Dilma Vana Rousseff: Brazil´s First Female President

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Despite of all the factors which went against her, such as her non-political family, struggles during her election and living in a patriarchal society, she still managed to become the first female president. According to ‘’Forbes’’ , Dilma Vana Rousseff is ranked second in the chart for the most powerful women of the world. One of the reasons, which make her so powerful, is the unfortunate event of her father’s death. Even fact that she was imprisoned and tortured for rebel group to go against the Brazilian dictatorship, it didn’t stop her from being what she wanted to be. The main competitor of Dilma was Jose Serra, who had been on the top of the polls for over two years already. The main difference between them was their presidential campaigns. Dilma’s main advisor was Lula – they met each other before elections, in the year 2001 when he was a president of Brazil. Lula told her, that even if she will not be able to be a president, she becomes a great minister, because of her skills ‘to command, to deliver and to drive things’ (1, Veronika Sardon). So, in the final round of elections Dilma Rousseff led Jose Serra by 56.6 % to 44.4 %. This is astonishing since she became the first female president of Brazil, which is almost impossible to imagine in such a patriarchal society.
Before her political career began, she was an ordinary child, a daughter of a Bulgarian immigrant father and schoolteacher mother. After she finished economics in college, “she joined an urban guerrilla group called National Liberation Command” to be able to prohibit everyone from the military dictatorship in Brazil in years 1964 – 1985 (3, Soares Marcelo ). Along with that she was tortured in the early 1970s; however she continued her fight for the truth.
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