Each year 12,000 Nepali
girls are sold into brothels in India. This is the stark fact even today and
this is what propelled Patricia McCormick to write “Sold”, the story of
13-year-old Lakshmi, who was sold by her gambler-stepfather into prostitution
in India.
In her notes, McCormick
writes, “As part of my research, I traced the path that many Nepali girls have
taken—from remote villages to the red light districts of Calcutta. I also
interviewed aid workers who rescue girls from brothels…But most touching and
inspiring was interviewing survivors themselves. These young women have
experienced what many people would describe as unspeakable horrors. But they
are speaking out—with great dignity… It is in their honor that this book was
written.”
The author has also
stated in an interview, “It was a challenge to keep the book from being too
grim, and to keep Lakshmi's humanity alive in a believable way” and “in even the grimmest of situations, there is
kindness as well as cruelty, terror as well as boredom, and even, surprising as
it may seem, humor.” Well, true to her words, McCormick has written a book that
is interestingly told from the point of view of the main character (in a series
of short, vignette-style chapters) and, true to her credentials as an
investigative journalist, the book contains factual events that, even if they
are so difficult to imagine for a normal person, are true to life—the life of
those unfortunate girls sold into slavery from where only the lucky few get
liberated.
Lakshmi lives an
ordinary life in a village in the foothills of the Himalayas in Nepal. She goes
to school like any other girl and even though life is hard, it has its simple
pleasures. But, her life takes a nasty turn when her stepfather sells her into
prostitution in India. In the brothel (ironically named ‘Happiness House’) she
is beaten and starved until she gives in to the wishes of her brothel madam
Mumtaz to sleep with her customers. Her miserable life becomes a bit more
bearable when a boy who runs errands for the girls teaches her to read. She
also forms friendships with her roommates. Such moments and such relationships
bring a sense of balance to the harshness of brothel life and enable her to
survive in this terrifying world. She is finally rescued by an American who comes
to the brothel to rescue girls.
“Sold” has been now
translated into Nepali (“Bechiyeki— Will
they ever be free?”) the translators being Bishwanath Paudel and Tikaram
Sharma Paudel. They have done a fine job. This book has 300 pages and the main
story is divided into 288 very short chapters which certainly makes for easier
reading and serves the purpose of making this horrifying tale less grim as the
author intended. The last few pages are on instructions for discussions on the
book and some readers’ reviews. The Nepali version has been published by the
joint efforts of Joyce Tapper, “The Didi Project” and “Captive Daughters”.
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