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Soediro came back a few days later with some Barbie dolls. When she returned a third time, the girls showed her a stack of miniature dresses, sarongs and shirts. One had been fitted, beautifully, on the Barbie. "It was amazing!" said Soediro, who has helped the girls sell the dresses in shops and occasionally at exhibitions for $2 to $4 a piece
-- bringing in up to $70 a month, enough to help feed the family. Neighborhood kids pay just 5 cents, but the interaction after years of isolation is priceless. "They just want to be our friends," Putu says with a smile, as girls run in and out of the living room, others lingering curiously in the doorway. "And that's what we want, too." "I feel happy now," she says, watching her mother scoop Alit in her arms and carry her to the toilet. "I'm more excited now to live." As word spread, even Western tourists have been known to make the four-hour trip from the capital, Denpasar. "They are inspiring," said Stephanie Crowe, taking a seat on the floor beside the girls and picking up tiny dresses, admiring their fine handiwork. They don't have much, the Australian said, but they are surrounded, now, by friends and family. "We Westerners," she said, "are all about looking out for ourselves and saving money so we can buy more things. We don't always realize the important thing in a life is our relationships, people, and what you can do to make someone else happy." Putu, whose health is much better than her sister's, designs all the clothes and does most of the sewing. Alit helps when she feels strong enough, but this week the little girl was rushed to the hospital, where she is suffering from respiratory problems and a leaky heart valve. Of the dozen Barbies and one Ken the girls have collected over the last two years, some of them knock-offs, all of them gifts, Alit has her favorite: a blonde-haired girl whom she has yet to rename. She gently washes and conditions the doll's hair every day and then applies perfume and powder. Though the family lives with next to nothing -- there are no beds, cabinets, or even chairs
-- the sisters have created a miniature palace out of boxes for their Barbies. They have used cardboard to make furniture. Tiny blankets stitched by hand are spread across the beds. And the walls have been decorated with brightly colored gift wrap. "To me, Barbie is a princess," Putu says, shrugging off criticism that the Mattel dolls promote an unrealistic ideal about the feminine body. "And for her," she says, smiling over at Alit, "they are beautiful fairies."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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