One of my housemates, Cynthia, has quite an
interesting (and also very hard) job. She works with a program through the
Managuan Christian Base Communities called Casa Samaritanas. This program does
quite a lot in the social work realm, including work with sex workers
(primarily women) to get them various services that they need, spreading
awareness of and trying to prevent sex slavery, and giving empowering workshops
to children and adolescents of these women.
A couple weeks ago, I went with Cynthia and her
coworkers on a Foco. This means that
we loaded ourselves and a couple hundred condoms in a truck and drove around Managua , stopping to talk
with sex workers on the street and hand out previously mentioned condoms. We
left at about 9:00 PM, and we first drove up Carratera Norte. They have been
doing this twice a week for a few years now so they not only have an idea of
the places where women will be waiting, but they even knew the names and lives
of quite a few of them. After Carratera Norte, we went down Carratera Masaya.
Since this area is a bit safer with more traffic and lights, we were
actually able to get out of the truck and stand around talking with the women
for a bit. (I mostly just stood there silently as I really had no freaking clue
what to say.) At the end of the conversations, we offered the condoms, and they
always accepted.
We saw all shapes, sizes, and ages of women
(and even a few dressed up men). Some women were very full-figured;
others closer to skin and bones. Some were outgoing and talkative, while others
hardly even made eye contact. Most were dressed very nicely. On one corner we
found a bunch of girls smelling glue, and upon seeing us, they ran up to the
truck and thrust their hands through the windows asking for condoms. They all
looked about 15 years-old. In another area we met a woman who admitted to
having given birth fifteen days before. Another woman was very pregnant. We saw
women negotiating with stopped taxi drivers and getting into cars with people.
The whole experience was completely
eye-opening. I had never seen prostitution in real life like this before. It
made me so sad and frustrated. I know I need more experience and information
before I start making judgments and conclusions, but I just refuse to believe
those that say sex workers choose that type of work because they want to do it.
MAYBE in select cases this occurs, but in general, I saw what looked like
unhappy women and girls.
The human body is a precious living temple, the
physical manifestation of all that we individually are. We must recognize this
and treat them as such. Both the buyer and seller sides of prostitution are not
only disrespecting the beauty and sacredness of sex, but also of the body and really
the entire human being. Women are not inanimate, purchasable objects. Men are
not soulless, greedy consumers.