麻豆社国产

Skip to content

In Bolivia's scrappy highlands, proud Indigenous Cholas take the runway by storm

VIACHA, Bolivia (AP) 鈥 In the huddled markets, sprawling farms and pulsing parties of Viacha, a town southeast of Bolivia鈥檚 capital, it's typical for women to sport bowler hats, tiered skirts and fringed shawls.
01428f52d92a5a3fe7b1e1f528f69d0e6eb6c985f078c832a89c04fcd2b99b57
A woman models a creation by a local designer at a Chola fashion show, promoting the Andean style and beauty of Aymara women, in Viacha, Bolivia, Friday, Nov. 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)

VIACHA, Bolivia (AP) 鈥 In the huddled markets, sprawling farms and pulsing parties of Viacha, a town southeast of Bolivia鈥檚 capital, it's typical for women to sport bowler hats, tiered skirts and fringed shawls.

What's less typical is for the fashion spotlight to turn to these outfits 鈥 worn by 鈥淐holas,鈥 Indigenous women from the highland Altiplano.

But late Friday in Viacha, some 22 kilometers (13 miles) from Bolivia's capital of La Paz 鈥 over 12,000 feet (3,650 meters) above sea level 鈥 awe-struck teenage boys and proud mothers throbbed the main square as the town鈥檚 dirt roadway was briefly transformed into a runway.

One by one, the girls from Viacha 鈥 mostly students between 15-25 years old 鈥 strutted down the catwalk to a surprising soundtrack of early 2000s American pop music. Street vendors hawked hot dogs and empanadas. Supporters cheered in Spanish and the Indigenous Aymaran language.

Wearing glittering shoes and brightly colored, bunched-out skirts called 鈥減olleras,鈥 the amateur models of all heights and sizes twirled, tipped their hats and threw sultry glances at the crowd.

鈥淵ears ago, people would associate these skirts with the fields, they'd look down on us as rural peasants,鈥 said Rogelia Canaviri, 42, who couldn't stop smiling as she watched her daughter, Carolina, stride down the runway in dangling pearl earrings, the sequins on her layer-cake red skirt catching the stage lights.

鈥淚t's something I'm proud of, to see my daughter and her friends enjoy what I've worn for work my whole life," she said, pointing to the wool shawl, velvet hat and lower-key beige pollera she had on 鈥 the same clothes, she said, she still wears to milk her cows and sell her cheese at open-air markets. Her own mother did the same.

Generations ago, the Aymara were subject to waves of conquest and dispossession, first by the Inca, then by the Spanish, who forced the Indigenous communities to abandon their traditional way of dressing and adopt the style then-popular in the court of Seville.

Legend has it that the jaunty felt bowler hat became critical to the get-up after being introduced by British railway workers in the 1920s.

Bolivia's whiter, more affluent population has used 鈥淐hola鈥 鈥 and its diminutive, 鈥淐holita鈥 鈥 as dismissive racial epithets. But in recent decades that stigma has dissipated, with Indigenous Aymara proudly reclaiming the word and younger Bolivians rediscovering the charm of their mothers' and grandmothers' vibrant garments.

鈥淚 think the 鈥楥holita鈥 has become something very interesting, very exciting in our current context,鈥 said Brittany Cantuta Valeria, 21, a first-time model, her hat brimmed upward and cheeks flushed a reddish gold.

鈥淲e鈥檙e now at the point of being respected because of everything that鈥檚 been implemented, so I wear this to have fun, to show off, to go to parties and dances. I have nothing to do with working the fields.鈥

Most of the girls parading onstage Friday, in the show organized by the Viacha municipality, grew up during the tenure of (2006-2019), the country鈥檚 first-ever Indigenous president whose championing of Bolivia's Indigenous majority earned him fervent support across the cinderblock and adobe homes of the Altiplano.

Morales instituted a new constitution, which, , expanded recognition for Bolivia鈥檚 36 ethnic groups. He promoted the teaching of Indigenous languages and boosted state funding for folkloric arts. More Chola runway shows and beauty contests cropped up, widening the reach of Bolivia's native highland culture.

But fashion fanfare was largely limited to La Paz, the seat of the government. Before Friday, the town of Viacha, like most of the other villages across these austere mountain-rimmed plains, had never taken its turn on the runway.

鈥淚 was really nervous but I realized this is the first time for all of us,鈥 said 15-year-old Tomasa Ramirez. 鈥淚 feel so pretty. Now I know it鈥檚 my dream to be a Cholita model.鈥

whose while the cost of food has doubled, many girls said walking the show was no easy feat.

Top-notch velvet hats and shawls made from vicu帽a wool with silk fringes can fetch thousands of dollars. Polleras cost a few hundred dollars. Then there's the jewelry 鈥 ideally made of real gold, pearls and diamonds when worn to these kinds of formal events.

鈥淭his year there was no way I could have real ones,鈥 said Julieta Mamani, 16, pointing to her gold-colored earrings. 鈥淚 hope things will be different next year.鈥

Watching her 24-year-old daughter pose for selfies in her elaborate skirt, Canaviri, the dairy farmer, has another hope.

鈥淚 hope she doesn't like wearing pants,鈥 she said of her daughter. 鈥淚 tried on pants once in my life, and I felt naked. Never again.鈥

Isabel Debre And Juan Karita, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks