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Did you think of this scheme in a VISION.Elmyi wrote:Comments ar disallowed on http://kaamwali.fullhydblogs.com
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i think Elmyi is DQ....he wants to draw our attn. to his blog...akhilis2cool wrote:that blog belongs to DQ ...right?
yeh elmyi...kaun hai![]()
hmmCtrlAltDel wrote:i think Elmyi is DQ....he wants to draw our attn. to his blog...akhilis2cool wrote:that blog belongs to DQ ...right?
yeh elmyi...kaun hai![]()
i know...i was just joking...DQ wrote:CAD no attention needed. Just a thought.
where in the world do household help to sit at the same table with the master and eat? even in developed countries, do u see butlers, maids, gardners n drivers sitting n eating meals with their masters?DQ wrote:Simple question, how many of you (if you have household help) allow them to sit with you at the table ?
...and in thousands of other households, the household help plays an important role in cooking meals and taking care of babies.DQ wrote:Let alone that, most places I have noticed, their utensils are seprate too !!!
blatant exploitation does exist everywhere, not necessarily only in India.DQ wrote:There is so much more that goes unnoticed and thats exactly what I am trying to potray.
CtrlAltDel wrote:where in the world do household help to sit at the same table with the master and eat? even in developed countries, do u see butlers, maids, gardners n drivers sitting n eating meals with their masters?
CtrlAltDel wrote:...and in thousands of other households, the household help plays an important role in cooking meals and taking care of babies.
asli_badmash wrote:Here is what happened at my place...
An old muslim woman came to my mum, crying and weeping and asking for some monetary help and a place to live. She told us she had nowhere to go and her step-children had pusher her out of the house. Since we were in need of a house help we said alright she could stay at our place. We gave her room which is next to my moms bedroom. We were using it as store room. We cleaned it for her use.
asli_badmash wrote:1. The first day she asked us how much are we going to pay her. We thought since she was living in our house and we didnt charge her anything for rent or food we would give her enough money to take care of her medicine and all. But she said she wants more.We agreed at Rs. 750. Plus she said she wouldnt cook. My mum said Ok.. dont worry she would cook for all of us. Since she like cooking and all.
asli_badmash wrote:2. We allowed her to eat at the same table as we do. She was practically a member of the house. We shared everything we got.. sweets.. Mirchi-bhaji and all. Never did we pass on old food to her or anything like that. She seemed to be content for some time a week or 15 days.
asli_badmash wrote:But then the trouble began. My mum works and takes care of our business and early in the morning she is in a rush. She is very particular about cleanliness and order in the house. And she instructed the maid to clean the house properly... to our shock she started answering back. And saying that she wouldnt do it. This went on for few days and one fine day I got to know about it.Even I dont have the guts to answer back to my mum. And I saw this lady back answering my mum in a loud voice. I was pissed.
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asli_badmash wrote:We didnt fire her from work but we asked her to move out of the house and take a home of her own. She doesnt work at our home, she works as ayya at my mums office. Now she is pleading with us to take her back into the house. But once the trust is broken it wont be the same again.
asli_badmash wrote:I think by allowing the lady to become a part of our house, we broke the cardinal rule for master-servant interaction. Since we let her be a part of our family, she thought she would do as she pleases and we wouldnt say anything. I am all for equality and all.. but people have to understand their position. We made ourselves vulnerable by allowing her into the family.
asli_badmash wrote:After this bitter experience I probably will never allow any work person close to our family again.
asli_badmash wrote:Yes I agree there is exploitation of workers... but in any relationship be it master-servant, company-employee one person is exploiting and the other person is getting exploited for his/her needs.
tch tch tch..too badDQ wrote:The man of the house dies in Kaamwali.
Dude Elmy, you had no reason to kill poor Ramulu!!DQ wrote:The man of the house dies in Kaamwali.
blatant exploitation does exist everywhere, not necessarily only in India.[/quote]DQ wrote:CtrlAltDel wrote:where in the world do household help to sit at the same table with the master and eat? even in developed countries, do u see butlers, maids, gardners n drivers sitting n eating meals with their masters?
1. Do not want to compare at all
2. Well if they do not, let them not.
3. If they do not the blog is for them too, its for all humans to truly understand equality. If you beleive in equality it has to be constant.
4. In Iran I know, that every body sits at the same table. Whatever they maybe.
5. Countries like Australia, "incases where household help is used", if needed they dine and wine together.
6. Masters !!! "Word only used by the Royal families and thier heir in these days" and they to need to chage.CtrlAltDel wrote:...and in thousands of other households, the household help plays an important role in cooking meals and taking care of babies.
yes apart from this, they are not allowed to sit to gether. not use the same utensils to eat food.
Ayya ka plate / glass alag hota hain!!
:d What did you do after that?Habitual Perfectionist wrote:One fine day, I see this lady washing her grandson's @$$ with some cold water from our fridge.
lonewolf wrote::d What did you do after that?Habitual Perfectionist wrote:One fine day, I see this lady washing her grandson's @$$ with some cold water from our fridge.
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:lonewolf wrote::d What did you do after that?Habitual Perfectionist wrote:One fine day, I see this lady washing her grandson's @$$ with some cold water from our fridge.
Gave her some water from the tap and warned her that ice-cold water might make the kid's @$$ sore.
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:Dude...communism has been an utter failure everywhere. Equality of classes has never existed and will never exist anywhere.
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:
Let's look at some points you've raised here. You talk about domestic help dining at the same table with their employers...and that the utensils belonging to domesti help are separate from the rest of the lot. Can you guarantee that the domestic help will keep up the same levels of hygiene as the others in the household?
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:Let me tell you something that happened at my place. There was a municipal sweeper who used to lean up our society compound in Ahmedabad. We stayed on the ground floor and so, this lady and her kids used to get water from our place. One fine day, I see this lady washing her grandson's @$$ with some cold water from our fridge. So much so for equality.
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:
What exactly do you mean by equality here? Do you mean that my domestic help should be allowed to sleep in an airconditioned room just like me? Or that domestic help should hae access to a luury sedan if his/her employer owns one?
Habitual Perfectionist wrote:There should be respect due to a fellow human being in the way a domestic help is treated. And beyond that, I don't feel it to be any obligation that I should consider my domestic help my equal. And IMO, most of the households today, do give their domestic help that respect. I fail to see what this hullaboo is all about.
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