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There is a place where champions are born, called the slums, and the disease plagues 5-year-old Oliveira

author:BAike

What does a slum house look like in ChinaOn October 17, 1989, Charles and Oliveira were born in a corrupt country where people were treated like scum. The abhorrent street violence that rattled the city and the brutal intervention of the police meant that at least five or six people lost their precious lives every day. A family of six crammed into a dilapidated bungalow with an aisle the width of a foot, and although there was no money, Oliveira's father never let Oliveira go hungry, even if he was hungry.

There is a place where champions are born, called the slums, and the disease plagues 5-year-old Oliveira

The rich are opposite, but distinguished by a spectacular, narrow landscape. To this day, the people of the slums are left to fend for themselves. Slums also have their own laws, and if you want to live a stable life, you have to observe the distance of villains. When Oliveira was ten years old, doctors firmly told him that he would not have a normal life for the rest of his life. Watching the hands of his peers dancing outside the window, Oliveira's ears were full of words like a knife, and the pain of juvenile arthritis and heart murmurs enveloped his whole body, unable to stand and walk, resulting in his favorite football not being mentioned.

There is a place where champions are born, called the slums, and the disease plagues 5-year-old Oliveira

Oliveira spent two full years in the hospital, during which time his father and mother worked two jobs each, alternating tears at Oliveira's bedside. Oliveira's mother slept on the floor in front of her hospital bed every day, woke up at 5 a.m. to work, and couldn't go home once a month, only going back and forth between the hospital and work. When she was discharged from the hospital, Oliveira told her mother that if I couldn't do what I loved, I would rather die. At this moment, Oliveira was so helpless, how eager she was to stand up. Uncle Paul, a neighbor, saw that he could not play soccer like other children and persuaded his mother to take him to Jiu-Jitsu. At the age of 12, Oliveira regained the fitness she had also made here, believing that this was what she wanted. Since then, Paul has taken Oliveira to Jiu-Jitsu every day and encouraged him that one day we will be champions.

There is a place where champions are born, called the slums, and the disease plagues 5-year-old Oliveira