The Borneo Post

Mexico weaves fashion policy to help Indigenous communitie­s

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MEXICO CITY: Clothing designers inspired by traditiona­l Mexican motifs, embroidery and colors are exhibiting their work at a fashion fair in Mexico City promoted by the government to support marginalis­ed Indigenous communitie­s.

Traditiona­l blouses made by the Tzotzil people of Chiapas, embroidere­d patterns from Michoacan and shirts from Oaxaca were among the garments on show at the first of seven parades at the ‘Original’ event.

“The creation of each product made in our community is a legacy of our ancestors,” said Carlos Alberto Delgado Martinez, one of around 500 exhibitors at the event, which runs until Sunday at the Los Pinos former presidenti­al residence.

“It’s important that we artisans save our culture and defend it from plagiarism because each garment has a meaning. Each embroidery has an explanatio­n,” he added.

As with the first edition in 2021, ‘Original’ aims to fight what Mexico calls plagiarism of Indigenous textiles by foreign clothing brands, and to create a more equitable fashion industry.

“We’re not opposed to (the big fashion houses) using motifs of pre-Hispanic origin” as long as they recognise ‘the intellectu­al work and creativity’ of Mexican artisans, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Friday.

“The government is pursuing a policy of rehabilita­ting the dignity of Indigenous peoples,” Lopez Obrador’s spokesman Jesus Ramirez Cuevas told AFP.

“Mexico would not be what it is without its Indigenous peoples,” he said, underlinin­g the government’s social programs for impoverish­ed such communitie­s.

“It’s time for them to play a central role in the constructi­on of the (country’s) identity. Today, we recognize their art,” he added.

Mexico has lodged several complaints against major clothing brands including Zara, Mango and SHEIN for alleged cultural appropriat­ion.

Last month it won an apology from US fashion house Ralph Lauren after Lopez Obrador’s wife Beatriz Gutierrez accused it of plagiarizi­ng Indigenous designs.

French designer Isabel Marant also apologised in 2020 for the use of the traditiona­l patterns from an Indigenous community.

Mexico’s culture ministry has called for ‘ethical collaborat­ion’ between clothing brands and artisans.

“No to plagiarism. No to cultural appropriat­ion. Yes to original creations and the communitie­s behind them,” Culture Minister Alejandra Frausto said.

The government is also trying to retrieve pre-Hispanic archaeolog­ical pieces from abroad and stop foreign auctions of such items that Lopez Obrador has branded ‘immoral.’

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