As euphoric rock music played, dozens of men in suits swarmed the
aisles with hand-held credit card machines to take donations from the
faithful.
The pastor smiled at the crowd in the downtown
headquarters of the mega-church and, as cameras rolled, belted out: "We
all voted already, right? Who voted today?"
In the spotlight, he
made no mention of whom he hoped his flock had cast ballots for.
But for
most in the crowd, and those watching the election for the mayor of
Latin America's largest city, it was clear which candidate Brazil's
increasingly influential evangelical churches were throwing their weight
behind.
Television personality Celso
Russomanno took Brazil's political establishment by surprise when he
shot to the top of the polls in the run-up to the election. Although he
is Roman Catholic, his relatively new Brazilian Republican Party is backed by the powerful Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus, or Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
In
the world's largest Catholic country, a group of well-organized
evangelical churches is rewriting the rules of politics here. In the
process, the evangelicals have dismayed Brazilians uneasy with such
blatant mixing of religion and politics.
Amid a surge in Latin
America in recent years, more than 20% of Brazilians are now evangelical
Christian. Followers make up one of the largest voting blocs in
Congress, and use their money, influence and media power to press a
small set of socially conservative issues, as well as to maintain
favorable conditions for their often very profitable enterprises.
"They
don't yet have quite as unified an agenda as the evangelical movement
in the U.S.," said David Fleischer, a political scientist at the
University of Brasilia. "But they are growing, and are far more
effective than the Catholic Church at convincing people to vote one way
or another."
Since colonial times, the Roman Catholic Church has
been the dominant religious force in Brazil, though in practice it has
often been mixed with indigenous and African traditions. Still, not only
did the constitution establish separation of church and state, but
voters and the church also tend to abhor any direct religious
endorsements in elections.
Russomanno's position in the polls
shocked the elites into action here and, after attacks from all sides —
from the left, the right, the Catholic Church — he ended up finishing
third.
But his movement made its mark. The candidate from the
ruling left-leaning Workers' Party, Fernando Haddad, immediately sought
his backing in the runoff Sunday.
Nationally, President Dilma Rousseff maintains an uneasy alliance with the evangelical bloc, which makes up about 10% of the Brazilian equivalent of the House of Representatives.
The group flexed its political muscle in a big way last year when it
killed Rousseff's plan to supply Brazilian schools with anti-homophobia
educational materials.
On the Friday before the first round of
voting early this month, a group of artistic and cultural activists
mounted a large protest against Russomanno's sudden rise, using social
media to organize a group of rock, funk, hip-hop and traditional
Brazilian forro concerts.
Some revelers wore shirts proclaiming "Not
Serra, not Russomanno," with Jose Serra, the center-right candidate,
portrayed as Mr. Burns, the character on "The Simpsons" (he does bear a
resemblance), and Russomanno as fellow character Ned Flanders.
But
evangelical politics isn't just about traditional conservative issues
such as morality or abortion, which is illegal in Brazil. Elected
officials at the local level also push for favorable zoning and
municipal rulings that allow them to easily develop new churches. And
then there is the more subtle use of political power, Fleischer said.
"The
larger churches face frequent accusations of income tax evasion, money
laundering and all sorts of other fraudulent activity. Edir Macedo, the
head of Igreja Universal, also owns the second-largest TV network in the
country, which should technically be unconstitutional," Fleischer said,
because he is a religious figure operating on public airwaves. "But the
state looks the other way."
Macedo's Universal Church has
branches in Africa and is successful throughout Latin America. In
California, the local branches, which attract large numbers of Spanish
speakers, are often recognizable by the slogan "Pare de sufrir," or
"Stop suffering," a subtle dig at Catholic cultural traditions.
In
Sao Paulo, many were puzzled as to why Russomanno denied he was backed
by the evangelicals. Macedo also denied strong links, despite his
pastors calling on worshipers to vote for him and a blog he published
(anonymously) listing reasons to vote for him.
"I don't like who
is paying" for Russomanno, Sueli Machado, a 65-year-old retiree, said
after voting in Penha, a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Sao
Paulo. "I don't have anything against any religion, but the men who run
those churches are millionaires rich off of donations. If he can't admit
they are behind him, how can I trust him?"
Later that week in
Penha, a Universal Church pastor gave a small congregation bars of green
soap that would "wash not just your body, but your soul."
Then he led
the screaming crowd in a ceremony to expel demons from a middle-aged
woman, who writhed at his touch.
Before ending the ceremony, he
asked the parishioners to give themselves a round of applause: "Look at
all the people we got voted onto the City Council!"