Ruyman Afonso… The Kind of Work That Doesn’t Shout, But Matters

Some people have a job.

Others just show up for people properly.

Ruyman Afonso sits somewhere in the middle of that.

Born and rooted in Santa Cruz, his path hasn’t been about titles or recognition… more about being present where it actually counts.

Not Your Typical “Educator”

He’s a social educator, but he doesn’t dress it up.

No big speeches. No academic tone.

More like:

  • Being at the school gate
  • Watching how kids arrive
  • Picking up on what’s not being said

The small moments… that’s where he works.

And in reality, that’s where most of the problems start as well.

Where It Comes From

There’s a bit of history behind him.

Son of Hupalupa, a known figure locally, and a mother he credits with giving him the ability to listen, mediate, and stay calm when things get messy.

That mix… public life on one side, quiet understanding on the other… you can see how it shaped him.

The Reality on the Ground

Most of his work has been in the metropolitan area, with time spent in the south as well.

And the picture isn’t complicated… but it’s not easy either.

In the south especially:

  • Long working hours
  • Tourism-driven jobs
  • Families with very little time

It’s not neglect.

It’s people trying to get by.

And that pressure shows up in kids… in behaviour, in expectations, in how they see their future.

More Than Just School

He doesn’t see schools as just places to teach.

They’re where problems show up early… or where they can be softened before they grow.

That’s why his work goes beyond classrooms.

Projects like Birmagen or Tenique focus on bringing families, kids, and communities back into the same space.

Nothing complicated… just rebuilding connection.

Because once that’s gone, everything else becomes harder.

No Hero Talk

He’s not trying to “save” anyone.

And he’s clear about that.

Some situations don’t change.

Some kids don’t turn things around… at least not straight away.

But his view is simple:

If there’s still time, and someone’s still listening… there’s always a chance.

The Approach

No forcing.

No lecturing.

Just:

  • Understand first
  • Then support
  • Stay consistent

In a world that’s getting faster and noisier, that approach stands out more than it should.

The Bigger Picture

What he’s really pushing for isn’t complicated.

  • Kids not growing up on their own
  • Families having some level of support
  • Schools acting as real community spaces

It sounds basic… but it’s not happening everywhere.

And that’s the gap people like him are trying to fill.

Quietly, most of the time.

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