<p>Soccer jerseys are everywhere in football-mad Brazil, often with the numbers of the country's all-time legends: Ronaldo's 9, Pele's 10, Romario's 11.</p>.<p>But one number is off-limits: 24, the focus of a homophobic taboo whose origin story is a wacky roller-coaster ride through more than a century of Brazilian history, winding up with the present -- but slowly shifting -- anti-gay attitudes that loom large in football today.</p>.<p>The story of the 24 taboo goes back to 1892, when the founder of Brazil's first zoo, Baron Joao Batista Viana Drummond, came up with a creative way to fix its troubled finances: a lottery called "o jogo do bicho" (the animal game).</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/britain-extends-pardons-to-all-men-convicted-under-scrapped-gay-sex-laws-1067931.html" target="_blank">Britain extends pardons to all men convicted under scrapped gay sex laws</a></strong></p>.<p>Visitors to the Rio de Janeiro zoo received an animal figurine, and every day the baron's staff would randomly select one of the 25 animals, with a cash prize for everyone who had that figurine.</p>.<p>The game soon exploded, as quick-thinking entrepreneurs printed bingo-like cards with the 25 animals and started selling shots at different jackpots.</p>.<p>The game was banned three years later, but had already become a Brazilian institution -- and remains one today, run by a mafia with ties to some of the biggest businesses in Brazil: politics, carnival, music... and football.</p>.<p>The 24th square on the game card is a deer, or "veado" -- a word used as a homophobic slur in Portuguese, apparently because deer are seen as feminine and sometimes engage in homosexual relations.</p>.<p>And that is why male footballers in Brazil fear the number 24.</p>.<p>"It's crazy when you think about it, because it's just a number like any other. But there's definitely a taboo," said Bernardo Gonzales, an LGBTI activist and player for trans men's futsal team Sport Club T Mosqueteiros in Sao Paulo.</p>.<p>He said some Brazilian men even shun 24 when they pick a seat at the movies, rent an apartment or turn 24 -- saying they are 23+1.</p>.<p>"Footballers would rather use another number, because they don't want anyone questioning their masculinity," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>In the Brazilian men's first division, just four of the 20 teams currently have number 24s. Three are young players on their first professional contracts.</p>.<p>"I think it's important for every club to include (the number)," said one, Kevin Malthus, a 19-year-old midfielder with Santos.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/us-lgbt-community-draws-on-aids-experience-to-fight-covid-1074413.html" target="_blank">US LGBT community draws on AIDS experience to fight Covid</a></strong></p>.<p>"It's just a number that ended up with this homophobic prejudice around it. But some great athletes have used it, like Kobe Bryant," he told news site UOL.</p>.<p>The biggest name in Brazilian football to wear the number is currently Victor Cantillo, a Colombian international midfielder who joined Sao Paulo club Corinthians in 2020.</p>.<p>Cantillo caused a flutter when he arrived in Brazil by deciding to keep number 24, which he had worn at his previous club, Junior.</p>.<p>"Not 24, not here," said Corinthians' then-director for football, Duilio Monteiro Alves.</p>.<p>The comment triggered widespread backlash and a campaign that saw numerous players -- including one of Brazil's biggest stars, Flamengo striker Gabigol -- wear the number for a match.</p>.<p>But the polemic rolls on.</p>.<p>LGBTQ rights group Arco-Iris recently took Flamengo to court for excluding number 24 from its squad for an under-20 cup in Sao Paulo last month.</p>.<p>Prosecutors said it would be difficult to prove a "discriminatory motive," and the case was shelved.</p>.<p>A player for another team in the tournament, America Mineiro winger Jurandir, wore number 24 -- and drew homophobic chants.</p>.<p>"Despite all the criticism and social movements, it hasn't been enough" to eradicate the taboo, said sociologist Rodrigo Monteiro of Fluminense Federal University.</p>.<p>"Football is still a very masculine space."</p>.<p>The controversy has largely spared the Brazilian national team, since most international tournaments allow just 23 players and require sequential numbers.</p>.<p>But last year, when Covid-19 havoc led Copa America organizers to allow 28-player squads, Brazil were the only country not to register a number 24.</p>.<p>Arco-Iris took that case to court, too, calling the move "homophobic."</p>.<p>The Brazilian Football Confederation said the decision was based on "sporting considerations," and the case was shelved.</p>.<p>By contrast, number 24 is regularly used in Brazilian women's football, and hugely popular on LGBTQ teams.</p>.<p>"It's a symbol of resistance," said Gonzales -- himself sporting number 24.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Soccer jerseys are everywhere in football-mad Brazil, often with the numbers of the country's all-time legends: Ronaldo's 9, Pele's 10, Romario's 11.</p>.<p>But one number is off-limits: 24, the focus of a homophobic taboo whose origin story is a wacky roller-coaster ride through more than a century of Brazilian history, winding up with the present -- but slowly shifting -- anti-gay attitudes that loom large in football today.</p>.<p>The story of the 24 taboo goes back to 1892, when the founder of Brazil's first zoo, Baron Joao Batista Viana Drummond, came up with a creative way to fix its troubled finances: a lottery called "o jogo do bicho" (the animal game).</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/britain-extends-pardons-to-all-men-convicted-under-scrapped-gay-sex-laws-1067931.html" target="_blank">Britain extends pardons to all men convicted under scrapped gay sex laws</a></strong></p>.<p>Visitors to the Rio de Janeiro zoo received an animal figurine, and every day the baron's staff would randomly select one of the 25 animals, with a cash prize for everyone who had that figurine.</p>.<p>The game soon exploded, as quick-thinking entrepreneurs printed bingo-like cards with the 25 animals and started selling shots at different jackpots.</p>.<p>The game was banned three years later, but had already become a Brazilian institution -- and remains one today, run by a mafia with ties to some of the biggest businesses in Brazil: politics, carnival, music... and football.</p>.<p>The 24th square on the game card is a deer, or "veado" -- a word used as a homophobic slur in Portuguese, apparently because deer are seen as feminine and sometimes engage in homosexual relations.</p>.<p>And that is why male footballers in Brazil fear the number 24.</p>.<p>"It's crazy when you think about it, because it's just a number like any other. But there's definitely a taboo," said Bernardo Gonzales, an LGBTI activist and player for trans men's futsal team Sport Club T Mosqueteiros in Sao Paulo.</p>.<p>He said some Brazilian men even shun 24 when they pick a seat at the movies, rent an apartment or turn 24 -- saying they are 23+1.</p>.<p>"Footballers would rather use another number, because they don't want anyone questioning their masculinity," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>In the Brazilian men's first division, just four of the 20 teams currently have number 24s. Three are young players on their first professional contracts.</p>.<p>"I think it's important for every club to include (the number)," said one, Kevin Malthus, a 19-year-old midfielder with Santos.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/us-lgbt-community-draws-on-aids-experience-to-fight-covid-1074413.html" target="_blank">US LGBT community draws on AIDS experience to fight Covid</a></strong></p>.<p>"It's just a number that ended up with this homophobic prejudice around it. But some great athletes have used it, like Kobe Bryant," he told news site UOL.</p>.<p>The biggest name in Brazilian football to wear the number is currently Victor Cantillo, a Colombian international midfielder who joined Sao Paulo club Corinthians in 2020.</p>.<p>Cantillo caused a flutter when he arrived in Brazil by deciding to keep number 24, which he had worn at his previous club, Junior.</p>.<p>"Not 24, not here," said Corinthians' then-director for football, Duilio Monteiro Alves.</p>.<p>The comment triggered widespread backlash and a campaign that saw numerous players -- including one of Brazil's biggest stars, Flamengo striker Gabigol -- wear the number for a match.</p>.<p>But the polemic rolls on.</p>.<p>LGBTQ rights group Arco-Iris recently took Flamengo to court for excluding number 24 from its squad for an under-20 cup in Sao Paulo last month.</p>.<p>Prosecutors said it would be difficult to prove a "discriminatory motive," and the case was shelved.</p>.<p>A player for another team in the tournament, America Mineiro winger Jurandir, wore number 24 -- and drew homophobic chants.</p>.<p>"Despite all the criticism and social movements, it hasn't been enough" to eradicate the taboo, said sociologist Rodrigo Monteiro of Fluminense Federal University.</p>.<p>"Football is still a very masculine space."</p>.<p>The controversy has largely spared the Brazilian national team, since most international tournaments allow just 23 players and require sequential numbers.</p>.<p>But last year, when Covid-19 havoc led Copa America organizers to allow 28-player squads, Brazil were the only country not to register a number 24.</p>.<p>Arco-Iris took that case to court, too, calling the move "homophobic."</p>.<p>The Brazilian Football Confederation said the decision was based on "sporting considerations," and the case was shelved.</p>.<p>By contrast, number 24 is regularly used in Brazilian women's football, and hugely popular on LGBTQ teams.</p>.<p>"It's a symbol of resistance," said Gonzales -- himself sporting number 24.</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>