Fans seeking rare mementos of the Brazilian star are scouring the
town of 75,000 inhabitants where Pele was born to a poor family and
spent the first years of his life.
A month ago, Pele was admitted
to Albert Einstein Hospital in Sao Paulo, where he had been undergoing
treatment for colon cancer since late 2021.
Eight days ago, the
hospital announced Pele's cancer was showing "progression" and he needed
"more extensive care to treat kidney and heart failure."
Tres
Coracoes, which means "three hearts" in Portuguese, is located some 250
kilometers (150 miles) from Brazil's three major metropolises: Belo
Horizonte, Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.
The small town is
surrounded by coffee plantations and is famous for just one thing: the
birth, in 1940, of Edson Arantes do Nascimento, known as Pele.
Pele moved away from Tres Coracoes at a young age before joining his longtime club, Santos FC, as a teenager.
Santos, a port city near Sao Paulo, now hosts the Pele Museum, where most of his trophies and other memorabilia are displayed.
The
football star's declining health has drawn fans to the museum and to
Tres Coracoes, where they can visit Pele House -- a replica of his first
home.
"I had never been to this house, which is already ten years old," said Neilor Henrique, who lives nearby.
"But the news of his hospitalization made me want to visit it," the 41-year-old told AFP.
Built based on the memories of Pele's mother, Celeste
Arantes do Nascimento, now 100 years old, the house shows the family's
modest origins, with a few pieces of wooden furniture, straw mattresses,
an old radio and a framed portrait of his parents on one wall.
- Immense statue -
A
few meters (yards) away, the small museum Terra do Rei (Land of the
King) exhibits Santos jerseys signed by Pele, a football he played with
and his birth certificate.
But some fans say they wished Tres Coracoes had more mementos of the man dubbed "The King."
Rafael Antunes took a detour during a family trip to visit the town in search of Pele souvenirs.
"I
found few traces of him in the town, almost none," said the 43-year-old
entrepreneur, unimpressed by the huge statue of Pele that stands at the
entrance to the town.
"I think it shows a certain lack of respect for the role he played
for football and our country," he said of the only player to ever win
the World Cup three times.
But Fernando Ortiz, a family friend, has a different reasoning for why there aren't more monuments to Pele.
"Many
Brazilians can't stand to see their compatriots succeed. And when it's a
black Brazilian, the dismissal is even stronger," said the 60-year-old,
who spearheaded the construction of Pele House.
"Unfortunately, I think that if Pele had been a white man with light eyes, he would have been accepted by everyone."