Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Human Trafficking...coming closer to home - Part 2


January 11 was Human Trafficking Awareness Day.   Just about an hour after I received a text informing me of this, I got an email from Pastor Tom* (introduced in my January 15 blog) telling this incredible story.  This first part was written by a friend from the US who is currently ministering with Pastor Tom.

"The Lord spoke to Pastor Tom and told him to go to a certain city on the _____border with _____which was a 5 and a half hour drive away. So he and his beloved wife left Saturday morning in obedience to the Lord.  As they arrived they found many, many people, but very few pastors or believers. Slums and much need and what was brought to their attention was the human trafficking that is there and the young girls that are there and  with child and they have no more value. One young girl gave birth to her baby and wanted to give it away but as she nursed it for three days the love of a mother took hold of her and with tears crying out where would she be able to go. A local pastor took her in, a pastor that has next to nothing. Later Pastor Tom and Susan were taken to a small hut with I think Pastor Tom said there were six other women in the same situation. Pastor Tom also found out from the pastors that this city is the hub of this in this part of Asia... "

Here is the latest from Pastor Tom received yesterday that he wants me to share:
                "The trafficking of women and children is reaching epidemic proportions around the world and especially in South Asia. _____ and ______ border  hides a sinister market of sexual slavery. Deceived and hopeless, young women are huddled in dirty shacks or chained behind bars while they await being forced to do things they shouldn’t even know about. Many of those held captive, sold  are between the ages of 1216. They don’t think of the future because they don’t think they are worth it, their only value is what the customer is willing to pay. They don’t know they were created in God’s image, they don’t know you can’t put a value on life, they don’t know they are priceless.
            God is passionate about the broken, and because we too have been broken, we are humbled to follow Him to the darkest corners of the world in pursuit of those whom He loves. We (desire to) provide a residential program to young mothers and their children who have been living in or rescued from sexually exploitative situations. We seek to love them in a way that provides protection, restoration and empowerment through love in action. They are the Kingdom, they are the children of God. They are very precious."

I am overwhelmed - how are we to respond?



*Names changed and specific locations omitted for "Pastor Tom's" security
               

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Human Trafficking...coming closer to home - Part 1


                Human trafficking came closer to home for some friends of mine this week. I have their permission to share that story with you.  But I think I need to tell my story first, so you understand the significance of my friends' experience and will be able to better connect to it.
                  In the spring of 2010 I was urged by one of my daughters to read "NOT for Sale: The Return of the Global Slave Trade--and How We Can Fight It" by David Batstone.  The urging came with the warning: "Mom, it will change your life."  And it did.
                I learned that "27 million slaves exist in our world today. Girls and boys, women and men of all ages are forced to toil in the rug loom sheds of Nepal, sell their bodies in the brothels of Rome, break rocks in the quarries of Pakistan, and fight wars in the jungles of Africa."  The stories were heartbreaking and haunting.  At the same time , I learned about men, women and young people involved in rescue and aftercare : ordinary people using their gifts and passion where God had placed them.
                At the time I read "NOT for Sale", I was at a change point in my life and was asking God:  "What next?"  Reading "NOT for Sale" prompted me to begin to read more about human trafficking and slavery.  I researched on the internet what our government was doing about this travesty; I learned about the many organizations who are involved in raising awareness, rescue and restoration, and bringing perpetrators to justice.  And I began asking God, "Is this something you want me to get involved in?  Or is this just my emotions?"
                It was a few weeks later that I met a pastor and his wife from SE Asia.  Pastor "Tom" and "Susan"*  had opened an orphanage for girls a few years earlier as the result of a devastating natural disaster that had come through their country.  As Pastor Tom told about the orphanage and showed a few pictures, my heart was instantly captured. 
                A few days after we met, I asked Pastor Tom about human trafficking in his country.  "Oh, yes, it is very bad," he replied.  Then his eyes lit up as he continued, "But, for the girls at the orphanage, we got there (to the villages devastated by the natural disaster) before the traffickers!" -- and I knew I had my mission!
                The result has been "Beads to Bless!", handmade jewelry and home decor, with 100% of the profits going to the orphanage.  A secondary mission of B2B is to use, as much as possible, only fair trade beads.
                Well, this has gotten longer than a blog should be - so in a few days I will post  a more recent part of this saga, and how human trafficking is coming "closer to home."

*Names changed for personal security reasons

Thursday, January 5, 2012

True Confession


OK - I'll admit it:  I have 28 slaves working for me.

That's what I found out when I completed my "Slavery Footprint" -- an online survey that tallies the food and goods you consume everyday, and tells how many slaves it took to provide those things for you.   

The survey is very engaging to take; and  you will learn alot as you go along too.  So, take about 10 minutes, and go to www.slaveryfootprint.org. 
After you've taken the survey, post a comment here and let me know something new that you learned.

You may even have a "confession" to make, too.