Remembering Fabio da Costa Saldanha: The young star of Rio Breaks

Remembering Fabio da Costa Saldanha: The young star of Rio Breaks
Rest in peace — On 3 March 2017, 22-year-old Fabio da Costa Saldanha was shot dead by Brazilian police. Just ten years ago he was the subject of a documentary, Rio Breaks; one of two kids captured in a Rio de Janeiro favela learning to navigate the world around them. Huck Publisher and Rio Breaks writer/co-producer Vince Medeiros pays tribute to Fabio.

On Sunday 5 March, I woke up to the following email from my friend and fellow Rio Breaks producer John Maier: “I just got a message from Ricardo saying Fabio was killed by the special police forces in Rio. He had been in prison the last 3 years, got out, tried to work but then went back to being a ‘traficante’. He was killed 2 days ago and the burial was yesterday.”

I spent two years on and off with Fabio da Costa Saldanha and his best friend Naama Martines de Uzeda, making a documentary about the two young surfers from Morro do Cantagalo in Rio. This was 2006/2007, they were in their early teens, and they loved the beach.

A young Fabio

A young Fabio

Rio Breaks director Justin Mitchell wrote on his FB page: “When we filmed with Fabio and his best friend Naama they were just kids, sweet and funny boys who reminded me of two grumbling old men with how they bickered back and forth with one another. Even though they had lived hard lives in the favela, they both maintained a sense of wonder for life, and an innocence that was felt by everyone around them.”

Life in the favela is tough. I mean, really fucking tough. Tough in a way that metropolitan folk and the Twittering liberal classes almost certainly fail to comprehend.

Fabio lived at the very top of the hill with his grandparents – mum had left him; dad had been killed – in a small, unimaginably precarious home. Food was limited. There’s a vérité scene in the film where he’s sitting with Naama on the roof of his house, watching vultures circle up above. The two are just sitting together, shooting the shit, being kids. At one point Fabio says he’s hungry; he says he’d love to eat “that delicious bread from the bakery”.

Fabio once said he wanted to come back to the UK with me, but when I said there was no surf in London, and that it was cold, he seemed to think twice about it; all of a sudden he wasn’t so sure anymore. But that desire to escape had always been there.

Surfing at Arpoador was a small window into that dream. There, in the waves, he was happy. The happiest I’d ever seen him while making the film. He was also happy in the company of Rogerio, who runs the Favela Surf Club and is a mentor to many of the kids on the hill. Rogerio is a real life hero. But there’s only so much he can do.

17038775_10154595351929671_5649905907562616503_o

Fabio’s killing personalises what is often a newspaper headline, if that. More often than not, it is just a statistic. Another kid – a ‘bandido’ – shot by the police. Fabio was a kid when we made the film. He was 13. And he was also a kid when he was shot dead by the police. He was only 22.

Fabio’s death brought the whole gang who worked on Rio Breaks closer together. I’ve been in touch with Justin and producers Ricardo Gomes and John Maier. And I’ve also been in touch with Fabio’s best friend, Naama.

Naama’s had a tough ride in the last few years. After some time in prison, he made it out and got back together with his girlfriend. They have a kid, Artur, who’s now 4-years-old. Naama’s set on making a fresh start. He’s now working with NGO Afro Reggae, and has reconnected with Rogerio and the Favela Surf Club. He told me he’d taken Artur out surfing for the first time recently.

Naama’s a survivor. He said to me last night: “I wish Fabio was alive to see how I managed to turn things around.”

May Fabio rest in peace.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Latest on Huck

Nearly a century ago, denim launched a US fashion revolution
Culture

Nearly a century ago, denim launched a US fashion revolution

The fabric that built America — From its roots as rugged workwear, the material became a society-wide phenomenon in the 20th century, even democratising womenswear. A new photobook revisits its impact.

Written by: Miss Rosen

A forlorn portrait of a Maine fishing village forced to modernise
Culture

A forlorn portrait of a Maine fishing village forced to modernise

Sealskin — Jeff Dworsky’s debut monograph ties his own life on Deer Isle and elegiac family story with ancient Celtic folklore.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Subversive shots of Catholic schoolgirls in ‘80s New York
Culture

Subversive shots of Catholic schoolgirls in ‘80s New York

Catholic Girl — When revisiting her alma mater, Andrea Modica noticed schoolgirls finding forms of self-expression beyond the dress code. Her new photobook documents their intricate styles.

Written by: Isaac Muk

We need to talk about super gonorrhoea
Activism

We need to talk about super gonorrhoea

Test & vaccinate — With infection rates of ‘the clap’ seemingly on the up, as well as a concerning handful of antibiotic resistant cases, Nick Levine examines what can be done to stem the STI’s rise.

Written by: Nick Levine

5 decades ago, Larry Sultan & Mike Mandel redefined photography
Culture

5 decades ago, Larry Sultan & Mike Mandel redefined photography

Evidence — Between 1975 and 1977, the two photographers sifted through thousands of images held by official institutions, condensing them into a game-changing sequence.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Warm portraits of English football fans before the Premier League
Sport

Warm portraits of English football fans before the Premier League

Going to the Match — In the 1991/1992 season, photographer Richard Davis set out to understand how the sport’s supporters were changing, inadvertently capturing the end of an era.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now