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way they are for us today; robbed of their real  pride, and taught to identify with that which they will never be.

Injustices are done to us daily in the fashion magazines, the entertainment and book industries, and even at the local grocery stores where the average Indian paycheck is depleted before the family is nourished, while the traders, the movie makers and the fashion forgers live with surplus to spare...yet they forget to share.

Our daughters have a very narrow range of choices open to them. An Indian girl like any other girl should have a sensible right to a dream come true...in any field of endeavor open to women today, including the arts, the "glamour fields" of modeling and show business, and the professions of medicine, law, and business.

The non-Indian people are worried about their daughters, not ours and we've got to face that. At present I see no other help in sight other than us.

Therefore, let us join together

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