Nak Muay Ying

On closer inspection of the room, however, certain anomalies belie the ordinariness of its residents. Among the tiny statuettes arrayed around the bridal doll is a framed photo of a young woman dressed in a red satin boxing gear. Facing the camera,she assumes the classic Muay Thai stance: knees slightly bent, gloves hands raised. And instead of the dresses and blouses normally found in teenager's cupboards, this one is filled with sports apparel-sleevless jerseys, shiny satin boxing trunks and mini capes. The Buddhist reliquary too is unusual In addition to the standard offerings of incense sticks, vases of fresh flowers and dried jasmine garlands, three mongkron(ceremonial headbands worn by Muay Thai oxers at the start of the match) hang from the corners.

Actually, the young women are nak muay ying(female boxers). In boxing parlance Fah Sathan fights in the junior flyweight category, Soi Dao is flyweight and Jaeda a pin weight. Along with three other teenagers( including Rung-arun Sor Fongnom, the country's ottest female fighter) they live upstairs at the Muay Thai Institute(MTI), an unimposing five story structure located behind a disco on the outskirts of Bangkok. Ranging in age from 15 to 17, the girls train six days a week from 5:30 am until 7 pm- with time out for meals and naps,- and attend high school on Sundays.

The ground floor of the building houses the 2,000 seat Rangsit stadium which boasts the country's first offically sanctioned boxing ring for women. Fah Sathan and her cohorts are in the vanguard of a quiet revolution that is upending the rarified male only world of kickboxing in Thailand. Long held superstitions and prejudices that women pugilists will jinx any ring they fight in have traditionally colored local attitudes toward nak muay ying.

The women have not fought professionally since the late 60s when Amnuay Kesbumrung current president of the MTI and a former fighter himself, tried to popularize the sport by holding female bouts at the famed Lumpini Stadium. However, he abandoned the idea after three years because the predominately male Thai fans refused to watch-or more crucially bet on-the matches. In the ensuing four decades, the only place to see women boxing was at provincial temple fairs and festivals.

So what was it that created the second coming of kickboxing for Thai women? Essentially the impetus came from abroad. Over the last decade, women throughout Europe, Australia, the US and Japan have been taking up Muay Thai as a form of exercise and self defense. Wanting to test out their skills in the country where the sport originated, the foreign boxers came here only to discover a dearth of qualified opponents.

Thai women werent being properly trained and foreigners basically destroyed them, " recounts Niamh(pronounced Neve)Griffin, a junior featherweight champion from Ireland. "It was humiliating for the Thauis". Under pressure to even up the boxing scores, in 1998 Amnuay resusciated the idea of promoting women's fights. This time, however, he decided to provide women and any interested men- with an on site school as well as just a sports venue. In conjunction with the World Muay Thai Council, he turned rangsit stadium-the smallest of the city's three boxing arenas-into a certified training facility. Because the male fighters categorically refused to let women inside the existing ring, Amnuay had to build a second one.

TTT!

Despite the seperate but equal facilities, male boxers still climb into Rangsits women only ring for their practice sessions even though the ban on women using theirs remains in full sexist force. Nonetheless, Rangsit is a welcome alternative to most of the country's provincial boxing camps and gyms which will not even let women into the premises, much less allow them to train. And the few that do offer training, hold firm to their gender biases when it comes to entering the ring.

Once inside the ring, Thai women fight just as intensely as their male countrymen. The only difference between the five round matches is that men fight three minute rounds with one minute breaks, while women go for two minutes with two minute breaks.

In sharp contrast to the Thai stereotype of smiling gentleness, the sport combines graceful physicality with a grunting savagery that can break bones and draw blood.

As in men's Muay Thai, each match begins with the ceremonial Ram Muay dance taken from the Ramakien(a Thai epic closely based on the Hindu Ramayana). Wearing the traditional mongkron headbands created from written monk's prayers that are wrapped in silk thread, the boxers move gracefully in the center of the ring, bowing in all directions. The dance is a mark of respect for the boxers trainer and parents. As Niamh explains, "It also serves to calm a fighter so she can take possession of the ring and feel safe theree" Supposedly in the past you could tell which gym a fighter came from on the basis of the style of the dance. Nowadays this is no longer true.

Once the fight starts, the boxers are in constant motion, except when they get backed into a corner or clinch together with their red gloved hands around each others necks. A good fighter never throws just one kick and stops: she immediately follows through by thrusting a knee, elbow or fist at any part of her opponent's anatomy. Like the men, the women fight barefoot and wear no protective gear apart from a padded bra and crotch guard. (Amateurs cover the head, elbows, knees and waist with padded guards).

Rangsits bi weekly Saturday night matches attract female fighters from all over Thailand, Australasia and Europe. Nowhere near as profitable as the raucous, jam packed matches held at Ratchadamnoen and Lumpini stadiums, the events rarely pull in large crowds. Only when local champion Rung-arun or one of the famous foreigners like Niamh Griffin, appear on the program does attendance rise above contenders who, whatever their level of expertise, treat their opponents like human punching bag. A well fought match generates incredible intensity in and out of the ring. The increasingly frenetic rhythms of the traditional three piece band and the loud shouts of Oy, Oy, Oy from the crowd ramp up the intensity still higher.

The 63 year old Amnuay works tirelessly to promote his "girls" at home and abroad. He has already taken Rung-arun, Fah Sathan and Soi Dao to Singapore for exhibition matches and dreams of organizing a fight between Rung-arun and Lila Ali in two or three years. Like many other Thai promoters and trainers, he's extremely paternalistic- and strict-with his teenaged charges. Those who flaunt his 9pm curfew can look forward to a close with a bamboo stick!

The age factor creates some interesting dilemmas. The current crop of Thai women contenders are mostly teenagers who come from low income, rural backrounds. Boxing gives them a full time career with unprecedented travel and money making opportunities. Even so, most plan to quit the profession by their early twenties to get married. On the other hand, the realities of life outside Thailand mean few foreign women can afford to devote themselves full time to a career that requires three to four week restorative breaks between bouts.

Their training gets sandwiched in between regular jobs and they're often considerably older-sometimes by 10 years or more-than their Thai opponents. In a society like Thailand, where age correlates with experience, the older foreigners are assumed to be stronger fighters. To even out the preception of the odds, women like the twenty something Niamh(who began her meteroric career in Bangkok in 1998) sometimes subtracts a few years from her age.

The fledgling career of one Thai boxer may help change local atttitudes towards age. Since childhood, 28 year old Boonterm Kijtmuti always wanted to be a boxing champion. After completing her basic schooling, she helped her mother selling noodle soup from a streetside cart in Bangkok before starting her own noodle vending business. By 17 she was married and soon had two sons (now 10 and 8) to care for. after her marriage fell apart, Boonterm decided it was time to pursue her dream. Leaving her sons with their grandparents, she took a part time job in a restaurant and began training. (To help defray costs, she also washes the gyms laundry twice daily). In late June, only after three months of training, Boonterm won her first match at Rangsit Stadium.

Meanwhile, both Amnuay and his Western educated son Nutchakorn Kesbumrung(who holds the imposing title of deptuty director of foreign affairs at MTI) devote most of their energy-and money-to changing the Thai perception of women boxers. Lacking any sponsorship, they defray the costs of their Saturday night bouts with funds from other family run businesses(a disco and a car dealership). At the close of a typical Saturday night, Amnuay sits at the ticket booth near the entrance to the stadium and doles out money to the fighters. Win or lose, each young woman gets paid(usually US $25-$75). Not much compared to the fees for the highly lucrative men's matches but enough to sustain a sense of pride and accomplishment.

"If we stop trying, there'd be nothing," says Nutchakorn. "We're planting the seed. And we'll keep up the women's fights for as long as we can because we truly believe that one day it will become a popular sport."

Thank you Pahuyuth; an excellent and informative read.

This from an older article dated October 2000:

At first glance, the large, sparsely furnished dormitory could be the living quarters of any trio of typical Thai teenagers. On top of a low cabinet in one corner, cutsey cupid figurines vie for space with a large bridal doll dressed in ruffled white organdy and bottles of beauty care products. Hello Kitty paraphernalia cram the shelves of the single wardrobe. On the wall, next to the scotch taped poster of a local rock band, sits a small Buddhist shrine. The room's 17 year old inhabitants themselves also represent a standard cross section of Thai teenagedom. Jaeda from Chiang Mai is currently relaxing in bed with a mudpack on her face. A ghetto blaster blares out pop tunes. Two portable fans at the foot of the narrow metal circulate warm in her general direction. Her roommates Fah Sathan from Khon Kaen and Soi Dao from Chantaburi are not around, but several stuffed animals and a half finished jigsaw puzzle on the floor attest to their recent presence.

train riding home reading material - WOOHOO!

thanks.

serious q: does these female events exclude boxers like Lady Parinya, i.e., gender changes?

TIA.

Great read! Thanks.

TTT

Yuki