Backgrounds of Prostitutes (cont’d)
Okiyo’s family, that is, Mikawaya in Kanbara, keep mailing magazines for female students, such as World of Women’s Studies and Women’s Literature, every month to the boarding school for their daughter.
This is understandable. They sent off their dearest daughter to the far sky of Canada and are always wishing for her safety and waiting for her to return to Japan after finishing her studies. The magazines they sent to their daughter are filled with their parental wishes. But in reality, their daughter is in the devil hands of Yamazaki and is sunk in the world of suffering. You can now see how sinful these devils are.
Besides, Outa, who was held by devil Tatsuji Motoki in Cranbrook, is also an ex-student. She was brought to this country without being informed that she would be involved in prostitution. When she realized that it was a cave she cried and cried throughout every single night for the first half of the month. But others rolled their tongues of temptation, telling her that she had no option but to give in or that they also had a difficult time in the beginning but the job became easy once they got used to it. When that was not adequate to convince Outa, women conspired with their madam and openly counted cash right in front of Outa, saying how much money they gained that day and talking about clothes and hair accessories to seduce the woman’s little mind. In the end, her tears and everything else dried up and out of desperation her mind was swayed by the sweet-talk; she became an irredeemable body.
These examples can be found everywhere and these stories are generally similar. But no matter how much money they want, deceiving children of pure and innocent parents and serving them as sacrifices for dirty profit-making are abominable deeds.
In comparison, women who migrated for the purpose of doing prostitution are, as I mentioned above, usually daughters of peasants or fishermen, and they are just unspeakable things that pretend to be women only by their looks. I am suspicious whether they are literate. Their speech is casual, and their manners are rough. They are garbage without any merit.