Mimi’s Room
Mimi’s room smells of baby oil and is infused with a pink glow. There’s an industrial-sized roll of paper on the shelf that she uses to cover the bed and a couple of towels that do for all the clients – usually around five a day.
The fee for
the massage goes direct to the boss; Mimi makes do with the tip for the
follow-up service, depending on what she
is asked to do. She’s terrified of catching something, she explains in sketchy
Spanish as she hurries along the corridor in a black dress.
Estefania took a month to cross Asia and Europe by car
for a job in a sweatshop in Badalona
Mimi works in
one of Barcelona’s many Chinese ‘massage’ parlors where, according to the
Catalan police, massage is synonymous with sex. Now numbering over 100, they
are fast becoming an additional tourist attraction for the city.
Mimi’s parlor is
close to the busy Sants neighborhood and doubles as a hair and nail salon whose
services are advertised in the window. Mimi’s not happy but she has a contract
and set hours. And it has been a long, arduous road to get this far.
Like the other
four women interviewed for this report, Mimi arrived in Barcelona three years
ago thanks to a “snakehead,” an individual who specializes in smuggling in
immigrants from China.
She knew she would be running up garments in a sweatshop, but she wasn’t worried about the hard work – after all, she was used to it. Besides, she would earn more money than she had at home.
What she wasn’t expecting was to find herself practically imprisoned for two years in premises in the Fondo neighborhood of Santa Coloma de Gramenet, where there is a large Chinese community. In fact, this is where many of the 65,048 Chinese immigrants registered in Catalonia begin their new lives in Spain. “The workshop offers many of them access to the job market here,” says a police spokesperson.
Mimi worked 16
hours a day, seven days a week. She ate nothing but rice and noodles and slept
alongside 30 others in a makeshift dorm. In return, she earned between €800 and
€1,000 a month. She used the money to repay the cost of her trip from China and
saved the rest.
It’s a familiar
‘career’ path for many female Chinese immigrants. In 2009, the Catalan police
raided 40 illegal garment factories in the Mataró area, arresting 77 people and
freeing 450 Chinese immigrants, most of whom were women working in conditions
of semi-slavery that included violence.
Known as
Operation Wei, the raid exposed how many of the clothes put together by these
illegal and exploited workers were destined for stores such
as Zara, El Corte Inglés, Desigual and Cortefiel. Cheaper
than having the clothes made in China or Thailand, the garments were
irresistible to the chain stores who claimed they knew nothing about how they
were being made.
Mimi went from working at a garment factory to one of
Barcelona’s 100 or more massage parlors.
But despite the
initial success of the operation, it was almost impossible to get anyone to
come forward with evidence against the ringleaders of the organization. Nobody
admitted to feeling exploited. On the contrary, most were angry at having been
left without work and staged a protest to get their jobs back.
“It’s because of
the work ethic in China,” says a source who participated in that operation.
“The hierarchy is not fixed in these organizations. Whoever is being exploited
today could be doing the exploiting tomorrow. The girl doing the massages could
end up managing the center if she plays her cards right. They can prosper
within the structure, so it’s hard to get them to make a charge against
anyone.” In the end, the operation secured no more than three convictions for
exploitation.
Estefania – her
Spanish pseudonym – is one example of how these Chinese women move through the
ranks in this parallel universe. Twelve years ago, she traveled from Beijing
across Asia and Europe to Spain. It took a month, with vehicle changes each
time they arrived in a new country. She claims to have made the trip with some
friends, though the Catalan police maintain that in every country there is a
snakehead helping them on their way.
As soon as
Estefania arrived in Spain, she was put to work in a sweatshop in Badalona
where members of her family were already waiting for her. Like the other women
interviewed here, she sewed for 16 hours a day and slept and ate on the
premises. She doesn’t recall there being anything odd about it, it was just a
lot of work.
Estefanía now has her own massage business with three employees in the Eixample neighborhood of Barcelona. Because of her status, she mans the reception desk but when there are no girls available, she doesn’t hesitate to step in. “In China, when there’s work, you work,” she says.
According to
Antonio Rodríguez, Area Chief for the Catalan police’s organized crime unit,
Estafania got her papers and paid off her trip and is now able to work for
herself, drawing on resources from the community, such as cheap labor and a new
loan – the Chinese community avoids asking banks for credit just as they avoid
seeking police help in emergencies.
So far, no one
has been able to prove that there is a mafia or criminal group behind all this
activity, though clearly they are not part of the Spanish system. “Everyone
goes from being exploited to doing the exploiting,” says Rodríguez. “Many women
have removed themselves from sex work by becoming the ‘mamis’ –the ones who run
the establishments. And for them, that’s what it means to do well. It’s a
recognized model of success.”
The larger
Chinese community does, however, believe that things have changed considerably
in the last few years, and dismisses the suggestion that this wheel of
exploitation is a general trend.
Lam Chuen Ping,
president of the Catalan Union of Chinese Associations, insists that nowadays
the picture is very different and that sweatshops are
becoming a thing of the past. A businessman who has spent more than 40 years in
Barcelona and who acted as spokesman for the workers who lost their jobs in the
Wei Operation in 2009, Ping adds that the raid was “absurd” and had “disastrous
economic consequences for Mataró.”
Now, given the
current state of Spain’s economy,Chinese immigration has fallen off sharply,
says Ping, and those that do come have done so to invest. As for the second generation
of Chinese in Spain, they are not involved in sweatshops. “We have lawyers, doctors, architects” he says.
There’s no doubt
that second-generation Chinese are fully integrated into the workplace. But
according to the Catalan police, sweatshops are still thriving, with staff
drawn mainly from the Chinese provinces of Fujia and Zhejiang.
Everyone feeds off the same system, going from being
exploited to doing the exploiting
Antonio Rodríguez, from the Mossos d’Esquadra says: “The person in charge of recruitment in China doesn’t have to do much; people know that there is a system that works parallel to the legal one. It’s like a travel agency. The recruiter has a source of cheap labor, and depending on the area of demand, he organizes the supply; it could be phone centers, bazars, warehouses, workshops or sex work – where there is always an element of deception.”
After the recruitment comes the journey, which could
cost between €10,000 and €15,000 depending on how it is made and what forged
documents are required.
Though most of Barcelona’s sweatshops were shut down
in 2009, it is true that recent demand has triggered a fresh batch of them. And
it’s not a world where unions are welcome.
“It’s a very closed and secretive community,” says
Carlos Chicano, head of the labor union CCOO’s textile division in Catalonia.
“They come here in precarious circumstances and the result is they are
exploited. But they themselves don’t feel exploited because they are actually
better off here than they were back home.”
But two of the repercussions of these sweatshops for
the rest of society are the normalization of unacceptable working conditions
and the decimation of any local competition.
Every time there has been a police raid on the garment
factories, there is a reshuffle and employees are moved to other industries.
Those who have the looks are sent to work in the massage parlors, explains one
police officer who has been involved in various busts. “If the girl is cute,
they make more money out of her doing that than if she’s making shirts.”
This was
certainly the case for Ana, who came to Spain by plane with a fake passport
four years ago. She has spent the last two years working in a parlor in
Eixample. The premises are neat and, like many others, give onto the street.
Her first two years were spent in a garment factory in Badalona. As she had no
papers, she used a friend’s passport during that time for ID. “The Spanish,”
she says, “can’t tell the difference between us.”
Forging
documents is another field of opportunity. In 2011, during Operation Turandot,
the Catalan police raided a Chinese passport factory in Santa Coloma de
Gramenet in Barcelona. The quality of the passports was so perfect that the FBI
took some of them back to the US to study.
“The quality was excellent” says Rodríguez. “In fact, the
documents looked very authentic”.
1.Spain : The Spanish population residing abroad increased 4.2% in 2023 and reached 2,908,649 as of 01 January 2024.
Mexico, United States and France are the countries that have registered the largest increase in population of Spanish nationality.
Students A discuss why people immigrate to Spain ; Students B discuss why Spanish people immigrate abroad.
2. GREAT AGAIN: What are the main reasons people immigrate? Elaborate
| Reasons | Examples |
Economy | | |
Safety | | |
Education | | |
Enviornment | | |
Equal rights | | |
| Other | | |
3.Vocabulary
Paragraph 1
1. | likened | a. | A time in history, like a special time when something important happened. |
2. | age (noun) | b. | To make a serious promise when starting a new role / position to do your job. |
3. | inauguration | c. | A group of people who manage or lead something, like a country or organization. |
4. | sworn in | d. | A big event to start an important job, like becoming a leader. |
5. | gesture | e. | To grow or do very well. |
6. | flourish | f. | Point out the resemblance of someone or something to. |
7. | administration | g. | moving a part of the body to expresses or emphasizes an idea, feeling, or attitude |
Paragraph 2
8. | mission | h. | a dishonest or unkind act. |
9. | dirty trick | i. | Killing a very important person, usually for political reasons. |
10. | assassination | j. | Making things in large amounts, usually in factories. |
11. | launch (verb) | k. | Made a strong and serious promise. |
12. | vowed | l. | To start something new, like a project or sending a rocket into space. |
13. | backlash | m. | A special job or goal someone works to complete. |
14. | manufacturing | n. | A strong negative reaction by a large number of people, especially to a social or political development. |
Paragraph 3
15. | envy | a. | strong excitement of feeling |
16. | tap into | b. | causing or feeling uneasy, embarrassment or inconvenience. |
17. | enthusiasm | c. | achieving a maximum productivity with minimum wasted effort or expense. |
18. | efficency | d. | to manage to use something in a way that brings good results |
19. | awkward | e. | someone that supports another person either emotionally, financially, politically, etc... |
20. | ally | f. | a type of jealousy because of someone else's possessions, qualities, or luck. |
4. SYNONYM MATCH: Match the following synonyms from the article.
- age
- mogul
- sworn in
- speech
- flourish
- administration
- assassination
- huge
- intent
- cut
- assured
- manufacturing
- amount
- ban
- frankly
- founded
- combat
- chief
- reduce
- prohibit
- created
- goal
- fight
- address
- government
- honestly
- guarenteed
- very big
- volume
- era
- leader
- grow
- mass production
- appointed
- killing
- magnate/tycoon
5.Immigration Countries:
Role A – The U.S.A. | ||||||||||||
Role B – Germany
| ||||||||||||
Role C – China
| ||||||||||||
Role D – Canada
Role E – Switzerland
Role F– France
Role G – The U.A.E.
Role H – The U.K.
Role I -France
Role J - A country not on the list.
6. Fill in the blanks: 1. If you work without your payment being declared or taxed, then you are working under the ? 2. If you entered the country illegaly, or if you entered a concert without paying and without anyone seeing you get in, then you in? 3. If you arrive to to a new country but you are always missing your home country, then you are . 4. If you dislike the new country , but after some time you start to like it, then the new country is . 5. Another word for your home country is your OR country. 6. The new country that you immigrated to is your country. 7.If the highly educated people of your country decided to immigrate, then your country suffers from . 8. If a huge amount of Spanish citizens decide to immigrate to the U.K., then the United Kingdon is with Spanish immigrants. 9.If you try travel outside of Spain one month yes and one month no, then you travel outside of Spain . 10. If you consider yourself Spanish but your parents or grandparents are from Portugal, then you have Portugese . 11. If you immigrate to a county like Andorra that does not have access to the sea, then you immigrated to a country. 12. If you immigrated to a country whose econmy is growing quickly and has potential to become a giant, then it is an country. |
7.Discussion - The Golden Age of America
- What do you know about President Donald Trump?
- How will President Trump get America to enter a golden age?
- What do you know about the current problems in the USA?
- What do you think of the leader of your country?
- How will President Trump change the world?
- What are President Trump's strengths?
- What promises to make America great again do you know of?
- What advice would you give to President Trump?
- What do you think about President Donald Trump?
- How important is the USA?
- Do you think Donald Trump will get an American to Mars?
- Do you think President Trump will end wars?
- What three adjectives best describe President Trump?
- What will the USA be like in four years' time?
- What questions would you like to ask President Trump?
Schizophrenia: Vincent Van Gogh, Brian Wilson
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