The Exposition
HONORAGE'S CRIMES ARE EXPOSED HERE
Slave traffick, genocide, support for the pro-slavery regime, and other crimes against humanity that history insisted on hiding.
Currently 73 racist works of art in exposition
( 1672 - 1740 )
Bartolomeu Bueno da Silva was a pioneer, slave owner, colonial and military administrator. Bartolomeu received the same name and surname from his father, Anhanguera. In the first years of acting as a bandeirante, Bartolomeu dedicated himself to exploring regions of Minas Gerais in search of gold. He settled for a time in the Sabará region, later in São João do Pará and finally in Pitangui. Due to some problems and conflicts in that region, the bandeirante ended up returning to São Paulo.
In 1722, he led a flag towards Goiás in search of metals and precious stones. He found gold on the banks of the Vermelho River in 1725. Then he settled in the region of Goiás where he received the position of superintendent of the region. The arrival of the flag in the region of Goiás was responsible for the decimation of the indigenous people of the Goyá nation, both for the violence and for the enslavement. Documents sent by the Captain-General of São Paulo point to twenty-two enslaved Indians who died on one of the expeditions led by Bartolomeu Bueno Silva.
Inauguration: 1968
Slave traffick, genocide, support for the pro-slavery regime, and other crimes against humanity that history insisted on hiding.
Currently 73 racist works of art in exposition