Attendees hope to be covered in dust, saying it brings good luck
Battling summer heat and dust, child jockey Purevsurengiin Togtokhsuren rides his stallion across the vast Mongolian steppe.
Despite being only 13, Togtokhsuren is riding for the fifth time in the national races at Mongolia's summer festival, known as Naadam, lining up against some 170 other child jockeys.
Thirteen-year-old jockey Purevsurengiin Togtokhsuren (right) arrives at the starting line to compete in the race for 5-year-old stallions during the Naadam in Khui Doloon Khudag, 50 km west of Ulan Bator, Mongolia, last week. Johannes Eisele / AFP |
Riders chant hard to inspire their horses and Mongolians hope to be covered in the dust they kick up - they believe it brings good luck.
The armies of Genghis Khan and his descendants rode their steeds to conquer a huge swath of the Eurasian landmass, and for 800 years Mongolians have celebrated Naadam, which showcases the "three manly skills" of horsemanship, archery and wrestling.
The warm temperatures are also a welcome respite from long and brutally cold winters - the reason Togtokhsuren himself rides horses for money.
His parents sent him to work as a jockey after they lost their livestock during the unusually harsh winter of 2010, known in Mongolia as a zud, in which millions of animals perished.
Togtokhsuren has taken to the sport and says he wants to coach other jockeys so that he can ride horses his entire life. But the time away from family has taken a toll.
"I don't know what my parents do for a living while I'm away," says Togtokhsuren, whose serious mien and close-cropped hair give him an air of maturity beyond his years.
"I don't miss my mom because I've been living at my coach's for the last five years," he added.
Togtokhsuren would not say how much he makes, but Mongolian child jockeys usually earn 500,000 tugrik (about $250) a month - which goes to their parents, while coaches pay for food and school materials.
There are incentives. A first place at the national races - the most prestigious in the country - entitles a jockey to 20 percent of the 15 million tugrik prize money from the government, and often more from sponsor companies.
Though bathed in the glow of tradition, racing is also a hazard to the children who mount up - some have died or suffered serious injuries - and their plight has drawn the attention of UN agencies such as the International Labor Organization and UNICEF.
Mongolian horses are bred for stamina and distances that are far longer than in Western racing.
Togtokhsuren took third and fourth place in Naadam races in 2014, but finished well down the line in this year's competition.
He came in 30th in the 6-year-old stallion race, a 15-km sprint, and 54th out of 172 in the 5-year-old stallion competition, a 23-km event.
But he withdrew from the Ikh-Nas, a run over the same distance for fully mature horses, saying his mount was too feeble to race because of the drought.
(China Daily 07/18/2015 page8)