Romelu Lukaku (in Man U Jersey) |
Manchester United
striker, Romelu Lukaku, has given an account of his family background,
revealing that they were not just poor but broke.
Lukaku, who is currently representing Belgium at the ongoing FIFA World Cup in Russia, shared a very emotional story about his childhood in an interview with The Player Tribune, revealing that his family lived in abject poverty.
Lukaku talked
about his struggle growing up as a black footballer in Belgium and how he vowed
to be the best player ever in the country.
“I remember the exact moment I knew we were broke. I can still
picture my mum at the refrigerator and the look on her face. I was six years
old, and I came home for lunch during our break at school. My mum had the same
thing on the menu every single day: Bread and milk. When you’re a kid, you
don’t even think about it. But I guess that’s what we could afford.”
Romelu Lukaku (in Everton U Jersey) |
“Then this one
day I came home, and I walked into the kitchen, and I saw my mum at the
refrigerator with the box of milk, like normal. But this time she was mixing
something in with it. She was shaking it all up, you know? I didn’t understand
what was going on. Then she brought my lunch over to me, and she was smiling
like everything was cool. But I realized right away what was going on.”
“She was mixing
water in with the milk. We didn’t have enough money to make it last the whole
week. We were broke. Not just poor, but broke. My father had been a pro
footballer, but he was at the end of his career and the money was all gone. The
first thing to go was the cable TV. No more football. No more Match of the Day.
No signal. Then I’d come home at night and the lights would be shut off. No
electricity for two, three weeks at a time.”
“Then I’d want to take a bath, and there would be no hot water. My
mum would heat up a kettle on the stove, and I’d stand in the shower splashing
the warm water on top of my head with a cup. There were even times when my mum
had to “borrow” bread from the bakery down the street. The bakers knew me and
my little brother, so they’d let her take a loaf of bread on Monday and pay
them back on Friday.”
“I knew we were
struggling. But when she was mixing in water with the milk, I realized it was
over, you know what I mean? This was our life. I didn’t say a word. I didn’t
want her to stress. I just ate my lunch. But I swear to God, I made a promise
to myself that day. It was like somebody snapped their fingers and woke me up.
I knew exactly what I had to do, and what I was going to do. I couldn’t see my
mother living like that. Nah, nah, nah. I couldn’t have that.”
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“People in football love to talk about mental strength. Well, I’m the strongest dude you’re ever going to meet. Because I remember sitting in the dark with my brother and my mom, saying our prayers, and thinking, believing, knowing … it’s going to happen. I kept my promise to myself for a while. But then some days I’d come home from school and find my mum crying. So I finally told her one day, “Mum, it’s gonna change. You’ll see. I’m going to play football for Anderlecht, and it’s going to happen soon. We’ll be good. You won’t have to worry anymore.”
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