The enlistment boards were supposed to meet in the churches (centers of public activities) on 1 August 1875. With the news spread, tensions already arose in the preceding months. The malcontents had a simple solution: destroy the drafts. On the day of the meeting, mobs in ten provinces stormed the churches, impeded the work of the boards, and tore up the lists. The rebels could be unarmed or carry sticks, sickles or firearms. The use of violence was regulated, and the reports from the boards often took the form of dialogues between the recruiters and the population. Where there was resistance from the police, the raids resulted in some deaths and injuries. The collective action was well structured and the movements sometimes went beyond the limits of the parishes. Many boards did not meet due to the absence of their members, intimidated by threats made by the
rasga-listas or in agreement with them. There was a special absence of parish priests due to the
Religious Issue. There are even records of the authorities participating in the crowds. The activity of the rebels continued throughout the months of joint work and reappeared whenever the government tried to implement the law. The targets were expanded to Masonic lodges, collectors and municipal taxes. Attacks on conscription work continued for years, such as in
Serro,
Minas Gerais, in 1881, and in
Conceição das Alagoas in 1884. The historical subjects of the movement were anonymous, and many facts were not recorded. The movement was popular, but it had the connivance or support from local elites. Due to the outstanding female participation, the movement was also called “Women's War”. In
Mossoró,
Rio Grande do Norte, the organization and execution were exclusively led by women, in the so-called "Women's Mutiny". The geographic distribution was wide, occurring in numerous parishes in Minas Gerais,
São Paulo,
Rio de Janeiro,
Espírito Santo,
Bahia,
Alagoas,
Pernambuco,
Paraíba, Rio Grande do Norte and
Ceará. In
Rio Grande do Sul the greater presence of troops prevented riots, but the enlistment suffered many manipulations. The rebel concentrations were in Minas Gerais and in the northeastern
agreste, both marked by the greater importance of free work. Minas Gerais also had a population too dispersed for troops to defend the recruitment boards, and a traditional aversion to military service. In August, the board was attacked in 78 localities in the province by mobs of 30 to 500 people, with further fighting continuing until April 1876. The destruction of the lists was accompanied by festive celebrations in the cities. Seditions in São Paulo were limited to regions bordering Minas Gerais. In Ceará, a poor and populous province with a heavy recruitment burden, the revolt was a consequence of the Paraguayan War and rumors circulated of recruitment for a new conflict in Paraguay. At the time, the rebels were accused of
fanaticism, misunderstanding and especially ignorance. Part of the historiography considers the
rasga-listas as "pre-political" social movements of the
sertão, associating them with
cangaço and
messianism. But the free population had its reasons. The movement was reactive and legitimist, defending established rights and the "natural order of things" against what was considered an unwarranted expansion of government demands. Thus, it was typical of pre-industrial revolts in Europe, a Brazilian
vendée or
jacquerie. The reform hurt the
sertanejos' sense of justice, based more on customs than on the laws of a distant state. In the Northeast, the
rasga-listas had a geography similar to that of the Quebra-Quilos revolt, a movement contrary to the implementation of the metric system, but also to the new recruitment law, and the Ronco da Abelha Revolt and the "Marimbondos", years earlier. They had in common the fears of the
sertanejos with the secularization and rationalization imposed by the Europeanizing elites. This unrest would begin in the 1870s, with the
Muckers and the Vintém revols, ending with the
Canudos and
Contestado Wars, decades later. The crowds cheered the monarchy, the Catholic Church and the old law, presenting themselves as restorers of order. The new law was called "barbaric", having come to "enslave the people". The
rasga-listas claimed to be defenders of religion and were hostile to Freemasonry, reflecting the rupture between State and Church that occurred with the Religious Issue. In some places they were in favor of the
Liberal Party due to some of this party's leadership that was against the law. However, the discontent went beyond religious and partisan issues. == Results ==