The women have made an appeal to bring more single men to the town. But there's one caveat: Men have to follow their rules, from town planning to farming, religion, and more.
The motivation for the way the town is set up is a direct result of its history: The town was founded in 1891 by Maria Senhorinha de Lima, who had been excommunicated as an adultress after leaving a man she had been forced to marry. Over time, she was joined by other single women and female-headed families, and the insular society came into being.
In the 1940s, an evangelical pastor, Anisio Pereira, took one of the town's 16-year-old girls as his wife and founded a church there, imposing strict puritanical rules. When he died in 1995, the town's women determined that they would never again be subject to male domination, and they dismantled Pereira's church.
23-year old Nelda Fernandes told Daily Mirror "Here, the only men we single girls meet are either married or related to us. Everyone is a cousin. I haven't kissed a man for a long time." "We all dream of falling in love and getting married. But we like living here and don't want to have to leave the town to find a husband".
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