An image of resilience, a concrete alternative for the young people of the Complexo do Alemão, one of the largest and most emblematic clusters of favelas in Rio de Janeiro. It is the community initiative “Projeto Elite Futebol e Inovação Social”, which uses football as a tool for social inclusion, education and personal development for children and adolescents in a vulnerable area, afflicted by poverty and emergencies linked to criminal drug trafficking.
The area, north of the Brazilian metropolis, stands out not only for its size – about fifteen communities, with a population of around 70,000 inhabitants – but also for the commitment of some of the residents, who have long been mobilized to offer free sporting activities, working on values such as discipline, coexistence, social participation.
The project, born in 2024, involves around 200 children and adolescents through football lessons, coordinated by coach Betinho. The activities take place in the Fazendinha area, one of the communities of the Complexo do Alemão, but the young people, including those with disabilities, also come from other communities such as Alvorada, Inferno Verde, Casinhas, Área 5.
In the midst of the World Football Championships in Canada, Mexico and the United States, on the eve of whose inauguration Pope Leo deny any future. In a context marked by violence, the territory is where last October a ghostly silence fell after a massive police operation against narcos, an anti-drug blitz involving 2,500 agents against the criminal organization Comando Vermelho, with a death toll of over 100 between the Complexo do Alemão and that of Penha. The videos of the inhabitants of the area, spread on social media amid controversy over the brutality of the methods used, then made it a real war scenario: bombs dropped with drones, hundreds and hundreds of bullets fired, bodies dismembered with machetes, buses set on fire and used as barricades to block the roads. (aquiline jade)












