Sister answers call of captive fisherman, migrants in distress

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Sr. Josephine Amala Valarmathi addresses a meeting of domestic workers in Chennai, southeastern India. (Provided photo)

Chennai, India — Sr. Josephine Amala Valarmathi was not surprised when she got a telephone call around midnight in the last week of October 2016. On the other end was a fisherman who goes by the name Veerghese.

He was among 15 fishermen from the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu being kept in custody without food and water on Kish Island, off the southern Iranian coast. The Iranian Coast Guard had arrested them for entering their territorial waters on Oct. 22, 2016. The Indian workers of a fishing firm in Bahrain, across the Persian Gulf from Iran, were seized as they were returning home in three boats after deep-sea fishing.

Valarmathi promised help and ended the call. The member of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary then began work on their behalf that lasted almost six months.

Finally, on April 6, 2017, the fishermen landed at the airport in Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu state. Among those present to receive the distraught group was Tamil Nadu's fisheries minister, who also arranged buses to take them home.

"But for Sister Josephine, we would be still languishing in the Iranian jail. Her prompt and efficient intervention saved us. We are so grateful to her," Veerghese, captain of one of the boats, said in a phone interview from his home in Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu's southernmost district.

Valarmathi, who is based in Chennai, says she often gets such distress calls from migrant and domestic workers of Tamil Nadu's coastal towns, where she has spent 15 years as a social worker. Thousands of people from the region work in the Persian Gulf countries, Malaysia and Singapore as construction workers, drivers or cattle ranchers, or doing domestic and unskilled work.

"I am quite familiar with the problems of Indians working overseas," says Valarmathi, a Hindu convert to Catholicism.

The 42-year-old nun says providing free legal aid to migrant workers in their destination countries is a must to end their exploitation by employers and employment agents. Numerous cases could be avoided, she says, if Indian embassy officials would join civil society organizations in those countries to educate workers on local laws.

The nun says her priority since 2003 has been to organize awareness programs for migrant workers on safe legal migration procedures so that they could avoid exploitation and fraudulent recruitments.

Sr. Josephine Amala Valarmathi, left, addresses a press conference in March 2017 in Chennai, southeastern India. (Provided photo)

"Workers going overseas must be given pre-departure orientation and training. This will make a huge impact on their lives and work in a foreign country," she said.

She also wants bilateral policies to respect international conventions that could prevent abuse and exploitation of migrant workers.

In 2011, in addition to the training and policy work she was doing, she was forced to take up the tedious and time-consuming rescue operations after she started receiving complaints about exploitation overseas.

In Veerghese's case, Valarmathi contacted Tamil Nadu ministers and government officials the same night she received his call. The following day, she contacted federal external affairs officials and the Indian embassy in Iran. She alerted India's External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Twitter. She also contacted a few Indians working in Iran to make arrangements to take food and water to Veerghese and his companions.

The result came after six months of lobbying the Iranian government, but it was worth the trouble, the nun says. "I could bring happiness to many people at last."

Domestic workers in Chennai, India, hold a demonstration in 2017. (Provided photo)

Making others happy was what attracted her to Jesus, whom she first learned about when she studied in a Catholic high school in Tamil Nadu. "I was so much attracted by the spirit of Christian love, charity and service to people. I wanted to become Christian and a sister to serve people and experience the living Christ in them," she recalls.

She overcame stiff opposition from her orthodox Hindu family to become a Christian in 1990. After nine years, she joined the Immaculate Heart of Mary sisters. Later, she studied for a bachelor's degree in commerce and master's in social work.

Since 2003, she has handled scores of migrant worker cases.

One involved Shanti Mary, a 52-year-old woman who worked in Saudi Arabia. The trained English teacher paid 100,000 rupees (about $1,500) to a recruitment agent for a job in Kuwait. The agent, however, sent her to Saudi Arabia. In Riyadh, the Saudi capital, the agent's people took her to a house. Only then did she realize she was employed as a maid. She wanted to leave but could not.

She then remembered a phone number that an immigration official in Tamil Nadu gave her to call in case she faced problems in her new country. It was Valarmathi's number. After Mary explained her predicament, Valarmathi quickly contacted an agent in Riyadh and organized Mary's return ticket. Within a week, Mary flew back home.

Mary described Valarmathi as a "Godsend savior," calling her "genuine, humane and committed."

Valarmathi made Chennai her base in 2006, when she began her efforts for domestic workers in Tamil Nadu. Currently, she coordinates the Tamil Nadu branch of the National Domestic Workers' Movement founded by Belgium-born Immaculate Heart Sr. Jeanne Devos in 1985 in Mumbai.

Domestic workers in Chennai rally at a meeting in 2017 organized by the Tamil Nadu branch of the National Domestic Workers Movement. (Provided photo)

The movement fights for just wages and humane working conditions for domestic workers and supports them through education, capacity-building and campaigning.

The movement's Tamil Nadu unit is registered as a trade union and now has some 3,000 paid members. It holds monthly meetings to educate the members about the basic rights, duties and responsibilities of a domestic worker.

Pushpa Saravanan joined the movement in 2000. The 36-year-old woman had started working as a housemaid when she was 7. After joining the movement, she managed to complete 10th grade.

"Today, domestic workers like me know different laws and legislations pertaining to our work. Earlier, I could never imagine people like me could organize ourselves and fight for our rights," she told GSR.

She became a part-time volunteer in the movement three years ago, still working as a housemaid in the morning.

Valarmathi says her plans include identifying people such as Saravanan to lead the movement. The sister also plans to arrange for education for children of domestic workers to ensure a better future for them.

Valarmathi tries to liberate child workers and works with the Child Rights Movement, a national subsidiary of the domestic workers movement. Although India has banned child labor, thousands of children are seen working in restaurants, workshops and factories in Tamil Nadu, neighboring Kerala state, and other parts of India.

Child workers demonstrate for rights in Chennai, southeastern India, in 2016. (Provided photo)

The movement targets former and potential child domestic workers and children of domestic workers. It serves as a platform for children to develop their potential and capacities to become change agents in society, the nun explained.

Valarmathi says her faith in Jesus gives her the strength to work for others. "I can do all things in Christ who strengthens me," she says.

She believes in the maxim that "God has a plan, trust it, live it, enjoy it."

"I feel thankful to God for calling me to this way of life. It is through my involvement with people's problems that I came to know Christ more closely and deeply," she says.

Sr. Josephine Amala Valarmathi at her office in Chennai, southeastern India (Philip Mathew)

[Philip Mathew is a journalist based in Bengaluru, southern India. He edits Asia Pacific Ecumenical News and writes for Matters India, a news portal that focuses on religious and social issues.]

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