
KARNATAKA, INDIA - (ANS)- Imagine living in a society in which you are judged by your station in life, determined by your birth, rather than by your individual worth or accomplishments.
As a member of the lowest rung of
society, you can barely keep food on the table for your wife and two daughters.
Such is the situation in most of South Asia, according to one ministry working
in the region.
"When your wife becomes ill after giving birth to a third daughter who,
unlike the son you had hoped for, will be an unbearable financial burden, you
have only one choice: You must dedicate your daughter to the goddess as a
devadasis, a temple prostitute," writes Kate Taylor on the website www.go2southasia.org
.
Taylor says that by dedicating your baby, "you have given her a profession
and a way to obtain food for her family. "
Taylor states: "Perhaps the goddess will now show favor to your family, sparing your wife's life and filling her womb with the long-awaited boy child. Your daughter's sacrifice is small compared to your entire family's alternative fate of starvation. If her body is the price the goddess asks, it must be paid."
In India, according to Taylor, the
devadasi (day-vah-dah-see) system, a Hindu practice of temple prostitution, has
existed for more than 5,000 years, says David Dass, executive director of the
India Gospel League. In the state of Karnataka, where he and his wife live,
starving families dedicate hundreds of girls each year to the goddess Yellamma.
The children are forced to begin a life of prostitution at age 11 or 12.
"From the very beginning, they're being exploited as babies," says
Annette Romick, a humanitarian aid worker in India. "Then, when they hit
maturity, their bodies are exploited by men. Even when their bodies are no
longer desirable to men, they are still exploited and abused because that
stigma is on them. They can never escape from it. It's a trap that they're
stuck in; it's a living hell that they're experiencing."
Taylor explains the word devadasi literally translates to "god's female
servant." Parents usually choose to dedicate their daughters as infants to
the goddess Yellamma, in hopes of gaining the goddess' favor or easing a
financial burden.
Once dedicated, says Taylor, a girl is considered to be married to the goddess
and is never allowed to marry a man. When the girl reaches physical maturity,
she is forced to begin her life as a prostitute.
"Since 1982, the devadasi system has been banned by the government of
India and Karnataka," says Joseph Paul, a Christian pastor ministering
among devadasis. "But there are underground practices - nobody knows how
they practice and how they dedicate."
Taylor says that because the devadasis practice has gone underground, the women
work mostly from their homes, only visiting the temple to beg money from
worshippers. Many of the prostitutes are trafficked to the red light districts
of Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore and other large cities.
"Our parents gave us birth and threw us on the street. Men come and use
us, finish their job and go," says Sugandha, a former devadasis receiving
assistance from a non-governmental organization.
Taylor goes on to explain that in the Hindu religion, devadasis have hope for a
better life only through the cycle of rebirth. Few devadasis have ever heard
the name of Jesus Christ who offers hope for this life and for eternity.
"Their lives have been ruined, and they feel like trash that's just been
used over and over again and just discarded," Romick says. "They need
to know the love of Christ and the only way that they're going to have that is
if we go and tell them."
Taylor states that Devadasis come mainly from impoverished families of the
untouchables class, the lowest rung of Hindu society. They are used and
exploited by men. Sometimes they receive compensation for their services,
sometimes not. A vulnerable population, the devadasis are susceptible to HIV,
AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
"Not only are they shunned because of their profession, but they're
shunned by society because of their status," Romick says. "They're
the lowest of the low. They're not even in the caste system - they're outside
the caste system."
According to Taylor, a number of human needs organizations are working to
prevent the continuation of the underground devadasi system, but the practice
is still widespread throughout India; estimates range from tens to hundreds of
thousands of devadasis in the country.
A devadasis who discovers a relationship with Christ, Dass says, becomes a
powerful witness in her community: a witness against the practice that enslaved
her and for the Savior who set her free.
"It's like the woman at the
well," Dass explains. "Jesus asked questions and finally she
realized, 'Hey, here is the person whom I know that He is the Messiah.' Then
she goes out, calling other women and bringing them and telling, 'Here is the
answer for our problem.'"
Education and awareness are essential components to bring about the end of the
devadasis system. Of the women themselves, Dass says, "Equip them, empower
them, mentor them, train them, disciple them and put them back [in their
communities] and you'll see what the Lord does."
www.go2southasia.org is a
family of committed followers of Christ focused on the task of making disciples
of all South Asian Peoples in fulfillment of the Great Commission. They are
burdened to care about the eternal plight of South Asian peoples and their lack
of access to the Good News.
Their vision is to see a "vast multitude from every South Asian Nation,
Tribe, People and Language knowing and worshiping our Lord Jesus Christ"
(Rev 7:9).
The ministry says that more than 1.5
billion of the planet's inhabitants are South Asian peoples. Their heritage or
home is India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka or the Maldives.
According to the ministry, the percentage of lost South Asians is mind-boggling.
South Asia includes the seven countries of India, Bangladesh,
Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, and Pakistan.
The website states: "There are more unengaged unreached people groups in South Asia than in all the rest of the world combined. Today God is calling out a unique people for Himself to take the Gospel to South Asians, no matter where they are located in the world.
"He is calling them from California to go to Calcutta and from London to go to Lahore to be on the front lines of sharing the Good News with a vast multitude still living without the knowledge of the Most High God."