NOIVA DO CORDEIRO, A TOWN IN BRAZIL MADE UP ENTIRELY OF WOMEN HAS MADE AN APPEAL FOR BACHELORS TO COME LIVE WITH THEM
Okay, are you an eligible Bachelor and ready to adhere to these women's rule? Then I guess they need you here in Noiva do Cordeiro, it’s like the opening gambit of a bad
Hollywood romance. A Brazilian town populated only by women has made an appeal
for eligible bachelors.
More than 600 women live in the town of
Noiva do Cordeiro, south-east Brazil. And most of them are aged between 20 and
35 years old.
Now they have extended an invitation to
potential suitors. But don't start packing your bags just yet - any men who go
have to understand that this corner of the Brazilian countryside is very much a
woman's world.
Some of Noiva de Cordeiro's women are already married and have families, but their husbands - and any sons over 18 - are made to work away from home and only allowed to return at the weekends.
iTS
It means girl power rules in the rural
community, with women in charge of every aspect of life - from farming to town
planning and even religion.
And residents say their town is that much the better for it.
'There are lots of things that women do
better than men. Our town is prettier, more organised, and far more harmonious
than if men were in charge,' said Rosalee Fernandes, 49.
'When problems or disputes arise, we
resolve them in a woman's way, trying to find consensus rather than conflict.
'We share everything, even the land we
work on. Nobody competes with anyone here. It's all for one, and one for all.
'The whole town came together recently to
help buy a huge widescreen TV for our community centre so we can all watch soap
operas together.
'And there's always time to stop and
gossip, try on each other's clothes and do each other's hair and nails.'
But while none of the residents of Noiva do Cordeiro would have it any other way, it has left them with just one problem.
Nelma Fernandes, 23, admits it's
impossible for her neighbours - renowned in the region as strikingly beautiful
- to find a would-be spouse.
'Here, the only men we single girls meet
are either married or related to us, everyone is a cousin. I haven't kissed a
man for a long time,' she said.
'We all dream of falling in love and
getting married. But we like living here and don't want to have to leave the
town to find a husband.'
The lack of eligible batchelors has now led the community's many single young ladies for make an appeal for interested men - but only those willing to adapt to living in a women's world.
Ms Fernandes said: 'We'd like to get to
know men who would leave their own lives and come to be a part of ours.
'But first they need to agree to do what
we say and live according to our rules.'
Noiva do Cordeiro was born in the hills
near Belo Vale, in Minas Gerais state, after founder Maria Senhorinha de Lima
was branded an adulterer after leaving a man she had been forced to marry.
She was chased out of town in 1891 after
the Catholic church excommunicated her and the next five generations of her
family when she shacked up with another suitor.
Shunned by the local population, she and
other women who subsequently went to live with them were vilified as loose
women and prostitutes, causing them to isolate themselves from the outside
world.
In 1940, an evangelical pastor, Anisio Pereira, took one of the women, aged 16, to be his wife and founded a church in the growing community.
However, he proceeded to impose strict
puritanical rules, banning them from drinking alcohol, listening to music,
cutting their hair or using any type of contraceptive.
When Anisio died in 1995, the women
decided never again to let a man dictate how they should live. And one of the
first things they did was to dismantle the male-biased organised religion he
had set up.
Rosalee Fernandes said: 'We have God in
our hearts. But we don't think we need to go to church, get married in front of
a priest or baptise our children. These are rules made up by men.'
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