Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

Don'T Stereotype Us: Women Sex Workers Urge Indian Showbiz

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Mar, 2019 10:23 PM

    "Main pehle ek mahila hu aur uske baad ek sex worker (I am a woman first and then a sex worker)." Kiran Ramchandra Deshmukh, 40, says with pride, in the hope that the world treats women like her with equality, dignity and respect.


    Kiran, a sex worker for over 20 years in Maharashtra, notes how the world of showbiz has portrayed sex workers over the years and isn't impressed by the stereotyping.


    She takes offence at the dialogue "Aurat maa hoti hai, bahen hoti hai, patni hoti hai, dost hoti hai... aur jab woh kuch nahi hoti, toh tawaif hoti hai (woman is a mother, a sister, a wife, a friend. When she is nothing, she is a prostitute) from the 2002 film "Devdas".


    "According to the dialogue, we don't even deserve to be called women? That's not fair. I can proudly say that I am a woman," Kiran told IANS as she delved on the sentiments of several sex workers like her.


    Renuka, another sex worker, has urged filmmakers not to show them as "use and throw" objects -- as it happened in Salman Khan's movie "Chori Chori Chupke Chupke" on surrogacy.


    Indian filmmakers have time and again delved into the life of women sex workers. "Mughal-e-Azam", "Mausam", "Mandi", "Devdas", "Chandni Bar", "Laaga Chunari Mein Daag: Journey of a woman", "Dev D" and "Begum Jaan" are movies that have delved into their world, but sex wokers and activists say these films do not reflect the real world.


    Social activist and lawyer Aarthi Pai says mainstream cinema has done a lot of damage to "the identity of sex workers".


    "There has been some niche cinema which has attempted to show sex workers in a much more positive light, but most of the movies have shown them in dangerous type of stereotyping. Dangerous because it has harmed sex workers over the years.


    "This stereotype of sex workers hanging out in verandahs and showing their breasts, chewing betel is one which dominates public imagination. Sex workers are of different types and they have different realities. Unfortunately, great injustice is done to them through the movies."


    Kiran said it is a reality that not everyone is forced into sex work.


    "Many women like me are willingly doing it to earn our livelihood. Even we have the right to say 'No'."


    Filmmaker Madhur Bhandarkar, whose deft handling of a story of a bar dancer won a National Award, says people shouldn't forget sex workers are humans too.


    "They are also humans. They are being discriminated in our society. People are not willing to give them a house... They are a part of our society and we should accept them with open arms."


    Author Anurag Garg, who also works for NGO Kat-Katha, feels movies usually depict sex workers' lives on a "surface level".


    "In most of the movies, a lot of glamour is attached to sex workers. They are mostly seen in loud make-up and depicted as women who are always ready for sex. But there is more beyond that."


    Most recently, Tabrez Noorani's "Love Sonia" took a deep dive into the world of human trafficking. It ended with giving a ray of hope, keeping with the larger aim to galvanise support for organisations that work towards rescuing trafficked women and giving them a new lease of life.


    Actress Richa Chadha, who played a brothel owner in the film, told IANS: "Bollywood is as responsible as society is, in stereotyping sex workers... Very few films have depicted the truth about this bleak world."


    "Love Sonia" protagonist Mrunal Thakur calls for films which create a powerful impact on society and make people more educated and aware.


    "What we see in the films is just a fraction of what these girls go through in life."

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    Jeetendra, Jaya Prada To Reunite On-Screen

    Veteran actors Jeetendra and Jaya Prada, who have acted together in over 20 films, will reunite on-screen, this time for a TV show.  

    Jeetendra, Jaya Prada To Reunite On-Screen

    Glad To Be In Industry At The Right Time: Ankita Lokhande

    Actress Ankita Lokhande who made her Bollywood debut with "Manikarnika: The Queen of Jhansi" is happy to be part of the industry when content is the king.

    Glad To Be In Industry At The Right Time: Ankita Lokhande

    Mona Singh Wants To Explore Her Potential

    Mona Singh Wants To Explore Her Potential
    Actress Mona Singh says she wants to keep on polishing her craft and exploring potential as an artiste.

    Mona Singh Wants To Explore Her Potential

    Pakistan'S Complicity In Business Of Terrorism Must End: Hansal Mehta

    Pakistan'S Complicity In Business Of Terrorism Must End: Hansal Mehta
    Disturbed after the deadly Pulwama attack, filmmaker Hansal Mehta says Pakistan's complicity in the business of terrorism should come to an end.

    Pakistan'S Complicity In Business Of Terrorism Must End: Hansal Mehta

    PM Modi Biopic: Zarina Wahab And Barkha Bisht’s Look Revealed

    Veteran actress Zarina Wahab will be seen playing the role of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's mother Heeraben Modi in the upcoming biopic "PM Narendra Modi". She says it's special.

    PM Modi Biopic: Zarina Wahab And Barkha Bisht’s Look Revealed

    Emphasis On Opening Weekend Biz Damaging Art Of Cinema: Swara Bhasker

    Actress Swara Bhasker says the constant emphasis on a films box office collection is damaging the art of cinema.

    Emphasis On Opening Weekend Biz Damaging Art Of Cinema: Swara Bhasker