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APRIL 2005Cross Cultural Exchange
By Leena Prasad
I shudder when I think of
past Mardi Gras parades. They are
impossible to avoid when you live in a suburb of New Orleans. Not that I’ve always wanted to avoid them. I went to my first few parades with an abundant
eagerness, enough to suffer through a French kiss from a total stranger for the
sake of a beautiful bead necklace. Two
decades later, I still remember the kiss because I was sixteen years old and it
was my first kiss and I hadn’t expected to have an unwanted tongue shoved down
my throat. Regardless, I went back to the parades the next day, and the next
year, and the year after… I find it difficult to
reconcile my current self with the one that desperately competed for the Mardi
Gras beads, the doubloons, and the various trinkets that the people on the
floats throw down to the people on the street watching the parade. Once, in my enthusiasm, I stepped on the
hand of a young child as he reached down to grab a doubloon. After that, I took a break from the
parades. At least until the next
year. Even when I didn’t want to go,
the pressure from friends and everyone around me was impossible to resist. Although I have not attended
a Mardi Gras parade for over a decade, there are Mardi Gras beads in my
bathroom and my bedroom. I have a
wooden Dutch shoe in my kitchen that’s stuffed with silver-gold-red-green-blue
doubloons. They symbolize the fact that Mardi Gras is a part of my youth, part
of my life in New Orleans. Thus, it was with mixed emotions of nostalgia and
curiosity that I went to see the documentary “Mardi Gras: Made in China,” about
the origination of the Mardi Gras beads and other trinkets. Of course they are
“Made in China.” Isn’t everything? I
had read articles in the Times Picayune, the local New Orleans newspaper, that
the beads are made in China and India.
This explained why they could be bought so cheaply and thrown out for
free to the revelers. So, when The Artists’ Television Access (ATA) on Valencia
Street in The Mission, scheduled a screening of the film, I wanted to find out
more. The documentary tells the
story of the lives of the mostly women workers in the bead factories of China.
A lot of them are pre-teens and teenagers and work at the factory in lieu of an
education. Some of them are not interested in an education and are happy to get
out of schooling but some work in the factory because their family needs and/or
wants the extra money. The workers’ hours are long and wages are shockingly low
by US standards. This is not much of a surprise except when you compare it to
the two million dollars annual salary of the CEO of the factory. The workers
must abide by many factory rules which are designed to make them more
efficient. For example, they are not
allowed to talk while working. Breaking
the rules has several consequences. One
of the punishments is the loss of upto one week’s wage. They factory workers are required to work
almost seven days a week with sporadic time off. To expand its horizon beyond
that of the bead makers, “Mardi Gras: Made in China,” travels to the other side
of the world and asks the Mardi Gras spectators if they know where and how the
beads are produced. Some of the revelers didn’t care. Some were appalled at the working conditions which made it possible
for them to wear the multi-colored beads around their neck. And some thought that the Chinese wages are
probably adjusted to the cost of living of that region and that what might be
shockingly low salary and unacceptable working conditions for US workers are
probably appropriate for the Chinese culture and lifestyle. The filmmakers showed footage
of the factory workers to some of the Mardi Gras party-goers and showed footage
of the Mardi Gras merrymakers to the Chinese factory workers. The Mardi Gras footage included shots of
women revealing their breasts in exchange for beads. Many of the factory workers were shocked that anyone would take
their clothes off to obtain one of those “ugly” beads. Many of the Mardi Gras merrymakers were
shocked that the cheap beads that they lusted after and threw away were
manufactured by the exploitation of poor people in a country far away. Looking at the factory
workers, I couldn’t help but remember that I was the same age as many of them
when I started working after school. I earned enough, however, to buy my own
car that I brought with me to college.
I was also the same age as many of them when I attended my first Mardi
Gras parade and allowed a stranger to kiss me so that I could have the
“beautiful” bead necklace he wore around his neck. |
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