Slavery

photo by susanne childers, photogenX.net
Definition:

Forced labour. For women and children this includes being sold for prostitution or debt bondage, used in pornography, armed conflict, or being harvested for human organs.

Statistics:

- there are over 27 million slaves in the world today

- there are 218 million working children between the ages of 5 and 17

- an estimated 100,000 women and children are forced to enter the sex trade in the USA each year

- children aged 7 to 10 work 12 to 14 hours a day, are paid less than 1/3 of the adult wage and are vulnerable to sexual and physical abuse

Personal Impact Story

Honey in her seat on the airplane. The first time she’s flown anywhere. Biting her lip, nervous and excited, imagining what her new life will be like. If she knew what awaited her, she would take one deep, final breath and ask God to hurl the airplane into the sea.

Australia. She saw pictures of the country when she was young. Honey and her little sister liked the photographs of baby koala bears and dreamed of touching their soft fur. Hopped around the street like kangaroos, giggling until their sides hurt. Met Australian travelers on the streets of Bangkok, tourists visiting Thailand to take photos of temples and rickshaws that they would later show to little Australian children.

The person sitting beside her is more devil than man. Once the plane touches Australian soil he will casually lean into Honey’s seat and say words he has whispered to other young, hopeful girls. Plans have changed. She will not be working as a maid in a home with children. There is no factory job waiting for her in Sydney. The seat belt sign will turn off and Honey will realize she’s been fooled. The exciting job opportunity, the promise of a brighter future in another country, was too good to be true.

Australia. Land of childhood fantasy where Honey will become a new worker in a thriving sex-trade. Where she will be forced to sell her body day after day for years to pay for her newly acquired debt: airplane ticket, visa, passport, luggage, clothing, travel documents. The very things promised to her as part of a lucrative job contract.

Honey sips on orange juice and looks out the window at the sky. Makes shapes out of the clouds. Turns and looks at the employment agent in the seat beside her who helped her out of the bleak situation at home in Thailand. Not realizing that within hours he will confiscate her passport and lock her into her new home – a small apartment shared with four other girls. That, within a few hours he will introduce her to her owner, the first man who will rape her in her new country. Within a few hours she will be faced with her new fate: forced sex with johns every day, hospital visits, bruises to the bone, involuntary abortions, and a debt that won’t go away. The memory of home, anger at her naivete. Anger that she let hope get the better of her. The desire to escape.

Honey in her seat on the airplane. Excitedly biting her lip. Imagining her new life.

*the above story is based on facts but is fictional, for actual statistics order 30 Days of Prayer for the Voiceless today

3 Responses

  1. These are very difficult stories to read. Well written and tragic.

  2. Maybe airport police and security need to step up their “questioning” process. Not make it more difficult to enter but rather if you see a “white” man with a child from a country such as Thailand, question him!! Ask him what is the relation of the child to him. If he claims he adopted her, make him produce the adoption papers, etc… Just do something, anything to make trafficking a bit more difficult for traffickers!

  3. To all of you who want to do something about child slavery, child pornography and child prostitution.
    Please go to http://www.ecpat.net, a worldwide organization who need our support urgently.

    ECPAT is a network of organisations and individuals working together to eliminate the commercial sexual exploitation of children. It seeks to encourage the world community to ensure that children everywhere enjoy their fundamental rights free from all forms of commercial sexual exploitation.
    The ECPAT acronym stands for ‘ End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes’.
    ECPAT has Special Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC).

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