Showing posts with label trafficking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trafficking. Show all posts

28 March, 2014

International Women’s Day

On March 8th 140 men and women gathered together to celebrate International Women’s Day. They
heard the stories of four incredible, local women, working to end personal violence. Through stories of loss and triumph from eastern Africa to here in Colorado Springs, we learned more about resiliency and how it really does take a community to end violence against women.
 
Violence against women takes on many forms and can be masked in ways we cannot imagine. From the emotional abuse to honour killings and rape as a weapon of war, violence against any woman is violence against all humanity.
 
Some interesting notes to come out of the day:
  • Education for girls decreases early marriage, obstetric fistulas, and human trafficking. It leads to smaller families, increased family income, and decreases in poverty.
  • The majority of those trafficked are men for labor exploitation.
  • There is a strong relationship between the number of female legislators in a state’s congress and the funding available for victims of trafficking. However, the most effective examples are the ones in which female legislators pull in their male counterparts and get their buy in.
We cannot let personal violence become a niched women’s issue. Far too many see these issues as things that only affect women. We have allowed the discussion and the response to become too female driven. That is to say, we need to remember that violence affects men and women, that both men and women are perpetrators and that if we want to end it, we need to create a complete community response.
 
As we talk about what we know with others, let us remember and advocate that personal violence is a human rights issue. It does not just affect one group of people, it affects all of us.
 
“You are the hope God created for others” ~ Doris Rivera-Black

24 February, 2014

Day at the Capitol


Last Thursday, the Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado hosted its second Advocacy Day at the Colorado Capitol.

Speakers included:
  • Chair, Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado, Betty Edwards 
  • Attorney General, John Suthers
  • Denver Chief of Police, Robert White
  • FBI Denver Special Agent in Charge, Thomas Ravenelle
  • Homeland Security Special Agent in Charge, Kumar Kibble
  • Denver PD Sergeant and ILTF member, Daniel Steele
  • Legislative Host Committee members 
  • Brad Riley, iEmpathize 
  • Survivor, Aubrey Lloyd


Hear  Aubrey’s story here.










Stay in-touch with about the Task Force, check out their Facebook or website.

14 February, 2013

One Billion Rising


Advocacy Day: Today there are one billion rising to end violence against women!

Human trafficking is a form of violence.

While many today will be rising to fight domestic violence and sexual assault, we want to include human trafficking in the dance as well.

It is the violation of women and children's freedom of choice. It is rape for money. It is exploitation.

Let's stand & DANCE and say enough is enough for those who are being raped and sold and used for the benefit and pleasure of another.



31 January, 2013

What Sarah Can Show Us


Did you know that human trafficking happened in the Bible? 

Actually, it happened a lot more than you might think...

Take, for example, Sarah. Sarah was the wife of Abraham. Abraham and Sarah left everything behind to travel to Canaan. The story of God’s relationship with them is extraordinary, but not without its humanness and failure.

Abraham prostitutes his wife not once but twice. Both times out of fear. 

The first time was when they entered Egypt. Sarah was apparently very beautiful (the Bible tells us so in Genesis 12:11). Abraham feared that he would be killed by someone who wanted his very lovely wife, and so tells Sarah, “Say you are my sister, so that I will be treated well for your sake and my life will be spared because of you. (Gen. 12:13).” He did not say, ‘say you are my sister so we do not become separated’ or ‘say you are my sister so that we may both live.’ Instead he asks Sarah to lie so he may be treated well and have his life spared. 

After they enter Egypt, Abraham hands his wife over to Pharaoh. Abraham was indeed treated well and his wife was taken into Pharaoh’s palace.

The second time, in Genesis 20, was when Abraham and Sarah moved to Gerar. The king of Gerar found Sarah very lovely and once again Abraham handed his wife off to another man to save himself. 

We don’t know what happened to Sarah in Pharaoh’s palace. The Bible does not say how long she was there. In Gerar, we know nothing transpired between her and the king and that Sarah was returned to Abraham the next day after God spoke to the king in a dream.

Twice Sarah was handed over to another man by her husband. Fear can be as much of a coercive measure as force. Abraham chose to rely on his wife’s beauty to save (and further) himself instead of trusting God’s hand in His life. 

But the story does not end there. In a sad twist of irony, Sarah herself became a trafficker in the life of her servant, Hagar. 

Sarah herself choses to force Hagar to lie with her husband in order to produce a child. This may have been “culturally acceptable” during that period, but culture often departs from what God says is good and right. The outcome of Sarah’s trafficking of Hagar produced pain and suffering for literally everyone concerned (Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, and both of their children).   

The Bible rarely minces words about sin and human failure. With the story of Sarah and Abraham, we can cover up the parts of their story that make us uncomfortable, or we can use it as a teachable moment in our own quests to become people after God’s own heart, bringing His justice and righteousness to our fallen world.

Notice that God chose Abraham to be the father of a great nation. Abraham, a man who handed over his wife to other men, agreed to pressure to produce a child from another woman, and banished his firstborn to keep peace among his warring women. And God chose Sarah to be the mother of that nation. Sarah, a woman who was trafficked and who trafficked another person to bypass His plan. In spite of their deep failures, faithlessness and sin, God redeemed Abraham and Sarah. He is not daunted nor deterred by the mistakes people make.

God has an amazing way of bringing glory through deep pain, rejection and pride. Sarah’s story is tragic and yet inspiring. The betrayal she experienced by her husband, her pain at being barren, the toll of living a nomadic life, and her use of Hagar as a poor substitute for the failure of her faith, create a story of a complete person who we can relate to - someone who is imperfect and yet used by God for big and mighty things. When we look at Sarah in the entirety of who she is, we see the power of God’s grace and mercy. We see what can become of a life that is marred by such pain. We see how, in the end, the redemption of God works through pain to produce faith, courage, and strength. 

HTTF-SC Advocacy Day Info


HTTF-SC Human Trafficking Awareness Advocacy Day
-ONE VOICE for ONE CAUSE to end modern slavery in Colorado-
At the Colorado State Capitol, February 21, 2013
AGENDA
Host:                         Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado, Betty Edwards, Chair, ht-colorado.org

Legislative Host Committee:
                         Sen. John Kefalas (D), Sen. Steve King (R), 
                         Rep. Beth McCann (D), Rep. Amy Stephens (R)

7:30am to 8:30am 
Legislative Breakfast (breakfast provided for legislators only), Old Supreme Court Chambers (citizens may fill in empty seats), Human Trafficking in Colorado with A.J. Alejano-Steele, Ph.D., Chair, Laboratory to Combat Human Trafficking (LCHT)

8:30am to 9:00am
Citizens make appointments or stop by to visit with Legislators in their offices.  For a list of Legislator’s contact info and office suite numbers go to http://www.leg.state.co.us.

9:00am to 10:30am
Human Trafficking Resolution presented in the House and Senate by the Advocacy Day Legislative Host Committee members: Sen. John Kefalas and Sen. Steve King, Rep. Beth McCann and Rep. Amy Stephens, followed by comments from fellow House and Senate members.  Citizens are welcome in the galley above the House and Senate Chambers.

10:30am to 11:30am
House and Senate are in Committee

11:45am to 12:30pm
Legislative Lunch (lunch provided for legislators only), Old Supreme Court Chambers (citizens may fill in empty seats) The Road to the End: Prevention, Protection, Prosecution, Participation Panel of experts, moderated by Raj Chohan, of Baker and Hostetler and former Denver CBS affiliate reporter.

12:30pm to 1:15pm
West Steps Rally (press invited)
Brief music selection from Marta Burton's production "Unbounded: Breaking the Chains of Modern Slavery" followed by brief comments from a variety anti-trafficking experts, including Attorney General John Suthers and Denver Chief of Police Robert White, James Yacone, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Denver Division, Beth Klein of Klein and Frank, Brad Riley of iEmphathize, and Aubrey Terry, Clinical Director of Sarah's House, along with survivor testimony. Awaiting confirmation of additional speakers

1:30pm
Official event program ends. iEmpathize display in Capitol, north of Rotunda, will continue to be available for viewing until Capitol doors close to citizens at 3:00pm.
Ongoing throughout the Day: iEmpathize Display portraying human trafficking in Colorado.


HOW TO PARTICIPATE IN
HTTF-SC HUMAN TRAFFICKING AWARENESS ADVOCACY DAY!
February 21, 2013 at the Colorado State Capitol

On Advocacy Day
Where do I park, what door do I go in, and how will I know where to go when I enter the building?
Please find a Capitol map attached indicating best places to park, directions to the Capitol from various points and which entrance to use as you arrive at the Capitol.  Our hospitality team will greet you after you come through security and provide you with all the information you need to make your way around the Capitol and to enjoy the scheduled events.  You will also receive a packet to give your legislators.

What should I do on Advocacy Day while I am at the Capitol?
You may participate in as many activities as your schedule allows.  Review the Agenda to see what is planned.  Please try and accomplish the following while you are at the Capitol on Advocacy Day:
1.     Visit with your legislators for five minutes. (See below for more information.)
2.     Attend the West Steps Rally on the west steps of the Capitol.  (See agenda for details.)
3.     See the iEmpathize display portraying human trafficking in Colorado just north of the Rotunda.

How long should I plan to stay for Advocacy Day?
You can stay for as little time or as much time as you are able!  If you can be there for the whole day, you may arrive as early as 7:30am or 8:00am and stay until at least 1:30pm.   

What if I only have two hours to participate in the Day?
If you have two hours, plan to arrive at 11:30am and stay until 1:30pm:
1.     At 11:30, go see the iEmpathize display portraying Human Trafficking in Colorado, located just north of the Capitol Rotunda. 
2.     Then, around 12:00 Noon pop into the Legislative Luncheon Program in the Old Supreme Court Chambers and hear a panel of experts share “The Road to the End: Prevention, Protection, Prosecution, Participation" with a panel of experts. (Citizens are welcome to fill in empty seats). 
3.     Finally, at 12:30, head over to the big event of the day: the West Steps Rally, where there will be music and brief speeches from key public officials and agencies as well as non-profit leaders, all passionate to end trafficking.

What if I just have one hour to participate in the Day?
If you have one hour, be at the West Steps by 12:30pm for the powerful Human Trafficking Awareness Rally and media event.  And make sure you get a chance to go inside and see the iEmpathize display at the north end of the building before you leave.

What’s involved in meeting with my legislators?
First, it is important to know that legislators are VERY interested in what concerns their constituents.  This gives you an advantage as you approach them to share your passion to see the end of modern slavery in Colorado.  Here is what you do:
1.     Make an appointment with your legislators before Advocacy Day. For your legislator’s contact information and office suite number go to http://www.leg.state.co.us .
2.     If you are unable to secure an appointment, know where their office is and try to catch them either in their office (see agenda for possible time frames), or in the hall as they go from the House or Senate Chambers to committee, etc.
3.     Plan to meet with your legislator for five minutes, respectfully share your passion to see modern slavery end in Colorado, and ask them to support improved legislation to fight this heinous crime.
4.     Give them the Human Trafficking Awareness Advocacy information packet that you received from our Hospitality Team.

Are food and beverages available in or around the Capitol?
Yes, there is a cafeteria open to the public on the bottom level of the Capitol.  There is also a Panera Grant Street, just a block south of the Capitol and 14th Street.

Before Advocacy Day
Schedule a time to meet with your legislators!
You can look up their contact information and office location within the Capitol online at http://www.leg.state.co.us and click on contact information at the left.  Call their office or send an email and attempt to secure an appointment, or to find out their open office hours for February 21.  However, don’t be daunted if you are unable to secure an appointment!  See the agenda for suggested ways and times to catch up with your legislators on the Day, or just stop by their office.  Your voice counts!

Promote and Invite!
Request an electronic jpeg version of the Advocacy Day Flyer from tamrafarah@gmail.com so that you can:
1.     Post it to your facebook page and invite your friends
2.     Email it to your contacts.
3.     Print it out (you can copy it in black and white if you prefer) and circulate to as many people as possible: at your work, your school, your place of business, your church or house of worship, clubs and organizations in which you take part, etc.

Visit the Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado facebook page - like the page and click on upcoming events.  Find the Advocacy Day event.  In the upper right hand corner you have an option to invite your facebook friends to join the event, too.

29 January, 2013

Motivations for Getting Involved


We have spent a lot of time this month talking about how trafficking can be seen in other things. Today we are going to check our motivations and call out one of the most damaging, unhealthy aspects within the trafficking movement. 

When we use words like ‘rescue’ ‘restore’ ‘save’ etc. we create and perpetuate an unhealthy relationship of savior and victim. It invokes images of someone who is powerless and needs someone else to crash down the wall and rescue them. It implies those involved do not have the willpower or ability to leave on their own. It sets up this exploitative idea that we can somehow save someone else. It conjures up connections with the bad fairy tale messages where the damsel in distress is helpless without her savior prince. If we start from this viewpoint everything else is we do is skewed to this perception. We end up doing more harm than good when we get our role in other people’s lives this off-kilter. 

If there is one thing the trafficking movement does not need it is saviors. 

When we come alongside those who have been abused, exploited, hurt, taken advantage of, etc. and ask permission to enter into their stories, we become more of a helpmeet (a helpful partner), who is there for the good and bad as the person needs us to be. It shifts control back to the person affected and puts us in a humble, servant position. 

When we look at the process of healing for someone affected by violence, we have to be very in-tune with our motivations and preconceptions. We are not here to save anyone. There is one person who can do that fully - and we are not Him. 

We can be there to listen, to care, to love, to model healthy relationships. Organizations can be there to provide for the tangible needs and create a safe space. But the process of processing and dealing with what happened must be led by the person who went through it. 

The simple reality is that the process of deciding to leave an abusive situation, whether its trafficking, a violent relationship, etc. has to be made by the person involved. We cannot chose when the time is right. That decision has to come from the person living it. The choice of how to heal (and when) comes from the person too. The choice of whether to face what was done to them, the betrayal of trust, the prolonged abuse, why they stayed, etc. is a decision only the person affected can make.

What we can do is be a sounding board, a listening ear, and occasionally a guide. People coming out of trafficking have a long, hard road ahead of them. They need helpmeets to help educate them on what is normal in a relationship, in every day interactions, in dealings with the opposite sex. They need to process and own owning their bodies again. For some they don’t realize what happened to them was wrong. Coming in with humility and love and releasing control of the healing process is the best thing any of us can do.

When we try and put people on our agenda, with our goals for “success” as the basis for what we do, then we are playing God and can leave those affected more damaged in the process. They will try to meet our agenda and do not adequately process what they have been through.

There is a lovely poem by Oscar Romero that is the basis for a lot of what we do at LTHF. It is how we approach every program we start. It is a key message with our volunteers and staff. It is only once we come to realize and accept our proper place in others lives that we can fully engage and love people as we should. 

Here is a portion of that poem:
That is what we are about: We plant seeds that one day will grow. We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise. We lay foundations that will need further development. We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities. 
We cannot do everything and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that. This enables us to do something, and to do it very well. It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, an opportunity for God’s grace to enter and do the rest. 
We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker. We are workers, not master builders, ministers, not messiahs. 
We are prophets of a future not our own.

It is a hard and difficult thing to look at motivations. We have to get beyond the simple desire ‘to do good’ and ‘help others’ to the real reason WHY we are helping. A lot of times we long to save others due to unresolved hurts in our own life. We want to control others and protect them and rescue them - even when these are not attitudes we want someone displaying in our life, with our pain. Why do we assume an attitude towards someone affected by violence that we do not want placed on ourselves? 

It starts with language. Take time and actually reflect on how organizations and individuals talk about who they serve. Are they saviors? Or are they messengers? Are they playing God or do they realize their proper role in other people’s lives? Do they rescue and save or do they come alongside and let the person affected take the lead? How do they treat their clients? Do they put them on parade to make money or do they respect their humanity and dignity and hold their lives and stories as something remarkable and precious? 

Then look at your response. Is volunteering with an organization about you or them? What are the emotions you get from the work you do? Why are you doing it? 

Finally, and maybe this is really step 1: look back at your own life. For so many of us, we can provide the most out of our own scars and pain and where we have been. But that will only happen if we stop, surrender and process our own experiences. We cannot give what we do not have. So how can we become a helpmeet to someone else, walking alongside them through the process of healthy healing, eventually able to use their experience to become a helpmeet for others, when we have not taken the time to look our own past in the eye and say, “Enough!”? 

It is a vital and continuing conversation. But as people who love and work alongside those affected by violence it is one we must have in an open, real and honest manner.  

15 January, 2013

Porn & Trafficking


One of the greatest myths around human trafficking and pornography is that they are two separate and distinct issues. This is purely and simply untrue. Without porn there would be no sex trafficking. 

Read that again:  

If there was no porn, there would be no sex trafficking. 

According to ABC News, the porn industry has become a $10 BILLION dollar machine. “(B)igger than the NFL, the NBA and Major League Baseball combined.” (ABCNews) To think all of that money is being made without the exploitation of those involved is to deny what is right in front of our faces. 

We often refer to porn as the gateway to trafficking, both for the person being exploited and the purchaser. What that means is that before someone is bought on the street (or through Craig’s List or Backpage, sold by a pimp, etc.) the person purchasing them (the purchaser, buyer, exploiter, etc.) has gotten used to the idea as people as commodities thanks to the images (print and video) they have witnessed.

Let’s break the myth that all people who pose for Playboy or are in porn movies are there voluntarily. And let’s stop making those girls the bad guy. It is the simple logic of human exploitation all around: if there were no purchasers, there would be no trafficking. So let’s turn the finger around at those who buy porn and those who make it and stop placing the blame on those trapped in it. 

Girls Next Door is the worse perpetuator of this myth because it makes people think that if you want to be in Playboy you get to live in a mini mansion, and, if you are lucky, end up in Hugh’s harem (ew!) and live the highlife. What it fails to show is the severe level of exploitation and abuse that happens to many of the girls who attempt to use magazines like Playboy to further their career. The modeling ploy is one of the biggest scams pimps run to get girls. They play on a girl’s desire to make it as a model to exploit them.

People often try to pacify this reality by saying that she willingly posed, or that is it just a photograph. But, it’s not. In this day and age a photograph lives forever. And HOW that photo got taken and HOW it is being used matters. She might have consented to having a picture taken, but she did not consent to having it possibly photoshopped, sold to magazines and used around the world for buyers to get off on. 

In the situation of film porn the issue become even more complicated. It is possible that women can be filmed and not know, have that video sold and then they become the victim of trafficking. And women are trafficked specifically to be used in porn. So, in some ways, porn can be seen as rape that millions of people buy and use for pleasure. Pretty vile, right? 

But what about the buyers? The people who are the only reason porn exists and make it a $10 billion industry.  

The thing about porn and those who view it, is that it can become an addiction. And as with any other addiction you need more of the product to get the same effect. So this spirals into more frequent viewing and then deeper and darker story lines and when that fails then it becomes going to strip clubs and then buying another human being. 

When I was in Cambodia, porn sold for .25 cents. The rate of child abuse was extremely high because fathers wanted to test out what they had seen in the videos and their child was the closet girl around. It’s unimaginable. But with the addiction of porn and the steady stream of viewing, eventually the person will need more than what the viewing and self-gratification can bring them. Studies have shown that women being prostituted have had a purchaser ask them to do something they saw in porn. 

The other aspect of the porn industry that is rarely discussed is the use of alcohol and drugs to keep women dependent on their pimps (thereby ensuring they will do one more scene to get their fix on a drug their pimp got them hooked on), the pressure of boyfriends to perform and do, and the escalation from photo to film to being sold. There is also a huge number of children being used in porn. 

Remember, the definition of trafficking does not not limit the action to sex alone. Any sexual activity - which includes stripping, sex acts, the production of materials, etc. are all forms of sexual exploitation according to TVPA (http://www.state.gov/j/tip/laws/) 

The point is, that if we are ever to truly address human trafficking we HAVE TO address porn. And that is hard, because to address porn we have to look at who is buying it and why. We have to stop making the participants the issue and focus on the purchasers. Because the simple reality is that if no one was buying Playboy they would stop making it. 

So, where do we go from here? Some final thoughts on combating this issue.

  1. The church needs to step up and in an mature way address this issue. It’s not an easy one to talk about, but how many more people have to be exploited before pastors take a bold stand and hold their congregations accountable? 
  2. We need to break the lie that every man looks at porn therefore its ok. Because one it is simple untrue that every man does it. And even if that was true, it doesn’t make it okay. 
  3. Men can do a lot to hold their friends accountable by helping to bring it back around that the person on the screen is really a person and not a commodity. 
  4. We need to stand up and loudly fight the idea that porn is victimless. As we have seen above that is not true. 
  5. Porn addiction does not only affect men. Let’s create a safe place for women who struggle to find a place to get support. 
  6. Talk to our kids about porn. Talk to them about why is it isn’t okay to view it, about how it harms others and how it doesn’t “make you a man” to do so. You’re really a man if you stand up against it. 
  7. We need to get a root causes. WHY IS PORN SO PROFITABLE? I think it has a lot to do with boredom and the dulling of our senses and being over stimulated. It also ties into gender roles, but we’ll get to that some other time. 
  8. There are people who are being exploited who return home at night and struggle alone. Reaching out to people, openly and without judgement is HUGE. Becoming that safe place is key, which means we have to stop being so self-centered and reach out to those who we don’t know. 
  9. When you hear a friend, family member, fellow church-goer bashing the victim, politely correct them and inform them that without a buyer there would be no porn. As long as we keep the action of porn on the participant and not on the buyer we will never get this addressed. She is the easy target, but let’s look at who is keeping her enslaved. 

I would encourage you to read http://www.morethandesire.com/. It is a beautifully written blog (and now a book) about a wife whose husband viewed porn and what it did to their marriage and their walk back from it. 

Also, Dirty Girl Ministries (http://dirtygirlsministries.com/) is for women who have been trapped in porn addiction. 


Further links:

08 January, 2013

Advocacy Updates

We hope you have been following our 52 days of Advocacy on Facebook. We are partnering with The Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado and Unlock Freedom to bring you safety tips to protect your children, ways to engage in the anti-trafficking movement from prevention to restoration, information on how Human Trafficking is attached to other forms of abuse and exploitation, posts from survivors and their families, and event updates and information.
 
LTHF is posting each Tuesday and Thursday until February 21st. 

In case you missed them, here are the posts from last week:

Tuesday: The 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Thursday: Foster Care children are at higher risk for being trafficking. A University of Chicago study found that 46% of foster care children in Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin had run away from care at some point in time. There are also a high number of those in foster care who "phase out" of the system and end up homeless because no other options exist. Experts state that most runaways are trafficked within 48 hours of being on the street.

Today: Victims of child abuse can become victims of trafficking. A study by Donna Hughes at the University of Rhode Island found that anywhere from 50-75% of women being prostituted where physically abused as children. 65 - 80% were victims of child sexual abuse, rape, or incest. Hughes correlates the two by saying, “Incest is boot camp” for prostitution. What if we did more to intervene in situations of child abuse? What if we fought harder and were more diligent in looking for the signs of abuse in children? What if we did more to stop child abuse, could that have an affect on the number of women being exploited?


Stay with us until February 21st via our Facebook group.  

01 January, 2013

The Emancipation Proclamation


Today marks the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation. The proclamation declared "that all persons held as slaves (within the rebellious states) are, and henceforward shall be free.

While there were limitations within the proclamation, it was a turning point, one that shifted the war towards an idea of freedom and started the process towards equality for those enslaved. 

Over the next couple years several states abolished slavery, culminating in the passing of the thirteenth amendment on January 31, 1865. 

The 13th amendment states that, "neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."

As the civil rights movement progressed and we struggled to recover and move on as a nation, many believed that the disgrace of slavery had been abolished. But, as we reflect 150 years later, we sadly have to admit that is far from true.

Human slavery is alive today.  

Estimates put the number between 12 million and 27 million people who are currently enslaved, around 100,000 or more in the U.S. But because slavery masks itself as other things we don't often recognize or appropriately respond to it. The sad reality is that slavery is becoming more prevalent and accepted.

So what is modern slavery? It can be forced labor, sex trafficking, forced child labor, debt bondage or involuntary servitude. It is the exploitation of one person by another. It is the denial of our shared humanity. It is a twisted system of confusing worth for profit. It is the process of de-humanizing someone into a commodity that can be used, again and again, whether for sexual acts, harvesting food, cleaning hotel rooms, begging for money or mining for minerals. It is diverse and tragic and the only way to miss it is not to look for it.

Irishman Edmund Burke famously said, "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."

It is a hard reality to face and one that is understandably overwhelming. In this day of crisis and pain bombarded at us 24/7 it might be easy to question why we would need to do anything. Slavery is not our problem. But...it is.

From the clothing we buy, to the coffee we drink, the cell phone we use and what our children watch on the internet, it is our problem. It is our problem because the person on the other side is someone's sister, daughter, son, mother, or brother. They have dreams, goals and hopes for their life that extends far beyond the situation they currently find themselves in.

One estimate says that 750,000 men died in the Civil War. They died in a conflict that, ultimately, became about the freedom of others. 750,000 men fought and did not come home so that slavery would be abolished. Maybe the Civil War was the first step and its up to us now to take the charge and finish the battle.

So, what can you do? The first step is to realize that we in the U.S. (and around the world) have a serious problem with slavery. The second step is to let it sink in that it is happening to our children, in our neighborhood. But then take a deep breath and acknowledge in a loud and powerful voice that we can do something about it!

Join us for 52 days to learn what you can do. We'll be sharing information, tips, stories, how trafficking masks itself in other kinds of abusive situations and how you can utilize what you are already doing to make a tremendous difference.

We would love to have you join us in our quest. 

Please check out our Facebook page for daily updates.  


Sources:
Emancipation Proclamation via The National Archives
Slavery Timeline via PBS
13th Amendment Resources via Library of Congress
Slavery in the Modern Age - NYTimes

31 December, 2012

52 days of advocacy

Starting tomorrow we are participating in 52 days of advocacy and awareness about human trafficking leading up to the Advocacy Day at the state capitol on February 21, 2013. 

We are partnering with the Human Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado and Unlock Freedom. Check in for daily tips, tidbits, stories and how to engage.
Join our Facebook event here. 

06 December, 2012

Update on Kara


The Colorado Springs Sheriff's Department held a press conference asking for information on two brunettes they think were with Kara the day she disappeared. Kara's picture turned up on a Las Vegas website for escorts, but police don't think Kara posted those photos.

I would encourage all of you to watch this KRDO story on Kara. The conversation around her disappearance has become too focused on what her dreams are. As Aubrey said in the KRDO story - someone's loved one is missing. Kara is someone's daughter, best friend, sister and that is getting lost in her dreams to become a model. Sex sells in our society and so instead of focusing on the facts of the case (someone's loved one is missing, she went to Denver without her wallet, her cell phone has been silent over two months and was last seen with two brunettes), news agencies, etc. are focusing on one aspect of who she was and making it all about that. The images they show don't focus on a 19-year-old girl, but are exploitative. Even the headlines show the media's tendency to play up the dramatic.

If we can find a reason to "blame the victim" then we feel less sympathy for her. Kara's desire to be a model and the images she posted are being used to excuse what happened. When we attach words like “prostitute” “model” “lingerie” etc. and images to a person, when we focus on lifestyle instead of shared humanity and the intrinsic value all human beings have, people become "less of a victim" because of choices we might not fully understand.

Regardless - a girl is missing and we need to do what we can to find her. Below is the latest poster released by the Help Us Find Kara Nichols Facebook page. If you have any information, please contact El Paso County Detective Cliff Porter at (719) 390-5555 or email tips to findkaranichols@gmail.com.

21 November, 2012

Dylan & JaRay

Two more missing teens to make you aware of: 

 

Dylan Redwine of Colorado Springs went missing between 7:30 and 11:30 a.m. from the 2300 block of County Road 500, just north of Vallecito Reservoir. He is described as 5 feet tall, 105 pounds with medium-length blond hair and blue eyes.A postal worker possibly saw the boy Monday on County Road 501, near Vallecito, and two rescue workers may have seen the boy Tuesday afternoon, said Dan Bender, spokesman with the La Plata County Sheriff’s Office. Both sightings are unconfirmed, and, in both cases, the boy ran from rescue workers up a hill in the Vallecito area, Bender said. “We’re assuming at this point – it may be Dylan – eluded searchers,” he said. “We’re leaning toward his being a runaway.” ... Anyone with information about Redwine’s whereabouts is asked to call La Plata County Dispatch Center at 385-2900. (from The Durango Herald)




JaRay Wilson has been missing since October 15. The Custer County Sheriff’s office says information they’ve uncovered shows JaRay may not have went on her own and is possibly a victim of human trafficking. The Wilson family says they just want their daughter home. They say the past two weeks has been unimaginable. They are thankful for the support they’ve received from law enforcement and strangers who are willing to help pass out flyers and spread the word to look for their missing daughter.JaRay Wilson is just 16 years old and 5’2″ and weighs about 95 pounds. Her family is asking anyone with information to call the Custer County Sheriff’s office 580-323-1616

Kara is Missing!




Kara Nichols went missing on October 9th. She was on her way to Denver and has not been heard from since.

The police released information on the person to the right as the last person to be seen with Kara.

If you have any information, please contact 719-390-5555.

You can follow what is going on here.


Kara is 5 feet 8 inches tall, 120 pounds with blonde hair and green eyes.

A note from the “Help Us Find Kara Nichols” Facebook page:

Kara is a victim, most likely a victim of a crime. She is someone’s daughter, someone’s sister, someone’s granddaughter and a friend to so many. Kara is still the victim and must not be re-victimized by the media let alone by reputable media sources. … Like many teenagers, despite the ongoing education and awareness media and advocacy groups likes ours try to tell kids about the internet, the kids will still post photos and comments despite the unfortunate circumstances that can arise and sadly has with Kara. A teen with a dream of becoming the next model is now a teen in trouble; she is not the first and sadly will not be the last – but you, the public, have the power to be the voice for justice or either a voice of judgment; we hope many of you will take the higher road.

Additional information can be found here or here.

 

19 October, 2012

Prostitution in Colorado Springs

Today we are asking people to wear red to bring awareness to Human Trafficking and the mission to make it STOP!! Many are gathering together to attend the latest hearing for a convicted pimp in Colorado Springs. He is charged with selling at 16 year old girl. 

Following his arrest, a mandatory protection order was issued forbidding contact between the victim and the perpetrator. That protection order has been violated at least three times, and each time he has been rearrested, the court has actually lowered the amount of his bond making it easier rather than more difficult for him to return to the community and reoffend.

The message these actions send is that the offense is not a serious one; that the victim’s safety is not of great concern to the community and that the perpetrator poses no ongoing risk to others.


As a community we must stand up to this type of crime and loudly cry NOT HERE, NOT NOW, NOT EVER! A good beginning would be to enforce the protection order by
holding the defendant in custody or raising bail to an amount that would convince him to stay away from the child victim. 


Below is a video a local news organization ran back in October. There are so many things wrong with it that it's hard to know where to start... 
  • If the girls are under 18 they are automatically considered a victim of prostitution under the TVPA Act passed by Congress back in 2000. 
  • They are prostituted women and children not prostitutes.
  • CSPD said this in the interview: "Years Ago you would see a lot of women on the streets walking, soliciting, nowadays with the internet it's more behind closed doors. What we're finding is that it brings in a lot of cash and younger girls are getting more interested in making that much money, so they're using their bodies."  It takes out the person who is selling them and the person buying them. No 13 year old girl decides to sell herself online without someone coercing her to do it (aka the defendant at the start of the story). This is a very sickening statement from a law enforcement agency. 
  • The story makes it appear that the prostituted girls are the problem. It does not speak to demand or the fact that law enforcement is doing nothing to catch or prosecute the purchasers.
  • All the "penalties" at the end are against the victims. There is nothing against purchasers or pimps.
How can you help?
  • We have two letters you can download and send to the judge in the case. They are here and here.  
  • Contact local news agencies help educate them about the reality of the current case and offer up LTHF or The Trafficking Task Force of Southern Colorado as places to go and get additional information. 
  • Write other news stations (the Gazette, Independent, etc.) and write about why this issues needs to be framed in a different light. 
  • Contact Dan May, District Attorney: 520-6000 and ask him to prosecute the Travis Baker case as human trafficking.
  • Let us know what else you are doing, so we can get behind you!