Tharoth, a female boxer, throws a punch to
her opponent, another female boxer who weighs 7 kilos heavier. Because
of the limited number of girls who spar, the boxers sometimes have to
fight above their weight class.
Image Credit: Hannah Reyes
|
Cambodia's Boxing Girls
“My mother hates it,” 23-year-old Tharoth tells me. “I don’t let her
watch.” Tharoth is a female boxer in Cambodia—a country where tradition
dictates that women be modest, gentle, soft-spoken and reserved. But in
the nation’s capital, a group of girls are going against these
expectations, and inside the ring to fight. The girls appear on national
TV, with local stations allocating airtime for their bouts. However,
because of the stigma, the number of female boxers is still small, with
some of them having to fight as many as three divisions above their
weight class. They accept these fights to gain experience.
A Cambodian female boxer wraps her hands before her match in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Image Credit: Hannah Reyes
|
Boxing was forbidden under the Khmer Rouge. In recent years, it had
to be established again, and quickly regained popularity. With its rise,
women began to take an interest, and eventually began sparring for
different reasons: some for the love of the sport, and others for extra
money. Most have to juggle boxing in between daily jobs, and at the same
time, fulfill their roles as women in their households. Tharoth comes
to her parents’ house everyday to take care of her ailing father. Thanks
to boxing she is now strong enough to carry him around the house.
Khmean, a young female boxer, is attended
to by Tharoth, who is her corner "man" in this match. The girls
alternate as each other's corner men and take care of each other when
they fight.
Image Credit: Hannah Reyes
|
Outside the ring, the girls act very differently to their male
counterparts. If not for their boxing gear one would not be able to tell
them apart from other young Khmer women. They giggle as they fix each
other’s hair before the bout. Yet as soon as they step in the ring, they
transform, holding the attention of a stadium that is almost
exclusively filled with men. The spectators are enthralled. “That was
the most interesting fight of the day,” one says.
Cambodia is not always a safe place for women. In 2013, a UN study
reported that one in five Cambodian men have raped a woman, with more
than half committing their first rape before the age of 20. Gang rape,
or bauk in Khmer, is a phenomenon that is far too common. In this
environment, these young female boxers are making an important
statement. “As a girl you are expected to stay in your place, be demure,
accept your role,” one of them tells me. Beyond physical strength,
these women are overcoming a mindset.
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