Baby Trafficking
August 22, 2016
INDIAN women struggling for money are enticed into renting their wombs. The BBC interviewed three women who were “surrogate mothers.” One of them said:
For three months after giving birth, I spent sleepless nights, I would get headaches thinking about the baby and I had to take medicines to calm down.
Every year, on 4 November, the day the baby was born, our family celebrates its birthday. I do all the rituals that I do for my other children.
I fast in the morning, I cook payasam [rice pudding] and share it with my family and neighbours, and I visit the temple to pray for the baby’s well-being and long life.
I’ve always wondered if the baby is like any of my other children. I really do miss the baby and would give anything to see it once.
I know it’s not my baby after all, but I know that if I’d seen the baby, I wouldn’t have given it away.