[Beer?]
[Thanks.]
[Beer?]
[Where's there an after party?]
[Garage?]
[No, no, an after party. We're gonna go to a club that stays open later.]
[Yeah, Garage is an after party.]
Do you want beer?
[My friend, you don't want some?]
[No, I don't want some because I can't, man.]
[I'm poor. I don't even have a euro.]
[How many hours are you going to work tonight selling beer?]
Until five o'clock I think, until five o'clock.
Then I'll go home, I'll eat,
I'll sleep and tomorrow at twelve o'clock I'll get up.
After eating at two o'clock I'll go to Retiro Park.
I'll be there working until nine or nine thirty.
Then I'll go home again, rest for three hours,
and at twelve o'clock at night I'll be here again, tomorrow also.
Here I need to send money home to my family,
so I sell beer.
I look for work but can't get any.
When you work, not a chance you sell beer.
[Because on Friday and Saturday night all discos are open, you know,]
[so we're working on Friday and Saturday nights.]
So that's our job for earning money, you know.
From 2003 until 2009,
more than seven years
I was a member of Union Parishad in Bangladesh
the same as the City Corporation or Madrid City Council.
I won by vote. Ten thousand people selected me.
So after change in government
in our country all the problems are political, so after change in government,
there were killings and there were many problems,
so I had to come to Europe.
I changed the decision and came to Madrid.
When I'm came here I sold everything
and I paid EUR12,000, one point two million Bangladeshi Taka,
to the Bangladesh government for a visa to come here.
It's not very easy from Bangladesh to come here, you know, very difficult history in my life.
From Bangladesh, first I went to Kuwait,
from Kuwait I came to Germany,
from Germany, I came to Madrid.
I am illegal here.
If you're illegal you cannot fly to Bangladesh, you can go but cannot come back again.
So I'm waiting to get residence.
If I can get residence in Spain,
I can fly to see my family and can come back again.
[What are their names, your children?]
Motahar Hossain, Nahid Ahmed and Jahid Ahmed.
Number one Motahar, Nahid and Jahid.
[And your wife?]
Yes, my wife, they're living together.
She's named Nasim Akhtar.
[Do you talk to them often?]
Everyday I talk on the telephone, sometimes on Facebook.
Everyday I talk to them.
And my Mother is also living with them. Everyday I talk with my Mother
or a family member. Everyday.
[I don't like selling beer because I have no job, but I need the money for sending.]
[It's illegal, so police take all the beer and sometimes fine me EUR150.]
[Many times the police have fined me,]
[I think maybe more than EUR3,000.]
Many times they have fined me but I never pay because I don't have the money to pay.
So when I get residence, I want a lawyer
for how to discuss this, you know.
Many times police take and fine, take and fine,
so it's very difficult this job.
[How many years have you been selling beer?]
Almost five years, almost five years.
[Do you drink alcohol?]
Oh no. I'm selling only, only selling.
He who knows how to drink,
knows how to be.
I love everybody. I respect everybody.
-They fuck me, -[They fuck you?] -No.
-I am happy. -[Josu, tell it, tell it to the camera.] -I am happy.
People are really better than they look.
-[Yes, right. Exactly.] -[But...]
And the saying is: 'If you have a problem,
and this problem has a solution...
then there's no problem.
And if it doesn't have a solution, what's the problem?'
And that's it, there's no more.
The public, we're numbers and that's it.
-[There's always a 'but', man. Oh look...]
[Is that it? Just like that?]
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