Remember Me Rescue Me Reviews Guest Book

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While reading this book, Remember Me, Rescue Me I found myself travelling from the streets of Brazil largest cities, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Recife and Bahia into the remote interior and poorer areas. Unfortunately it was not the beautiful tourists’ attractions that took me there, but the sad and cruel reality of the street children, which Roper so clearly describes in his book. The way he interweaves first-hand reportage, interviews and statistics to paint such vivid and strong picture of street children lives, revolves our emotions; feelings of sorrow, sadness, hanger and revolt for the way the children are so cruelly treated. Like Gilbert Dimenstein, in Brazil War on Children, Matt Roper moves from the rambling metropolises of Rio de Janeiro, to the white sandy beaches of Fortaleza, Recife greatest tourism resorts, and to remote towns and villages in the drought-stricken interior and dense Amazon jungle. In his travels he comes face to face with prostitutes, pimps, brothels owners, mafia leaders, child traffickers, and the children trapped on this horrendous adult world. Chapter by chapter he goes on explaining how these children found themselves sexually abused, sold as sexual commodities nationally and internationally, how the authorities turn the blind eye, and especially how the children feel living such dangerous lives. In one of the many travels and field research, Matt interviewed a brothel owner named Creuza, who explained that: The younger the girls is the better, they could get more costumers and money, around 250-300 reais. Those girls normally comes from poor or broken homes and many are actually sold by there parents who in most cases are fully aware of the futures the young girls will have. The demand for girls between 6 and 12 is very high. Majority of the costumers are members of the high society, man who old prestigious positions in society and the European tourists, mainly from Germany. Once the girls reach the age of 12, they have to do all they can to maintain that special child look, so that the prices don’t drop. Girls 15 and over will get around 25 reais (equivalent to £6) per programa- this is how the sessions are called. The girls, who live with her, don’t have to worry about the money they earn since payment is made in advance, and Creuza will then keep most of it- rent, service charges, clothes and food. Sometimes she will give them pocket money so that they can buy some sweets and toys. However those girls who have been bought will receive very little pocket money since they have to ay back the money she paid to there parents or whoever sold them. (p.75) Matt also describes how the police react to such crimes: …in Recife….. I Juliana coming hand in hand with an older girl, she smiled at me ….she was all dressed up...a silk pink dress…. Beautiful young girl, looking her age, 10… parading between tourist tables, I realised that they were biding, who would have her. I walked to them and asked them if they were not ashamed, they told me if I wasn’t happy the Police station wasn’t far. I went straight there and after making the complaint to this officer who attentively heard me, he replayed: - I understand what you mean, but there is nothing I can do, I am here to protect the tourists… (p.97) This kind of episode, according to Matt, happens all around Brazil, in every single city he went he witness these kind of stories. But the worst of all is what the children think of it all; majority considered death a blessing since they know there is now way out of such destiny. From beginning to the end, these is a book that makes you wonder what is happening to this world, are the children forgotten, or have man forgotten what is to be a child? Innocent, happy, and full of joy. When I bought this book, I only wanted to do some research for my final dissertation, but as soon I started to read it, it touched me more then I could ever imagine…. Until now I feel like I can still hear the voices of the children, voices screaming for help, hope and most of all acknowledgment, yes I can hear the voices which I only read in the book. Well done Matt. Sonia Dos Santos- student at UEL.

soniados santos <dossantossonia@msn.com>
london, uk - 12-Abril-2007 / 16:52:15


While reading this book, Remember Me, Rescue Me I found myself travelling from the streets of Brazil largest cities, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Recife and Bahia into the remote interior and poorer areas. Unfortunately it was not the beautiful tourists’ attractions that took me there, but the sad and cruel reality of the street children, which Roper so clearly describes in his book. The way he interweaves first-hand reportage, interviews and statistics to paint such vivid and strong picture of street children lives, revolves our emotions; feelings of sorrow, sadness, hanger and revolt for the way the children are so cruelly treated. Like Gilbert Dimenstein, in Brazil War on Children, Matt Roper moves from the rambling metropolises of Rio de Janeiro, to the white sandy beaches of Fortaleza, Recife greatest tourism resorts, and to remote towns and villages in the drought-stricken interior and dense Amazon jungle. In his travels he comes face to face with prostitutes, pimps, brothels owners, mafia leaders, child traffickers, and the children trapped on this horrendous adult world. Chapter by chapter he goes on explaining how these children found themselves sexually abused, sold as sexual commodities nationally and internationally, how the authorities turn the blind eye, and especially how the children feel living such dangerous lives. In one of the many travels and field research, Matt interviewed a brothel owner named Creuza, who explained that: The younger the girls is the better, they could get more costumers and money, around 250-300 reais. Those girls normally comes from poor or broken homes and many are actually sold by there parents who in most cases are fully aware of the futures the young girls will have. The demand for girls between 6 and 12 is very high. Majority of the costumers are members of the high society, man who old prestigious positions in society and the European tourists, mainly from Germany. Once the girls reach the age of 12, they have to do all they can to maintain that special child look, so that the prices don’t drop. Girls 15 and over will get around 25 reais (equivalent to £6) per programa- this is how the sessions are called. The girls, who live with her, don’t have to worry about the money they earn since payment is made in advance, and Creuza will then keep most of it- rent, service charges, clothes and food. Sometimes she will give them pocket money so that they can buy some sweets and toys. However those girls who have been bought will receive very little pocket money since they have to ay back the money she paid to there parents or whoever sold them. (p.75) Matt also describes how the police react to such crimes: …in Recife….. I Juliana coming hand in hand with an older girl, she smiled at me ….she was all dressed up...a silk pink dress…. Beautiful young girl, looking her age, 10… parading between tourist tables, I realised that they were biding, who would have her. I walked to them and asked them if they were not ashamed, they told me if I wasn’t happy the Police station wasn’t far. I went straight there and after making the complaint to this officer who attentively heard me, he replayed: - I understand what you mean, but there is nothing I can do, I am here to protect the tourists… (p.97) This kind of episode, according to Matt, happens all around Brazil, in every single city he went he witness these kind of stories. But the worst of all is what the children think of it all; majority considered death a blessing since they know there is now way out of such destiny. From beginning to the end, these is a book that makes you wonder what is happening to this world, are the children forgotten, or have man forgotten what is to be a child? Innocent, happy, and full of joy. When I bought this book, I only wanted to do some research for my final dissertation, but as soon I started to read it, it touched me more then I could ever imagine…. Until now I feel like I can still hear the voices of the children, voices screaming for help, hope and most of all acknowledgment, yes I can hear the voices which I only read in the book. Well done Matt. Sonia Dos Santos- student at UEL.

sonia <dossantossonia@msn.com>
london, uk - 12-Abril-2007 / 16:27:53
"I STORMED over to the blue police cabin and entered without knocking. Inside, an inspector was lounging, watching football on a portable TV."I stormed over to the blue police cabin and entered without knocking. Inside, an inspector was lounging, watching football on a portable TV. "'Have you any idea what is going on out there? A ten-year-old child is being sold to the tourists!'" "He waved me towards the door, not unkindly. 'There's nothing I can do, you see, senhor. My job here is to protect the tourists.'" Matt Roper dropped out of a journalism course...in order to become a first class journalist recording the lives of street girls in Brazil.

The book accurately records the grinding poverty which drives these girls into prostitution and the attitude of the authorities. "Protecting the tourists" including those tourists who have come to Brazil for the sole purpose of picking up underage girls. This is a pattern which emerges in one country after another. As the authorities crack down in Thailand the "sex tourism" trade moves to other areas where the police will "protect the tourists."

The result is that "working girls" will go to great lengths to appear younger. The economics are simple: the gringos come to Brazil for underage sex which is illegal in their own countries...and the gringos will pay the highest prices. The prices are still much lower than in their own countries and they do not risk prosecution.

The very real risk of AIDS is the price these children pay. Many also end up addicted to drugs as a matter of deliberate policy on the part of the rich men who control them.

In cases which he documents girls are enticed from Brazil with promises of marriage only to find they are virtually imprisoned in European countries and forced to work as prostitutes there - never seeing the money which changes hands. About 75,000 girls are estimated to be "imprisoned" in this way in Europe.

All too often books and TV programs about child prostitution are either voyeurism or they attempt to patronise the victims. Matt Roper's book does neither of these things. He places the blame clearly enough: "Once Recife was the centre of the Brazilian slave trade. More than one hundred years after the abolition of slavery very little seems to have changed, At Boa Viagem dark-skinned girls are bought and sold on the marketplace, taken from their homes and locked up in foreign countries. And the people who are operating this immensely profitable trade are white Europeans."

As a journalist, Matt Roper is not required to provide a political solution to the evils which he brilliantly exposes in this book. However, he does make clear both in the book and on the website that he believes the answer is Christian charity.

Socialists believe in freedom of religion but recognise the role of the church in the past in defending slavery This is exemplified by Jefferson Davis, President, Confederate States of America "[Slavery] was established by decree of Almighty God...it is sanctioned in the Bible, in both Testaments, from Genesis to Revelation...it has existed in all ages, has been found among the people of the highest civilization, and in nations of the highest proficiency in the arts."

Likewise the Christian church remains an important ideological pillar for capitalism, supporting the very system of exploitation which Matt Roper is exposing. Far from rescuing the victims of exploitation its main role has been to add to their burdens a further burden of guilt for their "sins". The Church has also directly assisted in the spread of AIDS by banning condoms.

Indeed Matt Roper himself recognises the fact that for every child who is saved from prostitution by charity - another one or two are recruited by iron economic necessity. He instances a rural village where people can either work in a factory producing farinha or by selling their bodies at the border post.

The wages at the factory are so low that when there is a drought a day's wages will not buy a litre of water. The dangerous and degrading work of prostitution is better paid.

He concludes "It is always children who bear the brunt of Brazil's unjust society, Girls like Adeidiane, with her scarred and roughened hands and troubling chest pains, are forced to choose between 12 hours of backbreaking work in a sweatshop,and selling her young body in the street. It is a choice no eleven year old should ever have to make."

Remember me, rescue me is compelling reading and the reader is certain to remember these smallest victims of exploitation. It is a tribute to those who, often at considerable personal risk, are trying to stem the tide in Brazil and around the world.

Derek McMillan
- 25-Fevereiro-2007 / 16:33:43
Amazing book, 'Remember Me, Rescue Me' made this macho man cry. The stories of hope fantastic, those who couldn't be helped, heart-breaking. A must read, certainly, but you can't read this book and do nothing.

Luke Moller <St Ives, Cambridgeshire>
- 19-Fevereiro-2007 / 21:01:30
I have recently finished reading this book by Matt Roper - it is an inspirational and compelling read, I couldn't put it down. He really delves into the seedy underworld of the Brazilian prostitution rings - something which you would not necessarily notice when visiting as a tourist. These girls need and want help & he makes you want to do something about it. He has, as the title states, made sure they will not be forgotten.

Jackie Bowles <Bristol, United Kingdom>
- 19-Fevereiro-2007 / 11:44:17

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