- Escrava Anastacia
Escrava Anastacia is a popular
saint venerated inBrazil . Aslave woman ofAfrican descent, Anastacia is depicted as possessing incredible beauty, having piercing blue eyes and wearing an oppressive facemask. Not officially recognized by theCatholic Church , Anastacia is still an important figure in popular Catholic devotion throughout Brazil. She is also venerated by members of theUmbanda andSpiritist traditions. She has also been portrayed in Brazil in books, radio programs and a highly successful television miniseries bearing her name.History of the Saint
Without an official history, stories of Anastacia's life vary. Some place her birth in Africa-often to a royal family-while others emphasize her Brazilian origins. In all versions she is enslaved and cruelly treated by her owners. Anastacia stoically bears these traumas and treats all people with love. She is often purported to have possessed tremendous healing powers and to have performed other
miracles . Eventually, she is punished by her owners by being forced to wear a muzzle-like facemask that prevented her from speaking and a heavy iron collar. The reasons given for this punishment vary: some report her aiding in the escape of other slaves, others claim she resisted the amorous advances of her Master and yet another version places the blame on a Mistress jealous of her beauty. After a prolonged period of suffering, all the while performing more miracles of healing and peace, Anastacia dies oftetnus from the collar. It is often claimed that she healed the son of her Master and Mistress and forgave their cruelty as she died.History of Veneration
While there are reports of black Brazilians venerating an image of a slave woman wearing a facemask throughout the late 19th and early 20th century, the first wide-scale veneration of the Saint began in 1968 when the curators of the Museum of the Negro, located in the annex of the Church of the Rosary of the Brotherhood of
St. Benedict inRio , erected an exhibition to honor the 80th anniversary of the abolition of slavery in Brazil. Among the displays was an engraving of a female slave wearing a punishment facemask. The image soon became the object of popular devotion and members of the Brotherhood began collecting Anastacia stories in the early 1970s.In the 1980s, the cult of Anastacia expanded from her original, poor, black base to include many progressive, middle-class whites. In 1984, an effort funded by the oil company
Petrobras to officially canonize Anastacia brought her considerable attention. Seen as a symbol of racial harmony, her popularity expanded rapidly, especially among nurses, black women and prisoners. There were radio dramatizations of her life and on television a popular miniseries and investigative reports were produced. She was also integrated into the Umbanda faith as one of the pretos velhos, "old black slaves".In 1987, the Catholic Church declared that Anastacia never existed and her image was removed from Church-owned properties. However, by this time, several independent shrines had been erected in Rio which exist to this day.
Veneration Today
Like other Saints, devotion to Anastacia is a deeply personal experience amongst those who venerate her. The primary arena of this devotion is the use of small images--like prayer cards, medallions, statuettes, candles, etc--through which the devotee prays for Anastacia to interceed on her behalf. Many also say prayers to Anastacia in times of difficulty or crisis. Often, devotees respond to intercessions by pilgrimage to one of several popular shrines. Here small offerings like flowers, jewelry, prayer cards and medallions are given to the image of the Saint.
Miniseries
In
1990 , aminiseries entitled "Escrava Anastacia" was produced for Brazilian television. Directed byHenrique Martins , written byPaulo César Coutinho and starringÂngela Correa , it portrayed Anastacia as aNigerian princess captured byslavers . The image of Anastacia healing the son of her oppressors is an innovation developed for this program.Sources
*Blessed Anastacia (1998) by John Burdick:"Blessed Anastacia: Women, Race, and Popular Christianity in Brazil" Burdick, John, Paperback, Book, ISBN 0415912601
*Escrava Anastacia (ministries, 1990) at the Internet Movie Database (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0229124/)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.