Tiago da Costa (Danca pra Galera)
   
 

Ideas and Suggestions.

 
 
The World Tourism Forum was a way of showing Brazilians that sustainable tourism can be applied in the communities and everyone comes out better off.
 
But in my opinion this could only happen with the help of NGO’s who are also fighting the battle for people of lower social classes, and so NGO’s could help a the communities take a big step forward on this long journey. There are a lot of people, like us, who want to aid development. I found this out through the interviews me and my group did where it was said that with the help of NGO’s interacting with the community it is possible to apply sustainable tourism. The NGO’s come to an agreement with people of the community to create a place where tourists can go to eat, drink, look around, and even talk to people at will with total security.
 
My other suggestion is to try to reach an agreement with tourism companies to offer a tourism course for young people from the lower and lower-middle classes covering languages, customs, cultures, and knowledge of other countries. This knowledge would open more opportunities for the kids, such as being tour guides in communities or perhaps working in those companies or related ones. An agreement with hotels in the city is another good idea to do with sustainable tourism: the hotels could train and employ people from the community to work in their hotels.
 
The above are the conclusions I reached as a result of going to the Forum, and the Forum was an amazing thing in my life as I could learn more about other places, such as Africa through a speech given by South Africa’s Jennifer Seif. She spoke about the problems in Africa, and that South Africa is a similar country to Brazil in that it has massive social inequality and the politicians only care about getting votes as opposed to actually helping the country whilst all the public really want is to live in a democratic country. In South Africa with time, the government joined with people from the communities to work together in a better way, and she also knew places in India where this had occurred. She said that the problems in South Africa are greater than those in Brazil, and massive preconceptions still exist, especially with regard to racism as segregation still exists: whites live in their communities, blacks in theirs, and mixed race in another for example. Therefore there is no interaction between peoples; each community stays within itself: white with white, black with black, mixed race with mixed race. There are also disputes about land, as whites sometimes want to take the land where the blacks are and vice-versa. There is also an incredible preconception about marriages between races. I asked here if she thinks a project such as hers (Fair Trade in Tourism is South Africa) could work here in Brazil, and she responded by saying that each country is different, and whether it works or not is dependent on the will to do it and people working together to achieve the aim.
  She also mentioned the problems that people have there with drug trafficking, and she said it is done by the mafia who instil fear in the population and so it is very serious. Also, everyone has the legal right to bear two firearms, and therefore with this law in place the mortality rate is very high.