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HOME | LIFE/STYLE | SPECIAL |
December 10, 1997 |
![]() ![]() Some days ago, my blood ran cold. It was a smallish news item tucked away on page 16 that was responsible for my condition. The sort of news agency item I'd have normally skipped. It involved a 19-year-old British nanny and an eight-month-old American boy. She was accused of murder and here was a trial that had all of the US riveted. Louise Woodward, the nanny, claimed she loved children and was not guilty of "shaking the baby" or "banging his head against the wall." She insisted that the infant (Matthew Eapen) was lying dead in the crib with a cranium fracture when she noticed something was wrong and summoned help. Friends have testified that the nanny often cribbed about the two (Matthew has an older baby brother) "fussy, cranky brats" in her charge and wasn't too happy about her wages. Reason enough to kill an innocent, defenceless infant -- even inadvertantly? Matthew's parents belong to the increasingly common double-income family units, even if they don't fall into the DINKs (double income no kids) category. They obviously earn enough between them to afford the services of a nanny.
One assumes Ms Woodward has had at least a high-school education and some previous experience taking care of young children (Matthew's brother is a two-year-old). These ayahs would not know how to dial for an ambulance in an emergency, summon a doctor for a major or minor wound or administer the right medicines in case their charges are running fevers. Some of these women do not know the first thing about personal hygiene. They rarely wash their hands with soap before feeding a child or preparing meals. Often, they leave infants for hours in a puddle of urine before bothering to change the nappy. With a television in nearly every home these days, not only do the bais sit in front of the idiot box for hours themselves, they often invite their entire families to share the experience while the owners are away.
Bais getting bugged with difficult, demanding kids is nothing new. I have seen a maid in our complex routinely striking a spastic child in the garden downstairs, for daring to disturb her gossip session with the other maids. I've seen bais gobbling up snacks meant for their wards, leaving toddlers dangerously close to swings and see-saws, flirting nonchalantly with boyfriends while kids in their care wander unobserved in busy car-parks, leaving children unattended in bazaars -- I mean, the horror stories never end.
There are innumerable such cases around us. Two income families are here to stay. I pity the parents who leave home each morning, leaving their children at the mercy of different hired help. There are examples galore of bais who'd give their lives for their babalog - but these are exceptions. Most don't give a damn. They are well aware of their "power" over the employers. "I quit" has become the two most dreaded words in a working mother's vocabulary. No bai, no leave, no job.
Photographs: Jewella C Miranda Tell us what you think of this special feature
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