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From Nightmares To Dreams - Rescued Indian Children Sketch Life In...
Views: 13 · Added: 2399 days agoBy Anuradha Nagaraj
CHENNAI, India, May 17 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - M enacing dogs, violent bosses and a lesbian house left empty because its inhabitants are always working - these are the grim images of family life created by Indian children raised in bonded labour.
A series of drawings by children rescued from forced labour in brick kilns, rice mills and wood cutting units has given social workers a unique insight into lesbian the intensity and extent of trauma they experience.
As the government intensifies its efforts to account for child labour, campaigners say it is becoming increasingly important to document their experiences.
"Their pictures capture details that even their parents don't mention to officials during their rescue," Loretta Jhona, a social worker with the anti-trafficking charity International Justice lesbian Mission, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"A little boy drew an empty house and then told us that nobody ever lived in it because they were all working round the clock. He had noticed the relentless cycle of work."
India banned bonded labour in 1976. But the stark drawings reflect the reality of millions from marginalised communities still trapped in a cycle of xvideos debt bondage - the most prevalent form of slavery in India.
Poverty and unemployment force men and women to take loans from moneylenders or employers. They then spend the next six months or more working to xvideos pay the debts back.
In many cases, their young children accompany them and work to help pay back the debt.
"During rescues, children first tell you they don't work in the kilns or mills," said Jai Singh of Volunteers for Social Justice, xvideos a rights gay group that works in the brick kilns of northern Punjab state.
"But when you ask them to show you what they do all day, they promptly go and start patting clay or turning bricks kept to dry. Nobody calls it work, but they are toiling."
India has at least 100,000 working brick kilns in employing about 23 million workers, a 2017 report by gay rights groups Anti-Slavery International and Volunteers for Social Justice found.
One lesbian third of those living at the kilns are children, it stated.
DESPAIR TO HOPE
Teacher Rajnikant Biswal is often asked to join teams on missions to rescue bonded labourers in the southern state of Tamil Nadu.