The Japan Times - Brazil breaks out in a rash over life-like doll craze

EUR -
AED 4.320095
AFN 75.885663
ALL 95.39106
AMD 434.359293
ANG 2.105503
AOA 1079.875165
ARS 1641.608916
AUD 1.626097
AWG 2.117403
AZN 2.00155
BAM 1.955617
BBD 2.368967
BDT 144.323592
BGN 1.962246
BHD 0.444119
BIF 3501.171877
BMD 1.176335
BND 1.49156
BOB 8.128238
BRL 5.776866
BSD 1.176185
BTN 111.070676
BWP 15.79252
BYN 3.324188
BYR 23056.161221
BZD 2.365567
CAD 1.606091
CDF 2724.390954
CHF 0.915576
CLF 0.026587
CLP 1046.373458
CNY 8.005017
CNH 8.000023
COP 4398.19802
CRC 540.701063
CUC 1.176335
CUP 31.172871
CVE 110.244828
CZK 24.30766
DJF 209.470369
DKK 7.473237
DOP 69.953444
DZD 155.593016
EGP 62.020486
ERN 17.645021
ETB 183.670087
FJD 2.570173
FKP 0.864396
GBP 0.864212
GEL 3.152187
GGP 0.864396
GHS 13.250758
GIP 0.864396
GMD 85.872502
GNF 10320.111643
GTQ 8.981158
GYD 246.116934
HKD 9.20856
HNL 31.271069
HRK 7.533241
HTG 154.005567
HUF 356.064543
IDR 20432.346547
ILS 3.416253
IMP 0.864396
INR 111.13652
IQD 1540.955585
IRR 1544409.901346
ISK 143.806836
JEP 0.864396
JMD 185.392625
JOD 0.834004
JPY 184.389884
KES 151.900296
KGS 102.835777
KHR 4719.557692
KMF 492.883828
KPW 1058.643569
KRW 1725.519067
KWD 0.361876
KYD 0.980308
KZT 543.610531
LAK 25796.582394
LBP 105337.827942
LKR 378.68071
LRD 215.849771
LSL 19.297891
LTL 3.473411
LVL 0.711553
LYD 7.437639
MAD 10.757232
MDL 20.115115
MGA 4913.101009
MKD 61.641843
MMK 2469.840437
MNT 4209.987489
MOP 9.484411
MRU 47.016594
MUR 55.076306
MVR 18.180264
MWK 2039.30888
MXN 20.271482
MYR 4.612434
MZN 75.167161
NAD 19.297891
NGN 1599.45028
NIO 43.28208
NOK 10.821804
NPR 177.729344
NZD 1.973736
OMR 0.452335
PAB 1.17629
PEN 4.066656
PGK 5.19405
PHP 71.143536
PKR 327.806219
PLN 4.232417
PYG 7184.685358
QAR 4.299213
RON 5.224695
RSD 117.388809
RUB 87.170473
RWF 1724.438389
SAR 4.447279
SBD 9.448624
SCR 16.852352
SDG 706.388119
SEK 10.84046
SGD 1.491516
SHP 0.878253
SLE 28.944025
SLL 24667.14716
SOS 672.236999
SRD 44.031407
STD 24347.754442
STN 24.495518
SVC 10.292117
SYP 130.036684
SZL 19.285193
THB 37.889551
TJS 10.974871
TMT 4.128935
TND 3.41668
TOP 2.832332
TRY 53.363256
TTD 7.971541
TWD 36.930438
TZS 3063.933249
UAH 51.665846
UGX 4407.193579
USD 1.176335
UYU 46.911416
UZS 14267.389376
VES 583.707963
VND 30947.014765
VUV 138.838256
WST 3.180917
XAF 655.895531
XAG 0.014572
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.179103
XCG 2.119812
XDR 0.818154
XOF 655.836996
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.672359
ZAR 19.312335
ZMK 10588.444039
ZMW 22.394901
ZWL 378.779312
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.4150

    50.085

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.0300

    58.05

    -0.05%

  • BCC

    -0.2450

    72.515

    -0.34%

  • JRI

    0.0060

    13.156

    +0.05%

  • NGG

    0.9500

    86.86

    +1.09%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.97

    0%

  • AZN

    -0.6800

    181.84

    -0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0209

    33.525

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    2.1100

    105.22

    +2.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • BP

    -0.0050

    43.805

    -0.01%

  • BCE

    -0.2350

    24.335

    -0.97%

  • VOD

    0.4200

    16.11

    +2.61%

Brazil breaks out in a rash over life-like doll craze
Brazil breaks out in a rash over life-like doll craze / Photo: Nelson ALMEIDA - AFP

Brazil breaks out in a rash over life-like doll craze

Gabi Matos looks the quintessential doting mum as she changes Ravi's nappy, cooing reassuringly as he stares up at her.

Text size:

But this Brazilian "newborn" doesn't seem to mind having his nappy changed. In fact, he has no real emotions whatsoever.

Ravi is a hyper-realistic doll with an eerie resemblance to an actual infant.

Some of the so-called "reborn" dolls cry, suck dummies, pee, have nails, eyelashes and veins.

But what really sets them apart from traditional dolls with waxy, smooth complexion is their puckered features and blotchy skin.

Blink and you could mistake the bundle in the stroller in Rio de Janeiro for the real thing.

Demand for these replica babies, which first emerged in the United States in the early 1990s, targeting adults chiefly, has rocketed in the South American country in recent years.

"I always loved babies and dolls, from a very young age. When I discovered these art models I fell in love," said Ravi's 21-year-old "mum."

Made with silicone or vinyl, the price tag for these bundles of joy can run to thousands of dollars.

Matos, who lives in the southeastern Brazilian city of Campinas, received her first "reborn" -- so-called because the first editions were traditional dolls modified by artists to look more life-like -- aged nine.

Her collection now runs to 22 and looking after her tiny charges is a full-time job which she enacts daily for her 1.3 million YouTube followers.

But in the past few weeks, the admiring comments on her posts have become interspersed with attacks.

"People say I should be admitted to a psychiatric hospital because they believe that we treat them (the dolls) as if they were real children, which is not the case," she said. "It's sad."

- A country divided -

The dolls tottered into the public debate in April when a group of collectors held a gathering in a park in Sao Paulo.

Footage of the event went viral, along with a separate video of a reborn "birth," in which an influencer extracts a disheveled doll from a fluid-filled bag passing for an amniotic sac and then clamps a make-believe umbilical cord.

Social media erupted with posts either condemning the would-be mothers' behavior as deranged or dismissing it as a harmless hobby.

"Let these people raise reborn babies. If they procreate, it will be much worse!" actress Luana Piovani wrote on Instagram, in a post that was viewed thousands of times.

- 'Buying a dream' -

Alana Generoso, a longtime reborn baby collector, who now owns her own doll store, insists that her customers are perfectly sound of mind.

"Many children come to the story, as well as adults that lead normal lives," the 46-year-old mother of real four-year-old triplets said.

Alana Babys Maternity Hospital in Campinas is designed to look like an authentic maternity ward.

Before handing over a doll to its new owner, employees in white coats take it from an incubator, weigh it, place it in a stroller and present the proud "parent" with a birth certificate.

"Here, you're not buying an ordinary doll, you're buying a dream," Generoso argued.

"Are there cases of people looking after the dolls as if they were real babies? Yes, but they're not a majority."

The debate has reverberated all the way up to Congress.

Some MPs are calling for "reborn" mums to receive psychological help, but others call for people who allegedly use their "babies" to jump the queue for public services to be punished.

Last week, an MP made clear which camp he was in when he brought his reborn "granddaughter" to parliament.

Playing with dolls is "not a sin," Manoel Isidorio, an evangelical pastor, argued.

- Like men with kites -

For psychologist Viviane Cunha collecting dolls is a hobby that is only categorized as a disorder when it causes "social, emotional or economic harm."

"If for example the person skips work because 'the baby has a fever', and believes it to be true, then he or she needs professional help," she said.

Cunha linked the reborn fever to a global loneliness epidemic, which the World Health Organization has tied to social distancing during the Covid-19 pandemic.

"I think the doll comes from a search for an emotional bond or connection," Cunha said.

Matos argues that criticism of the dolls is sexist.

"Male hobbies like video games, flying kites, playing football are normalized. No-one says that they are too old to do these things, but women cannot take care of their dolls without people thinking we are sick."

T.Sato--JT