/ 2011 / Press / Sports

Buzkashi Riders

Buzkashi riders fight in a scrimmage for possession of the goat.

Popular throughout much of Central Asia, buzkashi is a form of horse polo in which horseback players wrestle a goat carcass across a playing field. Believed to have its origins as a defense tactic against Genghis Khanâ??s livestock-snatching Mongols, the sport is played with few rules and no teams â?? every man fights for himself.

Buzkashi is practiced more widely in Tajikistan, compared to the other ex-Soviet republics, where the sport is occasionally controlled. For Afghan horse traders upholding their own buzkashi tradition, Tajikistan is also one of the chief sources for the prized â?? and often extremely expensive â?? buzkashi steeds.

Growing up in China, India and Indonesia, Theodore Kaye found a natural passion in photographing the world. While majoring in Film at Yale, he studied Uzbek and Farsi and then went to work as a newspaper editor and mountain guide in Central Asia before settling on a photo career. As a former staff photographer at Rhythms Monthly, a Chinese-language geographic magazine, he has covered stories in India, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Taiwan, Japan, Ireland and Great Britain. His work has been featured in the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, the Associated Press, McSweeney's, the Asahi Shimbun and the National Film Board of Canada. He is currently pursuing personal projects in the Central Asian 'stans and Greater China.