Guest guest Posted December 18, 2006 Report Share Posted December 18, 2006 Dear Madam/Sir, Please accept the best wishes of and greetings from the Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee (DMSC), Kolkata, West Bengal , India. You may be aware of the fact that we are working for the prevention and control of sexually transmitted diseases, HIV and AIDS, in the sex work sites of the different districts of West Bengal, for the last 14 years. Presently our work is no more confined to the control and prevention of sexually transmitted infections. We are working for the all-round development of sex workers and, of other marginalized people of our land. We organized ourselves into the DMSC more than a decade ago, on the 12th of July 1995, to carry on our struggle against all forms of injustice, violence, oppression, exploitation and health hazards that exist continually in and around our sex work sites and sex work. We firmly believe that we the sex workers provide entertainment to our customers. We provide sexual pleasure. Every one has the right to seek pleasure and happiness. Like the other entertainment workers of the world, we use our brain, ideas, emotion and sense organs, in short our entire body and our mind to make people happy. As Entertainment workers, we seek governmental recognition and, fulfillment of our just professional demands. For this purpose we have organized the Binodini Sramik Union. As artists engaged in the entertainment sector we believe that the need for entertainment existed in the lives of human beings in the past, it exists now and, it will exist in the future. In the absence of entertainment, the joy of living vanishes from our lives; life becomes a mechanical and tedious journey. Today the laboring people are under ever increasing occupational, familial, social and economic pressure. We are becoming ever more tired, exhausted. Our ability to work in getting reduced. We re becoming intolerant. We also notice that the governments of most countries do not understand and do not care about this situation. Usually our governments are ignorant, intolerant, dogmatic, oppressive and tyrannical about the reality of human need for leisure, pleasure, happiness and entertainment, about the various types of entertainment workers, and about the reality and variety of their professions. Such attitudes governed by ignorance and intolerance are detrimental to the growth of our human resources. If we destroy our human resources, then how shall we develop and grow? Only entertainment can liberate us from the suffocating environment that surrounds us daily, hourly and, help us become healthy and normal. Today many forms of folk dance and music are on the verge of extinction. Many modern forms of entertainment, like the dance of the dance bar girls of Maharashtra, have been banned illegally. Like the captains of all other industry, the captains of entertainment industry too try to pay their workers as little as they can. To maintain this regime of lowest possible wages, they divide and rule the entertainment workers. In this work of dividing and sowing the seeds of rift among the entertainment workers, they are assisted by a group of intellectuals and barons of the social service sector, who hawk the dominant ideologies that permanently label and classify the entertainment workers and artists into ancient and modern, classical and folk, genteel and vulgar, moral and immoral, adult and non-adult, meant for the cultured or for the uncultured people etc. etc. Once these labels are stuck, and the workers are segregated, they drift apart and, themselves stoke the fires of these divisions, at no extra cost for their bosses. Many entertainment workers fail to recognize themselves as workers for their entire life. Yet another way of keeping such division alive is to stigmatize some entertainment workers and, thus marginalize them within the society. It is thus that our sex workers are forced to lead a near-criminal life stigmatized by both law and social sanction. Folk singers and dancers are stigmatized as indecent people and harassed. 'Upper' caste men keep women entertainers from the 'lower' castes under their jackboots. The Bauls in Bengal are beaten up by bigots. The Tamasha artists are facing threats in Maharashtra. It is in such circumstances that we hope to create on united movement and organization of all the entertainment workers of all countries of the world - be they Bauls, Nats, sex workers, dancers, instrument players, singers, actors and actress, circus artists, Bahurupees, painters or sculptors - we hope to unite all of them. There are many entertainment workers in India and the rest of the world who are weak, who fail to gain the limelight, who live outside the pale of media glare. Then again there are many who enjoy social and political power and prestige, who always bask in media glare. We must try to break the resultant walls of power, prestige and wealth that divide our entertainment workers. We want equitable economic, social and, political status for all entertainment workers. We demand that the entertainment workers be recognized as special type of workers and, a special labour law be enacted for them. With this aim in view, we are organizing an All India Conference of Entertainment Workers at the Rabindra Kanan (nee Company Bagan), Kolkata, from the 25 th of February to the 3rd of March 2007 . We want you to be with us in that conference: not merely as a spectator of listener, we want you to participate as our comrade. We hope that you will join us. We hope to meet you at the conference. Thank you. Bishakha Laskar Govinda Saha (Joint Convenors) ALL INDIA CONFERENCE OF ENTERTAINMENT WORKERS 12/5 Nilmoni Mitra Street , Kolkata-700 006 Phone : 033 2533 6514 Tele-fax: 033 2530 6619/3148, E-mail: durbar.ec2007@..., Web site: www.durbar.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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