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Interview Portuguese Spanish    
Year 8 - N° 393 - December 14, 2014
ORSON PETER CARRARA
orsonpeter92@gmail.com
Matão, SP (Brasil)
 
Translation
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com

 
Isabela Pereira Dias Esperança: 

“Humberto de Campos, the writer whose aim is to write constructively”

The teacher and researcher talks about the work dictated from the Spirit World by the Brazilian author, who passed away 80 years ago

Isabela Pereira Dias Esperança (photo), Portuguese and Spanish Language and Literature teacher in the Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro, is a passionate researcher of the work dictated from the Spirit World by Humberto Campos, who also signed as Irmão X (Brother X). She also works as a volunteer at the Filhos da Luz Spiritist Centre in her home-

town of Barra Mansa. In this interview, which will be published in two parts over the next two weeks, she talks about the 80th anniversary, in December 2014, of the passing of Humberto de Campos: 

Firstly, tells us briefly who was Humberto de Campos. 

He was born Humberto de Campos Vera on October 25th 1886 in the town of Miritiba, in the north-eastern state of Maranhão. He was born in a poor family and received very basic education. He was six when his father died. He then began to work in harsh jobs in the area. But he had an inquisitive and persevering spirit and began to study by himself. A bit later in life, he found a job in the prints and went to the local library in his spare time to read and learn. He began his career as a journalist and eventually became a renowned author and member of the Brazilian Literary Academy. He got ill, had financial troubles but carried on working and passed away on December 5th 1934.  

How many books did he publish in life and after going to the Spirit World? 

Humberto de Campos was a very popular writer in his time, having published poetry, children’s literature, literary criticism, biographies and having organised anthologies. He publishe more than 40 books, in two phases. In the last five years of his life, he was diagnosed with hypertrophy or the hypophysis, which caused him great pain. He began to lose his eyesight and went into deep financial troubles. He enters a new phase in his work, more autobiographic, sharing his pain and become a character in his books. His popular grew as readers could empathise with him. We realise now that he was certainly being prepared for the work that would follow alongside Chico Xavier. From the Spirit World, he wrote: “I am like a builder who spent many years carrying the material to begin building a home for his old age only to have his arms cut off when he is about to lay the first brick”. In March 1935 the great Brazilian medium, Chico Xavier, wrote a letter to Manuel Quinhão, who was editor at the Brazilian Spiritist Federation, saying he had dreamt with Humberto Campos. He had been introduced to him in the Spirit World. That became the message “De um casarão de outro mundo” (“From a big house in the other world”), published on March 27th 1935, three months after he passed away. Those stories were published on Reformador magazine and were the first step towards the publication of many books through the mediumship of Chico Xavier. After his families began legal action to demand copyright of the work, he began to sign as Irmão X, or Brother X. Seven other books were published then. He would return many years later, publishing two other books in 1988 and 1989, all through the mediumship of Chico Xavier. 

What is the most interesting aspect of the work dictated by him from the Spirit World? And why? 

“My current problem is not writing to please, but writing constructively,” Humberto Campos wrote on the preface of Boa Nova (Good News). Before passing away, he used to write many letters from readers who shared their stories with him. Many of those stories became the object of articles he wrote. But they lacked the perennial quality of many of his work in other genres. Writing from the Spirit World, Humberto Campos’s articles on day-to-day events and observations have a different nature. They are descriptions and tales of the eternal life. His views and comments go much beyond the observation of daily events. He helps reflect on our journey in the light of the teachings of Jesus, in accordance with the principles of Spiritism. 

What are your favourite books written by Humberto de Campos from the Spirit World? 

The short stories of Boa Nova show that Jesus is back as part of an effort of the Spirit World to rescue the Gospel. The stories in that book are based on the experiences of conversion of personalities who met Christ. That was the case of Mary of Magdala, Joanna of Cusa and Zaccheus.  

Is there any story in that book that had a bigger impact on you? 

The short story “A Negação de Pedro” (“Peter’s Denial”) says that Jesus noticed that Peter, while he prepared to wash the feet of the other disciples, was too proud and refused to accept the lesson of the Master. Jesus explains to him that the disciple should never try to be better than his brothers and sisters and said that he was not as yet ready to follow him. He added that Peter would deny him three times but explained: “No, Peter, I do not think you are ungrateful or indifferent to my teachings. But you will learn, still today, that the man of the world is weak rather than evil”. In many of his short stories, such as “Nas Hesitações de Pedro” (“In the Hesitations of Peter”) we see the struggles of the weak spirit on a pathway that requires sacrifice and abnegation. Those are our own hesitations. Peter, aged 80, is finally taken to the cross to offer his sacrifice. He is followed by a madding crowd and by people who throw stones at him. He passes away and is then received by Jesus. Peter then hears a voice from the Earth. It is his executioner whose son is ill. He begs Peter to forgive him. Peter, the apostle, having learned and matured with the experiences of his life, is taken by the ideal of fraternity and, without hesitating, rushes to help his brothers and sisters. 

(The final part of this interview will be published next week.)



 


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