rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one, or recover it when possible. x


Russian community in Brazil
#1

Russian community in Brazil

Gents,

Many RVF'ers appreciate Brazilian and / or Russian women. What about Russian-Brazilian women? The following 4-minute-long video (in Portuguese), recorded in 1999, is on an Amish-like close-knit community of approximately 70 Russians and Russian-Brazilians in Montividiu, Goiás:






Even if you don't understand spoken Brazilian Portuguese, you can get the gist of it easily. Some facts:
  • Their ancestors came to Brazil in between 1917 (right after the Bolshevik Revolution) and the late 1950s. They are devout Orthodox Christians.
  • The kids' first language is Russian. They also learn Greek at religious classes. They learn Brazilian Portuguese later. The kids are not allowed to watch TV since "there's too much freedom on TV".
  • They try to marry other Orthodox Christians from other traditional Russian communities spread around the world, but many leave the community and marry non-Russian, non-Orthodox Brazilians.
Probably not a good place to look for an easy bang, but certainly a good place to look for a traditional wife to birth and raise your children. There are Polish communities in Brazil similar to this one, also, though Catholic and less strict.

"The great secret of happiness in love is to be glad that the other fellow married her." – H.L. Mencken
Reply
#2

Russian community in Brazil

Check this article out from the New York Times a few years back. It talks about model scouting in the German-descendent areas of Brazil, where a big chunk of the world's models come from. Watch the video and you'll see some stunning genes. They are scouting young girls in high school, but you can just tell they will be stunning as adult women.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/08/world/...odels.html
Reply
#3

Russian community in Brazil

I watched an interesting documentary some time ago about a Russian guy from Moscow who went to Brazil to find a Russian wife from one of those Amish-like communities. Can't find it on youtube, but basically the guy thought the chicks in Moscow were too money hungry and slutty (not without a reason). He wanted to find a Russian wife from a traditional religious community. He visited, talked to some girls there, but didn't bang anybody or bring anybody back to Moscow. The people in that video looked like typical remote village people to me: hard working, religious and isolated.

I don't think I'd look for a wife among these people, though I would like to visit and talk to them, find out what happened to their version of Russian language which is probably bastardized by now.... or could be the opposite, maybe it's pure and traditional, the kind of Russian people don't speak anymore. Also, I don't like the typical village look in girls, doesn't matter if they're Russian or not.
Reply
#4

Russian community in Brazil

There are some comunities lik that also in Argentina, Paraguay and Bolivia, inmigrants that created they own reductions and dont get too mixed with the general population by religious/political reasons. I remeber an ukranian colony in Misiones, and a German one (amish this time) in Bolivia, near Santa Cruz.

"What is important is to try to develop insights and wisdom rather than mere knowledge, respect someone's character rather than his learning, and nurture men of character rather than mere talents." - Inazo Nitobe

When i´m feeling blue, when i just need something to shock me up, i look at this thread and everything get better!

Letters from the battlefront: Argentina
Reply
#5

Russian community in Brazil

Found a video in Russian about "Staroobriadcy" - the traditional Orthodox christians from Russia who lived in Brazil and then moved to Russia.




Reply
#6

Russian community in Brazil

Quote: (11-17-2013 03:02 PM)Brodiaga Wrote:  

I would like to visit and talk to them, find out what happened to their version of Russian language which is probably bastardized by now.... or could be the opposite, maybe it's pure and traditional, the kind of Russian people don't speak anymore.

Two adult women are shown in the 1999 video:
  • The blonde one was born in Argentina, lived in the U.S., and then moved to Brazil to marry Samuil Ivanoff, the bearded farmer.
  • The bespectacled one was imported directly from Russia to teach Religion and Greek to the kids. She speaks modern Russian, I assume, so the community seems to be in touch with modern Russian.

"The great secret of happiness in love is to be glad that the other fellow married her." – H.L. Mencken
Reply
#7

Russian community in Brazil

Quote: (11-17-2013 03:14 PM)Brodiaga Wrote:  

Found a video in Russian about "Staroobriadcy" - the traditional Orthodox christians from Russia who lived in Brazil and then moved to Russia.

Here's the same video in English:





"The great secret of happiness in love is to be glad that the other fellow married her." – H.L. Mencken
Reply
#8

Russian community in Brazil

There's only 70 of them so probably would be pretty tough to blow in there and start gaming))

There are other bigger communities of numerous European immigrants from a century or so ago in southern Brazil - including Germans, Dutch, Ukrainians and a few others.

Guy I knew down there married a Brazilian-Dutch girl who's first language was Dutch and who had been there for generations but looked like she just got off the boat from Holland...blonde hair/blue eyes/tall etc.

2015 RVF fantasy football champion
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)