Meet The Confederados, The Confederate Loyalists Who Fled To Brazil After The Civil War
By Morgan Dunn | Checked By Jaclyn Anglis
Published June 15, 2020
Updated July 21, 2020
Rather than accept defeat, up to 20,000 die-hard Confederates moved to the slaveholding Empire of Brazil to establish colonies of Confederados. Their descendents still honor them today.
https://allthatsinteresting.com/confederados
Jesuit are the Colonizers.
The Jesuit Reductions
From the beginning, the Jesuits cared only about civilizing the Indians and saving their souls. They arrived in Brazil in 1540, just nine years after their founding, and in Paraguay in 1587. The first missions in the latter country began in 1609. In the area of Paraguay, not then defined precisely, the Fathers concluded that the best way to save their particular charges, the Guarani was to gather them into mission villages, which were called “reductions.” By this arrangement, they could keep them safe from the savages still roaming the forests, teach them various trades, and civilize them to the extent that they could read and write, and be self-productive within the mission. These reductions made it easier for the natives to learn the Faith from the priests and, once baptized, live it sacramentally in mutual charity. (Communism)
https://catholicism.org/the-jesuit-missions-in-south-america.html
How South America Became a Nazi Haven
Find out how and why South America became a safe haven for thousands of former Nazi party members and SS officers after World War II.
https://www.history.com/news/how-south-america-became-a-nazi-haven
The internet is really easy to use. You should try it for yourself.