I'm somewhat ambivalent about this documentary by VBS Television (
you can click on the above image), which I found on 
The Independent newspaper's website. In a nutshell,  Sarah Harris, a British journalist,  made a documentary about temple prostitutes  in south India...Devadasi women dedicated to a Hindu deity who spend  their lives selling sex.
The journalist, with a couple of local minders, travels to villages and towns of Southern India to  try to document a system of religious sex slavery dating back to the  6th century. Although illegal, there seems to be more than 23,000 women in the state of  Karnataka selling their bodies in the name of the mysterious Hindu  Goddess Yellamma. These are known as Devadasis, or ‘servants of God’.  As such things go, these statistics are estimates...which can be inflated or deflated depending on one's agenda.
I'm ambivalent because I don't get from this documentary  that the women are Devadasi per se. They are certainly sex workers, but  not necessarily Yellamma temple
 sex workers.  In parts, the documentary feels like a Lonely Planet or Global Trekker feature I watch on PBS...minus Ian Wright's wit and humor. I don't think that this documentary is accurate at all...and comes across as callous and superficial. The journalist sounds and acts as flaky as a young tourist traveling in India during a gap year, and I've seen no evidence that there was serious research done in the subject matter.
Having said that, William Dalrymple in his recent book Nine Lives, has interviewed and written about devadasi women, and their undeniable plight. Devadasi women have had a venerable history  in performing a wide variety of religious functions, including sexual  service...but their lives are now hard and harsh. Only marginally better  than ordinary prostitutes, the devadasi system provides a way out of  crippling poverty...very similar to other countries and societies.  
You can also watch it on 
VBS.TV website.
 
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