‘Not Just a Maid’: The Ultra-Running Domestic Workers of Hong Kong – The New York Times
‘Not Just a Maid’: The Ultra-Running Domestic Workers of Hong Kong The New York Times
Trail running has emerged as an unlikely equalizer for some foreign domestic workers in a city that often discriminates against them.
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HONG KONG — Six days a week, Jaybie Pagarigan cooks, cleans and shops for her employers, a family in Hong Kong.
Then on Sundays — her one day off — she hits the trails.
Traversing the city’s lush and vast country parks, the 39-year-old domestic worker from the Philippines clocks in miles of running and thousands of feet in elevation as she conquers one peak after another.
Ms. Pagarigan is part of a growing community of maids in Hong Kong who have taken up trail running for the challenge of the sport and the opportunity to be treated as equals in a society that often discriminates against them.
In addition to long work days, one-day weekends and an exhaustive list of responsibilities, these domestic workers somehow find the time and energy to compete in mountain ultramarathons. They squeeze in training runs before the crack of dawn or late at night, and find creative ways to turn their household duties into training opportunities.
On a recent spring Sunday, Ms. Pagarigan stood under overcast skies at the starting line of the King of the Hills Hong Kong Island race, part of one of the city’s oldest trail-running series. She was there to race the sprint distance, 11.5 miles.
At 4 feet 11 inches, Ms. Pagarigan was head and shoulders shorter than some of the men around her. But she had a look of steely resolve as she gazed into the distance, hopping on her toes to keep warm as the race director waited for a thunderstorm warning to be lifted so the race could start.
Ms. Pagarigan was not familiar with the course and did not quite know what to expect. But she did know that there would be stairs, lots of stairs, and that her legs would burn more than her lungs would. She also knew that she had hours of training behind her, and that “it’s better to not know what’s in front of you,” she said.
She ended up finishing the race in just under three hours, a result that disappointed her. The morning’s rainstorms had made the trails slick with mud and she had fallen twice.
Her friend, Fredelyn Alberto, 30, a fellow Filipino domestic worker, came third in the full race of 21.5 miles. Ms. Alberto has established herself as one of the city’s rising female trail runners after a string of podium finishes, including winning a 27.9-mile ultramarathon in January. Ms. Pagarigan ran her first ultramarathon in February, a grueling race covering 50 kilometers, or about 31 miles, and she is training for several more.
When they are not on the trails, Ms. Pagarigan and Ms. Alberto are among Hong Kong’s 380,000 foreign maids, who make up 5 percent of the population but play an outsize role in the city’s economy. Foreign maids first arrived in the city in the 1970s, when there was a shortage of local full-time housekeepers as the economy began to take off in line with China’s opening up.
The steady flow of migrant workers has allowed large numbers of local women to stay in the work force and has paved the way for Hong Kong’s transformation into a thriving service economy. Last year alone, foreign maids added $12.6 billion to the city’s gross domestic product, according to a recent report by Enrich, a nonprofit that works on the welfare of migrant workers in Hong Kong, and by Experian, a credit reporting bureau.
And yet the workers often face discriminatory treatment. The authorities have denied foreign maids the right to apply for permanent residency and have mandated that they must live in their employers’ homes — an arrangement critics argue increases the risk of abuse. It is not uncommon for domestic workers to be made to sleep in bathrooms, storage rooms or closets.
Trail running has emerged as something of an unlikely equalizer for domestic workers. For at least a few hours, the sweat and camaraderie of the trails blur the lines between employers and maids, and among locals, migrants and expatriates.
“On weekdays, people say, ‘Oh, you’re a domestic helper,’” Ms. Alberto said. “On weekends, on the trails, they say, ‘Oh, you’re a good runner.’”
“It’s amazing,” she added.
The sport is one of several ways that foreign domestic workers are reclaiming their voices and a sense of agency in a city where they are often expected to be subservient and virtually invisible.
For Ms. Pagarigan, the King of the Hills race was just the start of her day. Afterward, she dashed to a graduation ceremony for a course on money management offered by Uplifters, a nonprofit group that offers online education to migrant workers.
Later that afternoon, she led a hike as a volunteer for a local trekking group. In all, in her one day off from work, she covered 15 miles and 4,500 feet.
Ms. Pagarigan said that trail running sends an important message: “We’re not just a maid. We’re not just poor people.”
A typical day for her begins at 4:30 a.m., when she slips out of her employer’s apartment for a “sunrise jog,” a five-mile round-trip run to the summit of nearby Mount Butler, a 1,430-foot peak.
One perk of Hong Kong’s hyperdensity is that its verdant jungles are nearby, making the city’s vast network of trails accessible to almost anyone.
By 6 a.m., Ms. Pagarigan is back at the apartment, putting breakfast together and getting her employer’s two toddlers, ages 3 and 4, ready for school. Then she cleans the house, does the laundry, prepares lunch and picks the children up from school at half past noon.
Twice a week, she heads to the market just down the hill to buy fresh produce. But it is no ordinary errand.
To get to the market, a quarter-mile away, she runs a large loop around the neighborhood with her market trolley in tow to add on mileage.
At the market, she fills the trolley with vegetables, meat and fish. Then she runs back, carrying a load that she estimates can be up to 22 pounds. Finally, she runs up the stairs to the apartment on the 18th floor.
Ms. Pagarigan’s workday ends when her employer returns home from work, around dinner time. This is when she heads out for her second run of the day, a six mile jog along the harbor front.
Sometimes, if her employers notice that she has stayed in her bedroom and not gone out for her night run, they message her to ask if everything is O.K.
“They’re very flexible, supportive, helpful,” Ms. Pagarigan said of her employers. She said she felt lucky because it was rare for a domestic worker in Hong Kong to have her own bedroom and employers who actively encourage her athletic pursuits.
Many domestic workers endure poor living conditions, and restrictive visa rules make them particularly vulnerable to exploitation by employers and job agencies. Some venues, like private clubs, bar domestic workers from certain areas or even entire premises.
“This is sad but this is reality — that when you say you’re a domestic helper, you’re a small thing,” said Dolly Vargas Salles, 40, a fellow trail runner and maid from the Philippines.
“But for me, no. I can live as who I am,” she said. “This is what trail running has done for me.”
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A10 of the New York edition with the headline: In Hong Kong, Foreign Maids Are Racing to Reclaim Their Voices. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe