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The essence of Indian saints is actually sex slaves

For a long time, there has been a bad habit in Indian society. After girls from poor families entered adolescence, they were forced to sell themselves in monasteries and became sex slaves of senior Hindu monks and Brahmin elders, so they were called “Holy Maid” .
As a result of this move, the Holy Maiden of India has become a high-risk group of AIDS. persecution of women.
India has a tradition as old as its history – the Hindu virgin, which originated from an ancient tradition in India. After girls from poor families entered adolescence, they were forced to sell themselves in monasteries and become sex slaves of senior Hindu monks and Brahmin elders. , hence the name “The Holy Maiden”.
Due to the indiscretion of sexual life, the Indian virgin has become a high-risk group of AIDS. At the age of 10, these low-status village girls had to give up the traditional marriage model, dedicate their life happiness to the local gods, and perform religious ceremonies and prayers for the villagers. As soon as they entered puberty, they married the monastery in ceremonies and ceremonies, and then spent their bridal nights with monastic monks or elders.
Lifestyle
The saints generally lived with their families and served in the monastery until old age. Then, just like the fate of the prostitutes in European brothels, the old saintess began to step back into the background to advise the next generation of saints.
In India, “Holy Maid” is not a decent title. Although people respected them in awe and kowtowed to the ground, everyone knew exactly what role those high-up girls were playing.
The so-called “Holy Lady of India” is neither a queen nor a female star; on the contrary, she is a miserable child with the most miserable fate. As long as the family has the conditions, who is willing to send his daughter out to be humiliated by others? This sounds awkward, but in the final analysis, it is due to the ancient cultural traditions of India.
Substance
According to tradition, the “Holy Maidens of India” are all from untouchable families who were forced to sell themselves in monasteries as soon as they entered puberty. In front of the person, there is a glorious name to cover the shame – the saint; behind it, there are only free “sex slaves” of senior Hindu monks and Brahmin elders.
This kind of ugly thing can’t be concealed, so the girl who walks into the temple and dedicates herself to the gods is destined to sell her youth and body, and she is destined to live a strange life without marriage.
Status quo
According to Indian media, prostitutes in many red-light districts such as Mumbai and Goa were once “temple prostitutes”.
Indian states enacted laws successively in the 1990s, outlawing the organization of girls to join “temple prostitutes”. But in reality, the law simply takes such activities underground, especially in some parts of northern Karnataka, where the practice is still being secretly reinvented.
In some poor families, patriarchal parents on the one hand hope that sending their daughters away will bring good luck to the family, on the other hand, they believe that their daughters can find their own happiness by marrying gods.
Public appeals to ‘save the children
Many Indians believe that although the government has formulated various regulations to prohibit “temple prostitutes”, the legal departments in some regions still turn a blind eye to this, and even tacitly acquiesce to the occurrence of similar behaviors.
A Karnataka reporter once reported that at least 1,000 girls are still forced to join the ranks of “temple prostitutes” because of poverty every year. The main reason for not believing.
The Hindu newspaper quoted a Bangalore social issues expert as saying that Karnataka’s “laws on protecting women and children’s rights are still on paper” and that in the northern region where “temple prostitutes” are prevalent, there are concerns about trafficking Cases of women and children have increased significantly.
Today, this vice has a tendency to move from the underground to the foreground. The resurgence of “temple prostitutes” also made most of the media in India distressed. The “New India Express” website continued to track and report the incident of girls being forced to become “temple prostitutes” and could not help but appeal, “Let’s find a way to save these children!”