People laughed when a farmer paid almost nothing for a woman nearly two meters tall, dismissed by others as useless and uncontrollable. To most buyers, she was a risk no one wanted to take.
But Joaquim Lacerda saw something different. Where others saw a problem, he saw untapped strength—raw, unfocused, but full of potential.
Her name was Benedita, and what seemed like another moment of humiliation would become a turning point in her life.
The scene took place in 1857, in the town of Vassouras, in Brazil’s coffee-growing region. At the time, slavery shaped daily life, and human beings were bought and sold in public markets.
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