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7 Simple Suggestions to Fight Human Trafficking

January is National Human Trafficking Awareness month. It’s been a decade since I first learned of its existence (more on that story here). During that time, the one aspect of human trafficking many people find most difficult to believe is that it often happens close to home. By that I mean that it happens in local communities all across the United States and that many victims experience trafficking in their own homes, not primarily as a result of kidnapping.

Human trafficking is a $150 billion dollar industry with an estimated 40 million people trapped in its systems (https://www.ijm.org/slavery). From a financial perspective, trafficking humans is preferable to drugs or other commodities because you can traffic a person over and over and over again. It is also easier to hide human trafficking because it happens behind closed doors and victims are often either too afraid to ask for help or not believed when they do. 

The key to understanding human trafficking and to fight it is to realize that trafficking’s root cause is vulnerability. Human traffickers target individuals whom they can exploit, manipulate and control. The easiest people to target then are those who are often overlooked such as refugees, the homeless, individuals with substance use issues or mental health concerns, runaways, or those connected to the foster care system. 

When people learn the truth of human trafficking, their response is often, “What can I do to help?” My answer is always to start small and do what you can. Below are a few simple suggestions to fight human trafficking, and most of them can be done from the comfort of your own home.

Learn the facts

The first place to begin is always to educate yourself on what is true about human trafficking and what is a myth. Though posts suggesting traffickers are looking for victims at your local shopping complex are popular on social media, those posts are meant to be sensational more than truthful. It is better to learn the truth of human trafficking from sites like the Human Trafficking Hotline or A21.

See something, say something

Once you have an understanding of the signs of trafficking, you may begin to see red flags as you go about your daily life. I recommend putting the National Human Trafficking Hotline number in your phone to call anytime you see something suspicious (1-888-373-7888). The best course of action is always “if you see something, say something.”

Become a support person

Though visions of kicking in doors and rescuing people chained to metal bed frames may sell movies, it’s the people serving vulnerable populations who are the true heroes. It may not feel exciting to volunteer at a homeless shelter, become a mentor for an after school program, or parent a foster child. But these are three of many ways you can be a stable support for a vulnerable person which leads to a lesser chance of them falling prey to the wiles of a human trafficker. 

Shop with intention

You can also learn which industries are most likely to use slave labor and alter your purchasing habits to limit the likelihood of using products made by slaves. SlaveryFootprint.org is a great resource for learning more about labor trafficking and what you can do to stop supporting slave labor through your purchasing. End Slavery Now has a free buying guide that is a great tool to use as well as other good information and resources. Dozens of online stores like Made Free and Trades of Hope provide products to support anti-trafficking efforts and even provide income for those who have been freed from a life of slavery. 

Support anti-trafficking efforts

If the idea of kicking down doors still appeals to you, you may consider financially supporting agencies who work with local police forces around the world to free those trapped in slavery like A21 or International Justice Mission

Prevent child abuse

Another option I highly recommend is to take the 30 minute training on the Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children provided by Darkness to Light. If you are a parent, an educator, or in church leadership of any kind, I highly recommend you also take the Stewards of Children Child Sexual Abuse Prevention training. These trainings will teach you how to protect the children in your sphere of influence from sexual abuse, which creates vulnerability for human trafficking. As a certified D2L facilitator myself, I can vouch for the quality of these trainings and the efficacy of preventing the most vulnerable of us all—our children.

Help the one

When I consider the overwhelming problem of human trafficking, I am reminded of the story about the gentlemen throwing starfish back into the ocean after a storm. When a passerby mocked his efforts as barely making a difference in light of the hundreds of creatures littering the shore, the man’s response was to throw another starfish into the sea and say, “It made a difference to that one.”

It may seem that whatever you might be able to do is minuscule in comparison to the global problem, but eternity will reveal the ripple effect your donation, purchase, or phone call made in the life of an individual and their family for generations to come. Maybe you can’t help the millions, but you can help the one—and we all know what God can do with even the smallest of offerings given from a kind and generous heart. 

You’re Not Broken

I know it feels like you are. Losing your lunch in a parking lot because of a panic attack makes you feel broken. Racing thoughts that keep sleep at bay for days at a time can make you wonder if you’re crazy. Having flashbacks that make you leave a full grocery cart in an aisle while you run to your car and lock the doors can make you feel you will never be normal. But please hear this:

YOU ARE NOT BROKEN. Click To Tweet

There are mysteries that God created in the human body that doctors and scientists are just now beginning to understand. It’s been less than 100 years since scientists discovered neurons and the chemical and electrical functions within the brain. Less than 30 years since doctors discovered that traumas we experience in childhood impact our physical health into our adulthood, even playing a part in our life expectancy. Just in the last 10 years have scientists discovered that trauma can change our DNA, the effects of which can pass genetically on to our children—a truth shockingly relevant considering Deuteronomy 5:9-10.

“I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments.”

When the Psalmist recorded that you are beautifully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139), he wasn’t exaggerating to prove a point. God made you in His image—a wondrous masterpiece of cells and synapses woven together to proclaim His glory. When your body recognizes a potential threat and reacts according to the way God programmed it to protect you, that doesn’t mean that something’s wrong with you. Your body is doing exactly what God designed it to do. That you may later be ashamed by those reactions is nothing more than your Enemy whispering lies into your ears to make you feel shame God never intended for you to carry. 

When God formed your body in the darkness of your mother’s womb, He did so with love. It doesn’t matter if the instigation of the miracle was rape or the woman who carried you abandoned you in the hospital, God loves you. God has always loved you and will always love you. 

Nothing that you have done and nothing anyone has done to you can ever change God’s love for you. Sin is not bigger than your God. Trauma is not bigger than your God. 

“Neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. – Romans 8:38-39

YOU ARE BRAVE.

YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL.

YOU ARE LOVED.

You are not broken. In fact, the next time the Enemy tries to make you feel less than the breathtaking masterpiece that you are, shout back at him this:

“I will greatly rejoice in the Lord; my soul shall exult in my God, for He has clothed me with the garments of salvation; He has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decks himself like a priest with a beautiful headdress, and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels.” – Isaiah 61:10

There is nothing more stunning than a glittering bride, and you, my friend, are the Bride of Christ. Hold your head high and let 2020 be the year you ripped the word “broken” from your vocabulary. You may be quirky, unique, and feisty. You can call yourself a work-in-progress. You can even be a phoenix rising out of the ashes of the past. But you are not, nor will you ever be broken. 

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Photo by Allef Vinicius on Unsplash

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