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Society
Every other day I come across the baba-logs and their baby servants. The babas (girls and boys) are barely three or four years old, and their baby servants never more than 10 or 12. Sometimes, the baby servant is carrying the bawling baba, while mamma - usually a young woman who probably hits the gym on the weekends and is a newly-turned vegan - is carrying shopping bags while negotiating her way in a crowded market. Often, the two young
things can be seen in the park, the older one (the Surely, all the above activities are illegal - the anti-Child Labor (Prohibition and Regulation) Act came about in 1986. But who cares? Every year, I see more young families hiring child servants and more children dropping out of school and working for other children. Many are lured into the job by young couples who are very busy and want a playmate for their lonely child. Being a playmate could entail bathing the child, feeding the child whenever required and getting punished if the child gets hurt. With time, the playmate of the child is transformed into a full-fledged servant - cooking, cleaning, washing and carrying heavy loads - but earning barely half of what an adult domestic help would get. If higher wages are demanded, they get an earful: "What does he (the child) do anyway? He's good for nothing. He botches up everything." Actually, the child is the
youngest employee in the global economy. There is a huge market out
there for child servants: NGOs, researchers and recent UN reports would
vouch for that. The busy young couples have their reasons: The poor parents of such children don't see much future in education anyway. Some work themselves and don't want to leave the child alone at home. So they exchange the child's security for slavery. Some parents, who stay in the villages, and whose children have been trafficked to bigger cities, stay in darkness all their lives. They can never imagine what kind of work their child does in the city homes. Or the kind of abuses the child suffers. In some cases, baby
servants often start as a temporary arrangement. The neighbor belongs to this fast multiplying club of upwardly mobile young women and men who don't seem to struggle with any guilt of robbing a child of her/his freedom. "What's wrong? The child is secure, gets a much better life than her/his parents can ever afford." Such arguments were given by my mother's generation, especially by women who were first-generation workers. Although they found hiring children unethical, it was a desperate measure of convenience. This generation always carried the burden of guilt – they rarely showed off their child servant in parties or public places. But the new lot is different: the child servants go where the baba goes - McDonalds, multiplexes, theme parties, or swimming pools. Some servants look neat and tidy - their clothes are also decent if not smart. Employers prefer them to be young - 9-12 is the ideal age to `train' them. Gopal, 10, is woken up by 6 am. He cleans his teeth by the drain near the house. His 'rest time' is when he takes the six-year-old baba to play. Gopal is not sure when he will go back home. Someone has to come here to take him back, as he doesn't know his way back to the village. His uncle who brought him to Delhi last came about six months ago to take back his salary. For his employers, this is a win-win situation. "Children do very well until they are 15 or 16," observes a couple. By the time Gopal is 15, he will be thrown out. If it is a girl, the parents will pull her out of the memsahib's house. In any case, children like Gopal don't have a future. They are out of school for most of their active childhood years. Spending their tender years serving others, leaves them broken and directionless. And this time, it is not the feudal landlord or the exploitative moneylender who has deprived them of an empowered life. It's the empowered themselves who are disempowering. March 19, 2006 By arrangement with Women's Feature Service The Week of March 19, 2006
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