With Hungarian youth unemployment at 25%,
it's not exactly easy to find work in the land of goulash and Gabors.
But if you happen to be of Roma blood, it's apparently even harder. "I'm
a Gypsy, and people see me and don't want to give me a job," said
Elizabet, a 24-year-old Hungarian with Roma heritage. "Hungarians don't
like Gypsies."
After failing to find a job in Budapest, Elizabet decided to head west
to Amsterdam – the land of opportunity for any young, attractive girl
who's prepared to rent their body out to a succession of strangers. "I
came to Amsterdam last year to work as a prostitute because I can't find
a job anywhere else," she told me. "If I have no money, I die."
Yesterday, VICE ran an interview
with a guy who writes a blog entry every time he has sex with one of
Amsterdam's prostitutes. He made it out like the city's sex workers are
pulling in hundreds of Euros a session doing a job they love, but –
speaking to Elizabet – it seems his experiences may have been a little
unrepresentative. In her current line of work, money dominates
Elizabet's entire thought process. She pays €100 (£84) a day to hire the
small room and window she occupies down one of the smaller side streets
in Amsterdam's De Wallen district, and charges €50 (£42) for a
20-minute "suck and fuck" – but will often drop the price down to €40
(£34) on a quiet day.
A good day could net Elizabet anything between €300 (£248) to €400
(£330), but good days are increasingly rare, and the reality of living
as a prostitute doesn't quite match up to what she'd heard about the
lives of some of the city's high-end escorts, who supposedly live the
Rockefeller life for just a few hours of work a day. "I'm still poor,
but it's not as bad as [it was] back in Hungary," she said. "Any spare
money I have, I save."
She continued, telling me that it can often be hard just to break even:
“Sometimes I only make enough for the room. But sometimes I don’t, and
sometimes I don’t get any customers at all."
Elizabet normally starts her shift at around 10 in the morning and
finishes at about 6PM. She tries to avoid the night shift, for fear of
drunken tourists and whatever other dangers the Red Light District has
to offer once the gangs are out and about, trying to hawk bags of
teething powder to Australian tourists. Unlike a number of Amsterdam's
sex workers, she doesn't have any protection in the form of private
bodyguards or pimps, so chooses her clientele carefully.
"I can read people, but not always,” she told me. “Sometimes I'm definitely scared, because I have no one to help me."
Regardless of her admission policy, Elizabet always spends her shifts
trying to score as many jobs as possible. "I dance in the window and
make kissing faces to the men who walk past, trying anything to get them
to come in," she started. "Sometimes it works; sometimes not. Then they
come in, I ask for their money straight away and I lock it away – I
can't trust nobody. Then they take their clothes off and jump on the
bed."
Elizabet's workplace consists of a small lime green mattress, her grey
locker and just enough space for a sink and a chair, all of it lit up by
a dull green light bulb and sound-tracked with off-brand 90s Europop
compilations. The lack of anything resembling romance doesn't worry
Elizabet; she told me that she's definitely not trying to be a "hired
girlfriend" – a sex worker who offers the "girlfriend experience"
service – and that there generally isn't enough time for small talk or
sensuality anyway.
"I don’t make any faces or noises; I just lie there [during sex]," she explained. “I’m not enjoying it, so why would I pretend I am? I normally just look up at the clock to see when their time is up. I think that's why a lot of men don’t orgasm when they come in."
"I don’t make any faces or noises; I just lie there [during sex]," she explained. “I’m not enjoying it, so why would I pretend I am? I normally just look up at the clock to see when their time is up. I think that's why a lot of men don’t orgasm when they come in."
Another prostitute, Madella – who moved to Amsterdam from Peru with her
two teenage children – said she'd do whatever the client asks, as long
as she gets paid. "They sometimes get a bit too over emotional, but, to
be honest, I don’t care at all," she said. "As long as they pay, I’m
fine with it. We can do whatever – as long as they pay."
For Elizabet, trying to win over potential regular customers isn't a
concern. “I've never had the same person twice,” she told me. “They're
mainly tourists – English, American, Australian – so they might only be
here for one night."
Madella, on the other hand, said that most of her clients are Dutch –
but she didn't seem too bothered about sinking her hook into potential
regulars, either. "I mainly get regular Dutch people," she said.
"Sometimes they smell really bad, and if they smell too bad I tell them
to fuck off – I don't accept just anyone." When asked if she's ever had
any negative reactions after turning people away – and whether she's had
customers flip out on her mid-session – she said: "Not really. As long
as they pay, I’m fine with it."
Continuing, she said: "The work here is good. Sometimes hardly anyone
shows up – those nights are terrible; I don’t enjoy those. But other
nights, it’s fine. You can make good money." I asked Elizabet if she
enjoys her job, and wasn't surprised by her answer. "I like the money,"
she said, smiling. "Sometimes I get sad about [the job itself], but what
can I do?"
A large number of Amsterdam's estimated 7,000 prostitutes
aren't Dutch nationals, with Elizabet guessing that around 80 percent
of the city's sex workers are from Eastern Europe. In fact, the
overwhelming presence of Eastern Europeans working on Elizabet's street –
most of them from Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria or Russia – has led to it
being dubbed "Hungarystraat".
It was Elizabet's decision to move from Hungary to Amsterdam and start
working in the Red Light District, but she's heard stories about women
from her home country – and others from all across Eastern Europe –
being forced into the sex trade by pimps and criminal organisations.
"The gangs take their passports and control their lives," she told me.
"They cannot escape – I feel terrible for them."
Not everyone is so sympathetic to the plight of trafficked women. Metje
Blaak – a retired prostitute who now works as a spokeswoman for
prostitutes in the Netherlands – lamented the fact that restrictions
introduced to cut down on human trafficking have resulted in more
bureaucracy for those who choose to work in the sex trade. "There are
many women who choose to be prostitutes," she wrote in an email. "But
the so-called 'help' for women who are forced into the job makes it
impossible for free women to work, with those stupid rules and idiotic
regulations."
Regardless of your views on the rules and regulations, from speaking to
Elizabet, it doesn't look like they're working particularly well; women
from poor backgrounds are shipped over with the promise of work, before
being forced into sex work and prevented from leaving.
Elizabet is also trapped, but only by the prospect of going home and
ending up unemployed again. She dreams of returning to Hungary and
starting a family, but has no idea when she'll be able to do so. "I want
to have kids and get married, but I won't find anybody here – I'm
always working," she sighed. "So I don't know if it will ever happen."
Shockingly, Elizabet didn't grow up hoping to forge a career in
prostitution. "When I was a kid, I wanted to be a shop mannequin, being
dressed up in all of the clothes," she laughed. "My mum used to say,
'You can't do that – mannequins aren't real.' We all thought it was very
funny. But now, I'm a prostitute," she said.
Elizabet seems to shares similar aspirations to anyone her age. But,
obviously, her circumstances have forced her to follow a different
career path to most of her peers – something she's managed to keep quiet
among her friends and family at home. In fact, the only person who
knows about her profession is her mother; everyone else thinks she's
working in a hotel.
"My mother is the only one who knows," she told me. "She says I
shouldn't do it, but I need the money, and I send the money back home to
my family. I don't want [the rest of] my family to know; I don't think I
could go back if they found out."
Madella told a similar story, saying that she spends all the money she
makes on her family. "I stacked shelves in a supermarket for a few days
when I first moved here," she said, "but I switched jobs soon after,
because the money [in prostitution] is better. Really, I'm just working
to make money for my family."
Despite Elizabet's apprehensions, it's not all bad – she told me she
enjoys some aspects of her life in Amsterdam. "It's nice here," she
said. "The people are nice, and the police and the landlord – they're
all very respectful." Ultimately, however, she's still desperate to get
home to her friends and family. "I want to stop, but I can’t," she said.
"I've always got money on my mind."
By Alex Pichaloff/twitter Elko Born
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