O Auto Da Compadecida 〈2024〉
O Auto da Compadecida is a celebration of the Brazilian gift for turning poverty into poetry and suffering into satire. It reminds us that heaven, if it exists, is not a place for saints. It is a place for rogues, cowards, and hungry tricksters who finally get a hot meal.
Written by Ariano Suassuna in 1955, this "auto" (a one-act play inspired by medieval morality plays) is a collision of opposites. It is high theology and low slapstick. It is a story about starving outcasts that feels like a carnival. It is, in essence, the Divine Comedy rewritten by a stand-up comedian from the sertão (Brazil’s harsh backlands). o auto da compadecida
The trial dismantles the idea of a punitive, distant God. Suassuna—a deeply Catholic writer rooted in folk culture—presents a God of compaixão (compassion). Grace is not earned; it is given because life on Earth is already hard enough. As Mary famously says: "It’s a very difficult thing to be human." O Auto da Compadecida is a celebration of
If you want to understand Brazil, forget the postcards of Sugarloaf Mountain or the samba of Rio’s carnival for a moment. Instead, sit down in a dusty plaza of the Brazilian Northeast. Listen for the sound of a goat bleating, a wallet being lifted, and two friends arguing over who gets to die richer. That is the world of O Auto da Compadecida —a story so wildly funny, so theologically audacious, and so deeply human that it has become a secular scripture for millions. Written by Ariano Suassuna in 1955, this "auto"