Sex Trade Under a Modest Facade
Feature | Benish Shah Sardar | March 17, 2009 at 1:35 pm
Every time their mother brings a customer home, the children of the prostitutes leave the house in order to escape, for a moment, the murky cycle of the notorious Red Light District of India. The escape means little – as they only go into the streets of the same area, where men walk around looking for sex workers, disrespecting anything and everything that comes in their way. It is an age old and sordid culture that thrives on poverty and is fed by the constant and insatiable demand for sex in a country whose history places women as sexual tools for men.
The now famous documentary, Born Into Brothels, won an Oscar for its painful display of the lives of children in the Red Light District. But the Oscar meant little for the estimated 12,000 children in Songachi, who often remained unschooled and find employment in small factories, shops, and cheap eateries. Exposed to drunken men, street brawls and heroin-shooting pimps in one of Asia’s biggest red light districts with 6,000 prostitutes these employments last only until the kids reach a sufficient age for prostitution, if they are female, or to take on the role of a pimp for boys. In Bombay, children as young as 9 are bought for up to 60,000 rupees, or $2,000 at auctions where Arabs bid against Indian men who believe sleeping with a virgin cures gonorrhea and syphilis.
Despite India’s outward image of sexual modesty, the scope of prostitution in India’s cities suggests a more complex picture and a troubling one for those attempting to break the cycle of poverty. And like everything else in India, the inexpensive nature and high demand of the business creates a larger market. For customers – typically migrant laborers, cab and rickshaw drivers, and students – a visit to a Falkland Road brothel in Mumbai costs from $2 to $4, or perhaps $10 for a longer meeting. Women working the streets without the brothel structure will turn tricks for $1 or less. The red light district in Mumbai generates at least $400 million a year in revenue, with more than 100,000 prostitutes servicing men 365 days a year, averaging 6 customers a day, at an average of $2 each.
This continuous need for sexual fulfillment in a male dominated culture has also led to the spread of AIDS in India. In 1997, tests found only 1 percent of Mumbai prostitutes were infected with HIV. Just five years later, 54 percent of the sample tested positive. The virus spreads from the customer to the sex worker, and then to another customer – who will more than likely give the virus to his wife. In places like India, there is no government mandate that your spouse must be informed about any sexually transmitted diseases carried by their mate – and therefore, the disease continues to spread like a silent and deadly representation of infidelity.
Sex is a 24/7 industry in these districts, where public and private disease-prevention and social programs are making an effort to control the spread of AIDS, and to help the women unknowingly affected by the HIV virus. Condom distribution, treatment for STDs, and care for the children of infected/deceased prostitutes’ children are provided. Many programs feed and educate these children and provide them a home when their mothers sicken and die. Often these children themselves are HIV positive.
In the bleak world of commercial sex in India, it is difficult to understand the pressures facing prostitutes, who work there not out of choice but for survival in a country of extreme poverty, which houses overt stigmas against prostitutes that prevents them from breaking the ccycle of prostitution in their children. AIDS is a modern disease that has intruded on an ancient culture of commercial sex, where eroticism is enshrined in some of India’s myriad religious traditions.
Without societal support for their rights, many of the sex workers have begun to create organizations to protect their rights. In 2006, Pakistani sex workers visited India’s Songachi’s Red Light District to meet with Calcutta’s Sex Workers’ Association, to understand how to battle HIV and other STDs. “It was unbelievable to the delegation [from Pakistan] that Sonagachi’s sex workers refuse sex without a condom even in the face of physical torture,” states Majid Rani, who led the Pakistani team.
One of the most recent and most respectable outcomes of these associations is a conference in which they created a network to prevent women being targeted by human trafficking gangs. The network would be run through a special website, and would focus on women at risk in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam.
What Can We Do?
Of course, with each problem we here at RIVAAJ try to help our readers look towards solutions. One of the key ways to help alleviate the cycle of prostitution in India is simply to understand that these women are not the “lowly” castes that want to participate in sex with strangers. It is natural for most South Asians to react negatively if ever faced with a sex-worker, but it is important to understand their circumstances in order to help solve the problem.
International Justice Mission
The International Justice Mission began in 1977 (2000 in Mumbai) and are an organization for Human Rights, aimed to help protect and rescue those who are victims to slavery, sexual exploitation, and those in violent situations. The group of lawyers, investigations, and health care professionals work with the local government to help victims fight for justice. They have 4 main purposes. 1.) Victim Relief 2.) Perpetrator Accountability 3.) Victim Aftercare and 4.) Structural Change. To help them fight for the rights of victims of this crime, visit (http://www.ijm.org/)
Bachpan Bachao Andolan
Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA) is an organization aimed to rescue and provide education for children who were exploited in the Human Trafficking trade. Campaigning for over 25 years, BBA has been rescuing slave children from villages in India that sell children as slaves. They emerged as an organization of many supporters and are known for their secret raids and rescue operations to free slave children. For more information about BBA, and to help them with their vision of creating a safe haven for children and providing free and quality education for those exploited in slave trade, visit their website (http://www.bba.org.in/index.php)
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women-International
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women-International (CATW) is a N.G.O that promotes women’s rights by helping to end sexual exploitation of women and children. CATW was founded in 1988, and was the first international N.G.O to focus on human trafficking. CATW prevent trafficking by educating people in communities and the public about trafficking and the harms and effects it has on those being sold into this trade. They focus on many different regions and all over the world including India which was reported that 1.3 million children are currently in their sex-trade centers. The CATW support and participate in programs and campaigns around the world to help stop human trafficking. To show your support and to find out more about this organization and how you can help please visit their website (http://www.catwinternational.org/index.php)
Apne Aap Women Worldwide
Apne Aap Women Worldwide was founded in 1998 by twenty two women who worked in prostitution to help end their own exploitation through sex trafficking, and help others end theirs as well. They are nonprofit organizations with centers all over India, as well as in New York. They work with other organizations to intervene and stop human sex trafficking. Their mission and goal is to create awareness in society on discrimination of women and children on issues of Sex trafficking and prostitution. They provide education and easy access health care in community centers for youth and women in Delhi, Mumbai, and other areas in India and opened up soup kitchens in the four red light districts of India. Their actions are based on Gandhi’s belief of Ahimsa (meaning non violence) and Antodaya (meaning the uplifting of the last person). To find out how you can help this cause visit their website (http://www.apneaap.org/).
Tags: Feature, Sex Trade


Tweet This
Digg This
Save to delicious
Stumble it
