July 7, 2011 - Issue 434 |
|||||
|
|||||
Bangladesh:
|
|||||
“Gertrude N. Cunningham was that teacher everyone says they remember, one teacher who made a big difference in their life,” begins the Managing Editor at the Black Commentator, Nancy Littlefield, but she was more: Mrs. Cunningham “guided me from early childhood to student-hood, from looking inward, to seeing myself as part of the larger world, from lost little child to capable young woman” (June 23, 2011). Among the projects and activities Mrs. Cunningham organized for her 4th grade class 50 years ago, there was one that caught my attention: “She wrote our class play to be a trip around the world,” writes Littlefield. The children in this class danced and sang “about one country after another.” “I think of her often, knowing what a huge positive influence she has been in my life.” Would
it be possible today for a Mrs. Cunningham to announce to her class
of students a trip to Bangadesh, students! The
People’s Republic of Bangledesh, according to Wikipedia, is a
sovereign state. It won its liberation from The
Internet provides us with tour guides. See the old and the modern, thriving
At
Bangladesh.com, the promo reads: “Dharka is a great place to
start your visit to this amazing country.” Streets are filled with people in traditional and western garb. There are so many women briskly walking among the taxi and bus horns blaring. Foreign tourists talk and chatter among the spectacle structures. Rolls and rolls of film to develop to show the folks back home and to remember…Video cameras capture images of family members and friends posing before the Lalbash Fort or the National Museum which houses, we are told, “a large number of interesting collections” including “sculptures and paintings of the Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim periods,” along with “inscriptions of the Holy Quran in Arabic and Persian works in Arabic” (Betelco.com). Shops and street vendors display souvenirs. And the tea gardens are really “lush” with tea leaves plucked mostly by women (Bangladesh.com). In fact, of the 300,000 employees of the tea estates, 75% are women since women “do a better job and are paid less than men.” There are the billboards, too! I am sure we would see multinational corporations like Monsanto, Monsanto Bangladesh Limited, located in Dharka on the 13th floor, 70/I Inner Circular Road, Kakrail. Monsanto - “meeting the needs of today while preserving the planet for tomorrow.” Some
objected. Environmentalist Vandana Shiva wrote a letter to the Microcredit
Nobel Prize winner Mohammad
Yunus, President, Grameen Bank, Monsanto's skills
in agriculture are in the field of genetically engineered crops. These
crops are designed to use more agrichemicals like Round-up which is
a broad spectrum herbicide that kills anything green. Your microcredit
venture with Monsanto will directly finance the destruction of the green
vegetables that women collect from the fields. Round-up also has negative
impacts on fish which provide 80% of the animal protein in While we stop for tea or eat a meal while the poor look on… …because
there is another Dharka of dark streets even in the daylight. If we
really want to “know” This Dharka is home to 75% percent of the nation’s 3,000 garments industries. This industry is the largest employer, after agriculture (International Trade Union Conference), with some 3.5 million workers. It is a 5 billion dollar business and growing. We do not want to miss it because the garment industry is becoming a huge source of income for Bangladesh According to TourBangaldesh.com, the garment industry “has given the opportunity of employment to millions of unemployed specially innumerable uneducated women in the country. It is making significant contribution in the field of our export income.” True,
80% of the employees at these garment factories are women, daughters
and mothers, young girls. These women workers produce “Ready Made Garments”
the kind of clothes smart buyers in the U.S. purchase at the Gap (Banana
Republic and Old Navy), Walmart, J.C. Penny’s, Kohl’s, and Macy’s. These
are the kind of garments that make In Dharka, local and rural girls and women flip through job ads like the following: Advance Attire LTD, Shah Ali Bagh (4th and 5th fl.), Section #1, Mirpur, [nearby town], Dharka-1216 B. Tel: (off) 029005662.02:9007538. Fax: (off) 02-801739. (Shirts, Jackets, Pants). See “Key personnel: Salam Hossam Chowdhury, C.E.O.” Oh, there is money to be made in the garment industry for “key personnel” and other neighboring citizens of a certain means and ambition. There is so much money to be made that when women at the factory, owned by the Ha-Meem Group just north of Dharka in Ashulla, were also critical of working conditions and wages and decided to stage a “peaceful” protest, several of them were killed. A few days later, on December 17, 2010, a fire at that factory in Ashulla killed 29 workers and injured over 100 - “trapped behind exits locked by their employees” (The Jewish Daily Forward, March 6, 2011). Fifty women jumped from the 10th floor of the factory where 5,000 made “pants for customers [mostly women] in the West” who purchase clothes from the Gap, Walmart, and J.C. Penny’s. Surprised, a spokesperson for the Gap said that for “more than 15 years, Gap Inc has worked to bring fair and safe working conditions to factories around the world.” ‘We
conduct periodic, unannounced audits of factories to ensure safety,
and we were on-site in April and August at this factory. Among the many
requirements of our Code of Vendor Conduct is that there are regular
fire drills and other safety measures in place.’ (The Guardian But
somewhere along the line between the Gap and the Ha-Meem Group communications,
I guess, broke down in favor of the bottom line not to mention
those women back in the Back
in Dharka, the women and girls we see sitting behind the sewing machines
wear mostly traditional garments, but they work 12-14 hours per day,
six days a week, to produce the latest fashion - Western fashion
- made from durable And as a result of the working conditions, they are not so healthy either. According to Gaurav Doshi, June 2006 article, “Overview of Bangadesh Garment Industry,” A research reveals that 90 percent of the garment employees went through illness or disease during the month before the interviews. Headache, anemia, fever, chest, stomach, eye and ear pain, cough and cold, diarrhea, dysentery, urinary tract infection and reproductive health problems were more common diseases. (Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/367773) Most of these women workers only manage to work four years in a garment factory Doshi adds (and as we see in pictures we have to search far and wide for): “the state of employment in many (not necessarily) textiles and clothing units in the developing nations take us back to those set up in the nineteenth century in Europe and North America.” Night falls in Dharka. The day is done for the tourists, the business owners, and the middle class managerial workers. But there is little rest for the women garment workers. As Gary Null, WBAI Radio, June 24, 2011) explained, they are silhouette figures, now, walking along the streets and roads, making the long distance trip home, only to resume this walk in reverse in the wee hours of the morning. Here in Dharka, in the Ready Made Garment district, we are worlds away from the life of the owners of the skyscrapers, the American and British corporate and NGO managers, some educated at the finest universities in the West, and tourists who visit the world’s largest natural beach and Dharka’s monuments. The
city of No,
a Mrs. or Mr. or Dr. Cunningham is even rarer today! Teachers cannot
attempt this project today in a [NOTE: Thanks to WBAI Radio Host Gary Null for discussing the plight of Bangladeshi women, June 24, 2011. Thanks to Mrs. Cunningham and Nancy Littlefield.] BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels. |
|||||
|
|
||||