Bacha bazi refers to a pederastic practice in Afghanistan and in historical Turkestan, in which men exploit and enslave adolescent boys sometimes for sexual abuse, and/or coerce them to cross-dress in attire traditionally only worn by women and girls. The man exploiting the young boy is called a bacha baz (literally "boy player"). Typically, the bacha baz forces the bacha (young boy) to dress in women's clothing and dance for entertainment.
Often, the boys come from an impoverished and vulnerable situation such as street children, mainly without relatives or abducted from their families. In some cases, families facing extreme poverty or starvation may feel compelled to sell their young sons to a bacha baz or allow them to be "adopted" in exchange for food or money.
The bachas are obliged to serve their patrons and their wishes, through cross-dressing and sexual entertainment. However, the patrons' options are not limited, as they often had recruited bachas for daily tasks in war, and for becoming bodyguards. Facing social stigma and sexual abuse, the young boys, who often despise their captors, struggle with psychological effects from the abuse and suffer from emotional trauma for life, including turning to drugs and alcohol.
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