Sunny side isn't always up / by Kylie Fuentes


For most people in the favelas, there isn't much work and when there is it is unskilled labour based. On average, the boys end up going to school for about 3 or 4 years and the girls just a little more. After that, they try and learn to build houses (they'll need this skill to keep mending & extending their shacks) and then basically hanging around the favela. The pics below are pretty typical of the scene in this part of town.

Makes for a pretty depressing and hopeless lifestyle, not many of them get out of the favelas and into mainstream society. But interestingly enough, there are some total juxtapositions in this place. They have a government provided Wi-Fi hotspot in the centre of the favela, a centre of commerce (including shanty town style beauty salons, bars, hairdressers and hardware stores) and everyone has a mobile phone. The strangest thing I've ever seen in my life. The way in and out of the favela is to walk up the steepest hills you've ever seen, or get on a rickety elevator. Needless to say, the effort to get in and out means most people spend all day in the favela, only leaving for the absolute necessities.