A
veiled girl from the Saraniya community waits for her engagement
ceremony to start at Vadia village in the western Indian state of
Gujarat March 11, 2012. The Vadia village in western India hosted a
mass wedding and engagement ceremony of 21 girls on Sunday aimed at
breaking a tradition of prostitution which has for centuries exploited
women of a poor, marginalised and once nomadic community in the region.
By Nita Bhalla
A
village in western India hosted a mass wedding and engagement ceremony
of 21 girls on Sunday aimed at breaking a tradition of prostitution
which has for centuries exploited women of a poor, marginalised and
once nomadic community in the region.
Hundreds
of guests from surrounding villages and government officials gathered
at the colourful event, which saw eight couples married and 13 others
engaged in a huge marquee in Wadia village, 115 km (70 miles) west of
Palanpur city in India's Gujarat state.
"Prostitution
is a tradition which this community adopted for ages and it has been
very normal for them. They did not think they were doing anything
wrong. But it is uncivilised, indecent," said Vijay Bhatt, development
officer for Banaskantha district, which Wadia village is part of.
"By
marrying and engaging these girls we have been able to break this
culture. Once a girl is married, she is out of the profession. Once she
is even engaged, she is out of this nexus."
Adorned
in gold jewellery and dressed in brightly coloured pink sequined
skirts and blouses, the girls sat veiled on a raised platform in a long
line next to their grooms and fiancés in golden turbans, as a Hindu
priest chanted Vedic mantras.
Activists
said the girls - who come from the Saraniya community, where women
traditionally do not marry and work as prostitutes in nearby towns and
cities - will now be able to break free of the profession of their
mothers and lead "normal, pious" lives.
"We
are trying to get rid of this culture and stigma. We want to pull it
from its roots," said Ramesh Saraniya, whose 25-year-old sister and
22-year-old niece were wedded to local village men in the mass ceremony.
"It is happening for the good of our society."
"EASY MONEY"
The
men of the Saraniya community, a nomadic group of 50,000, once worked
for various warring factions which ruled over this drought-prone region
prior to India's independence from Britain in 1947, sharpening their
daggers and swords.
The
Saraniyas' women were "entertainers" for the feuding warlords in the
then fragmented Gujarat and neighbouring state of Rajasthan, dancing
and singing, as well as providing sexual pleasure for their employers.
Post
independence, activists and officials say, the Saraniya were given
land by the government to provide a better means of income, but due to
the "easy money" made from sex work, Wadia's men have continued
soliciting their sisters and daughters.
Local
people from mud-and-brick Wadia village are reluctant to talk about
the issue, fearing discrimination against them in this conservative and
largely patriarchal country.
"We
are poor and don't have water. We have been doing agriculture and
farming castor seeds and now are earning more money. The kind of work
that you talk about has stopped now," said Valiben Saraniya, whose
20-year-old niece was married.
At
the ceremony, musicians played the dhol and shehnai, the traditional
Indian drum and trumpet used in weddings, as the eight marrying couples
simultaneously placed garlands over one another and walked around a
sacred fire placed in front of them, as per Hindu tradition.
Thirteen
couples as young as 12 were also engaged during the ceremony,
exchanging rings in the incense-filled tent, as a priest gave
instructions from a microphone. Their parents said their weddings would
take place when they turn 18.
Social
activists who organised and the funded 900,000 rupee ($18,000) event
said securing the girls with future husbands would end Wadia's flesh
trade, but they added that more development was needed to ensure other
girls did not become sex workers.
"It
is damn sure that no one will go into this profession after getting
engaged or married as that is how this community has worked. If there
is a husband, she won't be sold," said Mittal Patel from the Vicharta
Samuday Samarthan Manch, a local charity that works to support India's
nomadic tribes
"Alternative
employment to the women is necessary such as teaching them embroidery,
boosting irrigation for their fields and for them to do animal
husbandry. This will end this cycle. No woman wants to do this by
choice."
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