BOGOTA, Colombia — A young man and his mentor practice bullfighting techniquesin the parking garage of a small apartment building across the highway fromBogota’s El Campin soccer stadium.
As 18-year-old Andres Del Castillo sweeps a magenta cape, he emits a soft guttural sound. His chest is thrust forward, his lips are puckered and his mouth bulges. He ends the pass with one leg fully extended behind him, his foot in a point. The other leg is firmly planted below. After the imaginary bull passes, his gaze lifts as he takes a few triumphant strides.
His teacher for the past six weeks has been Gonzalo Rincon. He is the father of legendary Colombian matador, or bullfighter, Cesar Rincon, who was famously lofted on the shoulders of his compatriots after four stunning performances in Madrid in 1991.
In Colombia, most teenagers play Xbox, soccer or chase girls, not bulls. Across the country, from large cities to small towns, bulls once formed an integral part of annual celebrations. Today, the Spanish colonial tradition is disappearing amid sometimes violent protests, changing cultural norms and a struggling business model.
Fewer Plazas Host Bullfights
The 77-year-old Rincon’s goal is to “evolve” the art of bullfighting with new expressions and movements that have never been tried before, much as when his son thrilled audiences worldwide.
The soft-spoken Del Castillo dropped out of high school at 17. He said training to be a bullfighter has made him more disciplined, but with great sacrifice. His father refused to talk to him for six months, and he works odd jobs to pay his rent.
On a recent afternoon, Cesar Rincon watched a tienta from a viewing area above a small ring at the historic Achury Viejo bull ranch. The tienta tests the animals to see which ones are best for the sport.
“I think this is the lowest moment in the tradition,” said Rincon, a bull rancher in retirement who lives in Madrid with his father and spends four months of the year in Colombia. About a dozen bull ranches across the country have gone out of business in the last decade as fewer plazas and small towns host fights.
Meanwhile, ticket prices are too high for most Colombians. A lower-level seat in Medellin costs the equivalent of a monthly minimum wage salary. Benjamin de Los Rios, director of Medellin’s Plaza de la Macarena, says pricing is part of a “vicious cycle” as international bullfighters that draw crowds command up to $140,000 per afternoon. The result is a half-empty arena and fewer parents passing on the tradition to their children.
"The Country Is Changing"
Before a recent bullfight at la Macarena, a man who gave his name only as Juan G. for fear of threats from aficionados, led a protest. About 30 college-aged students joined him.
“We don’t think that anyone has the right to torture anything, animals included,” the New Jersey-born Colombian said, noting that his parents had met at the very arena and used to take him to bullfights as a child. Policemen on horseback stood nearby, part of a contingent of 110 officers protecting the Plaza that day. “It’s a shift in generations. The country is changing and we want to do away with violence.”
De Los Rios blames Walt Disney. Like others, he claims that when cartoons began to give human traits to animals, people began to treat them as human beings. In Colombia, schools also make environmental preservation and understanding of animal abuse part of the curriculum. Some teachers tell children that bullfighting is wrong.
Colombia’s Ministry of Education said bullfighting is not specifically addressed. Any reference to bullfighting either in support or against it is the personal opinion of the teacher or school.
For Cesar Rincon, the beauty of the art and legacy left by the Spanish to the countries of Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Peru should be preserved.
“We have to teach our roots, the backbone of our tradition,” he said. “In Colombia, bullfighting is not an art, it is not a sport, it is a profession that is controversial. And since it is controversial, there is no form of government support.”
Plaza De Toros De Santamaria
In recent years, anti-bullfighting advocates appeared to be gaining the upper hand. “Politicians have realized that they can win votes by saying they are against bullfighting,” said Colombian bullfighter Manuel Libardo, 28. Libardo was voted Colombia’s best matador this year but believes Colombia’s bullfighting future is uncertain.
Bogota’s ornate Plaza de Toros de Santamaria has been shuttered for the past two years, the result of an anti-bullfighting campaign that won the support of the city’s embattled leftist mayor and former guerrilla , Gustavo Petro. Colombia’s other plazas suffered losses as a result, but recovered this year.
Bullfighters, too, have had to get a second job. Santiago Naranjo, 28, a matador since 2010, has a retail store at a Bogota shopping center. He also studies business.
In 2011 in Quito, a national vote prohibited the killing of animals for sport in the city. Milton Calahorrano, president of Ecuador’s bullfighting union, said the industry was greatly harmed by the change, but the Plaza still filled at least to three-quarters over the following two years.
Last year, the group decided it would not hold bullfights in Quito until the law is changed and the tradition is restored. A makeshift bullring was set up outside the city limits, and the group is anticipating a change this year.
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