|
O novo nome da Igreja Batista Internacional de South Shore MA USA
|
LOCAL NEWS ‘PRAYING TO STAY’ - Far from Brazil: Pastor helps his flock adapt; Rockland congregation learns to be American while retaining Brazilian roots  Pastor Estacio Portela has a Brazilian ministry in Rockland that has grown out of a partnership with the Baptist church of the the Rev. Fred Boothman III. The Rev. Portela, a native of Brazil, has lived in the U.S. for five years. (AMELIA KUNHARDT/The Patriot Ledger) |
By ANDREW LIGHTMAN The Patriot Ledger ROCKLAND - Pastor Estacio Portela knows the loneliness that only comes when you are a stranger. The Brazilian minister at First Baptist Church moved to Rockland with his family almost five years ago, to spread his faith to the South Shore’s Portuguese-speaking community.
A native of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the Rev. Portela, 37, knew some English, but not nearly enough.
One day, unable to find the words he needed to buy curtains at Home Depot, he started to cry.
Living in a place he loved, surrounded by his wife and children, the Rev. Portela felt he did not belong.
It was at that moment, when the Rev. Portela understood his mission.
Since, he has worked to help his fellow immigrants adapt to life in this country.
‘‘We do what the country could not do (for us), in welcoming and preparing people who speak another language,’’ the Rev. Portela said.
According to the Brazilian Immigrant Center in Allston, there are more than 15,000 Brazilians living on the South Shore. Of those, many came to America to work and send money home to Brazil. Thousands more came to Massachusetts to build families and businesses, and make better lives for themselves.
‘‘I believe most of the people that attend this church want to stay here,’’ the Rev. Portela said. ‘‘They are praying to stay here.’’
‘‘God does not see us as immigrants,’’ he said.
It was a leap of faith that brought the Rev. Portela and his Portuguese wife, Fernanda, to Rockland, with their first two children, Rebeca, 9, and Israel, 6. The Rev. Portela said God, church and family sustained them through the first six months in America.
It was during that time when he met the Rev. Fred Boothman III, the senior pastor at First Baptist Church, who was looking for someone to help him reach the congregation’s growing Brazilian community.
After gaining a missionary’s visa, the Rev. Portela started his International Baptist Church in 2003 in the basement of First Baptist. It had 24 members.
Now the church has 150 regular visitors, and most members come to pray more than once a week, filling a spiritual void forged from the language barrier.
English classes started right away, as did seminars on employee rights, health at work and immigration. Furniture and warm clothes are given to the newest church members.
‘‘We don’t want to be only an immigrant church,’’ Portela said, ‘‘but a church that lasts to bless our neighborhood and our new country.’’
The church is effective because of the Rev. Portela’s passion, faith and humility, the Rev. Boothman said.
‘‘The faith that he lives is very real,’’ he said.
The youngest Portela, Deborah, 1, was born an American citizen.
The family is counting down the days until they can become citizens, having already suffered through the bureaucratic rigors of immigration.
Their story, and their experience, serve as a guide to those the Rev. Portela leads in worship, the Rev. Boothman said.
‘‘There’s nothing he can do legally (to help them become citizens), but he can show them what he did, what he went through,’’ the Rev. Boothman said. ‘‘He’s leading his church to trust God, that there are no shortcuts.’’
So far, things appear to be working.
The Brazilian church has its weddings, and feasts, and every few months it celebrates as another church member becomes a U.S. citizen.
Children are taught the Bible, and the Rev. Portela’s wife, who was born in Portugal, teaches traditional songs and dances.
The Rev. Portela believes his type of multicultural family will also become more mainstream on the South Shore, as the Brazilian community becomes more established.
English will soon become his church’s primary language as the children are educated in American schools.
The Brazilian culture will never disappear, however.
‘‘I found out the best way to be a good American is to be a good Brazilian,’’ the Rev. Portela said. ‘‘To be the way God designed me.’’
Andrew Lightman
Copyright 2007 The Patriot Ledger Transmitted Tuesday, May 08, 2007 By ANDREW LIGHTMAN
REGION Thursday, August 9, 2007 From The Boston Globe Newspaper http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2007/08/09/familiar_flag/ With an immigration boom, Brazilian businesses are popping up all over and expanding Eva Amaral (from left), her daughter, Lucia Bernardes, and Glaucio Malta having lunch at Terra Nossa market in Abington. 
Rev. Estacio Portela (left), whose church helps Brazilians feel settled, with Joao Jardim, the market's owner. (photos by MATTHEW J. LEE/GLOBE STAFF) By Milton J. Valencia, Globe Staff | August 9, 2007 The Rev. Estacio Portela notes the new workers and businesses as he makes his way along Union Street in Rockland. The auto-body shop may be owned by a Lebanese man, but it is run by Brazilians. And at Mike's Pizzeria, most of the delivery boys come from Brazil. Just blocks away, Alfa & Omega Hair Salon has a Brazilian flag in its window, a reflection of the owner's heritage. "So, how many businesses?" the reverend asks rhetorically. Many, he says, and the number keeps growing. Portelo says he's seen countless Brazilian-run companies expand in the past four years he's lived here, and he's noticed the same is true in adjoining towns. So strong is the influx that Catholic and Baptist pastors are holding services in Portuguese to accommodate the newcomers. Brazilians leaving the city life of Boston or moving north from Cape Cod to find jobs and cheaper housing are settling throughout the area, from Stoughton to Weymouth and Marshfield. They're opening markets in Abington and churches in Rockland, and joining the trades that fuel the region's construction boom. "The community is getting rooted in the country," said Josimar Salum, executive director of the Brazilian Ministers Network, a new group that aims to unite the growing number of Brazilian ministers and residents across the state. Immigrant-rights groups like to call the Brazilian population the "invisible minority that everyone sees," because even though US Census figures give them bragging rights as the latest and largest immigration wave, the population still is said to be under-estimated. Census surveys from 2005 show that the number of Brazilian-born people living in the state has nearly tripled since 2000, from 30,000 to 84,836. Yet immigrant-rights groups say the number is far greater -- perhaps more like 200,000 -- based on data from the Brazilian Consulate General in Boston from 2003 and records of passport renewals. One group uses Department of Public Health records to show that the number of babies born to Brazilian mothers is the fastest growing among ethnic groups. More than any other form of record-keeping, the groups use as their guide the membership count in churches, such as the International Baptist Church of Portela's in Rockland. "We're seeing a lot of Brazilians in the area, more churches, more businesses," said Fausto Mendes da Rocha, executive director of the Brazilian Immigrant Center in Allston. "Especially in the South Shore," he said. "It's a community growing faster than other areas." He lives in Randolph and attends church in Abington, where a growing Brazilian population has opened new businesses and assumed management of old ones. "They're in this country here to work, to enjoy the dream of being here, so they adapted," said Robert E. Wing, chairman of the Abington Board of Selectmen. Page 2 of 2 -- • "They've become part of the community and adapted just fine. They're not any different. They're neighbors." At one shopping plaza on Route 18, a Brazilian church is adjacent to a martial arts studio that teaches Brazilian jiujitsu and capoeira, the Brazilian form of dance fighting. At the center of the plaza, the Terra Nossa supermarket offers the area's largest supply of Brazilian-imported goods. The market is in a typical suburban strip mall, but the green and yellow flags posted on its windows send a signal that the place is Brazilian. "I tried to find a place for Brazilians everywhere," said Joao Jardim, the owner of Terra Nossa. He opened the market more than two years ago, after his success with a similar market in Brockton. In Abington, he's found a central location for a scattered immigrant group that, not long ago, had to go to Boston to find the Brazilian soda known as Guaraná Antartica, or Minas Frescal, an imported cheese. Jardim compared the area's influx of Brazilians to the immigration wave that hit Framingham two decades ago, making the Brazilian population in that city one of the largest in the country. Many South Shore area residents are becoming familiar with the goods and services that come with Brazilian culture. Bill Smith of Abington visited Terra Nossa recently to explore the goods and foods offered there. "It was just to see what it was like, to try something new," said Smith, who asked his neighbor, Silvio Mato, a Brazilian, to translate the Portuguese writing on the products. "I'll be going back there. I like different types of food, and diversity." Portela likes the mandioca flour for cakes and bread. It does the same thing wheat can do, only it tastes better, he said. Does he miss his homeland? "We don't miss the country that much," he said. "We still feel connected in many ways." He immigrated here four years ago after he found in an earlier visit to see his sister in Rockland that there were few churches to serve the needs of his people -- not only Brazilians, but people who speak only Portuguese. Churches like Portela's that cater to immigrants do more than serve as a place of worship. They're networking centers, where people can meet others who find themselves in a new land with little family and few friends. Most of the Brazilians living here are young couples with children. "These people really need a connection," Portela said. "This kind of ministry is different." He's benefited just as much as anyone, having found a sense of purpose when he, himself, arrived. The reverend is still getting accustomed to life here. Although his English is good, he studies daily, keeping a notebook of words he memorizes. On a recent day they included "ratify," "flaw," and "liability." Later, he struggled to say "bureaucracy." He is proficient enough to put himself on a list of translators in case of an emergency in the area. He stops at businesses throughout town, inviting residents to church functions he's planned. Sometimes there are movies or music classes. He's found new friends who are auto mechanics, or who work in construction or landscaping. Recently, a new member of his church told Portela of how he just opened his own restoration company, Express Clean, after years laboring in the business. "He said, 'Pastor, can you pray for me?' " Portela said. And he will. Milton J. Valencia can be reached at Valencia@globe.com. © Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
|
|