Rio mayor sings at concert to raise funds for city’s Holocaust museum
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Rio mayor sings at concert to raise funds for city’s Holocaust museum

Marcelo Crivella, who has visited Israeli 40 times, said: "A memorial is important to prevent and defend humankind from such barbarisms."

Rio Mayor Marcelo Crivella sang to raise funds for the construction of the city’s Holocaust memorial
Rio Mayor Marcelo Crivella sang to raise funds for the construction of the city’s Holocaust memorial

The Mayor of Rio has sang in front of thousands of people at a concert to raise money for the construction of a Holocaust memorial in the city.

More than 4,000 people listened to several gospel songs sung by Marcelo Crivella, who is a fervent Evangelical Christian and a longtime friend of the Jewish community. 

Having laid the cornerstone for the memorial last year, he said: “A Holocaust memorial is important to prevent and defend humankind from such barbarisms. Experience shows if we are not vigilant about the past, it simply returns. The monument will be an alert in the consciousness of everyone who visits it.”

The politician, who is an enthusiast of the Jewish state, had announced the donation of the public area to build the memorial before some 2,000 Jews attending a Yom Haatzmaut celebration on April 22. Crivella reportedly has visited Israel 40 times.

“It was really touching to see the mayor sing ‘I am Israel’ with the whole audience standing up, surrounded by Israeli flags waving in the hands of several youths by the stage. It was a unique moment in memory of the Holocaust and glory of the Jewish state,” Israel’s honorary consul Osias Wurman told JTA.

Crivella is a nephew of Edir Macedo, founder of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God some 40 years ago. He also has played a pivotal role in the church gathering some 5.2 million followers at 13,000 temples across Brazil and worldwide. The church owns the second-largest TV station in Brazil, as well as a broad conglomerate of newspapers and radio stations.

In early April, the words “Holocaust Never Again” in Portuguese were projected on Brazil’s National Congress buildings in Brasilia, an unprecedented honor to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day in the country’s capital city.

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil’s second largest city, is home to some 35,000 Jews. About half of Brazil’s 120,000-member Jewish community lives in Sao Paulo, the country’s financial center.

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