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  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Mexican Dwarfs find respect in bullfighting

    Dwarfs find respect in bullfighting
    Performances provide steady jobs in Mexico
    Chris Hawley
    Republic Mexico City Bureau
    Nov. 18, 2007 12:00 AM



    ACAPULCO, Mexico - It was a little after midnight, long past the bedtime of the children in the stands, but the crowd sat transfixed as the Original Bullfighting Dwarfs of Mexico faced their first animal of the night.

    Matador Ignacio Zaragoza raised his wooden sword at a fighting calf that was nearly as tall as he was. It pawed the ground, Zaragoza flicked his cape, and the beast rocketed toward him.

    "Ole!" shouted the crowd, as Zaragoza spun away, knelt on his short legs, and snapped the cape again. "Ole! Ole!"

    It's a spectacle repeated on weekends across Mexico, as troupes of dwarf bullfighters thrill audiences at fairs, patron-saint festivals and nightclubs. Some of them tour the United States, where they bring a dose of nostalgia to Mexican migrants from Oregon to Florida.

    Although some activists worry that they propagate stereotypes, the troupes - known as cuadrillas - provide steady jobs in a country where employment discrimination is rampant and people with disabilities have trouble getting work.

    "We've become part of Mexican culture," said Antonio Garcia, one of the Original Bullfighting Dwarfs. "You can't deny the attraction of a dwarf fighting bulls."

    Brought from Spain
    The tradition started in the 1970s, when a Spanish promoter first toured Mexico with a troupe of dwarf bullfighters, said Livia Corona, a New York-based photographer who has documented Mexico's dwarf bullfighters for eight years. Her book about them, Enanitos Toreros, comes out in December.

    There are now 10 to 20 bullfighting troupes employing about 200 little people nationwide, said Rigoberto Madrigal, president of the Little People of Mexico, a support group for people with dwarfism.

    The Original Bullfighting Dwarfs of Mexico, despite its name, was founded 13 years ago. "But our act is the most original, you see," manager Eduardo Ferandel said.

    Competition among groups is intense, so many cuadrillas have added other attractions to their shows. The Bullfighting Dwarfs of Torreón jump through burning hoops on all-terrain vehicles. The Bullfighting Dwarfs of Guadalajara pride themselves on singing and impersonations.

    But the heart of each show is a bullfight, usually using calves from the same fierce race used in full-size bullfights. Unlike real bullfights, the animals are not harmed.

    One night only
    "It's the show of a lifetime! A unique experience! The Original Bullfighting Dwarfs of Mexico, here in Acapulco!" a barker blared through a speaker outside the Toro de Guerrero nightclub on a recent Saturday night.

    Behind the nightclub, Ferandel bustled around a makeshift bullring, settling last-minute details with the singers and rodeo riders who were to be the opening acts for the cuadrilla. Parents and children filled the tables around the ring, eating plates of arrachera steak, roasted onions and sliced prickly pear cactus. Admission was 100 pesos, or about $9.25, and half-price for children.

    The kids hung over the railing, gawking at the seven toreros in their embroidered bullfighting suits.

    Show vs. sideshow
    Dwarf bullfighters said they tread a fine line between being laughed at for their height and respected for their skill.

    "When we run around, our movements are just naturally humorous," said Gustavo Vázquez, the manager of the Giants of the Bullring, another cuadrilla. "But we also put on a quality variety show, and the bullfighting is real. The goal is for the audience to see past the fact that we're little people."

    In the United States, dwarf shows have gone the way of the circus freak show. But political correctness is still an unfamiliar concept in Mexico. Here, negrito (blackie) and flaco (skinny) are terms of endearment, and the country's best-loved comic-book character is a big-lipped caricature named MemÃ*n PinguÃ*n.

    But discrimination, too, is more accepted, said Madrigal, the president of the support group. Labor laws protecting people with disabilities are rarely enforced in Mexico, and employers openly advertise for people with "good presentation," meaning attractive.


    "The shows are denigrating, but some of these people have no other way of making a living," Madrigal said. He said he worries the shows promote an image of little people as circus oddities.

    Many dwarf bullfighters also endure low pay and poor treatment by cuadrilla managers, most of whom are normal size, performers said. A matador may earn $100 a show, but the other performers get as little as $50 each, Vázquez said. There is no union or retirement plan.

    To make ends meet, one member of the Original Bullfighting Dwarfs shines shoes during the week. Zaragoza, the matador, peddles DVDs on the street and taught himself bullfighting by watching television.

    "Here, little people don't have the kind of support that you have there (in the United States)," bullfighter Jorge Reyes said. "There's no help from the government at all. Here, a little person really has to work."

    The main event
    Suddenly a brassy paso doble rang out over the speakers behind the Toro de Guerrero. The diminutive bullfighters strode slowly into the ring, chests thrown out, capes folded over their arms. The crowd cheered as Garcia, the group's comic relief, somersaulted into the ring.

    For the next half-hour they told jokes and sang songs as Garcia did pratfalls. He and Oscar Mendoza, the troupe's token performer of normal size, kept up a stream of puns as Zaragoza played the straight man. Then it was down to business. The cuadrilla members took their positions in a circle, and the calf flew into the ring.

    In real bullfights, cuadrilla members weaken the bull by stabbing it with lances and barbed sticks before it faces the matador.

    But the dwarf bullfights are bloodless, and the 350- to 480-pound calves are full of energy. One of them fractured Garcia's jaw a few years ago, putting him out of work for months.

    To tire the animal, Zaragoza's companions took turns hurling their bodies at the calf. Garcia donned a padded horse costume and charged the animal, which butted him mercilessly as the crowd guffawed. Amador Torralba came up spitting dirt.

    Finally Zaragoza took control, whipping his cape as the calf barreled past him again and again. There was another flourish of recorded music, and the show was over.

    "They were fun! I'd never seen little people before," said 9-year-old Fernando Segal Lugo.

    "I thought they'd just come out and show themselves, but they really put on a good show," said Oswaldo Viviano, 26.

    Show business
    At 1:30 a.m. the weary performers sat down to leftover beans, tortillas and sausages from the concession stand. Zaragoza grumbled that the calves were small and lacked spirit.

    Then the Original Bullfighting Dwarfs piled into a van for the six-hour drive back to Mexico City.

    The cuadrilla does 100 shows a year. About one-third are in the U.S., though Ferandel said the U.S. dates have declined recently as Mexicans become more afraid of raids by U.S. immigration agents. Few non-Mexicans go to the U.S. shows, the performers said.

    "I think Americans may not understand what we do," Javier Landa said. "They may think we go out there to be laughed at, but that's not the case.

    "If a little person can fight a bull, he can do anything. That's what we're trying to prove."
    http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/ ... s1118.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Sheesh! Now I've heard just about everything. Mexico really is a 3rd world country that deserves no respect. Respect must be earned...and Mexico hasn't earned any.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member IndianaJones's Avatar
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    "You can't deny the attraction of a dwarf fighting bulls."
    Obscene!

    "If a little person can fight a bull, he can do anything. That's what we're trying to prove."
    It's not working.
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

  4. #4
    Senior Member Shapka's Avatar
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    Good to know the scribblers at the Arizona Republic are still reporting on the issues that impact Americans.
    Reporting without fear or favor-American Rattlesnake

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