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Long Island wrestling phenom overcomes odds after surviving horrific chimpanzee attack

A local high school wrestling phenom just won a national championship and is heading to college on a scholarship, but that's a far cry from how his life started off thousands of miles away, where he endured a life-changing attack that's hard to fathom.

Dunia Sibomana-Rodriguez has always had guts and grit, so it's no surprise how well he took to wrestling.

He's been grappling with life since he was 6 years old, but he would not let life's challenges pin him down.

"I don't think I would have ever thought I'd be here, coming from my country and ending up being a good wrestler," Sibomana-Rodriguez said.

He was just a little boy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, when a swarm of chimpanzees attacked, killing Sibomana-Rodriguez's cousin, injuring his brother and leaving him with no easy life, trying to fit in. But then Sibomana-Rodriguez found wrestling.

"Once I started getting better at it, people started accepting me and I accepted them," he said.

Sibomana-Rodriguez came to the United States for reconstructive surgeries.

He had never wrestled a day in his life. Five Nassau County titles, three state championships and a national title later; the 18-year-old has committed to the University of North Carolina. As for how he got his start, he was taken in by a wrestling coach at Long Beach who would adopt him when he was in middle school.

"It meant everything because without him pushing me so hard I wouldn't be where I am today," Sibomana-Rodriguez said.

For teammate Ethan Andreuli, a sophomore, Sibomana-Rodriguez is more than a mentor. He's an inspiration.

"He always kept like a smile on his face, kept ignoring like the bad stuff, and he always kept working hard and doing the right thing," Andreuli said.

The high school wrestler needed more than a dozen surgeries. He lost a finger, part of an ear, and part of his face, but he never lost his indomitable spirit.

"His dedication, his hard work made other boys work," XX said.

Sibomana-Rodriguez made others realize their own potential.

"Don't let people determine who you are, and you should make your own story," Sibomana-Rodriguez said.

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