Cali, Colombia – As the one sister to 9 brothers, Carmen Diaz loved a boisterous childhood within the port metropolis of Buenaventura, Colombia. Collectively along with her siblings, she would wreak havoc round the home or exit within the streets and kick a ragged ball round for hours.
“I adored taking part in soccer,” stated Diaz, who requested to be known as by a pseudonym.
However her joyful, rambunctious childhood got here to an finish when her uncle began to sexually abuse her, she stated. The assault continued over a number of events.
When she instructed her mother and father about what occurred, they refused to consider her and as a substitute accused her of mendacity. Feeling distraught, Diaz determined to run away from residence on the age of 13.
Diaz ended up sleeping on the streets of the close by metropolis of Cali and have become hooked on medicine. Ultimately, she discovered shelter by way of town’s social providers, which related her with sources for minors.
That’s how she found her lifeline: salsa dancing. It was a part of an experimental remedy undertaking run by the native nonprofit, Mi Cuerpo Es Mi Historia, a reputation that interprets to “My physique is my story”.
The undertaking combines salsa dancing and psychotherapy to assist survivors of sexual violence specific their feelings and course of their trauma over the course of a number of months.
“Dancing can assist to heal trauma,” stated undertaking founder Martha Isabel Cordoba Arevalo, a psychologist and avid dancer who was born and raised in Cali, often called the world capital of salsa.
“When survivors don’t wish to talk about what occurred to them, or if they aren’t capable of, motion provides them a distinct method of expression.”
Over the previous decade, Mi Cuerpo Es Mi Historia has labored with roughly 700 younger ladies, largely by way of referrals from metropolis providers. Therapy begins with efficiency courses, specializing in appearing, singing or dancing.
Then, the subsequent step is to let contributors discover subjects they selected by way of efficiency strategies. By the top of the programme, organisers hope the artwork could be an outlet for contributors to grasp and address their experiences.
Recovering from trauma, nevertheless, isn’t straightforward or simple. Arevalo remembers assembly Diaz, now 28, when she was solely a youngster, newly referred to the programme. She noticed that Diaz appeared aggressive — damage by all that she had endured — and didn’t wish to work together with the programme’s psychologists.
“I used to be afraid of males,” stated Diaz. “The male psychologists I spoke to, they made me scared.”
However Arevalo quickly found that Diaz had a pure expertise for salsa. Week by week, {the teenager} appeared extra relaxed.
The quick tempo of salsa’s tumbao beat saved Diaz’s thoughts — and her heels — busy, as she flicked throughout the dance flooring, her physique swaying to the sound of trumpets and timbales.
“After I was dancing, I felt free and completely satisfied,” Diaz stated. “It was the most effective remedy for me. I don’t really feel like a sufferer any extra. I’m a survivor.”
A rising physique of analysis helps the declare that dance and motion can have advantages for the thoughts, in addition to the physique.
A assessment of 41 research revealed within the journal Frontiers in Psychology in 2019 discovered that dance motion remedy decreased nervousness and melancholy, “persistently” enhancing associated circumstances.
Dita Federman, a dance motion therapist who has researched sexual abuse, argues this unconventional remedy technique can attain some sufferers in methods different interventions can not.
“It may be essential in serving to some sufferers,” stated Federman. “Dance remedy can result in elevated coronary heart fee, utilizing coordinated motion and stability, and what occurs whereas dancing is that persons are extra more likely to recall and specific previous reminiscences.”

However Arevalo cautioned that addressing sexual violence is extraordinarily advanced and that no easy answer exists.
“You want time and sources, and also you want skilled professionals so as to make deep modifications or restorations of lives,” she stated. “Not everybody has that luxurious.”
Federman additionally warned that, in each sort of remedy, there’s a danger of re-traumatisation. Dance is not any exception.
“It needs to be accomplished very slowly, with out straight questioning [the survivors] for emotional materials,” she stated. “If it comes up from them, then it comes up. Nevertheless it shouldn’t be pressured.”
And whereas there was analysis into its efficacy, Federman stated information about dance motion remedy stays restricted due to the issue in acquiring permission to check survivors of sexual violence.
“There’s a lot we don’t but know,” she stated.
However proponents consider dance remedy may assist make small steps in responding to the stark ranges of gender-based violence in Colombia.
One third of girls within the Latin American nation have suffered bodily or sexual violence by the hands of a companion, in line with the United Nation’s International Database on Violence.
Colombia’s six-decade-long inner battle has additionally contributed to excessive charges of sexual violence. In September, the Particular Jurisdiction for Peace — a court docket set as much as examine crimes dedicated in the course of the battle — introduced that at the very least 35,178 individuals had suffered gender-based violence between 1957 and 2016.
Proper-wing paramilitary teams have been accountable for the most important variety of incidents, at roughly 33 %. Girls made up the overwhelming majority of the victims, comprising 89 % total.
“The our bodies of girls have been used as a goal of warfare,” stated Arevalo.
To scale back the chance of re-traumatisation, Arevalo avoids utilizing “direct” dance companions in her periods with younger survivors. As a substitute, the dancers be taught their steps in a bigger, coordinated group. And once they pair up, they usually use a method known as “mirroring”, whereby dancers replicate their companion’s strikes at a distance.
Arevalo stated there may be additionally loads of room for particular person improvisation in salsa, which could be danced alone in addition to with others.

Her nonprofit features a pathway for sexual assault survivors to turn out to be salsa instructors themselves, to allow them to move alongside their strategies to others — and even arrange their very own enterprise.
Sofia Murillo is among the many graduates of that programme. On a current December afternoon, she and her fellow trainer Alexander Patiño defined the essential salsa steps to about 25 vacationers in a packed dance studio lined with pale yellow and inexperienced tiles.
Cali’s model of salsa is famously fast-paced: Within the Seventies, it grew to become widespread for DJs to play data at 45 revolutions per minute, a lot faster than the standard pace of 33rpm.
Confronted with Cali’s whip-fast beats — the galloping pulse of the bongos and cowbells seemingly unrelenting — Murillo’s college students struggled to maintain up. Their toe faucets and turns risked turning into collisions and crushed toes.
However by the top of her class, each one of many vacationers was capable of cobble collectively a decent routine.
“I had damaging ideas previously,” stated Murillo, 40, who grew to become a salsa trainer in 2023. “I used to be mistreated. However once I’m dancing, it’s totally different. I neglect all the pieces. I smile.”