Guest guest Posted June 7, 2006 Report Share Posted June 7, 2006 Indian sex worker takes to the streets to battle AIDS By Anand Giridharadas International Herald Tribune Published: June 6, 2006 MUMBAI, India With the strut of a baby-kissing politician, Shah strolled down the byways of the red light district the other day, pausing every few steps to offer a hug and a stern lecture to the prostitutes. Shah - tall and serene at 35, wearing a turquoise sari - began each conversation gently, with a joke or a compliment. A woman's makeup, she might say, was looking nice. Then she would lean in closer, glance around for onlookers, and pull out a pamphlet from the AIDS organization for which she works part- time. Pointing at explicit photographs, she fired out her lessons: This is how to use a condom; this is what a vaginal infection looks like. When her shift ends, Shah, who is being identified only by her common last name to protect her identity, resumes her night job. By midnight, if luck is kind, she will be in a cheap hotel somewhere in the byways of Grant Road, earning a few dollars from a strange man for what she calls the only work she knows. And because she must survive, Shah will fail to tell him - even as she insists on a condom - that she is a prostitute with HIV. The United Nations reported recently that India had become the HIV/AIDS capital of the world, its 5.7 million infections surpassing South Africa's 5.5 million. Some Indian officials have disputed that number, but the government has acknowledged that the spread of the virus shows no signs of slowing. Social Activities Integration, the nongovernmental organization that Shah works for, runs the peer-education program in Mumbai. It estimates that there are 37,000 sex workers in this city alone; the real figure is probably much higher. The organization employs 35 peer educators, with each responsible for a group of 50 sex workers. Although it has no official statistics, the group says condom usage and the frequency of HIV testing have risen dramatically among the women coached by their peers. AIDS is often cast as an epidemic of bad choices. But it is also, in the life of Shah, an epidemic of the choiceless. Since childhood, she has walked on a path leading, with ever greater inevitability, to AIDS. She grew up in southern India, dividing her time between school and her job in a firecracker factory. When she was 13, her grandmother demanded that she marry her first cousin. But he had a fist-sized lump growing out of his back, and Shah's mother was angered by the thought of her lone daughter wedding an invalid. Her mother summoned her back to Bombay, and forced upon Shah a marriage more to the parents' liking. They had been taking care of a 35-year-old migrant worker who had no parents in the city, and Shah was beaten by her mother until she agreed to marry him. By age 14, Shah had given him a daughter. He had begun to stray from the marriage, and one day she caught him with another woman. When she complained, he kicked her out of the house. It was Shah's own house, and she had been ejected with her mother's approval. Days later, a woman found her on the platform of a Bombay train station and offered to find her a job as a maid. She got up and followed her. By evening, she had been sold to a brothel for 10,000 rupees, about $220 today. She told the owner to contact her mother, who would gladly pay the money to buy her back. But when the brothel sent a messenger to Shah's home, her mother denied having a daughter. For years, Shah lived in the brothel on a single meal a day: rice and watery lentil soup. She lived through years of forced embraces, loving no one but believing that they all loved her. " We don't love, " she said. " We take money, do our work, and they leave. We don't love because our hearts have become too hard. But the men love us. " One of her customers became a lover. He bought her back from the brothel and married her. When he needed money, though, she was back on the street. She protested, and he stabbed her in the cheek and back, burned her with kerosene on the belly and legs and shaved her hip-length black hair down to the scalp. Shah felt a rare flash of power when she went to the police, dragging her two children in tow, to display her wounds. The police followed her home. They dragged her husband out of the house and beat him senseless on the roadside. " I was very happy, " she said, " because he had tortured me a lot. " Two years ago, a test revealed she was HIV-positive. " I went crazy, " she said. She drank and took pills, trying to kill herself. Then social workers approached her, looking for prostitutes to educate their colleagues about AIDS. She agreed, and because she knows their craft, she has a knack for communicating with her colleagues. They stop her everywhere she goes for a bit of gossip or advice. She loves the work, for it has given her the first feelings of respect. Today, suicide has fallen away from her thoughts. " I have forgotten everything, " she said. She is happily remarried and has discovered meaning through her teaching. " I had an idea, " she said over a cup of tea, " that what happened to me, I would not let happen to other girls. " http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/06/06/news/aids.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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