The Japan Times - Indigenous Mexican softball team fights against machismo

EUR -
AED 4.269911
AFN 72.658748
ALL 94.915795
AMD 428.055222
ANG 2.081348
AOA 1067.143961
ARS 1621.632758
AUD 1.623964
AWG 2.093891
AZN 1.980807
BAM 1.952467
BBD 2.342302
BDT 142.748177
BGN 1.941225
BHD 0.438541
BIF 3460.079226
BMD 1.162466
BND 1.486688
BOB 8.03642
BRL 5.90289
BSD 1.162915
BTN 111.545516
BWP 16.450203
BYN 3.236331
BYR 22784.328181
BZD 2.338948
CAD 1.597914
CDF 2612.64627
CHF 0.914594
CLF 0.026805
CLP 1054.879981
CNY 7.91628
CNH 7.92164
COP 4429.006031
CRC 527.544886
CUC 1.162466
CUP 30.805342
CVE 110.609072
CZK 24.324019
DJF 206.593866
DKK 7.473719
DOP 69.225291
DZD 153.748173
EGP 61.496999
ERN 17.436986
ETB 183.030684
FJD 2.560568
FKP 0.862421
GBP 0.872215
GEL 3.115862
GGP 0.862421
GHS 13.299061
GIP 0.862421
GMD 84.283241
GNF 10203.547362
GTQ 8.87197
GYD 243.308869
HKD 9.103159
HNL 30.945289
HRK 7.531969
HTG 152.273176
HUF 361.515801
IDR 20458.757378
ILS 3.393749
IMP 0.862421
INR 111.504996
IQD 1522.830098
IRR 1533292.28975
ISK 143.471968
JEP 0.862421
JMD 183.756336
JOD 0.824234
JPY 184.53683
KES 150.365388
KGS 101.658074
KHR 4664.398129
KMF 492.885874
KPW 1046.22128
KRW 1741.246228
KWD 0.358772
KYD 0.969162
KZT 545.967451
LAK 25516.123037
LBP 104098.805948
LKR 382.032817
LRD 213.167198
LSL 19.169503
LTL 3.43246
LVL 0.703164
LYD 7.352641
MAD 10.724954
MDL 20.119004
MGA 4856.204926
MKD 61.626219
MMK 2440.759526
MNT 4161.015762
MOP 9.37985
MRU 46.499031
MUR 54.845573
MVR 17.914036
MWK 2024.438401
MXN 20.156517
MYR 4.570239
MZN 74.285895
NAD 19.169498
NGN 1593.136463
NIO 42.679974
NOK 10.815087
NPR 178.472426
NZD 1.98884
OMR 0.446973
PAB 1.162935
PEN 3.990168
PGK 5.193942
PHP 71.590496
PKR 323.892057
PLN 4.249336
PYG 7086.902977
QAR 4.237232
RON 5.20727
RSD 117.423032
RUB 84.68781
RWF 1697.781189
SAR 4.409172
SBD 9.318484
SCR 16.312958
SDG 698.06494
SEK 10.97467
SGD 1.488171
SHP 0.867898
SLE 28.655211
SLL 24376.327437
SOS 664.353418
SRD 43.537873
STD 24060.693468
STN 24.702397
SVC 10.175631
SYP 128.490183
SZL 19.169489
THB 37.943467
TJS 10.850465
TMT 4.06863
TND 3.357245
TOP 2.798938
TRY 52.944041
TTD 7.894204
TWD 36.678162
TZS 3022.411271
UAH 51.349648
UGX 4366.546502
USD 1.162466
UYU 46.580489
UZS 14001.900028
VES 593.030511
VND 30636.784144
VUV 137.078484
WST 3.145166
XAF 654.850466
XAG 0.015073
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.141622
XCG 2.095958
XDR 0.813648
XOF 648.078818
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.422867
ZAR 19.38171
ZMK 10463.590637
ZMW 21.893006
ZWL 374.313489
  • RBGPF

    0.8900

    61.68

    +1.44%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8300

    15.1

    -5.5%

  • GSK

    -0.8289

    49.67

    -1.67%

  • BCE

    -0.4000

    23.79

    -1.68%

  • JRI

    -0.5435

    12.463

    -4.36%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    22.98

    -0.7%

  • AZN

    -3.2800

    181.68

    -1.81%

  • BCC

    -3.3200

    66.08

    -5.02%

  • RIO

    -5.9300

    103.66

    -5.72%

  • RELX

    0.9350

    32.395

    +2.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.1328

    23.1

    -0.57%

  • NGG

    -6.7750

    80.655

    -8.4%

  • BTI

    -1.6500

    65.05

    -2.54%

  • BP

    0.7392

    44.36

    +1.67%

  • VOD

    -0.8000

    14.68

    -5.45%

Indigenous Mexican softball team fights against machismo
Indigenous Mexican softball team fights against machismo / Photo: Robyn Beck - AFP

Indigenous Mexican softball team fights against machismo

Enedina Canul wanted to play softball, but the 47-year-old didn't have a bat -- and that was the least of her problems.

Text size:

Her simple desire to play sports was also a major fight for women's rights as she fought against the conservative social mores of her rural Mexican village, captured in the film "Las Amazonas de Yaxunah," premiering at the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival on Sunday.

The documentary focuses on Canul and the softball team she formed in her small, Indigenous hamlet -- and their push against the stifling machismo culture that saw their participation in sports as an affront.

On a makeshift field, Canul and her team played with a baseball she took from her husband, ditching their sandals to run faster barefoot and carving a bat from a tree.

"My husband told us it's not okay for women to go out and play -- what will people say?" Canul told AFP.

"I told him that doesn't matter to me."

As a young child she had a passion for baseball, a hugely popular sport in Latin America.

But in her teenage years, her desire to play sports ran up against a culture that considered a woman's proper place to be in the house, the mother of four said.

So she gave up the idea of playing sports, until years later, in 2017, when a government program helping to fight against obesity organized Zumba lessons in her jungle town.

The softball team became so controversial that some of the players' marriages fell apart.

Canul ran into her own roadblocks -- such as her husband asking her to cook dinner right when she was about to go play.

"There's food in the pan, I'm leaving," she would respond as she told her son to grab the bats and gloves.

- Viral fame -

The Amazonas' fame escaped a the thick jungles of the Yucatan peninsula thanks to a viral video, and soon more cameras were arriving to capture the women playing ball in huipil, a traditional dress made famous by Frida Kahlo.

US sports juggernaut ESPN soon caught wind of the story, with a producer tapping documentary filmmaker Alfonso Algara to work on the project.

"It was a super conservative community, where literally a few years ago they still couldn't go out in the street alone," he said.

Women weren't even allowed to vote, Canul said, with their husbands demanding they hand over their IDs on election day.

But slowly, softball has helped change everything.

"Between four years ago and now, there is a big difference. We are slowly undoing the machismo," said Sitlali Poot, team captain and Canul's daughter-in-law.

"We have made it clear to most of the men that we also have the opportunity to go out and play, to get to know each other, to have fun, because to play softball or baseball is to unite the family."

Her husband has been swayed as well -- and is now the team manager.

Canul's husband died a year and a half ago, but he also came around, she said, telling her he felt "proud" of her.

"I am thankful that before he passed away he accepted that I can play softball with my children," she said.

With the team's fame has come invitations to play internationally, including in the United States.

"It doesn't matter if we win or lose," Poot said at a match against a local high school in California on Friday to promote the film.

"The important thing is that we show we know how to play."

"Las Amazonas de Yaxunah," featuring narration by Oscar-nominated Mexican actress Yalitza Aparicio, will be available on ESPN in English and Spanish this fall.

M.Sugiyama--JT