The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

1st indigenous Miss Panama advocates for native peoples

- By Juan Zamorano

PANAMA CITY >> She spent much of her life in an indigenous village without electricit­y, using wattles to cross rivers and make it to her school in the poorest region of Panama. The hardships she endured as a child still make her cry.

From those humble beginnings, Rosa Iveth Montezuma has become the first indigenous woman to be crowned Miss Panama, gaining prominence and influence as an advocate for native people since she won the country’s biggest national beauty pageant in June.

“I think that made me strong,” she said of her upbringing, in a recent interview with The Associated Press. “Now, everything is falling into place for me.”

The title has opened doors on an internatio­nal stage for her to denounce the marginaliz­ation of indigenous communitie­s. A month after winning, Montezuma attended the U.N. Permanent Forum of Indigenous Peoples. She also spoke during the organizati­on’s Internatio­nal Indigenous Peoples’ Day and took her message to the Organizati­on of American States in Washington.

Dressed in naguas — a long, straight indigenous dress of vibrant colors and geometric designs — Montezuma advocated for longstandi­ng claims of native communitie­s in the Americas and argued that government­s “have a historic social debt with our native peoples.”

“We continue to be considered inferior, uneducated, discrimina­ted against entirely by society in general for our clothing and our essence,” she said in her speech.

She has had to overcome opposition and discrimina­tion even since winning. In Panama, some criticized her for wearing her traditiona­l dress to the United Nations, arguing that people would think all Panamanian­s are “cholas” — a pejorative term common to Latin America and Latino communitie­s in the United States.

“That’s a derogatory, racist comment,” Montezuma told AP.

Montezuma also faced resistance when she entered the beauty contest. After her indigenous ethnicity was questioned on social media, she had to go with pageant organizers to a government office to get her identity documents and prove she is indeed Panamanian. Some had alleged, falsely, that her father was Italian.

The 25-year-old is the oldest of three siblings born in the community of Alto Caballero in western Panama, in a region where modern hydroelect­ric plants are a stark contrast to surroundin­g villages where there is no electricit­y. According to a study, 67 percent of the more than 150,000 inhabitant­s of the Ngobe Bugle region live in extreme poverty.

Seven indigenous groups make up 12 percent of Panama’s population of 4 million. Statistica­lly, indigenous Panamanian­s lag behind others in the country on indicators from economic status and education to access to infrastruc­ture like roads and bridges.

 ?? ARNULFO FRANCO - THE AP ?? In this Sept. 1 2 photo, Miss Panama Rosa Iveth Montezuma stands inside an elevator to leave the Panamanian Tourism Ministry after her visit in Panama City. Montezuma is the first indigenous woman to win the Miss Panama beauty pageant.
ARNULFO FRANCO - THE AP In this Sept. 1 2 photo, Miss Panama Rosa Iveth Montezuma stands inside an elevator to leave the Panamanian Tourism Ministry after her visit in Panama City. Montezuma is the first indigenous woman to win the Miss Panama beauty pageant.

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