logo
Rio: Where joy rises, and the hills rejoice

Rio: Where joy rises, and the hills rejoice

Borneo Post4 days ago
'You shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace; the mountains and the hills will break forth before you…' — Isaiah 55:12
High above Rio, Christ the Redeemer 'watches' in silence.
RIO de Janeiro is a city where joy is not merely found in its people, colours or its music, but it arises from the land itself.
From the sunrise over Guanabara Bay, the seabirds soaring over the Atlantic and the stretched wide arms of Christ the Redeemer atop Corcovado Mountains – there is beauty and joy unlimited.
After writing about the colours of Rio – the bohemian flair of Santa Teresa, the vibrant steps of Selarón, and the carnival of sights and sounds at the Hippie Market – I turned my gaze upward and outward.
The nature of Rio calls just as loudly and boldly as its culture and people.
Its mountains and seas offer a different kind of beauty, one that is steady, grounding, and quietly transcendent.
And as I stood before these wonders, the words of an old hymn came to mind: 'You shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace; the mountains and the hills will break forth before you… and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.'
High above Rio, on the 710-metre Corcovado peak, stands the Christ the Redeemer statue, 'Cristo Redentor'.
I have seen countless photos of this wonder and read about its symbolism and stature before I came, but nothing prepares me for seeing it in person.
The journey up began at 7.20am through the Tijuca Forest, where a lush green corridor came alive with birdsong and mist.
As the narrow road brought me upward, excitement and anticipation built up with every turn.
Reaching the summit, the statue emerged – not just as a monument of reinforced concrete and soapstone, but it is a presence.
The wide open arms was a gesture that did not domineer, but one that was embracing, forgiving, sheltering and most of all, unafraid.
There and then, I felt the gentleness of that open and welcoming arms – perhaps that was one of the reasons Christ the Redeemer was named one of the 'New Seven Wonders of the World'.
It is not just the sheer size – 30 metres high, with arms stretching 28 metres wide – but the way it commands the landscape.
The magnificent stature does not give a feeling that it is looking down in judgement, but, for a while, I feel it is gazing over the city with quiet compassion.
My tour guide, in his wisdom, suggested that we start early so that there would not be many tourists and that I could feel and think the message 'Christ the Redeemer' bringing in its personal way to me.
I found myself simply still. There was surely something about the wind up there and the proximity to the sky, which made the noise inside fall silent.
Perhaps it was peace, or awe – or both.
In the distance, the hills did seem to break forth. The song felt real.
From one marvel to another: Sugarloaf Mountain, or 'Pão de Açúcar', stands as a watchful monument at the entrance of Guanabara Bay.
If Christ the Redeemer is Rio's spiritual crown, then the Sugarloaf is its 'lighthouse' – watching over the coast.
Bernard said the Portuguese colonisers named the mountain 'Sugarloaf' because its granite peak resembled the conical sugar moulds used for sugar refinement during the 16th century.
The summit of Sugarloaf Mountain provides a complete view of Rio de Janeiro.
The cable car ride up Sugarloaf is in itself an adventure.
Suspended in a glass capsule, standing inside, you feel that you are floating between the sea and the sky with the city below shrinking into a mosaic of red roofs, green parks, and sapphire water.
The city exists between mountain ranges and ocean-fronts as a natural masterpiece that connects through its grand landscapes.
The air at this height carries a distinct salty flavour while birds glide effortlessly through the sky as if happiness had a physical form.
According to Bernard, many tourists are making a trip up to Sugarloaf for the sunset view.
He described that as the sun began to set, the entire landscape turned gold. The bay shimmered like liquid brass.
Even though it was not a sunset when I visited, the line from Isaiah returned: 'All the trees of the field shall clap their hands.'
It is not hard to believe that creation itself is celebrating.
There's something poetic, even divine, about Rio de Janeiro's topography.
It is a city defined by extremes – high peaks and low bays, sacred silence and samba rhythms, solitude and celebration.
These contrasts do not compete, but they complement.
The mountains remind us to look up. The seas remind us to let go.
Together, they offer a geography of grace.
It's easy to be overwhelmed by Rio's man-made marvels – its music, its food, its football – but nature always has the last word.
The mountains and seas were here long before colonists arrived, or concrete was poured – and they will remain long after we're gone.
For me, Rio wasn't just a city to tick off a travel list.
It became a place of personal reflection.
As someone used to the quiet hills of Borneo, I felt an unexpected kinship with Rio's rugged terrain. It felt familiar yet foreign, distant, yet deeply intimate.
Christ the Redeemer and Sugarloaf may be landmarks, but they are also metaphors – for hope, for faith, for resilience.
I left Rio with many photographs, but the image that stayed in my heart was not a perfect sunset or a bustling street.
It was the silhouette of the Christ statue, arms open to the wind, framed by clouds that seemed to clap in joy.
In a world that moves at fast pace and stressful, Rio's mountains and seas offer a kind of healing.
Not the loud kind, but the quiet and enduring kind.
So yes, I did go out with joy. I was led forth in peace. The mountains broke forth before me – not in grand explosions, but in quiet reminders of wonder.
And the trees?
I swear I heard them clap. brazil Christ the Redeemer Corcovado Mountains Guanabara Bay Rio de Janeiro
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What to Do — And Not to Do — About a Judge Like Emil Bove
What to Do — And Not to Do — About a Judge Like Emil Bove

The Intercept

timea few seconds ago

  • The Intercept

What to Do — And Not to Do — About a Judge Like Emil Bove

Emil Bove, the nominee to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, is sworn in before his confirmation hearing in the Senate on June 25, 2025, in Washington. Photo: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images President Donald Trump's second term has so far been a constant barrage of unconstitutional actions and illegal orders. So it was thus no surprise when the Senate on Monday confirmed Trump's former personal lawyer and Justice Department lackey, Emil Bove, to a lifetime appointment on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. That 50 Republican senators would install this fascist bootlicker to one of the most powerful judicial positions in the land for life is, as MSNBC legal analyst Andrew Weissmann put it, 'a nail in the coffin' for a system of checks and balances on authoritarian presidential overreach. There's a risk, however, after a grave blow like this to legal, political, and constitutional norms, that liberal epitaphs to the American constitutional order will mourn the wrong thing. Bove's appointment confirms something worse than the Republican embrace of lawlessness. He represents the Republicans' use and abuse of our fraught constitutional order for the purposes of enacting profound, life-denying, and long-lasting injustices to uphold a white nationalist regime. Liberal epitaphs to the American constitutional order risk mourning the wrong thing. Calling on the restoration of preexisting norms of law and constitutionality to reverse course will be, at best, insufficient. After all, liberal reliance on a system of order above justice helped deliver us Trump and his jurist enablers in the first place. This is not to understate how appalling it is that Bove has been appointed a federal judge. 'It is one thing to put lab-designed Federalist Society members on courts across the country — and, to be clear, several of Trump's nominees from his first administration went far beyond that,' wrote legal journalist Chris Geidner when Trump nominated Bove, 'but it is another thing altogether to name a lawless loyalist to a federal appeals court.' Geidner called Bove's confirmation a 'line that cannot be crossed.' It has now been crossed. Bove is perhaps best known as the Justice Department official who dismissed corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams — a decision that led more than 10 Justice Department attorneys to resign in protest. He fired federal prosecutors who had worked on January 6 cases. According to three Justice Department whistleblower accounts, Bove also told federal attorneys that they 'would need to consider telling the courts 'fuck you'' and ignore orders blocking the administration from sending immigrants to El Salvador's gulag. Over 900 former Justice Department attorneys, identifying with both parties, wrote letters opposing Bove's judgeship. Yet Republican senators refused to hear whistleblower testimony and dismissed the widespread concerns about Bove as Democratic meddling. As usual, they did what the president asked. Bove's new, permanent position assures more serious harms to come. Given how few cases are heard by the Supreme Court, the 3rd Circuit is most often the final voice in the law for cases from Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Bove has made unwaveringly clear that, for him, the law is the president's will. This position is now standard in the Republican Party and all too consistently affirmed by a Supreme Court majority committed to unitary executive theory to vest authoritarian powers in Trump's hands. Earlier this month, Geidner posted on social media that 'should Bove be confirmed — which he should not be — he should immediately be the subject of an impeachment inquiry should Dems retake Congress.' Based on his actions at the Department of Justice, there are ample grounds to call for impeachment. Democrats should vow to do this immediately. Senate Democrats carry significant blame for Bove's judgeship, too. Senate Democrats, after all, carry significant blame for Bove's judgeship, too. His seat should have been filled by Biden nominee, Adeel Mangi, who would have been the first Muslim judge on a federal appeals court. Instead of shutting down vile, Islamophobic Republican attacks against Mangi, Senate Democrats allowed the smears to gain ground and eventually stood down on the nomination. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Tuesday said, 'To confirm Mr. Bove is a sacrilegious act against our democracy.' He did not mention that, when he was Senate majority leader, he permitted a relentless Islamophobic campaign to tank Mangi, a qualified nominee, which left the judge's seat open for Trump's taking. The Democratic establishment may lament Bove's confirmation as 'a dark, dark day,' but we have no reason to think that this party leadership will bring us toward the light. Geidner's suggestion — to pursue impeachment — would be the very least that Democrats can do. What they should already be doing is using every tool in their power to hinder Trump's deportation machine. Given the Democrats' own vile embrace of harsh border rule, I am not holding my breath. The judges who have continued to push back directly against Trump's illegal actions, meanwhile, remain a crucial constraint on some of the administration's worst attacks on our rights. These judges are under unprecedented attack. On the same day Bove was confirmed, Trump's Justice Department filed a baseless misconduct complaint against U.S. District Judge James Boasberg. In March, Boasberg issued an order to block deportation flights to El Salvador under Trump's invocation of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act — the very sort of order that Bove reportedly told attorneys to say 'fuck you' to. In an obscene retaliatory escalation, the Justice Department's complaint claims that Boasberg's alleged comments — that the administration could trigger a 'constitutional crisis' by disregarding court orders — 'have undermined the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.' The complaint says that the administration has 'always complied with all court orders.' The idea that it constitutes judicial misconduct to suggest otherwise, despite clear evidence of the executive's disregard for certain unfavorable court orders, is the sort of authoritarian logic that obviates concerns about a constitutional crisis in the worst way: There can be no crisis if fascist rule silences all constitutional pushback. Then the problem is not a constitutional order in crisis, but a fascist order without opposition. This is not yet the state of affairs. The courts — certain courts, at least — are not yet a dead end. It should be increasingly clear, however, that they will not deliver us from fascism either. As legal scholar Aziz Rana wrote earlier this year, the left should 'strongly back litigation efforts and condemn Trump's defiance of the courts,' but not because the courts are a terrain of liberatory struggle. Rana is clear that 'the reason to oppose Trump's violation of court orders is not out of a general faith in judges or constitutional norms,' but because they are a tool, however limited, for protecting people and holding the administration to account. The affront at the heart of Bove's confirmation is not that he does not respect the law — although that should no doubt be disqualifying for a judge. If that's where we object, however, we risk lionizing a criminal legal system that also gives rise to racist policing and mass incarceration. Bove's violence lies primarily in his commitment to a form of injustice that ensures impunity for the corrupt and powerful, while the poorest and most vulnerable are treated as wholly disposable. The infamous advice Bove allegedly gave to ignore court orders over deportations was a 'fuck you' to the Constitution and the rule of law, yes, but above all it was a 'fuck you' to the over 200 men who were rounded up, kidnapped, shaved, beaten, and tortured in a foreign gulag without any recourse. It was a 'fuck you' to human beings. It should go without saying that the constitutional order in and of itself has never in practice guaranteed equality and justice for all. The constitutionalization of slavery's abolition and many basic civil rights protections took extraordinary social struggle and political work. The successful dismantling of the constitutional right to an abortion took decades of political organizing, too. Nothing in the Constitution guarantees progress. 'The great social movements of the past, from abolition to civil rights, labour to women's suffrage, famously called for the defiance of unjust court judgments that sustained slavery, segregation and disenfranchisement, or criminalized union organizing,' Rana noted. 'Considering the current right-wing control over the courts, the left may find itself in a similar place in the coming years, calling for civil disobedience of judicial authority.' With judges like Bove in place, such action will likely be all the more necessary.

Chargers vs. Lions: 4 biggest storylines ahead of Hall of Fame Game
Chargers vs. Lions: 4 biggest storylines ahead of Hall of Fame Game

USA Today

timea few seconds ago

  • USA Today

Chargers vs. Lions: 4 biggest storylines ahead of Hall of Fame Game

It's the Chargers' honor to kick off football season with the Hall of Fame Game on Thursday. We'll get a look at some key roster battles that have been brewing in the late stages of the summer. With that, let's look at a few storylines to watch for on Thursday evening. First glimpse at rookies The best thing about preseason is always getting the first look at the rookies who take the professional field for the first time. On Thursday, we'll get to see the likes of Omarion Hampton, Keandre Lambert-Smith, and Tre Harris take their talents to the NFL stage. In particular, Hampton has the potential to be ultra productive early on in his career. Don't expect him to play much, but it'll be a thrilling sight to see him in a Chargers uniform. Interior defensive line rotation The defensive line has been a question mark for the Chargers entering the 2025 season. Head coach Jim Harbaugh announced that Teair Tart is among the group of veterans who will not play on Thursday. That tells you his spot is locked in, but the rest of the defensive line rotation remains up in the air. Thursday will give us a look at who is in line to play the most amongst Naquan Jones, Otito Ogbonnia, and Jamaree Caldwell. Lineup at center Similar to the defensive line, the center position is another area of uncertainty heading into the season. While veteran Bradley Bozeman may very well start there again, the Chargers have tried some different options this summer. Zion Johnson, a left guard in his first few NFL seasons, has gotten some looks at center. He will see some snaps there on Thursday, the first look at him in game action at the position. Andre James may get some looks too, as he has plenty of starting experience at the center position. Pecking order at wide receiver Lambert-Smith and Harris have already been mentioned, and they will have a major impact on this wide receiver room this year. Veteran Jalen Reagor had a nice start to camp, but he's been absent from practice due to injury over the last week. Quentin Johnston has had some impressive moments this summer, but he also has had some timely drops. We'll see if anyone can make a name for themselves and sneak onto the 53-man roster after the recent retirement of Mike Williams.

Jay Glazer gives Broncos' weight room a glowing review
Jay Glazer gives Broncos' weight room a glowing review

USA Today

timea few seconds ago

  • USA Today

Jay Glazer gives Broncos' weight room a glowing review

NFL insider Jay Glazer is no stranger to strength and conditioning, having served as a trainer in mixed martial arts for professional football players and athletes over the years. So it should also be no surprise that he enjoys weight rooms and strength programs. Glazer recently visited the Denver Broncos' facilities and marveled at the club's weight room. Glazer loved it so much that he not only broadcast it to his X (formerly Twitter) account but also rated it the best weight room in the entire NFL. The weight room has become an essential part of the success of NFL athletes, pro athletes, and athletes worldwide. For the Broncos, it's clear that investing in their weight room is a big part of their success, and under Sean Payton, they will need it now more than ever as they look to build off their 10-7 season and make a deeper playoff run. Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/X! Did you know: These 25 celebrities are Broncos fans.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store