-
The obstacles to holding war-time elections in Ukraine
-
History-maker Von Allmen wins third Olympic gold
-
Depleted Australia reach 182-6 as skipper Marsh ruled out of Ireland clash
-
Dutch court orders investigation into China-owned Nexperia
-
US snowboard star Kim stays on track for Olympic hat-trick
-
Spurs sack Frank after miserable eight-month reign
-
Hong Kong journalists face 'precarious' future after Jimmy Lai jailed
-
French AI firm Mistral to build data centres in Sweden
-
Frank sacked by Spurs after Newcastle defeat
-
South Africa pip Afghanistan in double super over T20 thriller
-
Three Ukrainian toddlers, father, killed in Russian drone attack
-
Siemens Energy trebles profit as AI boosts power demand
-
WTO must reform, 'status quo is not an option': chief
-
European airlines warn of 'severe disruption' from new border checks
-
French rape survivor Gisele Pelicot to reveal pain and courage in memoirs
-
EU eyes tighter registration, no-fly zones to tackle drone threats
-
Shooter kills 9 at Canadian school, residence
-
Australia captain Marsh out of World Cup opener, Steve Smith to fly in
-
Spanish PM vows justice, defends rail safety after deadly accidents
-
Meloni and Merz: EU's new power couple
-
Veteran Tajik leader's absence raises health questions
-
EU must 'tear down barriers' to become 'global giant': von der Leyen
-
US grand jury rejects bid to indict Democrats over illegal orders video
-
Struggling brewer Heineken to cut up to 6,000 jobs
-
Asian stock markets rise, dollar dips as traders await US jobs
-
Britain's Harris Dickinson on John Lennon, directing and news overload
-
9 killed in Canada mass shooting that targeted school, residence
-
Wembanyama scores 40 as Spurs rout Lakers, Pacers stun Knicks
-
UK's crumbling canals threatened with collapse
-
Hong Kong convicts father of wanted activist over handling of funds
-
Australia charges two Chinese nationals with foreign interference
-
'Overloading' may have led to deadly Philippine ferry sinking
-
Bangladesh to vote on democratic reform charter
-
China coach warns of 'gap' ahead of Women's Asian Cup title defence
-
Glitzy Oscar nominees luncheon back one year after LA fires
-
Pacers outlast Knicks in overtime
-
9 killed in Canada mass shooting that targeted school, residence: police
-
De Zerbi leaves Marseille 'by mutual agreement'
-
Netanyahu to push Trump on Iran missiles in White House talks
-
England captain Stokes has surgery after being hit in face by ball
-
Rennie, Joseph lead running to become next All Blacks coach
-
Asian stock markets mixed as traders weigh US data, await jobs
-
Australian Olympic snowboarder airlifted to hospital with broken neck
-
Moderna says US refusing to review mRNA-based flu shot
-
'Artists of steel': Japanese swords forge new fanbase
-
New York model, carved in a basement, goes on display
-
Noisy humans harm birds and affect breeding success: study
-
More American women holding multiple jobs as high costs sting
-
Charcoal or solar panels? A tale of two Cubas
-
Alset AI's Lyken.AI Signs Formal Cloud Compute Services Contract with Leading Multinational Technology and Telecommunications Company, Commences Service Delivery
At a ballet in Lima shantytown, dancers - and self-esteem - soar
On a barren shantytown hill in Lima, a group of girls in white leggings gamely tiptoe around a rocky, dusty path. "And onnnne, twoooo, threee, fourrr", hums the ballet instructor whose day job is selling trash.
It's not likely any of her students will make it as a professional dancer, says Maria del Carmen Silva, or La Miss, as her students call her -- slang for teacher here.
Today, the teacher on the hill is more interested in healing than in the talent of her little "fairies."
Silva started classical dance at the age of 12, danced until she was 33 and today, at 58, she is leading an initiative to improve the lives of poor girls and teens through ballet -- long associated with a demanding (thin and white) aesthetic.
We had to be "thin, with long limbs, a small head and extremely flexible," recalls the former dancer with the national ballets of Peru and of neighboring Chile.
Silva, who is fair haired and has light eyes and a comfortable life, began volunteering in 2010 at a public school in the very poor coastal district of Chorrillos.
There she met the girls of San Genaro II, a settlement 300 meters above the level of the Pacific where in the last four decades some 500 families have settled in wooden houses with corrugated metal or zinc roofs.
- Rehearsing on the hill -
An endless number of stairs zigzag up the hills above Chorrillos, where the poor live.
Up here, there is no drinking water, and locals are supplied by tanker trucks or public wells.
Most people in the neighborhood eke out a living in the informal sector which in all of Peru reaches 75 percent of the working population, the highest rate after Bolivia, according to the International Labor Organization.
Silva confesses, half ashamed, that she came to school looking for a typical dancer, but she found girls with "short legs, flat feet or without much instep."
Sadly, above all, so many could barely muster a smile, when their everyday concerns were so pressing.
"Some of the girls have their dads in jail; others have been raped or mistreated by their parents; and some have told me: my dad beats my mom," she notes sadly.
"I am from a different economic class, so I didn't even realize that they were leaving because they couldn't afford the clothes; because they don't even have water and sometimes not even anything to eat," she says.
That's when she said she had a mental breakthrough.
"I told myself: forget about that perfect dancer, that perfect prototype, and reach out to the human being."
Now she organizes some rehearsals on the hill, despite the fact that her knees already suffer from the bustle between San Genaro II, the school, and the small school that she runs in a religious complex in Miraflores, one of Lima's more affluent districts.
- 'A different person' -
In that place, girls from "both economic situations" sometimes mix and it is a collection point for donations and for the cardboard, paper and bottles that the Silva ballet recycles to raise funds for costumes.
But only a few of those who attend the Silva ballet, she points out, realize the world of dirt and poverty from which her "fairies and princesses" emerge.
"Balance, balance, 'leap,' and up and two," she croons as she guides nine schoolgirls on a busy thoroughfare.
"I try to bring beauty where everything seems ugly, a drop of light where everything is black," says Silva pointing to the group with a grimace: "Despite the dirt from home they already want to be clean, they have their hair well combed, now they don't walk with their eyes looking at the ground.
She firmly believes that her ballet heals self-esteem.
"I didn't consider myself pretty. I was very shy, didn't say anything and now I can express myself," confirms 20-year-old Maria Cielo Cardenas.
"In ballet I am a different person, I feel like a princess, especially when we have performances and we put on costumes and crowns," she says. In January she and her partner Kerly Vera, 19, won a scholarship to study dance in Barcelona.
Y.Nakamura--AMWN