“Good morning, girls!” Igor Fuchs exclaimed as he greeted his students
at the start of English class in this southeastern Brazilian city.
But this is no ordinary crowd and the curriculum, for the most part, is focused on sex props.
Fuchs
teaches English to prostitutes so they can give a warmer welcome to
tens of thousands of football fans headed here for June’s Confederations
Cup, as well as next year’s World Cup.
The city’s 80,000 sex workers
are counting on brisk business as authorities predict 40,000 tourists
will be in town next month for a total of three matches June 15-30. A
whopping 140,000 are expected to follow for the 2014 World Cup.
With
that in mind, the Association of Prostitutes has been offering free
English classes to its members at a local mall since March.
“We
teach basic expressions but also have demonstrations with erotic
paraphernalia so they can learn the names, how to use them and propose
them,” said Fuchs, a volunteer who also teaches Spanish and French.
The
goal, says association president Cida Vieira, is to provide prostitutes
with communication skills to keep clients who don’t speak Portuguese
happy — both during the upcoming sports extravaganzas and beyond.
“We
deal with ‘gringos’ (foreign men) daily on the streets and in discos,”
Vieira said. “We want to train the girls so they can better serve them.”
So far, 300 prostitutes have signed up.
Attendance
is irregular and older women like 55-year-old Maria Aparecida, who has
been in the business for almost three decades, tend to come to class
more often than others.
“I have always wanted to speak English,” she told AFP. “I raised my kids by doing this job.”
Demand is definitely there — on both sides of the booming sex trade.
“Tourists
are going to flock here and those who come from abroad like to spend,”
said 26-year-old Vitoria, clad in a pink mini dress as she waited for
work at one of many sex motels on busy Guaicurus Street.
On average, she sees 20 customers a day in her tiny room, with 15-minute sessions costing between $10 and $25.
Some of the women view learning English as a way of securing their livelihood down the road.
“It’s
important to speak English because one day I will quit prostitution to
find another job and another language will help,” said Vitoria.
But not all are sold on the need to speak English — or any other foreign language for that matter.
“I
have never had American or French clients,” said Yasmin, a
transvestite, as he showed off some deft samba moves on Avenida Afonso
Pena before rushing to negotiate with a client in a waiting car.
“I know basic words such as ‘good morning’ and ‘condom’,” said 31-year-old Juliana across the street.
“For the rest, I get by with gestures. All men are the same. They come for the same thing. No need for words.”
Belo
Horizonte is not the only Brazilian city taking steps to beef up its
sex industry offerings ahead of the World Cup, which will be followed by
the 2016 Summer Olympics.
A shortage of hotel rooms has led
authorities in Rio de Janeiro to invest millions of dollars to convert
raunchy motels to accommodate the legions of tourists expected for the
events.

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