It is the popular street cat, inhabitant of roofs, city
squares and gardens, which has become an eminent
feline recognized as a breed 10 years ago by the Brazilian Cat Federation,
located in Rio de Janeiro. Everything started in 1985, thanks to
a breeder's idea, Paulo Ruschi, at the time president of the Federation.
His project was based on the work done by the British and Americans, who
transformed street cats in pure bred cats, the British Shorthair and the
American Shorthair. Besides, our cat had a characteristic tipology, deserving,
therefore, recognition of its own race standard.
The struggle started that same
year. Three or four member breeder committes,
were organized to analize the characteristics
these cats had in common, and to
establish a standard for them. In a research
developed in Ceará, Rio de Janeiro, and
Porto Alegre, around 40 cats were registered.
The breeders searched the streets,
and wrote down a description of the characteristics
of the cats: shape of the body,
head, paws, nose, muzzle, coat, eyes, tail...
"It was surprising. In despite of the
distance between these cities, there was a great
similarity between the cats
analized," says Ruschi. From the similarities,
a breed standard was created, and it
was named Brazilian Shorthair. At the time, this
was made known by newspapers
in Rio de Janeiro, and all the members of the
entity, around the country, were
informed of the recognition of the breed, and
people who had such cats were called
to get their initial registration at the Federation.
A request for recognition was also
made at the World Cat Federation, located in
Germany, entity to which the
Brazilian Cat Federation is affiliated, along
with entities from 17 other countries.
The president of WCF, Annelise Hackmann, came
to Brazil, saw the cats, and took
part on a meeting about the issue with the directors
of the Brazilian Cat Federation.
The standard was examined in Germany. In 1994,
the cat was recognized as the
Keltic Shorthair, a breed which comes from ancient
European cats (known as
European Shorthair in other cat entities), because
they concluded both had similar
characteristics.
The Brazilian Shorthair has,
in fact, originated from cats that were brought here by the Europeans,
at the time of the country's colonization. However, Ruschi
comments that, through the years, they have gone
through changes. "The Keltics I
saw in expositions in Germany, for example, are
clearly different from the Brazilian
Shorthair: more robust, bigger and wider head,
the length of the muzzle is equal to
width of skull. Our cat is lighter, thinner,
with a head longer than wide."
Ruschi's observations agree
with the differences existing in the standards of the two breeds. In the
Keltic, the body must be medium to large, and well muscled; in the Shorthair,
only medium. In the Keltic, the head is really wide, while our cat's head
must be longer than wide. For our cat, any color is acceptable, while for
the Keltic there are restrictions (colors accepted are the same as the
ones in the British
Shorthair). The Brazilian Shorthair's coat does
not stick up, rather it is tight to skin,
according to the standard, a characteristic which
is not mentioned in the standard of
the Keltic. Due to these comparisons, Ruschi,
who is also a senior international
judge for the World Cat Federation, as well as
the Govern Concil of the Cat Fancy,
in England, says it will be necessary to make
a new proposal to this entity -
documented with photos, videos of the cats, and
so forth - in order to create a
separate standard for the Brazilian Shorthair,
recognizing it as a specific breed.
The Brazilian Cat Club, affiliated
to FIFE, Federazione Internazionale Felina
Europeia, has also taken a first step toward
the international recognition of our cat.
"We have asked FIFE to specify the demands to
recognize the Brazilian Shorthair.
We proposed to photograph or show 5 generations
of these cats," informs Celso
Tirlone, president of the Club.
The Brazilian Shorthair is
a strong and medium sized cat: neither compact, with
round and flat lines as the Persian, nor thin
and elegant as the Orientals, such as the
Siamese. The coat is short, and eyes preferably
matching the color of the coat. The
temperament is playfull, gay, active and very
attached to the owner. For Rose
Marie Lynch, from Cattery de Lynx, in Rio de
Janeiro, president of the Brazilian
Cat Club in Rio, and breeder, "it is intelligent,
and learn things easily. It is also an
accomplished hunter, extremely healthy and very
envolving, demanding our
attention all the time. Without love, however,
it can become peevish, suspicious,
and end up choosing a friendlier owner."
The Brazilian Shorthair, if not bred profissionally,
may become extinct. "There is
an indiscriminated mating both in the streets
and in the homes, for many owners of
this breed breed them with furrier cats, thinking
kittens will be more valuable that
way," states Rose Marie.
One of the goals of the breeders, is to preserve
this cat, always seeking to improve
its characteristics. In order to do this, the
Brazilian Cat Federantion is issuing an
initial registration for the cats which are close
to breed standard, as well as a
definitive registration, for the ones who have
a certain number of titles in
expositions, or come from breedings which followed
certain rules. So far the
Brazilian Shorthair has very few breeders, and
little genetic improvement. Possibly,
the main factor for this is the enormous disponibility,
in the streets, of cats which
present the characteristics requested by the
standard. To obtain a registration, the
cats just have to be presented for examination
at the Brazilian Federation of Cats.
However, there is genetic work to be done, such
as obtaining the combination of
the eye color and coat, something hard to find
in the streets, where mating in
random.