Dubai Telegraph - 'Happy suffering': the Brazilian gold rush that spawned iconic pictures

EUR -
AED 4.286947
AFN 79.960154
ALL 97.645324
AMD 447.944302
ANG 2.089046
AOA 1070.424598
ARS 1465.863334
AUD 1.774213
AWG 2.104078
AZN 1.985929
BAM 1.947817
BBD 2.358434
BDT 142.037867
BGN 1.953255
BHD 0.440048
BIF 3480.236487
BMD 1.167311
BND 1.493778
BOB 8.100799
BRL 6.4592
BSD 1.168013
BTN 100.027046
BWP 15.564211
BYN 3.822534
BYR 22879.29277
BZD 2.346284
CAD 1.599233
CDF 3368.859568
CHF 0.931205
CLF 0.0289
CLP 1109.015361
CNY 8.375806
CNH 8.371574
COP 4687.570203
CRC 589.085672
CUC 1.167311
CUP 30.933738
CVE 110.602718
CZK 24.638895
DJF 207.454593
DKK 7.460988
DOP 70.270218
DZD 151.502164
EGP 57.796362
ERN 17.509663
ETB 158.024697
FJD 2.616819
FKP 0.859331
GBP 0.861073
GEL 3.163447
GGP 0.859331
GHS 12.135344
GIP 0.859331
GMD 83.463263
GNF 10104.24255
GTQ 8.973224
GYD 244.378432
HKD 9.163215
HNL 30.758225
HRK 7.534879
HTG 153.251907
HUF 398.777896
IDR 18944.929897
ILS 3.872087
IMP 0.859331
INR 100.129477
IQD 1529.177221
IRR 49158.37641
ISK 142.796415
JEP 0.859331
JMD 186.664966
JOD 0.827656
JPY 171.540419
KES 151.161227
KGS 102.081242
KHR 4693.757135
KMF 492.016984
KPW 1050.568038
KRW 1606.39427
KWD 0.357045
KYD 0.973411
KZT 605.956528
LAK 25132.203019
LBP 104591.052848
LKR 350.881934
LRD 234.629046
LSL 20.696506
LTL 3.446765
LVL 0.706095
LYD 6.297612
MAD 10.508714
MDL 19.763003
MGA 5171.187191
MKD 61.519511
MMK 2450.829729
MNT 4186.916568
MOP 9.444592
MRU 46.343821
MUR 52.704612
MVR 17.976773
MWK 2027.036485
MXN 21.791651
MYR 4.973328
MZN 74.661649
NAD 20.696382
NGN 1786.59198
NIO 42.898846
NOK 11.791354
NPR 160.043074
NZD 1.939166
OMR 0.448835
PAB 1.168013
PEN 4.139306
PGK 4.814865
PHP 65.92853
PKR 332.062818
PLN 4.252783
PYG 9052.897314
QAR 4.249707
RON 5.078616
RSD 117.149022
RUB 90.582602
RWF 1673.923767
SAR 4.377934
SBD 9.719599
SCR 16.748417
SDG 700.96643
SEK 11.11779
SGD 1.495238
SHP 0.917323
SLE 26.266311
SLL 24477.929265
SOS 667.114844
SRD 43.620077
STD 24160.97792
SVC 10.220114
SYP 15177.29453
SZL 20.696445
THB 38.040347
TJS 11.300884
TMT 4.097261
TND 3.389348
TOP 2.733956
TRY 46.883901
TTD 7.931493
TWD 34.139182
TZS 3070.027402
UAH 48.887538
UGX 4185.8446
USD 1.167311
UYU 47.455507
UZS 14781.072437
VES 132.613862
VND 30458.058501
VUV 139.428117
WST 3.211263
XAF 653.279578
XAG 0.031421
XAU 0.00035
XCD 3.154716
XDR 0.811764
XOF 651.359905
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.314134
ZAR 20.727647
ZMK 10507.25139
ZMW 27.361859
ZWL 375.873619
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

'Happy suffering': the Brazilian gold rush that spawned iconic pictures
'Happy suffering': the Brazilian gold rush that spawned iconic pictures / Photo: Nelson ALMEIDA - AFP

'Happy suffering': the Brazilian gold rush that spawned iconic pictures

Four decades after Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado shot a human anthill of mud-spattered miners digging for gold in the middle of the Amazon, some of the "garimpeiros," now into their 70s, are still hoping to get lucky.

Text size:

Salgado's 1986 black-and-white photos of hundreds of men with pickaxes and spades working in the Serra Pelada open-pit mine travelled the world, depicting the hellish conditions in which people were still toiling in the late 20th century.

"I never saw anything like it," the photographer, who died in May at the age of 81, said of the columns of men he saw clambering up the steep sides of the mine on ladders, with massive sacks of earth on their backs.

The mine, which was closed down by authorities in 1992, is covered by a lake in the present day.

But some veterans of its heyday remain consumed by the prospect of the riches hidden under their feet.

Chico Osorio was one of the miners who struck gold at Serra Pelada in the 1980s.

He extracted more than a tonne of gold from the mine, which he used to fund a lavish lifestyle, but in an all-too-familiar, rags-to-riches-and-back-again tale, he squandered much of his fortune.

Now aged 77, and on crutches, the elderly miner with chiseled features continues to dig the earth.

He only manages to extract a few grams a week on his plot, which is within striking distance of Serra Pelada, but he still dreams of making it big again.

- 'Happy suffering' -

Other former "garimpeiros," as illegal gold miners are known in Brazil, who joined the gold rush in the 1980s, also remained behind in Serra Pelada, now a town of some 6,000 people.

Despite the grim conditions in which they labored, they are nostalgic for what they recall as a golden period.

"It was a time of plenty, everyone was happy, even those who didn't find gold, because they were driven by a dream," said Lucindo Ferreira, 72, who proudly keeps old magazines that published Salgado's images.

"It was a kind of happy suffering," said Francisco Aderbal, a 63-year-old fellow former miner who is now a town councilor.

"We went up and down those ladders without feeling the fatigue," Aderbal, who like Ferreira has little to show for his backbreaking work, insisted.

Creuza Maria de Conceicao witnessed the frenzy up close, as a former cook for the miners.

"People are attracted by gold but their riches quickly slip through their fingers," the 64-year-old said, as she embroidered a cushion with motifs of miners.

- A new chapter -

Ferreira accepts that the chaotic 1980s model of illegal gold digging is a thing of the past but hopes to see industrial miners move in.

Brazil has the world's ninth-largest estimated gold reserves, according to the US Geological Survey.

Canadian company Colossus Minerals acquired a significant stake in Serra Pelada in 2006, but abandoned it in 2014 in the face of financial difficulties.

Since returning to power in 2023, left-wing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has stepped up the fight against illegal gold mining, which is blamed in part for destroying vast chunks of the Amazon rainforest.

In Serra Pelada, the younger generations seem ready to turn the page on the past.

"Many garimpeiros dream of taking up illegal mining again, but young people want to go to university," said 19-year-old Gabriel Vieira.

Nearly 40 years after Salgado's photos, Vieira has founded a video production company to retell the story of his hometown, this time in motion and with color.

T.Jamil--DT