Excerpt:
...Albino Carreira was born on January 29th, 1945 --
the fourth child of six in a family of stone cutters.
As a boy he loved to make toy 'trains' out of scrap
wood. Some of these were so big he could ride them down
the hilly streets of his hometown in Ourem, Portugal.
From the age of 12 he was a hard worker, taking employment
at a small clothing store as a sales clerk. At 18 he
joined the national army and was posted in Mozambique
for 3 years where he learned of abundant employment
opportunities overseas from his fellow comrades. Then,
in 1972, after briefly holding a position as head salesman
in a department store, he left Portugal for the promising
economy of North America. His destination was Canada
where many of his fellow countrymen had landed. This
seemed to him a likely place to settle down. He immediately
got himself a job with a construction company and happily
worked long, hard hours for the next 21 years. At one
of his major construction sites, an expansion of the
Art Gallery of Ontario, Carreira recalls being fascinated
by all the wonderful sculptures and paintings.
On June 16, 1993 at 12:30p.m., Albino Carreira slipped
and fell twenty four feet from the scaffolding where
he was at work. On his journey downward, his head grazed
a brick building which cracked his skull. When he landed,
his spine had broken and a great deal of blood was lost
from a head wound. At the hospital, Albino's injuries
were considered fatal. The examining physicians gave
him but a few hours to live. To everyone's surprise,
Carreira's body did not expire. Instead it showed strong
vital signs and the decision was made to save him. Surgeons
worked for 8 hours -- they mended his skull and then,
using stainless steel plates and six, long Robertson-head
screws along with pieces of his leg bone, they reconstructed
Albino's spine. He now lives on a permanent disability
pension with his wife, their two children and his mother-in-law.