Tags
Boa Vista/Roraima/Brazil, Brazilian Poet Eli Macuxi, Gay Love, LGBTQ+ Community, Poem “For Your Hypocrisy With a Kiss” by Eli Macuxi, Poema “Pra Sua Hipocrisia Com Um Beijo” por Eli Macuxi, Same-sex Love

Photo Credit: Blog Elimacuxi, Pure Poetry
My Poetry Corner June 2023 features the poem “For Your Hypocrisy With a Kiss” (Pra Sua Hipocrisia Com Um Beijo) by Brazilian poet, photographer, historian, and teacher Elisangela Martins, who self-identifies as Eli Macuxi or Elimacuxi. She teaches History and Art Criticism in the Visual Arts Course at the Federal University of Roraima with special interest in feminism and gender identity/orientation. As a historian and photographer, she has partnered with the Association of Transvestites and Transexuals of Roraima in fighting for human rights.
Born in 1973 in the City of São Paulo, she grew up in a favela on the periphery where, for the first ten years of her life, she faced hunger and begged on the streets. Her semi-illiterate father, from the Northeastern State of Ceará, taught her to read and write. With a childhood fascination for verse and encouraged by a teacher, she began writing poetry in fifth grade. At fifteen, she dreamed of having her work read and studied by others:
“But the desire was totally blunted by the pessimistic awareness of reality,” confides the poet on her blog. “I was a skinny teenager, without luck of getting a job, studying at night school on the periphery, ‘daughter of a drunkie,’ with lots of younger siblings. To be a writer? Poet? It was laughable.”
In 1990, as a seventeen-year-old night school student and receptionist at a pharmacy during the day, she married a much older man. Giving birth to triplets soon after did not bode well for their marriage. Before the triplet’s second birthday, her husband had had enough and left them. A divorcee and back home with her parents, she worked for two years at several part-time jobs before securing a steady job as a waitress at a high-end restaurant.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons (Sales Neto/BR)
Her future changed after a three-month stint in 1998 as a research assistant for a project in Boa Vista, the capital of the State of Roraima—Brazil’s most northern state which shares borders with Guyana and Venezuela. She discovered a better quality of life in the small, spatial city of less than 200,000 people. In January 2000, she and her partner moved with her three girls to Boa Vista.
For the first time, she saw the possibility of furthering her academic studies. After earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in history at the Federal University of Roraima in 2003, she never looked back. In 2007, she temporarily moved to Manaus to earn a Master’s Degree at the Federal University of Amazonas. On her return to Boa Vista, she taught history at the Federal Institution of Roraima from 2009 to 2013.
In her poem, “Ave Roraima,” published on her blog in 2009, Elimacuxi sings praise to the region that had transformed her life:
Ave Roraima that sings like the mythical bird. In the heart of those charmed by its enchanting lyrics flowing rivers, warm colors blazing plowed land burn howler monkeys in heat cry out. Even those who come by asphalt From the noise and the dust When you see, it is Roraimeira Pretoneuberliakin... Ave Roraima that sings Love that enters and replaces All the evil in me!
While she pursued higher learning, her love for poetry never waned. She started her blog, Elimacuxi, Pure Poetry, in 2008 and began publishing her poetry in numerous anthologies of poetry, literary magazines, and newspapers. In 2013, she published her first and only book of poetry, Love For Those Who Hate (Amor Para Quem Odeia), which portrays love in its various forms of human experience. Inspiration for the title poem came from a classroom discussion about same-sex love. Because I don’t understand or accept the discourse of hatred against love, the poet notes at the end of the poem.
Her poem, “Abomination,” questions our “perfect world” in which violence, intolerance, exploitation, hatred, and misunderstanding rule the day against what some perceive as an abomination of deviant lifestyles.
We are skillful in survival blacks, poor people, whores transvestites, gays, daredevils we move about dangerously free becoming a risk for you who don’t change, who have no doubt, for you who willingly live the script and remain half giddy to see how we reaffirm in the crooked lines of marginalization our existence and pride our resistance against your humiliation.
In her poem, “Law of Life,” Elimacuxi speaks of hate that drips and spreads within our failed lives. It dirties the floor where [we] tread and blocks the way. Like a faulty razor blade, this hate causes pain to all involved. She concludes: A wise friend taught me: / life has no mercy / and if it’s just pain that you sow / only pain will be harvested.
In the featured seven-verse poem “For Your Hypocrisy With a Kiss,” published on her blog in 2018, Eli Macuxi calls out the hypocrisy of people who are horrified by gay love, but are blind to the abomination and injustices around us: war, environmental degradation, unemployment, hunger, childhood prostitution, and lack of healthcare. The following excerpt comprise verses 1, 2, 6, and 7:
did you see? war is kissing the earth exploding child, old, church, man, woman did you see? did you see? greed kissing the environment destroying river, plant, hill, mammal, snake did you see? […] did you see? that in the hospital the unfairness of the powerful kisses everyone with their delay and in full agony, without beds or materials the arrogant overflows with kisses of indifference did you see? did you see? tell me if you saw those kisses? or if you are one of those who only sees, is horrified and upset with gay love kisses in soap operas?
To read the complete featured poem in English and the original Portuguese version, as well as learn more about the work of Eli Macuxi, go to my Poetry Corner June 2023.
She has surmounted the tribulations of such a life and turned them into most meaningful verse
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Without a doubt, Derrick! Thanks very much 🙂
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You nailed it! I deeply admire people who can rise from terribly difficult circumstances and go on to achieve their dreams! She is inspiring!
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Thank you, Tamara
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😀☺️
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She is inspiring, indeed, Tamara! In addition to the featured poem, I also had to share her story.
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I’m so glad you did! We all need to hear more about people who achieve in spite of the odds stacked against them!
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Her life experiences gave her a powerful voice. Long may it sing. Thanks for sharing, Rosaline. Allan
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My pleasure, Allan 🙂 Couldn’t agree more.
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Thank you, Rosaliene, for presenting poetry that confronts what we don’t see, what we turn from, and what we rationalize and deny in ourselves. Very powerful.
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It’s a pleasure, Dr. Stein 🙂 She does, indeed, force us to question our distorted view of others.
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Thank you for bringing this wonderful writer into my universe. Truly beautiful and truthful. 💚
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You’re most welcome, Bev. Thanks for dropping by 🙂
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What a life, and what an incredible woman and poet. Thanks for bringing her to us Rosaliene. Maggie
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My pleasure, Maggie 🙂 Her incredible humanity shines through her poetry.
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Her voice speaks to injustices that transcend gender. She was able to turn a difficult life around with an impressive show of strength.
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She did, indeed, Pablo. What’s also amazing is that, as an adolescent, she did not succumb to drugs like some of her school friends.
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A difficult and amazing life, and a fantastic poet. That excerpt from “For Your Hypocrisy With a Kiss” is exceptional. Thanks, Rosaliene, for widening our horizons with excellent writers who we might not have been aware of.
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You’re most welcome, Dave 🙂 I’m happy to be able to share the work of Caribbean and Brazilian poets who are not well known in the USA.
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What a life & what a poem! Thank you, Rosaliene, for introducing me to this poet’s amazing voice! 💓🙋♂️
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My pleasure, Ashley! So glad that you like her work 🙂
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Thank you, Rosaliene, for introducing me to Brazilian Poet Eli Macuxi. Triplets at 17 – what resilience! I look forward to reading more of her work.
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My pleasure, Sunnyside 🙂 She mentions in her autobiography that “it was only noticed that I had three children in my womb in the eighth month of pregnancy, on the eve of Father’s Day.” Sounds like very poor prenatal care.
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Can you even imagine THAT??! I wonder what happened to those precious children…
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I know! The triplets are adults now. Elimacuxi doesn’t mention them in her concise online autobiography.
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I am always looking forward to your poetry introductions. I thought you needed to know that in case I haven’t mention it before.
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Thanks for letting me know, Bridget 🙂 Great poetry has the power to uplift us when we’re down; to heal us when we’re broken.
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So true.
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She is a very strong and determined person. Considering the conditions she grew up in, it’s admirable that she is where she is today.
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Neil, I also found this very admirable. Her life is an inspiration of how much we can achieve with self-determination.
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She’s been through a lot but she never disposed of her skill!
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So true, Zet Ar! I suspect that poetry was her saving grace.
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A very sharp difference of what she could achieve in life once she had managed to transform her life with an education.
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So true, John. Education makes an immense difference in our lives.
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And that it why it is such a pity that the glorious leaders of so many poor countries can’t be bothered to start up even the simplest of education schemes.
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In spite of the harsh challenges she experienced, she maintains elements of love and hope in her writing while exposing injustice and inconsistency. I appreciate these hints of light in the darkness.
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JoAnna, I also appreciate the light she shrines in the darkness. In lifting herself up from a life of destitution, she brings real-life experience to her poetry.
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Thank you for sharing!!.. someone who has courage and compassion and rather than succumb to the fears of her mind, followed the dreams of her heart!.. like you, she would be a role model for many in today’s world!… 🙂
Hope all is well in your part of the universe and until we meet again..
May the dreams you hold dearest
Be those which come true
May the kindness you spread
Keep returning to you
(Irish Saying)
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You’re welcome, Dutch. Thanks for your kind words 🙂
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Such an incredible poet . Truly amazing writer. Anita
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Thanks very much, Anita. Glad you like her work 🙂
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