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 Prostitution as a tradition among Bedia tribe of North
India<http://adivasi.wordpress.com/2008/03/30/prostitution-as-a-tradition-among-bedia-tribe-adivasi-of-north-india/>
  Engagement of women in prostitution with familial consent is widespread
among some of the erstwhile nomadic groups such as the Bedia, Nat, Sansi,
Kanjar, and Bachada found in north, northwestern, and central India. In
north India, the Bedias are the best known for pursuing prostitution as a
familial occupation. Women born into a Bedia family remain unmarried. They
engage in prostitution in order to provide for the economic needs of their
natal family. Bedia brothers, that is, the men, although not economically
productive, do marry. The wives of the Bedia men do not engage in
prostitution. But they are largely responsible for all the domestic work
including cooking, washing, cleaning, and childcare. It is interesting that
members of the Bedia community resort to starkly contradictory
representations of the prostitution of their women. They vacillate between
two extremes. The weight of tradition on the one hand, and the "choice" of
individual women on the other. A middle-aged wife said, "This is going on
for many generations. We don't even know. It has been going on from the
times of our ancestors." But she added a little later that "earlier no one
knew this occupation". On another occasion, she explained to me, "Earlier we
used to do like this: Sometimes we would camp in one village sometimes in
another. We used to beg and survive. Then one ancestor of ours started this
tradition. He put his daughter into this 'dhanda'. He even set out all the
rules of the trade. And ever since then, this has been going on in the
community." In yet another conversation, the same woman said: "Our ancestors
started it". But her sister-in-law quipped in: "No, it was not really the
old people/ancestors. Sisters and daughters started this of their own will".
A crucial feature of the Bedia families dependent upon the prostitution of
their women is that women do all the well-defined work within and outside
the household. The wives of Bedia men generally accomplish all the domestic
work. A wife cooks, cleans, washes, and takes care of all the members of the
household including her sisters-in-law and any children that the latter may
have. In areas where the Bedia women migrate in order to engage in sex work,
their children are often left behind and brought up by their mothers or
brothers' wives. The domestic labour of a wife in her husband's household
frees the unmarried Bedia sisters and daughters to engage in sex work. The
needs of a cash income are fulfilled by the prostitution of unmarried women
or the non-kin women kept for this purpose within a Bedia family. In sharp
contrast, Bedia men do not engage in any kind of wage or even non-wage work
for the major part of their lives. While the community members do own some
land, the young Bedia men do not participate in its cultivation although
some of the older men do so intermittently. Families owning some cultivable
land employ wage workers from other castes/communities for agricultural work
during the harvesting season. In some families, the land has been let out to
sharecroppers despite the availability of labour within the family. Bedia
men sometimes participate in domestic chores. Under some conditions, the men
may engage in some gainful activities such as agriculture, rickshaw pulling,
or some other work involving manual labour. But they barely ever do so
consistently and in no case are they primarily responsible for the
sustenance of their family. The Bedias' situation departs considerably from
the 'man the breadwinner, woman the home-keeper' model. The economy of the
Bedias, insofar as it is dependent on prostitution, is sustained at two
levels by women's labour. The Bedia men on the other hand are the most
parasitic members of their family. It is hardly surprising that the
community members draw a clear correlation between men's inactivity and
their increasing dependence upon prostitution. It is extremely difficult to
have a precise estimation of income from prostitution; the women generally
work with a daily target of earning a certain amount through entertaining an
approximate number of clients. Accordingly, they tend to calculate both
earnings and expenditure on a daily basis. The situation changes somewhat
with the migration of women who remit earnings more or less regularly. The
Bedias in Nagla admitted that a fixed amount comes from Mumbai where many
Bedia young women had migrated in recent years. In 1999-2000, most Bedia
women maintained that they do not accept anything less than Rs.50 from any
of their customers for a single visit. This minimum figure had been raised
to Rs 100 by 2002. Women also said that the "rate" depends upon their
perception of the paying capacity of the customer. In fact, Rs 100 is said
to be the rate for a sadak-chaap (run-of-the-mill) customer while a man who
seems better off can even be asked to cough up Rs 500. Westerners and other
foreigners are welcomed for their "dollars" and generally higher paying
capacity. Even the curiosity value of the hamlet sometimes earns the
community members gifts in money and kind (soap, shampoos, lipsticks,
ball-pens, etc.) from passing foreign tourists. The earnings in Mumbai are
much higher than Nagla or even Delhi brothels. One girl can easily earn
anything between Rs 2,000 to 3,000 in a night's work. The women also claimed
that the chances of their finding a stable, reliable, and wealthy patron
were much better in Mumbai than elsewhere. Such men often provided the women
with living accommodation worth Rs 700,000-800,000, gave them Rs
20,000-30,000 toward their monthly expenses and did not hesitate in parting
with another 50,000-100,000 if the women asked them to do so for any special
occasion. Now, it is undeniable that all Bedia women cannot earn in such
high figures. But the significance of the "possibility" of this kind of
income can barely be underestimated. The most likely employment options of
Bedia men are as agricultural workers, workers in the informal sector, or in
petty business keeping. The income possibilities from occupations that are
the most likely economic options for the Bedia men are far inferior as
compared to possibilities offered by prostitution. While the income
possibilities from both unskilled and semi-skilled occupations range from
anything between Rs 25 and 250 per day, the usual daily income is likely to
be in the bracket of 75 to 150. The Bedia women expect to earn anything
between four to 10 times this figure, if not even more. Bedia men have
developed a strong resistance to any change in their mode of living. There
is also much that the community does to redress the feeling of incapacity
that the men might have. Just as small children are made to feel important
about little things they do, so are Bedia men treated. For many of the
married men with grown-up children, "shopping in the city" is mentioned as
foremost among the activities. Similarly, irrigating the fields occasionally
or getting fuel-wood from the forest are all bestowed with a
disproportionate importance. Men's visits to the local courts to deal with
the police cases registered against their sisters are also treated as
"work." Thus, even though most Bedia men do not contribute much to their
family economy, they are not necessarily allowed to confront this fact on a
day-to-day basis. The security of living in a more or less comfortable home
with no responsibility is not something Bedia men are willing to easily give
up. (Women's Feature Service) ⊕ Anuja Agrawal 24 Jan 2008 Anuja Agrawal is
Reader in the Department of Sociology, University of Delhi. This article is
extracted from "Chaste Wives and Prostitute Sisters - Patriarchy and
Prostitution Among the Bedias of India" by Anuja Agrawal; Published by
Routledge; Price: Rs.650; Pp: 251.


Source:
http://adivasi.wordpress.com/2008/03/30/prostitution-as-a-tradition-among-bedia-tribe-adivasi-of-north-india/






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