Walking through the grounds of the festival is a visually liberating experience. Bodies of all ages, shapes, sizes, and colors move freely. There are the tan lines of construction workers, the stretch marks of mothers, the scars of surgeries, and the wrinkles of age. In this context, the "perfect body" becomes an anomaly. The festival fosters a phenomenon known in psychology as "body neutrality"—not necessarily loving every part of your physique, but accepting it without judgment. By decoupling nudity from shame, Enature allows participants to exist in their skin as they exist in the world: imperfect, alive, and worthy of respect.
Enature is also a model of sustainable tourism. The host resorts are typically eco-lodges that utilize solar energy, greywater recycling, and permaculture gardens. Because the festival rejects the fast-fashion industry (if only temporarily), there is a tangible reduction in textile waste. Participants bring fewer suitcases, use fewer towels (a practical challenge in naturism requires bringing one’s own towel for hygiene), and engage directly with the landscape. Enature Brazil Naturist Festival
Despite its successes, Enature operates under constant legal and social pressure. Brazilian public decency laws are strict, and naturism is only permitted in designated, federal-approved areas. The festival must constantly fight against media sensationalism that conflates nudity with lewdness. Moreover, the rise of digital culture poses a threat: the fear of being photographed and having images shared out of context (a practice known as "doxxing" or digital shaming) keeps many curious Brazilians away. Walking through the grounds of the festival is
The event draws a diverse crowd—families with children, elderly couples, young singles, and LGBTQ+ individuals. For families, Enature provides an opportunity for intergenerational education, teaching children that nudity is not inherently sexual but a practical state for swimming, sleeping, or sunning. This demystification, proponents argue, leads to healthier adolescent development and a lower incidence of body shame. In this context, the "perfect body" becomes an anomaly
To understand Enature, one must first divorce the concept of Brazilian naturism from the stereotype of sexual libertinism. The Brazilian Naturist Federation (FBrN) adheres to a strict code of ethics that prioritizes respect, non-verbal consent, and the separation of nudity from eroticism. Enature is the festival where these ideals are put into practice on a massive scale. Held in various eco-resorts across the country—from the Atlantic Forest hinterlands to the plains of São Paulo—the festival transforms private naturist clubs into bustling, temporary villages.