India's strange custom: "Sagna" is a tool for monks to vent their desires

speaking of india's idiosyncrasies, it's unending.

india is a country of diverse traditional cultures and one of the ancient civilizations of the world.

in india ' s long history, a variety of peculiar practices, many of which are rare, are prevalent.

let's take an inventory of india's eccentric customs.

in india, there is a tradition as old as in its history - girls from dalit families begin to serve in monasteries at a young age and become sexual slaves of hindu senior monks and brahmin elders.

they're called saints.

in india, the word "sacred" is not a decent word.

in accordance with tradition, “houses of india” are all from dalit families who were forced to sell to monasteries as soon as they reached puberty.

in front of a man, there was a shining name — a saint; behind them was nothing but a free “sex slave” for hindu high-ranking monks and brahmin elders.

such indecency cannot be kept from people, so young girls who enter monasteries and give their lives to gods are destined to sell their youth and bodies and to live a strange life without marriage.

in addition to serving as a ventilating tool for monks, they are also hiv mobile stations.

indian society will pay a high price for this.

with more than 5 million people living with hiv in india, if not effectively controlled, there will be 3 million new infections every decade.

as early as 2003, aids was the most deadly disease in india.

it is not an exaggeration to call india the “largest outdoor toilet in the world”.

almost every foreigner who has been to india is impressed by the toilet.

in india, the toilet is everywhere and the land is the largest open-air toilet.

the results of the 2011 census in india showed that about 131 million households nationwide did not have latrines, 8 million households had access to latrines and 123 million households had access to toilets outside, which was particularly difficult for women.

bandeshwa patak, founder of the surab health movement in india, said that women do not go to the outdoors during the day, and that it is necessary to solve the problem after dusk and before dawn, “to walk barefoot in places where they are susceptible to vermin, bacteria and disease, where children play unsanitaryly”.

the minister of rural development of india, jairam ramesh, said that 60 to 70 per cent of women were forced to go outside and that india “should be humiliated”.

the business of rent-a-wife is very hot in india, where the harshest word is “may you have a daughter”.

the father of the newborn child has a daughter if the two hands are opened up again, i.e., “no two hands”.

moreover, in rajasthan, one of the rituals for the birth of a daughter is to smash a jar, which is a sign of bad luck, a bit like china's ancient so-called “honor to make waa”.

india has emerged as a result of the widespread practice of female infanticide, resulting in the lack of brides in many villages and townsa partial social variation — renting wives.

in some places, such as gujarat, the business of renting wives is very hot.

it is available for rent at a monthly rate of rmb 800 and can be changed frequently.

some poor indian husbands are also very responsive to the “rent wife” scheme, renting their wives to relatively wealthy men in exchange for rent up to pound100 per month.

i'm sorry

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