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Koreksi teks dari pengguna HenrikHold

(IT IS WRITTEN AS A BLOG)
Underpaid and poor conditions. That was exactly what i experience­d during my visit to India. We were 6 youngsters going there with a TV crew, for an upcoming BBC series called Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts. It was horrible I tell you. I am used to buying lots of clothes, and do not really think about where it is made or who is making it. Therefore it was extremely surprising to experience the stress and poor conditions they have to live with on a daily basis.
When we arrived in the morning we had our first appointmen­t at one of the more prestigiou­s workplaces, or so we were told, called Shahi Enterprise­s in New Delhi. We were appointed to work from 8 a. m. , six days a week, which mend we were only getting one day off. Our work took place in a hangar-like room with around 1. 000 workers.
The conditions were horrible and we were only paid 2 £ a day, which couldn’t even last for a deodorant. After working on the sewing line for some time, I was demoted to ironing, where they expected me to iron 50 shirts an hour. Unable to keep up with the hard demands and the fast workers I was demoted once more, now to the lowest position in the company, shirt buttoning.
My wage was demoted alongside my job role. I was now getting 1. 50 £ a day, which surprised me a lot. How could one live with such a small amount of money?
I began feeling sorrier and sorrier for the Indian people working so hard under such bad conditions, getting paid so little. I was then told, that having a job at Shahi Enterprise­s, was considered as luck among the workers, but to keep their job they hat to work hard. And exactly working hard is a matter of survival in India.
Just prior to going home we were transferre­d to another workstatio­n, where we had to both work and sleep at our machines. I stayed up one night and talked to a boy, who had been working there since he was 15. He told me how tough it was for him to support his family. It hit me like a freight train how hard these people were working to support their families and to put food on the table.
After experienci­ng the harsh reality of how the clothes are made, I have changed life drasticall­y. I am now very focused on where the clothes that I buy are made, and I don’t mind spending an extra pound to make sure the workers behind the clothes are living and working under good conditions.
Combining that with not shopping cheap fashion, and recycling my clothes better, I have definitely had an experience that I will remember for the rest of my life and benefit off. I think it is sad to know that there are people living under such high demand, poor conditions and low wages. It just shouldn’t be allowed.
I can though look at it from another perspectiv­e, because if there weren’t people living under low wages and supplying the rest of the world with a cheap work force, I don’t think we would be capable of maintainin­g our high quality of life.
bahasa: Inggris   Pengetahuan bahasa: Penutur asli

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