Meet the brave boy that the World Cup ignored
For many Brazilians, hosting the World Cup was a moment to affirm the country’s status as a true player on the global stage – finally casting off its perennial tag as a nation with huge potential only matched by difficulties living up to such lofty expectations.
With media attention focused on organizational concerns and sporting spectacle, countless stories fell below the radar.
One of them was the tale of Werá Jeguaka Mirim, a Guaraní teenager who fearlessly protested at the tournament’s opening ceremony, right before Brazil kicked off against Croatia at the shiny new Arena Corinthians in São Paulo.
Werá was in a group of three children – one white, one Afro-Brazilian and one indigenous – who were chosen to release doves of peace on the field as a tribute to tolerance and cultural diversity.