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Sao Paulo overwhelms the senses with its sheer size. With
seventeen million inhabitants, it is the world's
third largest city and the largest in South America. Sao Paulo and its rival Brazilian
city, Rio de Janeiro, have often been compared to New York and Los Angeles respectively.
If Rio has gained fame for its striking natural setting, Sao Paulo's attraction lies in
its people and its vibrant cultures. The Avenida Paulista's canyon of upthrusting
skyscrapers only hints at the city's sources of energy. A more cosmopolitan city than its
counterpart, Sao Paulo possesses significant ethnic minority communities, including
substantial Japanese, Italian, and Arab and Lebanese Christian neighbourhoods.
The array of nationalities living in Sao Paulo have made it a legendary city among
gourmands: Japanese, Italian nuova cucina, Brazilian, Chinese, Jewish, and Arab
restaurants are all familiar parts of the city's landscape. Brazil's famously good beef is
put to good use at the numerous rodizios and churrascarias. Succulent, roasted cuts of
meat are circulated around the tables and cut to patrons' order. In fact, people often
visit Sao Paulo just to dine out. The Jardins district is the center of the dining scene,
and thus the center of the Sao Paulo social scene. Paulistanos eat late--restaurants often
don't begin serving until 9pm or 10pm, and it is common for them to stay open until 3am.
Brazil's most modern, cosmopolitan city has much to offer in addition to its outstanding
cuisines. Its museums are among the finest in South America, its surrounding coastline is
graced with many lovely beaches, and its entertainment and nightlife have for years
attracted some of the best performers in the world. In recent years,
the city has evolved into a center for Brazil's own martial art, capoeira, whose
dance-like motions are performed to music. The art has its own traditional instruments:
drums and the berimbau, a stringed rod used to keep time. Originally developed as the
martial art of the slaves of the Bahia, capoeira was banned by the ruling classes. To keep
their art alive, the slaves turned capoeira into a dance, and the berimbau, which had
warned of an approaching master, began to accompany the dance itself. As late as the 1920s
capoeira was still outlawed and practiced only underground; today, it is a well-known and
much-loved spectacle.
Copyright (c) 1998 interKnowledge Corp. All rights reserved.
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