Just as Americans can remember what they were doing when they heard that President Kennedy had been shot, so any Brazilian old enough can recall the moment they found out Ayrton Senna had died.
"I was in Spain, in Valladolid. I had played a game in the morning," says former basketball international Oscar Schmidt.
"It was shocking to see Senna crashing at that speed with that force. I was paralysed.
Olympic gold medallist Robert Scheidt was windsurfing at Ponta das Canas, three hours from Sao Paulo, when he heard of the racing driver's death at Imola in Italy.
"It was an unforgettable day," said Scheidt.
Footballer Ronaldo, a 17-year-old, was watching the San Marino Grand Prix on television at a team training camp.
Senna's death 10 years ago paralysed Latin America's largest country.
The 34-year-old's body lay in state for 24 hours and up to one million people lined the streets of Sao Paulo to witness the funeral procession.
STATE FUNERAL
Brazilians said the event was matched only by the state funerals for former president Getulio Vargas, who committed suicide while in office in 1954, and Tancredo Neves, who died in 1985 days before he was due to take office as president.
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Ten years later, the former world champion is still remembered fondly in his home country. The Ayrton Senna Institute is involved in educational projects around the country and plans to invest $7.3 million this year.
It says that 1.2 million children from 3,375 schools and 463 cities will be directly involved in its activities this year. During the same period about 48,600 teachers will be trained.
His elder sister Viviane Senna has carried on the social project envisaged by the driver three months before he died.
"I quickly learned that just one project would not be enough," she said in a recent interview with O Globo.
"Just as important as providing care is developing a model of social technology that will allow us to care for more and more people."
UNIQUE RESPECT
Senna is treated with a respect enjoyed by no other Brazilian sporting hero. "Senna was an example in all aspects, on and off the race tracks," said Schmidt.
"He was an icon for reaching new limits, talent, quality, personality, character. He left emptiness. Senna was a complete idol, a guy that makes all Brazilians very proud."
"Brazilians have this irreverence towards their idols," said a feature in the news magazine Veja.
"Brazilians laughed about the emperor Pedro I's lovers, laughed again whenever (singer and composer) Tom Jobim got drunk or when Pele referred to himself in the third person.
"The only exception is Ayrton Senna. Brazilians worship Ayrton much the same way the Argentines do (king of tango) Carlos Gardel and Evita Peron."
(Additional reporting by Camila Moreira and Tatiano Ramil)