LA PAZ, Bolivia — Before setting out for the wide, white mountain, Ana Lia González Maguiña took stock of her gear: A chunky sweater to guard against the chill. A harness and climbing rope to scale the 6,000-meter summit of one of Bolivia's tallest mountains. Aviator glasses to protect from the bright highland sun.
And most crucially, a voluminous, hot-pink skirt.
The bell skirt with layered petticoats — known as the ''pollera'' (pronounced po-YEH-rah) — is the traditional dress of Indigenous women in Bolivia's highlands. Imposed centuries ago by Spanish colonizers, the old-fashioned pollera has long since been restyled with local, richly patterned fabrics and reclaimed as a source of pride and badge of identity here in the region's only Indigenous-majority country.
Rather than seeing the unwieldy skirt as a hindrance to physically demanding work in male-dominated fields, Andean Indigenous women, called ''cholitas,'' insist that their unwillingness to conform with contemporary style comes at no cost to their comfort or capabilities.
''Our sport is demanding, it's super tough. So doing it in pollera represents that strength, it's about valuing our roots,'' said González Maguiña, 40, a professional mountain climber standing before the snow-covered Huayna Potosi peak, just north of La Paz, Bolivia's administrative capital. ''It's not for show.''
Skirt-clad miners, skaters, climbers, soccer players and wrestlers across Bolivia echoed that sentiment in interviews, portraying their adoption of polleras for all professional and physical purposes as an act of empowerment.
''We, women in polleras, want to keep moving forward,'' said Macaria Alejandro, a 48-year-old miner in Bolivia's western state of Oruro, her pollera smeared with the dirt and dust of a day toiling underground. ''I work like this and wear this for my children.''
But many also described the current moment as one of uncertainty for pollera-wearing women in Bolivia under the country's first conservative government in nearly two decades.