More than 2,000 boys and girls have been given free surfing lessons at surf schools in Rio
Free surf schools are giving a new lease of life to impoverished children in Rio de Janeiro.
More than 2,000 children from Rio’s largest slum, Rocinha, have
received free surf lessons at two schools in the city over the course of
the last twenty years. The lessons aim to give the children exercise,
focus and a moment of escapism amid Brazilian slum life.
Rafael Silva, second right, and Joao
Pedro Alves, second left, prepare their surf board at the Rocinha Surf
Association headquarters at Rocinha slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Cristiano Gomes 'Xuxu' leaves Rocinha slum on his way to Sao Conrado beach in Rio de Janeiro (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
He now ranks in the Top 10 of Rio’s junior surfing league and plans to enter the sport professionally. He says: “A lot of my friends who aren’t surfing don’t have anything, they don’t know what to do with their lives. I don’t know what would have become of me without surfing.”
Young bodyboarders from Rocinha joke
with each other as they run towards the water at Sao Conrado brach in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this photo, Gabriel de Lima, 13,
stretches before surfing at Sao Conrado beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Not long ago, many of these kids were begging on the streets or engaged
in crime, but two surf schools serving youth from Rioís largest slum,
Rocinha, have helped change that. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
He surfs everyday whilst also working as a dog walker to make ends meet. He says that Rio needs to develop its pro-surfing infrastructure more to give greater opportunities to surfers looking to become professionals: “My dream until today is to be a pro surfer. I still compete in championships, but there aren’t many of them in Rio, so it’s not easy.”
Marcio Pereira da Silva, right, founder of the Rocinha Surf Association, ASR, is helped by young surfers as they store boards at their headquarters at Rocinha slum in Rio de Janeiro (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Robert Silva poses for a photo while
fixing his board at the Rocinha Surf Association headquarters at Rocinha
slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Along with free surf boards and
clothes, kids are taught how to maintain and fix their gear. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
Worldwide, the sport is gaining popularity as the number of people taking to surfboards around the globe has increased by 35 per cent over the course of the last decade.
Young surfers from the Rocinha slum
enter the water at Sao Conrado beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Everyday
barefoot boys hustle down the inclined alleyways of the Rio de Janeiro
slums they call home, surf boards under their arms. They head to nearby
Sao Conrado or Arpoador beach, where they catch waves and momentarily
leave their impoverished lives behind. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
In this May 21, 2015 photo, Christian
da Conceicao, 11, shows a signed polaroid photo of him and friends with
U.S. surfer John John Florence at Sao Conrado beach in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil. Everyday barefoot boys hustle down the inclined alleyways of the
Rio de Janeiro slums they call home, surf boards under their arms. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)