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Brazil’s Modern-day Captains of the Sands

How Jorge Amado's novel, Captains of the Sands, about street children written 80 years ago, still resonates today in Brazil.

Eighty years ago, the Brazilian writer Jorge Amado published Captains of the Sands, a powerfully moving novel about the lives of a gang of orphaned children living on the streets of Salvador. The book had a huge impact, showing wealthy Brazilians the truth about the inequality in their country and the humanity of the children they were used to regarding as “pests”. It is now a literary classic and read by almost every Brazilian child at school.

Eighty years on, though, thousands of adolescents and children still live in the streets in Salvador. Their lives are still marked by poverty and crime, intensified since Amado's day by the growth of the drugs trade and the addiction and violence it brings. And they still find alternative bonds of family in the kind of gangs that Amado would have recognised. For Assignment, David Baker meets these modern-day Captains of the Sands and hears their stories and those of the people trying to help them.

Producer: James Fletcher

(Photo: JoĂŁo Vitor lives and sleeps outdoors in a square in Salvador, Brazil. He was raised by his grandmother and has been homeless since his mid-teens)

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27 minutes

Last on

Sun 2 Apr 2017 04:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 30 Mar 2017 12:32GMT
  • Thu 30 Mar 2017 21:06GMT
  • Fri 31 Mar 2017 01:32GMT
  • Sun 2 Apr 2017 04:06GMT

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