.
00:26:14
At a drugstore, I can write everything,
00:26:16
search for my medications, at the bank, everything.
00:26:20
It’s completely changed.
00:26:22
What would I do without those lessons?
00:26:25
Well, the person who can’t read or write is blind, you know?
00:26:30
Knowing is good! Because the more we study the more we learn.
00:26:35
Being illiterate is very bad. You can’t even journey.
00:26:39
If you go somewhere different and there is a sign
00:26:42
you don’t know where you are, what is written on it.
00:26:45
Finishing illiteracy
00:26:51
isn’t having another life.
00:26:53
Because who knows nothing is like a walking blind
00:26:58
who just walks whithout knowing where to go.
00:27:02
The thing I admire most is education.
00:27:04
hose who can’t read or write know nothing
00:27:08
What does that mean? They are dust!
00:27:10
I’m a citizen!
00:27:12
I’m aware of my rights and duties.
00:27:16
My classmates used to say
00:27:20
“We don’t want to be mass. We want to be people
00:27:23
knowing everything, citizens, knowing ourselves
00:27:31
and what the others do.”
00:27:35
Because it opened people’s minds.
00:27:40
hat time, elections were bustling, eventful.
00:27:48
I reared my family
00:27:51
and they all can read.
00:27:54
It represents all in my educational life so far.
00:27:58
The importance of reading, knowing things
00:28:03
I always taught this to my family.
00:28:06
Yeah… those 40 hours transformed, or formed
00:28:10
I don’t know… a whole family!
00:28:13
I’m glad my children can read.
00:28:16
All 3 graduated high school.
00:28:19
One of them works for Petrobras
00:28:21
I want them to acomplish what I couldn’t do.
00:28:26
As my mother didn’t let us study.
00:28:29
She thought her daughters souldn’t study
00:28:31
and that was taught by her father.
00:28:35
I used to say to myself:
00:28:38
“A child of mine shall study no matter what happens."
00:28:43
All my children studied and so are my grandchildren.
00:28:47
I reared a grandson and I thank God I could rear him.
00:28:55
Today he is a manager at the Caixa Economica bank in Apodi.
00:29:01
If I still had those lessons, I’d be a doctor.
00:29:04
Because the way I was going… wasn’t it?
00:29:07
I soon learned many things with him.
00:29:10
And soon I got more confident.
00:29:13
I’m so glad with what I learned.
00:29:15
And I guess they’re worth it
00:29:17
because, besides I’m not a teacher
00:29:20
I preach the word of God that is important
00:29:24
and I read the Bible and teach it to the others.
00:29:30
If I had continued studying, maybe I’d have graduated at college.
00:29:33
If I have continued studying, I could be another Anita, right?!
00:29:37
The little I learned wasn’t enough to make me better
00:29:41
to get a better job… but if I have continued studying
00:29:43
I’m sure I’d have gotten that.
00:29:46
The best lesson I learned was
00:29:48
to motivate my children to study.
00:29:50
I learned that knowing is above all.
00:29:53
I learned a lot! They’re really worth it.
00:29:56
I have a granddaughter who graduated at college.
00:30:02
She got it!
00:30:05
A psychologist!
00:30:08
I hope my grandchildren graduate
00:30:12
and they have everything alright in their lives.
00:30:14
I think the greatest thing in life
00:30:16
is to take child to the church to receive a graduation degree, you know?
00:30:22
I’m so honored to have been Paulo Freire’s student.
00:30:27
I first learned to teach my father
00:30:29
and then I wish I was a teacher
00:30:32
I wanted to be the teacher Eneide
00:30:36
and I got it.
00:30:38
Professor Eneide. Graduated in pedagogy and public servant
00:30:42
DATASHEET
00:30:46
Passos Jr.
Director and screenwriter
00:30:50
Renata Jaguaribe.
Reporter and screenwriter
00:30:54
Eduardo Mendonça
Director of photography
00:30:58
Amanda Freitas
Producer and arts director
00:31:03
Production assistants
Higo Lima. Vanessa D'Oliviêr. Cinara Ribeiro. Valeria Dantas
00:31:09
Diego Farias
Image editor
00:31:14
Hailton Mangabeira. Carlos Zens
Cordelist poet Soundtrack
00:31:20
Ufersa Angicos Collaboration: Prof. Joselito Medeiros, Prof. Rita Diana, Prof. Éder Jofre, Prof. Jacimara Villar
00:31:26
Drivers: Carlos Antônio (1st and 3rd days), Raimundo Nonato (2nd day), Aldomario Marcos (4th day), Marcos Antônio (Angicos)
00:31:32
Thanks: Geraldo Félix de Lima (Man weeding), Alexandre Gomes (Owner of the Mata Branca farm)
00:31:38
Interviewed
00:33:27
Soundtrack: Flores de Primavera (Carlos Zens), A Primavera, from "As 4 estações" (Vivaldi) with Asa Branca (Luiz Gonzaga e Humberto Teixeira). Support: Angicos City Hall
00:33:37
Production: Ufersa