Lama di negeri orang kok cara nT mikir ga upgrade to @mBoong. Yg ada kok
sagu doank dan semakin gimana gitu, XT terus. nT mesti punya segudang
material di benak mengenai tingkah solah manusia yang bisa (saling)
menghapus dosa manusia termasuk para petinggi suci maupun yang pernah
dan  sedang di tahta suci.

Sayangnya RNW subjektif, yang disorot cuma tingkah solah para suciwan
gereja katulik, belum (ga?) pernah kebaca yg selainnya yg seiman.
Tingkah solah rohaniwan Protestan excluded kan? Kalik memang demikian
adanya, suci, sehingga ga ada yang perlu dipubikasikan. Jadinya nDeboost
ga punya link yg kredibel


--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
>
> Di tanah suci,  Arab Saudia,dan negara-negara Islam tidak kurang
lonte.,  .
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>   From: ndeboost
>   To: proletar@yahoogroups.com
>   Sent: Saturday, March 12, 2011 10:43 PM
>   Subject: [proletar] Re: Poverty Drives Pakistani Women to
Prostitution
>
>
>
>   Dinegara makmur pelacuran ga ada ya.
>
>   --- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "sunny" ambon@ wrote:
>   >
>   >
>  
http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=30\
\
>   56&Itemid=197
>   >
>   >
>   > Poverty Drives Pakistani Women to Prostitution
>   >
>   > Written by Naeem Sahoutara
>   > Friday, 11 March 2011
>   > Pakistani sex workers ask God to hear their prayers
>   >
>   > It's midnight on the ninth of Muharram, the first month of the
Islamic
>   calendar. In Karachi's red light district hundreds of prostitutes
and
>   eunuchs are singing religious mourning poems or Nohas. Barefooted
and
>   wearing black dresses, they beat their chests.
>   >
>   > Humera, a 25-year-old sex worker explains why. "During the first
10
>   days of the sacred month of Muharram, there is no singing or sex
work
>   here. All such activities are suspended during the sacred month.
>   Prostitutes themselves refuse to do such things because they know
what
>   sacrifices were rendered by the martyrs of Islam. Instead, one can
hear
>   religious and mourning poems being played everywhere. Everyone
respects
>   this month," says Humera.
>   >
>   > The fact is that despite Pakistan's growing reputation for Islamic
>   conservatism, the country is teeming with sex workers. Karachi is
>   believed to have up to 100,000 female sex workers alone, according
to
>   data gathered by Pakistan Society, a local NGO. Lahore is believed
to
>   have as many as 75,000, almost all of them driven into the
profession by
>   poverty. Prostitution and homosexuality are banned in Pakistan and
sex
>   workers are often called defamatory names such as ghashti, or whore.
>   >
>   > Karachi's red light district has been around since British
colonial
>   times. It was once famous for nurturing performing arts such as
singing
>   and dancing, but difficult economic times forced performers to
switch to
>   selling sex.
>   >
>   > Babra, a young singer and sex worker is happily reciting religious
>   poems at the gathering. "I've been reciting Nohas since my
childhood.
>   Every year we have a mourning procession. Everyone is in mourning.
Some
>   males will even take part in flagellation because we forget
everything
>   during the mourning of Hussain," says Babra.
>   >
>   > Karachi resident Mohammad Shafiq watches the procession uneasily
from
>   the other side of the road. "Our religion doesn't permit
prostitution.
>   It is an unethical act. It must be stopped. Prostitutes are not
forced
>   to do this. If someone wants to help them, OK, give them financial
>   support but don't use their services," he says.
>   >
>   > A group of young people form a security ring around the
participants
>   to allay fears of an attack by a vigilante Islamic group. "If people
>   hear me reciting a religious poem they might beat me," says Baba,
with
>   fear visible on her pale face.
>   >
>   > Akhtar Balouch, a journalist conducting research on male and
female
>   prostitutes, says Pakistani society has double standards.
"Pakistanis
>   don't want to disclose having relations with sex workers or their
>   tendencies toward sex (outside wedlock). But, it's a fact that many
>   people in our society have sexual relations," he says.
>   >
>   > Commercial sex in Pakistan was banned in the early 1970s by then
Army
>   dictator General Zia ul Haq. "Zia was a so-called Muslim who tried
to
>   convince people he was a rigid religious person," Akhtar said.
"That's
>   why he banned red light areas. But, what happened? Now, in each and
>   every colony you can find prostitutes. Just make a call and it won't
be
>   a problem to have a girl for sex."
>   >
>   > Mirza Aleem Baig, president of the Gender and Reproductive Health
>   Forum, an organization that helps female and male prostitutes, says
many
>   Pakistanis become sex workers because they have very little choice.
>   >
>   > "One type of is hereditary; a mother, then her daughter and then
her
>   daughter. Others are poverty stricken and don't have enough to eat
or
>   drink. A father might unwillingly bring his daughters here and hand
them
>   over them to a pimp who will pay them US$400 to $500 a month. Some
>   daughters also offer themselves for sale because their siblings are
>   hungry. Many such girls financially support their families through
>   prostitution," says Baig, who calls the brothels a "market of
miseries."
>   >
>   > "I don't call it the bazaar of beauty but the bazaar of oppressed
>   women, the bazaar of orphans and the bazaar of diseases. These women
>   don't love their clients. When a customer comes they ask them to do
the
>   work in a hurry. That's only because this will light stoves in their
>   houses," she says.
>   >
>   > The silent journey of faith by the sex workers ends when they
reach
>   Sangeet Mehal or the Music Palace. Fifty-year-old sex worker Hina
says
>   they hope this year will bring them blessings.
>   >
>   > "It's wrong that people say our prayers will not be answered and
>   religion is the property of a single person. I'm firm in my belief
that
>   Allah responds to our prayers faster than other people because he
knows
>   we are helpless and vulnerable. Whenever I beg, he has honored my
>   prayers," says Hina.
>   >
>   > This article was first broadcast on Asia Calling, a regional
current
>   affairs radio program produced by Indonesia's independent radio news
>   agency KBR68H and broadcast in local languages in 10 countries
across
>   Asia. You can find more stories from Asia Calling at
www.asiacalling.org
>   >
>   > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>   >
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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