
‘God chose you, Jair Bolsonaro!' Is Brazil now in the grip of evangelicals?
The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.
But what caught Costa's eye in the footage was Bolsonaro's gaze. As he shouted into the microphone, the paratrooper-turned-populist repeatedly looked – seemingly seeking validation – at one particular man in his entourage: the televangelist Silas Malafaia. In response, the evangelical leader appeared to be lip-syncing along to the president's every word. 'I watched the scene many times,' says film-maker Costa, 'and the only conclusion I can draw is that Malafaia wrote Bolsonaro's speech. If not, how could he have known every word?'
This footage provides a compelling moment in the 41-year-old's new documentary, Apocalypse in the Tropics. Oscar-nominated for The Edge of Democracy, her previous film about Brazil's descent into populism, Costa this time explores the growing influence of evangelical leaders in the country's political process. 'This film is about Brazil,' she says, 'but the story is part of a global phenomenon of religious motivations undermining democracies. We've seen the rise of religious fundamentalism joined by a nationalist, conservative and extremist agenda all over the world – from the US to Russia.'
In many ways, the new film is a continuation of the critically acclaimed previous documentary, which charted the unravelling of the democratic fabric of Latin America's largest country with rare, behind-the-scenes access to key moments in recent politics, including the rise to power of backbench congressman Bolsonaro.
Now, through the lens of what she describes as the growing influence of Christian religious fundamentalism, Costa updates that story, covering events such as the January 2023 riot in which Bolsonaro supporters ransacked the presidential palace, Congress and the supreme court. As investigations by the federal police and the public prosecutor's office later concluded, the uprising was allegedly the climax of a coup attempt that began while Bolsonaro was still in power.
A central figure in Apocalypse in the Tropics is 66-year-old Malafaia, one of Brazil's most prominent preachers, with whom Costa and her team, which includes producer Alessandra Orofino, conducted about a dozen interviews. Although Bolsonaro had contact with many other Christian leaders during his four-year term, the film-maker believes none wielded as much influence over the president as Malafaia. In 2022, the evangelist even joined the Brazilian president's delegation to London for Queen Elizabeth II's funeral. 'Next to him,' she says, 'Bolsonaro almost seems diminished – like a child in front of a master.'
In September 2018, just two days after being elected, Bolsonaro took to the stage at Malafaia's church, greeted by chants of 'Myth! Myth!', as he is known, from the hundreds of worshippers present. Before handing the microphone to him, Malafaia paraphrased a passage from Corinthians, saying: 'God chose the foolish things to shame the wise … God chose the lowly things, those of little value, the despised, the discarded, those that are nothing … to shame the things that are – so that no flesh may boast before Him. That's why God chose you!' He then pointed to Bolsonaro, who listened with a furrowed brow.
Apocalypse in the Tropics also captures a private meeting between the two, inside the presidential office, in which the preacher recalls officiating at Bolsonaro's wedding. The far-right leader identifies as Catholic but his wife, Michelle, is a Baptist. Malafaia says: 'We were waiting for the bride … and this guy came up to me. I say 'this guy' because we're friends … and said, 'Malafaia, I'm going to run for president.' And I said, 'Are you out of your mind?' … I left thinking, 'This guy is crazy.''
Shortly after, Costa asks the president if he will follow through on his promise to nominate someone 'terribly evangelical' to a vacant supreme court seat. 'Yes,' he replies. 'Many people come to us with fantastic CVs, but the first requirement is to be evangelical. And, of course, after that, also having legal knowledge.' Bolsonaro kept his promise, appointing another preacher to the court. In fact, such was the religious influence over Bolsonaro's administration that Costa found herself wondering if Brazil was turning into a theocracy – a process she believes was halted by Lula's election, although the risk, with new elections coming next year, 'remains very much alive'.
Although the former president is barred from running until 2030 by an electoral court ruling, polls suggest that any candidates backed by him – including his wife or one of his sons – could pose a serious challenge to Lula, who has already confirmed he will seek re-election.
We approached Bolsonaro about all the claims in this article but his team did not respond.
The film weaves together interviews, archive footage and Costa's narration, accompanied by closeups of apocalyptic paintings such as the depictions of the Last Judgment by Fra Angelico and Hans Memling. The rise of evangelicals in Brazil is described as 'one of the fastest religious shifts in human history'. In recent years, alongside a congress that grows more conservative with each election, gospel singers and religious influencers have become superstars, while Brazil's still immensely popular telenovelas, or soaps, have increasingly incorporated evangelical characters and storylines into their plots.
Some experts even predict that Protestants, Baptists, Pentecostals and neo-Pentecostals will at some point become the majority in Brazil – the country with the largest Catholic population in the world. The documentary says they are now 'over 30%' of the population, although new census data released last month – after the film had been finalised – showed they make up only 27%, which nonetheless marks a significant increase since 1970, when they were 5.2%. Catholics declined from 91% to 57% over the same period. As they make up more than a quarter of the population, evangelicals represent a major challenge for any non-conservative candidate, such as President Lula, who faces deep resistance from them.
Apocalypse in the Tropics depicts an exchange between a mother and her teenage daughter inside their home, during Brazil's 2018 presidential campaign. The mother says she plans to vote for Bolsonaro 'because he's a man of God'. She adds that Lula, although 'also a man of God', is 'from Candomblé' – an Afro-Brazilian religion that faces persecution from some Christian groups. In reality, Lula is Catholic, but he has expressed support for Afro-Brazilian faiths.
The mother then asks her daughter to look up a photo of Lula 'receiving the sword of Xangô'. In fact, it was an axe – a symbol of the orixá, a divine spirit associated with justice. It was a gift to Lula from a university rector in 2017. As the girl begins typing 'Lula' on her phone, the autocomplete turns up phrases such as 'being consecrated to the devil' and 'supports unisex bathrooms'.
The film is not, however, intended as a critique of any specific religion, says Costa, but rather of the 'political manipulation of faith, which poses one of the greatest threats to democracies around the world'. She recalls witnessing firsthand how the church can positively influence people's lives, citing preachers who provided 'physical, emotional and spiritual care' in favelas during the pandemic, offering food, jobs and even paying for ambulances.
'What we need is a more nuanced perspective,' Costa concludes. 'There won't be a war in which good defeats evil, not from the right, nor from the left. There must be dialogue – and that's complex and difficult.'
Apocalypse in the Tropics is on limited release in UK cinemas on 11 July, and available on Netflix on 14 July

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
9 hours ago
- Reuters
Brazil regulator suspends soy moratorium, orders probe of exporters
SAO PAULO, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Brazil's competition authority CADE has given grain traders in the world's largest soybean exporter 10 days to suspend a program called "soy moratorium" or face hefty fines, in a ruling seen by Reuters on Monday. The two-decade-old private pact seeks to protect the Amazon rainforest, by barring soybean traders from buying from farmers who cleared land there after July 2008, but it represents a potential breach of Brazilian competition law. In his signed decision, the agency's general superintendent Alexandre Barreto de Souza called for a full investigation into the signatories of the voluntary corporate program in which companies share commercially sensitive information. Firms wishing to apply soy moratorium criteria to buy soybeans grown in the Amazon "must do so independently and in accordance with national legislation," he wrote. However, environmental group Greenpeace said the ruling was the result of pressure from the farm lobby, compromising nearly two decades of progress. "By suspending the moratorium, CADE not only encourages deforestation but also silences consumers' right to choose products that do not contribute to the devastation of the Amazon," it said in a statement after the ruling was issued. The attacks on the pact "are political and favor precisely those who profit most from the destruction of the Amazon," it added. CADE's decision to suspend the program was "historic", said farmer group Aprosoja Mato Grosso. "For years, a private agreement without legal support has been imposing unfair trade barriers on farmers ... preventing the sale of crops grown in regular and licensed areas," it said in a statement. De Souza has given soy buyers and trade groups Anec and Abiove, which represent global grain handlers such as ADM (ADM.N), opens new tab, Bunge, Cargill, Louis Dreyfus and Cofco, 10 days to comply with the ruling. CADE's stance on the moratorium is "extremely worrisome" and will be appealed, Anec, which represents grain exporters, said in a statement, however. The program should stand as it is "a multi-sector pact" backed by civil society, the environment ministry and Brazil's environment agency Ibama, it added. Abiove, which represents oilseeds crushers, said it was "surprised" at the recommendation for a full-blown probe and imposition of preventive measures, adding in a statement that it would take steps to prove the pact was legal. CADE's preventive measures must be adopted by the soy moratorium's working group, including Anec and Abiove, and 30 grain companies that have signed up to the program, the ruling showed. It also ordered soy exporters to refrain from collecting, sharing, storing and disseminating commercially sensitive information related to the soy trade and the farmers with whom they do business. The order calls for the withdrawal of all soy moratorium information and related online publicity.


Reuters
10 hours ago
- Reuters
Brazil challenges legitimacy of US trade probe, urges dialogue
BRASILIA/SAO PAULO, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Brazil submitted its formal response to a U.S. trade investigation on Monday, rejecting the allegations while challenging the legitimacy of the probe itself. While calling for "constructive dialogue," the Brazilian government stated that it does not recognize Washington's authority to launch the unilateral investigation. The probe, initiated in July under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, aims to determine whether Brazil's policies on digital trade and tariffs are "unreasonable or discriminatory and burden or restrict" U.S. commerce, according to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. This action adds to growing friction between the two countries, including 50% tariffs imposed by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump on imports of Brazilian goods and U.S. sanctions targeting a Brazilian Supreme Court justice. In its 91-page response, Brazil refuted U.S. arguments concerning its trade practices, including its ethanol market and the popular digital payment system, Pix. The government argued Brazil's acts, policies and practices are not unreasonable, discriminatory or burdensome to U.S. commerce. Brasilia also objected to the investigation taking place outside the legal framework of the World Trade Organization (WTO). The government has already requested consultations at the WTO over the U.S. tariffs. The office of the USTR did not immediately respond to a request for comment. "Brazil reiterates its long-standing position that Section 301 is a unilateral instrument inconsistent with the principles and rules of the multilateral trading system," Latin America's largest economy said.


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
Myanmar's military rulers set December date for general election
Myanmar is set for a general election in late 2025, nearly five years after the military took power in a coup. The first phase was expected to start on 28 December, state broadcaster MRTV quoted the Union Election Commission as saying. The dates for subsequent phases would be announced later. The announcement came almost three weeks after the military junta said that it was ending the state of emergency and restructuring its administrative bodies to prepare for the election at the end of the year. The military imposed a state of emergency and drew up new administrative structures after ousting Aung San Suu Kyi's government in early 2021 and jailing members of her National League for Democracy Party. At least 55 political parties are registered for the election and nine of them plan to compete nationwide. "Six parties are under review for approval and registration,' The Global New Light of Myanmar reported earlier this month. But critics say the election will not be democratic since there is no free media in the country and most top members of Suu Kyi's party are in jail. The plan is widely seen as an attempt to legitimise and maintain the military's rule. The election is expected to be dominated by the junta's proxies and the outcome is likely to be favourable to the military, critics say. A general election was supposed to be held in August 2023 but the junta repeatedly pushed the date back. A newly formed interim administration announced its plan to hold voting in over 300 constituencies, including in areas currently held by armed groups opposed to the military. The military justified its February 2021 coup as a necessary intervention following what it claimed was widespread fraud in an election held three months earlier that was won decisively by Ms Suu Kyi's party. But election monitors found no evidence of the alleged fraud, which would have changed the outcome of the exercise.