Dedicated to an Indian goddess as a child, Huvakka Bhimappa's years of sexual servitude began when her uncle took her virginity, raping her in exchange for a saree and some jewellery.
Bhimappa was not yet 10 years old when she became a "devadasi" -- girls coerced by their parents into an elaborate wedding ritual with a Hindu deity, many of whom are then forced into illegal prostitution.
Devadasis are expected to live a life of religious devotion, forbidden from marrying other mortals, and forced at puberty to sacrifice their virginity to an older man, in return for money or gifts.
"In my case, it was my mother's brother," Bhimappa, now in her late 40s, told AFP.
What followed was years of sexual slavery, earning money for her family through encounters with other men in the name of serving the goddess.
Bhimappa eventually escaped her servitude but with no education, she earns around a dollar a day toiling in fields.
She had loved a man once, but it would have been unthinkable for her to ask him to marry.
"If I was not a devadasi, I would have had a family and children and some money. I would have lived well," she said.
Devadasis have been an integral part of southern Indian culture for centuries and once enjoyed a respectable place in society.
Many were highly educated, trained in classical dance and music, lived comfortable lives and chose their own sexual partners.
"This notion of more or less religiously sanctioned sexual slavery was not part of the original system of patronage," historian Gayathri Iyer told AFP.
Iyer said that in the 19th century, during the British colonial era, the divine pact between devadasi and goddess evolved into an institution of sexual exploitation.
The practice was outlawed in Bhimappa's home state of Karnataka back in 1982, and India's top court has described the devotion of young girls to temples as an "evil".
Campaigners, however, say that young girls are still secretly inducted into devadasi orders.
Four decades after the state ban, there are still more than 70,000 devadasis in Karnataka, India's human rights commission wrote last year.
- 'I was alone' -
Girls are commonly seen as burdensome and costly in India due to the tradition of wedding dowries.
Many households around the small southern town of Saundatti -- home to a revered Yellamma temple -- believe that having a family member in the order can lift their fortunes or cure the illness of a loved one.
It was at this temple that Sitavva D. Jodatti was enjoined to marry the goddess when she was eight years old.
Her sisters had all married other men, and her parents decided to dedicate her to Yellamma in order to provide for them.
"When other people get married, there is a bride and a groom. When I realised I was alone, I started crying," Jodatti, 49, told AFP.
Her father eventually fell ill, and she was pulled out of school to engage in sex work and help pay for his treatment.
"By the age of 17, I had two kids," she said.
She was forced into the order after the death of her mother and was 13 when a 30-year-old man took her virginity. She fell pregnant soon after.
"A normal delivery was difficult. The doctor yelled at my family, saying that I was too young to give birth," the 45-year-old told AFP.
"I had no understanding."
- 'Many women have died' -
Years of unsafe sex exposed many devadasis to sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.
"I know of women who are infected and now it has passed on to their children," an activist who works with devadasis, who asked not to be named, told AFP.
Parents are occasionally prosecuted for allowing their daughters to be inducted as devadasis, and women who leave the order are given meagre government pensions of 1,500 rupees ($18) per month.
Nitesh Patil, a civil servant who administers Saundatti, told AFP that there had been no "recent instances" of women being dedicated to temples.
India's rights commission last year ordered Karnataka and several other Indian states to outline what they were doing to prevent the practice, after a media investigation found that devadasi inductions were still widespread.
The stigma around their pasts means women who leave their devadasi order often endure lives as outcasts or objects of ridicule, and few ever marry.
Many find themselves destitute or struggling to survive on poorly paid manual labour and farming work.
Jodatti now heads a civil society group which helped extricate the women AFP spoke to from their lives of servitude and provides support to former devadasis.
"We watch the news and sometimes when we see famous people... we understand their situation is much like ours. They have suffered the same. But they continue to live freely," she said.
"We have gone through the same experience, but we don't get the respect they get.
"Devadasi women are still looked down upon."
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© Agence France-Presse
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