Abbas Alizada was nine when he first saw a Bruce Lee film. He fell in love with kung-fu, copying his hero’s moves and his look before an online post shot him to overnight fame.Abbas was born in Kabul in 1993, the youngest of nine siblings. His family are Hazara, an ethnic minority who have historically faced violence and persecution in Afghanistan, and were partcularly targeted when the Taliban first took power in 1996. During this time, music and movies were banned, and Abbas’ family kept a low profile until the US-led invasion toppled the regime in the early 2000s.With restrictions gone, Abbas began to see movies for the first time, on a television his uncle would rent for the family. He was nine when he first saw Bruce Lee in kung fu classic Enter The Dragon. He was transfixed by the actor’s kung fu skills, and decided that day that he wanted to be a martial artist. As a teenager, he was enrolled in a local martial arts academy, but when his parents could no longer afford the fees, he continued training by himself at home. For years, he spent hours a day mastering his hero's moves in his basement, watching all of Bruce Lee's movies in slow motion, even teaching himself how to use the iconic fighter's trademark nunchucks. Abbas was eighteen years old when a friend first pointed out to him that not only could he kick like Bruce Lee, but that he bore an uncanny resemblance to the martial arts legend too. Abbas cut his hair to look like the Fist of Fury star and when his friend uploaded a photo of him posing like Bruce Lee to the internet, it went viral overnight. National and international media descended on the Alizada household to interview this young lookalike with his self-taught mastery of kung fu. Soon, Abbas was being flown all over the Middle East and Asia to star to star in movies, film commercials and perform at festivals. Abbas married, had kids, and was riding high. But when the Taliban returned to Kabul in 2021, he knew he had a target on his back. Soon, Abbas would be forced to drop everything - and find a way out. Presenter: Asya Fouks
Producer: Zoe GelberClips: Enter the Dragon / Warner Bros., Concord ProductionsLives Less Ordinary is a podcast from the BBC World Service that brings you the most incredible true stories from around the world. Each episode a guest shares their most dramatic, moving, personal story. Listen for unbelievable twists, mysteries uncovered, and inspiring journeys - spanning the entire human experience. Step into someone else’s life and expect the unexpected.
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why won't this episode play?
Lothar Hermann isn't unknown. Every book about Eichmann mentions him! Even before this neice, supposedly, discovered his role. What a very self important woman.
His story wasn't unknown. Every book about Eichmann talks about him! Lothar Hermann is all over history.
Great story
so inspiring
people are changed MARZIE they aren't racist anymore
A fantastic episode from a brilliant series
Am I the only one looking to find out WTF he wrote on the note he showed to the bank tellers???
very good podcast
wow! I found this story so absolutely amazing. it helped put things going on in my life into perspective.
Amazing story but one point, what she says about not being able to make yourself bankrupt in Scotland is wrong. Maybe it was true then but it certainly isn't now.
what an amazing woman sue is..such a touching story.
this story has made me into tears!
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wow It's a interesting story
wow what a story
What an incredible story!
There are beautiful stories here
What an incredible story!
I don't think you are pronouncing her last name properly. The "ch" in Callimachi is not pronounced as "kh" (as in Khan) but "Ch" as in "chess".