The Obelisk and July 9th in São Paulo

Surrounding the largest urban park in São Paulo city, named Ibirapuera Park, the projection of a huge monument can be seen.

Aerial view of Ibirapuera park - photo by Prof. Percival Tirapeli


The monument, that consists of an obelisk and a crypt,  was projected by the Italian-Brazilian sculptor Galileo Ugo Emendabili and executed in travertine marble by the German engineer Ulrich Edler. The construction was inaugurated in 1995, just one year after the park was opened. Preserved as historical heritage, the mausoleum of the obelisk guard the bodies of the students killed during the Revolution of 1932 and 713 ex-combatants. To honor them and to preserve the memory of the rebellion, there are biblical scenes and passages in the history of São Paulo made ​​with Venetian mosaics. Engraved in the building it is possible to see the initials MMDC, that corresponds to the names Martins, Miragaia, Drausio and Camargo, the four boys killed in conflicts of the Civil War, which is settled in São Paulo in 1932 and led to the Constitutional Revolution.


The obelisk - photo by Dornicke

In general, the Constitutionalist Revolution of 1932 is seen as an immediate answer to the new direction taken by the national political scene under the command of Getúlio Vargas, who decided to close the National Congress authoritatively.

In the year 1931, the collapse of coffee prices, as a result of the crisis of 1929 - the crash of the New York Stock Market, impacted directly the coffee producers, particularly the ones established in São Paulo State, generating a displacement of peasants to the urban center. Social problems caused by this scenario cooperated for mobilizing much of the population of São Paulo, looking not for the interests of the old conservative politicians but for real democracy.

In May 23, 1932, a group of young students tried to storm the headquarters of a newspaper favorable to the Vargas regime. During the conflict - which had already taken to the streets of São Paulo - students Martins, Miragaia, Drausio and Camargo were murdered by a group of lieutenants. The initials of those involved in the tragic event inspired the preparation of the movement known as MMDC, who advocated armed struggle against Vargas.

These deaths were the spark that started the Constitutional Revolution on July 9, 1932. With the help of the mass media, the movement won popular support and mobilized 35,000 men by the side of São Paulo, against 100,000 soldiers pro-Vargas. It took nearly three months of bloody battles, closed on October of that same year, when São Paulo was isolated and defeated. 

Historical  poster convoking volunteers for the Revolution - photo by Renato Chauí

However, morally, the movement was a winner, considering  the federal government called elections for a Constituent Assembly, which drafted the Constitution of Brazil in 1934. It was also the first time in the country that women participated in the electoral process, according to historians.

CURIOSITIES:

There are several curiosities about the design itself considering the project was based on numerical relationships, which always lead the observer to numbers related to the date of the rebellion: 09.07.1932. 

Aerial view of the obelisk - photo by Petria Chaves

The obelisk is 81 meters high, whose square root is 9. Also the larger base in trapezoidal shape from the floor is 9 meters for whom looks forward to the monument. The smaller base, above, has 7 meters. The width of the crypt, below, is 32 meters. Anyone looking forward to the profile of the plant would have the dimensions 32-9-7, which recall the year, day and month of the start of the conflict. To enter the monument must go 9 steps. From the access, there are three groups of three arches each, totaling 9 arches.

From the outside, the obelisk represents the image of a sword, with four faces, facing each of the cardinal points of the city, planted in a square-shaped heart.