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The Muxe Of Mexico

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Bianca
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« on: April 27, 2009, 09:45:59 am »



A Lifestyle Distinct: The Muxe of Mexico
 Katie Orlinsky for The New York Times
AT THE DEBUT Carmelo López Bernal, 13, at the recent annual town-wide muxe celebration,
the occasion for his first appearance in the identity of a girl.








                                              A LIFE DISTINCT:  THE MUXE OF MEXICO

       



       
By MARC LACEY
Published: December 6, 2008
The New York Times
Mexico City

— Mexico can be intolerant of homosexuality; it can also be quite liberal. Gay-bashing incidents are not uncommon in the countryside, where many Mexicans consider homosexuality a sin. In Mexico City, meanwhile, same-sex domestic partnerships are legally recognized — and often celebrated lavishly in government offices as if they were marriages.

In Mexico, Beyond Gay and Straight But nowhere are attitudes toward sex and gender quite as elastic as in the far reaches of the southern state of Oaxaca. There, in the indigenous communities around the town of Juchitán, the world is not divided simply into gay and straight. The local Zapotec people have made room for a third category, which they call “muxes” (pronounced MOO-shays) — men who consider themselves women and live in a socially sanctioned netherworld between the two genders.

“Muxe” is a Zapotec word derived from the Spanish “mujer,” or woman; it is reserved for males who, from boyhood, have felt themselves drawn to living as a woman, anticipating roles set out for them by the community.

Anthropologists trace the acceptance of people of mixed gender to pre-Colombian Mexico, pointing to accounts of cross-dressing Aztec priests and Mayan gods who were male and female at the same time. Spanish colonizers wiped out most of those attitudes in the 1500s by forcing conversion to Catholicism. But mixed-gender identities managed to survive in the area around Juchitán, a place so traditional that many people speak ancient Zapotec instead of Spanish.

Not all muxes express their identities the same way. Some dress as women and take hormones to change their bodies. Others favor male clothes. What they share is that the community accepts them; many in it believe that muxes have special intellectual and artistic gifts.

Every November, muxes inundate the town for a grand ball that attracts local men, women and children as well as outsiders. A queen is selected; the mayor crowns her. “I don’t care what people say,” said Sebastian Sarmienta, the boyfriend of a muxe, Ninel Castillejo García. “There are some people who get uncomfortable. I don’t see a problem. What is so bad about it?”

Muxes are found in all walks of life in Juchitán, but most take on traditional female roles — selling in the market, embroidering traditional garments, cooking at home. Some also become sex workers, selling their services to men. .

Acceptance of a child who feels he is a muxe is not unanimous; some parents force such children to fend for themselves. But the far more common sentiment appears to be that of a woman who takes care of her grandson, Carmelo, 13.

“It is how God sent him,” she said.



Katie Orlinsky
contributed reporting from
Juchitán, Mexico.
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Bianca
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« Reply #1 on: April 27, 2009, 09:47:45 am »










In the largely indigenous communities in and around the town of Juchitán, the world is not divided simply into gay and straight.

While Mexico can be intolerant of homosexuality; it can also be quite liberal.

In Mexico City, for instance, same-sex domestic partnerships are legally recognized.

But nowhere are attitudes toward sex and gender quite as elastic as in towns like Juchitán in the far reaches of the southern state of Oaxaca.



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« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2009, 09:49:14 am »










In this part of Oaxaca — a narrow strip of land known as the Isthmus — the locals make room for a third category, whom they call “muxes” (pronounced MOO-shays).

Muxes are men who consider themselves women and live in a socially sanctioned netherworld between
the two genders.

At a friend’s home in Oaxaca City, Beth-Sua prepares to attend a transvestite beauty pageant held at a local nightclub.

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« Reply #3 on: April 27, 2009, 09:50:32 am »










In the Séptima Sección, a working-class neighborhood of Juchitán, muxe friends greet each other.

They are there to attend a street party two blocks away for a 50th birthday.

“Muxe” is a Zapotec word derived from the Spanish “mujer,” or woman; it is reserved for males who,
from boyhood, have felt themselves drawn to living as a woman, anticipating roles set out for them
by the community.


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« Reply #4 on: April 27, 2009, 09:51:53 am »



Alejandro (Alex) Martinez Taledo, 16, is one of six children and the only muxe in her family.

After selling flowers with her mother in the center of Juchitán, she looks for a taxi home.

The flowers she carries will be the family‘s gift for a quinceañera — 15th birthday party —
that evening.


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« Reply #5 on: April 27, 2009, 09:53:18 am »










Alex with her mother, Rosa Taledo Vicente, and her father, Victor Martinez Jimenez.

Mr. Martinez is a construction worker who speaks Zapotec but little Spanish.

He and Alex have a loving relationship, and when asked about having a muxe son he replies:

“It was God who sent him and why would I reject him? He helps his mother very much.
Why would I get mad?
God sent him for both of us.
Why would I get mad?”


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« Reply #6 on: April 27, 2009, 09:54:23 am »



“Thalía,” who was named princess the night before at a vela,
or community celebration, for the muxes, waits for a parade to begin.


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« Reply #7 on: April 27, 2009, 09:55:55 am »










Beth-Sua enjoys a smoke at a vela in Oaxaca City.

She traveled there from the Isthmus to represent her city’s muxes.

Beth-Sua, born as Octavio, is a local organizer and H.I.V.-AIDS activist.

She makes a living embroidering huipiles, the traditional blouse of the Isthmus region.



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« Reply #8 on: April 27, 2009, 09:57:17 am »










Carmelo (In title picture, above) with his grandmother at their home in Unión Hidalgo.

When asked about her grandson, she says:

“I feel normal about it, it is how God sent him, and I love him even though he isn’t a woman.
Who knows what kind of person he will be, he is still young.”
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« Reply #9 on: April 27, 2009, 09:59:02 am »










Mistica, 30, from Juchitán, is a well-known and well-liked muxe.

She is recognized as an astute businesswoman, visible throughout the city as she sells
cosmetics and other products door to door.


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« Reply #10 on: April 27, 2009, 10:00:23 am »










Ninel Castillejo Garcia, 23, with her parents.

Ninel was born in Mexico City and moved to the Isthmus with her family when she was 8.

Ninel’s parents accept her, referring to her as their daughter and calling her Ninel, as opposed
to her birth name, Orlando.

She is one the few muxes who has had surgical augmentation.

Ninel used to work as barwoman, but today she is supported by her boyfriend.
She spends her days taking care of her younger siblings and cooking for her family and boyfriend.


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« Reply #11 on: April 27, 2009, 10:01:39 am »










Ninel with her boyfriend, Sebastian Sarmienta, 18 years old, have a laugh outside of Ninel’s home.

The couple met in Mexico City and eventually fell in love and moved in together with Ninel’s family
in the Isthmus.

Sebastian says he did not know Ninel was transgender at first, but adds:

“There’s nothing wrong with it. If I like her there’s nothing wrong with that.
I was never ashamed; I accept things as they are.
I’m not ashamed with my family either. I don’t care what people say. ...
There are some people that get uncomfortable. I don’t see any problem.
What is so bad about it? No one is going to die from this.”


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« Reply #12 on: April 27, 2009, 10:03:12 am »










Ninel’s mother helps her prepare for a vela, pinning on a sash that reads,

“Transvestite of the Year ’07,”

a title Ninel won at a beauty contest in nearby beach town Huatulco.



Ninel enjoys any possible occasion to show off her good looks, and her parents support her interest by helping her prepare for events and attending the events themselves.



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« Last Edit: April 27, 2009, 10:04:52 am by Bianca » Report Spam   Logged

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« Reply #13 on: April 27, 2009, 10:06:24 am »










Muxes, men, women and children dance together at a grand celebration for muxes across the Isthmus —

the Vela de las Intrepidas Buscadoras de Peligro.

Each year in November the muxes, along with roughly 1,500 guests, come together in Juchitán.

They choose a “reina,” or princess, and the mayor bestows the crown.

The party costs around $10,000 to put together and requires a full year of preparation by the organizers.



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« Reply #14 on: July 19, 2009, 09:14:01 pm »

     

   



   
   


                                                             M U X E S 


                                          We are Princesses in a land of Machos


                                                         (Oaxaca-Mexico)






They drink beer, they are part of local governement and they are symbol of good luck for their family: they are Muxes, homosexuals of the “pueblo oaxacaqueno de Juchitan”, more than 3000 homosexuals who enjoy respect and admiration in all the country.

Los Muxes (in zapotec language means homosexual)are considered as a blessing in Juchitan and you can count almost 3000 of them.

According to a taxi-driver, there is a homosexual in every family and Muxes themselves assert to be “fallen fron a broken pocket of San Vicente Ferrer” the patron saint of Juchitan,during his holy walk over the town (a local expression to say they are lucky, chosen people).

It is a luck for a homosexual to be born in Juchitan, where in a population of 160.000 people, the most of them feel respect for Muxes, while they walk proudly in the streets, dressed as women with huipiles and enaguas, typical dress of the Tehuantepec Isthmus.

The homosexuals of Juchitan have gained a place in economical and political activities, normally reserved to men.

They are ownersof shops,they work in hospitals, they are successful stylists of the typical local dresses and owners of beauty salons.

A resident in Juchitan says ”Thanks to God, we have one of them in every family... they are like women, they work as a man, but they wash, cook, clean the house and when the other sons will get married and leave, they will stay and look after their old parents”.

“A lady living here, has accepted a son muxes... and then she has winned the lottery.. it is a real blessing. .everybody shoul accept them as they are.. in every place they are”.

Carlos Lopez Toledo, municipal concellor, explains that when a family relizes that a child has a bent for homosexuality, they treat him as a lucky charme, because Muxes are good producers.

“A lot of us are in this way, because our parents have converted us and treated as female “says Felina, a 36 years old Muxes, owner of an Estetica (beauty salon). ”I’m not a man.. I’m not a woman.. I’m a Muxes and there is place for everyboby in the Vineyard of Lord “.



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