Houston Chronicle

Woman mayor protests sumo sexism

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TOKYO — A woman mayor in western Japan protested sumo’s male-only rules Friday in a speech she was forced to make outside of the ring unlike her male counterpar­ts, as controvers­y over the sport’s divisive tradition deepened.

Takarazuka City Mayor Tomoko Nakagawa said she is frustrated and pained by the sexist tradition in sumo. In the sport, the ring is considered sacred and women are prohibited from entering because they are seen as “unclean.”

“I am not allowed to go up to the ring and greet to you, just because I am a woman, and I feel mortified,” Nakagawa said, as she received applause from the crowd. “It’s painful.”

The Japan Sumo Associatio­n’s adherence to the rule caused outrage this week, when it ordered women first responders to leave the ring as they attempted to revive an official who collapsed at an event in northern Kyoto.

The 67-year-old mayor of the city of Maizuru collapsed during a ringtop speech, and two women, apparently medical experts, rushed in and started performing first aid. When two more women rose to the ring trying to join the effort, announceme­nts demanded the women get out of the ring.

The mayor, a man, was then taken to a hospital and survived.

Footage and photos on social media have triggered an uproar, with many criticizin­g sumo officials and saying they were choosing tradition over life. Sumo officials apologized over the incident Wednesday. Nakagawa said that’s not enough. “Tradition is important, but it is also important to have courage and make a change,” she said. “I don’t care whichever side of the ring we stand, but I do want both men and women to be treated equally.”

Sumo officials cited their maleonly tradition when they rejected Nakagawa’s request to speak on the ring. They asked her to respect the tradition.

In Japan, the sumo ring is not the only place women are discrimina­ted against. Many women fall behind men in hiring, promotion and pay. Japan also doesn’t allow women to become the emperor.

Top government officials asked the sumo associatio­n for flexibilit­y.

“Nothing is more important than life under any circumstan­ces,” said Yoshimasa Hayashi, the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, urging the sumo associatio­n not to repeat the same mistake.

 ?? Yoshihiko Imai / Associated Press ?? Tomoko Nakagawa, mayor of Takarazuka City, Japan, delivers a speech outside a sumo ring because women are considered too “unclean” to enter the ring. Nakagawa is calling for change.
Yoshihiko Imai / Associated Press Tomoko Nakagawa, mayor of Takarazuka City, Japan, delivers a speech outside a sumo ring because women are considered too “unclean” to enter the ring. Nakagawa is calling for change.

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