A student’s perspective on foreign maids in Jordan

Posted on November 25th, 2008 by Laura Byrne Paquet in News

One way to get unique, unvarnished insights into foreign cultures is to read blogs and articles written by students participating in semester-abroad programs. Today I stumbled on a recent post by American student Laura Ashbaugh, who is currently living in Amman, Jordan.

In her post, she reflects on her conflicted relationship with her host family’s Sri Lankan maid, who is close to Ashbaugh’s age. She also discusses a friend’s research into abuse of foreign domestic workers in Jordan.
Until I read Ashbaugh’s post, I had no idea that Jordan was home to so many foreign domestic workers. A bit of digging revealed that more than 50,000 workers–mainly women from the Philippines, Indonesia and Sri Lanka–are working in homes across the Middle Eastern country.
So why do women go to Jordan to work? In a word: poverty. According to Human Rights Watch, Sri Lanka’s foreign workforce sent home over US$2.3 billion in remittances in 2006 alone, accounting for over 9 percent of Sri Lanka’s GDP. Female Sri Lankans working abroad support an average of five family members each back home. Put starkly, these women work as maids because they have to. An article from Jordan Business magazine provides many other disturbing details, as does a piece in Sri Lanka’s Daily News outlining Amnesty International’s efforts to help foreign domestic workers in Jordan.
(Jordan is just one of many, many countries providing work to migrant workers, by the way. And few, if any, of those countries have a spotless human rights record when it comes to treatment of those workers. For instance, a recent article in the Toronto Star detailed the poor treatment of Mexican women hired to pick apples in Ontario.)
Kudos to Ashbaugh for bringing to light a sad subject of which I was woefully ignorant. If posts like hers aren’t an argument for travelling off the tourist grid, I don’t know what is.

Comments are closed.

More News

Books

Book review: Writer explores England by kayak

As British writer David Aaronovitch points out in the introduction ...

Contests

Contest: Win an African safari for 11!

Become a friend of Intrepid Travel on Facebook, and you ...

Destinations

Anguilla…just because

Those of you who have been following my new series, ...

Food

Aussie cafe serves chocolate on steroids

If you've ever thought, "Gee, chocolate bars would be great ...

Home Exchanges

Wanna buy a home-swap site?

Ever wanted to run your own home exchange site? Do ...

How To

Useful tips for travel photography

For 20 years, I used single-lens reflex (SLR) film cameras, ...

Language

Five places to find foreign language schools

The current online issue of The Atlantic Monthly includes an ...

Music

desert sands dunes Algeria

Year of Geography: Algeria

Unfortunately, Algeria is going through a bit of a rough ...

Recipes

Recipe: Tara Farms Pecan Pie Muffins

OK, this is a first for this blog: a recipe! ...

Travel Trivia

Travel trivia: Islands of Japan

By area, what is Japan's largest island? (Hint: It's where ...

Vacation Rentals

More info on Montserrat villa

A while ago, I wrote a blog post about the ...

Volunteer Travel

The view from Cameroon

British ex-pat Steve Jackson writes a somewhat colourful, often cranky ...