The arrangement is based on a Supreme Court ruling that in 2011 authorized notary publics to hold civil …
Rio de Janeiro (AFP) -
Three's a crowd? Not in Brazil, where three women have defied deeply
conservative trends in Congress and wider traditional mores by
celebrating a polyamorous civil union.
The happy
trio, who reportedly have shared a bed for years and say they want to
raise a child, took an oath of love in early October in the presence of
Rio de Janeiro notary public Fernanda de Freitas Leitao.
"This union is not just symbolic," because it defines "how they intend to have children," attorney Leitao said.The lovers -- a businesswomen and a dentist who are both 32 and a 34-year-old office manager -- have been together for three years and wish to remain anonymous. Despite salacious media speculation about their supposed love life, they are in fact shy, their lawyer said.
The
union is not a formal marriage, because under Brazilian law that would
be bigamy. Neither are they automatically allowed to declare joint
income or join a healthcare plan for spouses.
But the civil union is still a big step, according to the lawyer.
"If they seek these rights before a court, they could obtain them -- and I think they will," Leitao said.
They also have a better chance now of making good on their plan to create a three-parent family, Leitao said.
"Our union is the fruit of love," the unnamed businesswoman in the trio told the daily O Globo.
"We
are preparing for my pregnancy.... The legalization is a way for the
baby and for us to not end up abandoned and penniless. We want to enjoy
the same maternal rights that everyone else has."
While these are
the first women to enter a three-way civil union, a similar ceremony was
held in 2012 for a man and two women in Sao Paulo state.
Both
arrangements are based on a Supreme Court ruling that in 2011
authorized notary publics to hold civil union ceremonies for gay and
lesbian couples.
According to Leitao, "all the principles and fundamentals" of that ruling "can also be applied to polyamorous relationships."
- Satan and bikinis -
Brazil,
the world's most populous Catholic country with a growing Evangelical
population, is full of contradictions, including a permissive view of
sexual relations typified by the famous tiny Brazilian bikini.
In
Congress, one of the most socially conservative in Brazil's history,
legislators are currently debating a measure that defines a "family" as
the union between a man and a woman.But at the same time, polyamorous relationships are common in popular culture, including in two poplar telenovelas and a TV documentary series. Fans of the topic will dip into a 1996 novel by Jorge Amado called "Dona Flor And Her Two Husbands."
Anthropologist
Antonio Cerdeira Pilao, an expert on polyamory at the Federal University
of Rio de Janeiro, says Brazil has had a lax attitude to rules about
traditional couples since colonial times, when sexual relations between
slave owners and slaves was common.
Not everyone is excited with the racy new model family, though.
"We
are on the path towards chaos," fumed Euder Faber Guedes, head of a
major evangelical organization. He considers such relationships an
"aberration... opposed to nature as established by God."
"Men
with men do not produce children," said lawmaker and evangelical pastor
Hidekazu Takayama in a late September congressional debate.
"Satan
is laughing, shaking up family structures while arguing for the human
rights of modern women," Takayama fulminated on his Facebook page ahead
of the debate.
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