Brazil's former President Bolsonaro to Read Books to Reduce Sentence by Four Days Per Title
Jair Bolsonaro's lawyers have found a novel way for their client to reduce his 27-year prison sentence: reading books. The former far-right Brazilian president, known for his lack of interest in literature, will now be able to cut his sentence by four days for each title read under the country's penal code.
This literary loophole was made possible after Bolsonaro's legal team submitted a request to a supreme court judge to participate in the scheme. The book-reading inmates can reduce their sentences as long as they submit written reports detailing what they've read.
Bolsonaro, who has been infamous for his disdain towards democracy and minorities, is unlikely to appreciate the approved reading list, which features Brazilian works on Indigenous rights, racism, the environment, and the violence met by the country's 1964-85 dictatorship β a regime he openly supported.
The reading list includes titles such as Ana Maria GonΓ§alves' 950-page "Um Defeito de Cor" (A Colour Defect), which tells the history of Brazil from a Black woman's perspective, and Philip Bunting's children's non-fiction picture book "Democracy!". The books on the list range from Tolstoy to Cervantes, with some titles boasting over 1,000 pages.
In order to benefit from the sentence reduction scheme, prisoners must prove they have actually read the books by submitting written reports to prison authorities. This is a far cry from Bolsonaro's previous claim that he had no time to read and only read one book in three years.
This move may be seen as an attempt by Bolsonaro's lawyers to capitalize on his lack of interest in reading, given the former president's past support for the authoritarian regime that inspired some of the books on the approved reading list.
Jair Bolsonaro's lawyers have found a novel way for their client to reduce his 27-year prison sentence: reading books. The former far-right Brazilian president, known for his lack of interest in literature, will now be able to cut his sentence by four days for each title read under the country's penal code.
This literary loophole was made possible after Bolsonaro's legal team submitted a request to a supreme court judge to participate in the scheme. The book-reading inmates can reduce their sentences as long as they submit written reports detailing what they've read.
Bolsonaro, who has been infamous for his disdain towards democracy and minorities, is unlikely to appreciate the approved reading list, which features Brazilian works on Indigenous rights, racism, the environment, and the violence met by the country's 1964-85 dictatorship β a regime he openly supported.
The reading list includes titles such as Ana Maria GonΓ§alves' 950-page "Um Defeito de Cor" (A Colour Defect), which tells the history of Brazil from a Black woman's perspective, and Philip Bunting's children's non-fiction picture book "Democracy!". The books on the list range from Tolstoy to Cervantes, with some titles boasting over 1,000 pages.
In order to benefit from the sentence reduction scheme, prisoners must prove they have actually read the books by submitting written reports to prison authorities. This is a far cry from Bolsonaro's previous claim that he had no time to read and only read one book in three years.
This move may be seen as an attempt by Bolsonaro's lawyers to capitalize on his lack of interest in reading, given the former president's past support for the authoritarian regime that inspired some of the books on the approved reading list.