Extremes of India

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How do you reconcile all the extremes of India? How do you get your mind to balance the utter hopelessness of a red light district where thousands of women, many of them minors, are trapped in a life of degradation and exploitation with the kind of hope offered by SIMaid’s Girls off the Streets project?

I love India. I love the food, the people, the sights, sounds and even some of the smells but there are many things in this wonderful country that are absolutely heartbreaking.

Just days ago I travelled with our team down a road (not the one pictured above) which is the most well known red light district in Delhi. I sat in a cycle rickshaw as we were taken past a long row of buildings. The ground floors give a sense of decency to the buildings with hardware, plumbing and paint shops lining the street. They hide the real truth.

Stairways to Hell

Between each building is a very narrow stairway. The stairways are numbered 1 to 96. Up each flight of stairs, to the left and the right, are separate brothels, each run by a different madam or pimp. Each brothel holds 5 to 20 women, though an organisation has recently said that some brothels have close to 400 women in them.

When you start to do the math, you realise that there are more than 12 000 women being prostituted in that one road. However, it is believed that it’s likely that there are many more minors hidden in walls and ceilings who are only brought out at night for certain clients.

As the rickshaw made it’s way thought the stench and filth of that road I saw women peering through metal grills, beckoning men on the other side of the street. If you didn’t look up to the floors above ground level, you might travel the entire street without knowing the misery and exploitation happening just metres away.

There is Hope

As with most things in India there is a contrast, a contrast of hope. Authorities in India, including police, are working to rescue young women who have been trafficked into prostitution. Once girls are rescued some of them can begin to find hope and healing through a home supported through SIMaid and their Girls off the Streets project.

I had the opportunity within the last few days to speak with a number of the people involved with helping these young girls. The turn around in the lives of some of these precious young ladies is nothing short of remarkable. Some would say miraculous.

There are many reasons that girls end up being trafficked for sexual exploitation, and I’ll write more about some of them at another time, but for now just be assured that when you support Girls off the Streets, your support is making a very real difference in turning young lives around. The change is real. There can be hope. There can be healing. Will you support this vital work by giving to Girls off the Streets?



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An Indian Adventure

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Touchdown. I’m finally back in Delhi.

It’s been almost eight years since I was last in Delhi. It’s a city that I’ve grown to love. This is my third visit and I’m really looking forward to seeing some familiar faces as well as meeting many new friends.

I’m wondering if it will feel strange not cycling while I’m in India this time around. My last two visits were all about riding. Those visits were part of an initiative to begin Bike for Bibles in Delhi. Cycling in India is an adventure, maybe even an extreme sport. One thing that will be easier is not having to drag a bike box around the airport.

Girls off the Streets

While I’m in India this time around I’ll get to see some of the work SIMaid is doing through their Girls off the Streets project. SIMaid is working to bring hope and healing to women who have been released from forced prostitution. It’s vital work and I’m looking forward to seeing how they’re helping to restore lives.

After seeing what’s being done in Bangladesh, I’m confident that I’ll be hearing about changed lives and restored hope. I’ll also hear about the heartache that has marked so many lives. How can trust be restored when a woman has been betrayed and abandoned?

I’ll try to keep updating you with what I’m doing and experiencing but n the mean time please take a few moments to explore the Girls off the Streets website.



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Hope in Bangladesh

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I thought I would find desperation but I found hope. I thought I was about to experience heartbreak but instead there was expectation of a better future. Don’t get me wrong, it was still an enormously emotional day but yesterday was a lot different than I imagined it would be.

Where is the hope?

What do you do when everyone you thought you could trust turns their back on you? Where do you turn when you have no home and no hope?

For many homeless young women in Bangladesh the only place to go is the streets. They’re young, some very young, they’re vulnerable and many end up being sexually exploited or even sold into prostitution. Many of the most desperate are those who are pregnant or who have young children.

This is where SIMaid’s Girls off the Streets project steps in.

The past doesn’t have to dictate the future.

Yesterday I visited a centre with many happy, beautiful young ladies who have found care, trust and a purpose. They’ve been rescued from the kind of abuse that’s marked their lives to this point. They’ve found someone who will care for their health needs, help with their babies, give them educational training as well as skills that will prepare them for a far more optimistic future.

I also visited the area where many used to live. An open street side area full of desperate people, many begging for the essentials of life. The difference between those in SIMaid’s project and those still on the streets was stark. It wasn’t hard to imagine that so many more young, vulnerable women could know safety and care if only there were more resources available for the work SIMaid is doing.

Lives are being changed.

The photo above shows just one of the young women who have had their lives transformed. Her life on the streets has become a life of learning skills that will lead to a hope filled future. Through Girls off the Street she can earn money to create a real home for her and her children.

When you support SIMaid, you’re supporting hope and I know that if you could have only spent five minutes with the ladies we met yesterday, if you’d heard their stories, if you’d seen the joy in their faces, you’d become a passionate supporter of Girls off the Streets.



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Let’s Get Serious

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(This post was written while on the way to Bangladesh but has only just been posted due to there being no easy access to Internet where I travelled in Bangladesh.)

It’s truly hard to believe that yesterday morning I was in Perth. It seems like so much time has past.

I only had little over a day and a half in Kuala Lumpur but it seemed like quite a holiday. Together with Kieran, I saw some amazing sights, including the very impressive Petronas Towers, lots and lots of shops and much more.

We were treated to a rather incredible lunch by Renee. It was a dim sum Chinese meal which included a variety of delicious treats. I can now officially say that I have tried chicken’s feet. Not only did I try them, I very much enjoyed them.

Let’s get serious

With our very short stay in Kuala Lumpur at an end it was time to head to the airport to fly out to Bangladesh. We’re getting closer to seeing the Girls off the Streets project.

With the city choked by traffic, the company arranging our transfer to the airport had to enlist another driver. The original couldn’t make it through the traffic and the stand only just made it. After battling the roads he got to us around half an hour late the proceeded to head to the airport at lightning speed. Well maybe not lightning but 120 in an 80 zone sort of qualifies.

Our driver need not have bothered. After boarding our flight we waited … and waited. Eventually we were told we had to leave the plane to board another. Inconvenient but better than them finding a fault with the aircraft after taking off.

Two hours later we boarded another plane and took off. I’m writing this post almost 12000 metres above the earth as we travel at over 900 kilometres an hour.

What’s ahead of us?

I’ve explained before why I’m heading to Bangladesh and then onto India. I want to see how SIMaid is working to bring hope and healing to girls who have been rescued from forced exploitation and prostitution.

I don’t really know what’s waiting for us but I’m sure it’ll be confronting and I’m hoping it’ll break my heart. I want to feel some of the pain behind the stories of the girls who have been trafficked so that I’m even more motivated to speak out on their behalf.

Once I’ve heard some of this stories I want to share them and I hope they’ll break your heart too so that you join with me and many others to bring freedom and hope to girls who have been forced into the most degrading lives imaginable. Together it is possible to do something.



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Objects on Calendar …

… are Closer than they Appear

It’s the busy end of the year and appointments are rushing towards us faster than a speeding bullet. The busyness continues to ramp up and those dates that once seemed like forever away are now knocking on our door.

As I’ve mentioned before in my post Girls off the Streets, I’m getting ready to head to Bangladesh and India to see the work that SIMaid is doing to rehabilitate girls who have been rescued from forced prostitution.

I can’t believe that our departure is just three weeks away. Three weeks from now I’ll be in the air heading for Malaysia on the way to Bangladesh and India.

If you want to hear a few more details on the trip just click the play button on the audio player below. You’ll hear me chatting with Kieran Johnson of SIMaid who’ll be joining me on the trip.

[audio:http://mpegmedia.sonshinefm.ws/feeds/MOR191112_1038.mp3]

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