Photographer Jo Farrell tracked down 50 surviving women whose feet had
been bound. Many could no longer walk, and kept their disfigurement
hidden. Her images reveal the survivors’ strength, determination – and
hope. It was a nine-year journey across China, tracking down the
last survivors of foot binding. She found just 50 women. Five of them
were still completely bound and in hiding, but most had released their
binds. All were from impoverished villages in the provinces of Yunnan
and Shandong. The oldest, Zhang Yun Ying, was 103.
Foot binding was
outlawed in China 103 years ago, following almost 10 decades of the
practice. But the last factory producing “lotus shoes” – the triangular
embroidered platforms used to showcase the women’s minuscule pointy feet
– closed just six years ago. After foot binding was banned it became taboo, and in 1950 Chairman
Mao ordered anti foot-binding inspectors to publicly shame any bound
women they found. “It was considered an old tradition that did not
reflect modern China and should be stopped,” Farrell tells me from her
flat in Hong Kong. “Their binding would be hung in windows so that
people would laugh at them.”
Most women were bound at the age of seven. “The first year is
particularly excruciating because the girls were made to walk until
their toes would break under their weight,” says Farrell. “After that,
the toes became numb and now, 50 or 60 years later, they don’t have any
pain in their feet. It’s all quite numb.”
Part IV here
The Last Bound Feet in China here
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