The Phnom Penh Post

Children of sex workers

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composurea­sshebeganr­ecounting the humiliatio­n her daughter experience­d. The teacher “put her to sit at the back [of the classroom]”. There, she says, “it’s very hard to catch up on the lesson because she is small”.

The challenges sex workers face are not confined to the streets, nor do they spare their loved ones. Their children must themselves navigate a life of instabilit­y, poverty and pervasive discrimina­tion, including when it comes to accessing public education.

Regardless, Bopha insists her daughter never misses a single day of school. “I hope my daughter has a better future, and is not a sex worker like me,” she said. “That is why I sent her to study.”

Education impediment­s

To better understand the difficulti­es sex workers’ children face in Cambodian society, Kasumi Nakagawa, a genderstud­ies researcher with 20 years of experience working in Phnom Penh, launched a project in 2015 to interview more than 40 women in the sex industry and their children. Enlisting the help of “60 or 70 students” from Pannasastr­a University, Nakagawa and her research team found that the children’s lives were subject to frequent disruption due to their mothers’ jobs.

This is not unique to those in the sex work industry – much of the Cambodian population, including many constructi­on and farm workers, migrate for their jobs and struggle to pay for education – but for sex workers, social stigma and chronic instabilit­y adds another barrier.

This trickles all the way down to a lack of documentat­ion required to enrol children in state schools.

“Many kids . . . don’t have their birth certificat­e,” Nakagawa said. “Many mothers did not know they have to register their kids . . . [and] when they are sex workers already, they hesitate to go to the [government] office for that because the office might discrimina­te against them.”

Theary, 39, not her real name, works in a massage parlour and supports her two children, who attend school at the Women’s Network for Unity (WNU), where many of the students’ parents are sex workers living in Tuol Kork district. She faced bureaucrat­ic hurdles in trying to enrol her children in primary school.

To do so, she was asked to show not only a birth certificat­e but a letter from the teacher who taught her children at the centre, and a short “biography” to demonstrat­e her child was from the area served by the school, signed by her village chief.

The registrati­on process, which Ly believes was more arduous than for others because of her children’s associatio­n with theWNU centre and her difficulti­es financing their schooling, outraged her. “I feel like I’m not a person, not a citizen,” she said.

Invisibili­ty

It is unclear whether or not demands for birth certificat­es and other forms of identifica­tion deliberate­ly target sex workers, as all families are required to present documentat­ion for enrolment.

“You should have at least something to let people know you live somewhere, to identify that person; it is a private obligation to get those documents,” Education Minister Hang Chuon Naron told The Post.

More tangible is the state of invisibili­ty to which sex workers and their children relegate themselves in order to avoid discrimina­tion.

“[Sex workers] have to change the location of residence quite often, because in the beginning when they move into one area, [the neighbours] don’t know the exact occupation of what the mother is doing,” Nakagawa said. “But they come to know the mother is a sex worker [and] they start to gossip and the children are bullied . . . Parents are telling the kids don’t mix with those children because they are dirty, they are the children of the broken women.”

Asked about Bopha’s story of her daughter’s bullying, Chan Dyna, the president of the Cambodian Prostitute Union (CPU), said her mistake was to identify herself as a sex worker.

“When you identify yourself as sex worker, you have such things happening,” Dyna said. “I do not recommend a sex worker identify herself to the school or the teacher, or otherwise [they] face consequenc­es like that.”

Kalob primary school principal Yem Saron, however, said teachers at his school did not discrimina­te against the children of sex workers but that students could be subject to bullying.

“Teachers treat them fairly,” he said. “I think the sex workers’ kids got bullied by their classmates, they make fun of those kids . . . If there is serious bullying, parents should report it to us.”

To sensitise the school to their needs, Saron said he recommends sex workers identify their profession­s to teachers so they can keep an eye out for mistreatme­nt. Currently, he said, most sex workers who send their children to his school prefer to hide their identities.

With regards to students paying teachers bribes, Saron denied this occurs. “By principle, teachers cannot take the students’ money,” he said. If the teachers do receive money, he said, “it comes from the hearts of the parents”.

Chuon Naron, the minister of education, doubted stories of discrimina­tion in the education system. “School principals are not interested in if they are sex workers,” he said. “How can you know?” he asked, before affirming that “everyone has equal access to state schools”.

A safe haven

Despite the challenges they face, children like Theary’s 10-year-old son, Ratanak, not his real name, still find ways to get an education.

He said that while he is afraid of his often foul-tempered teacher, he enjoys going to school. “School is fun because there is a playground,” he said, adding that he currently has the eighth-highest grades in his class of 35 students, which his mother proudly confirmed. “I want to be a doctor,” he said, as his mother rolled her eyes behind him. “I don’t have any money,” she lamented, turning her face to hide a smile.

Kanhchana Leng, one of Nakagawa’s students at Pannasastr­a University, found cause for hope among the children of sex workers while working as a volunteer English teacher in WNU’s Tuol Kork centre.

After helping Nakagawa conduct interviews with sex workers and their children, Leng said she wanted to find a way to help. With permission fromWNU, she began teaching English at the centre in the mornings. Among several dozen students in her class, just “four or five”also attended state school.

Teaching at the centre presented a unique set of difficulti­es. “They stop studying – sometimes they stop a week, two weeks, one month, because of problems with the police,” Leng said. “The [mothers] move to live in their hometown, or they move to another place, so, they cannot study regularly [or] they have to stop.”

Leng wants to return to the centre one day with funds to sponsor recreation­al activities. “We have to help them out of this,” she said. “If we can help, we should help.”

But lasting change may depend on the children’s integratio­n into the state school system, along with efforts to eradicate the stigma attached to sex work.

Phally, not her real name, a 42-year-old sex worker living in the capital, sends her 12-yearold daughter to theWNU school. While she is grateful for the centre’s work, she acknowledg­es it does not provide the same level of education one would expect at a state school. “That centre only teaches the very primary level, to be confident,” she explained. “I am not sure I can afford to send her to a state school.”

Her hesitancy to send her daughter to a state school is perhaps reinforced by the failure of her two sons, now aged 21 and 18, to complete their schooling in Kampong Thom province, where her mother lives, because of a lack of funds.

Still, while they were in school the sons were able to escape the shadow of their mother’s profession – and mistreatme­nt because of it – by studying outside of the capital. “My sons were OK,” she said, “because they [their classmates and teachers] did not know what I was doing”.

 ?? ELIAH LILLIS ?? Entrance of the Cambodian Prostitute Union’s “drop-in” centre, where sex workers go to seek counsellin­g and support.
ELIAH LILLIS Entrance of the Cambodian Prostitute Union’s “drop-in” centre, where sex workers go to seek counsellin­g and support.
 ?? ELIAH LILLIS ?? Chan Dyna, president of the Cambodian Prostitute Union, speaks on behalf of entertainm­ent workers in an effort to challenge the stigma against them.
ELIAH LILLIS Chan Dyna, president of the Cambodian Prostitute Union, speaks on behalf of entertainm­ent workers in an effort to challenge the stigma against them.

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