Yay, Body Shop!
After taking a stand against child sex trafficking with their "Soft Hands, Kind Hearts" campaign last year, The Body Shop has launched a new fundraiser to again benefit ECPAT-USA and the Somaly Mam Foundation. The "LemonAid" campaign began on March 15, and it has already received so much support that The Body Shop has raised its goal to $15,000.
I just raised $5 for these organizations with a few clicks. It's so easy--visit http://www.lemonaid.thebodyshop-usa.com/ and you can raise $2 by becoming a Facebook fan of The Body Shop; $2 by following @thebodyshopusa, 50 cents by using the hashtag #LemonAid, 50 cents by squeezing the Lemon widget (below!), and $1 for installing it here.
I'm impressed by what the Body Shop is doing, and I'll be supporting them at every chance I get. Hope that you will, too.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
The Body Shop is Making LemonAid
Monday, March 8, 2010
All That is Possible
If you want to feel inspired, and so incredibly thankful for your life/education/opportunities, read Greg Mortenson's "Three Cups of Tea" and his recently published "Stones into Schools." They are fantastic.
These books, and Mortenson's organization the Central Asia Institute, ask what can be possible by giving girls an education and a chance to pursue a profession. In a similar vein, Nicholas Kristof wrote a piece today called "Three Proven Steps to Advance the World's Women," which is also worth a read.
It makes me want to sing that even as men and women are trafficking children and taking away every one of their rights, hopes, and opportunities, there are men and women who are pouring their lives into building the next generation. It's people like Greg Mortenson that make me believe that the balance will come out in the right.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
The Sum of Things
Full blogger disclosure: I'm needing a bit of a pick-me-up tonight.
I just read a book on the Holocaust and have had to delete a couple of links from a persistent commenter that are totally inappropriate given the subject matter of this blog...
...so to cheer us both up I'm posting a couple of (hopefully encouraging) videos to break up this week.
Not for Sale in Cambodia from Jesse Natale on Vimeo.
Engage In Your World from ryan frederick on Vimeo.
The second video says: "Our history is the sum of all moments and deeds, an aggregation of every tiny action taken."
I love that thought. Going to think about that one tonight.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Valentine's Day, Part II
Chances are, the first word that comes to mind when you hear "Valentine's Day" is... chocolate.
Unfortunately, one of the first words that is now coming to mind when you hear "chocolate" is... slavery.
This blog generally looks at issues of child sexual exploitation, but it's important to remember that there are many ways children are forced into slavery around the world. And it pains me that one of my favorite things in the world is often brought to my local stores through the blood, sweat, and tears of child labor.
Free2Work has put together a site where you can investigate how certain companies are faring in the use of slave labor. The fact that we can now educate ourselves about the best place to put our money is the good news.
The bad news is... most of our chocolate producers are getting C's and D's in the slave labor grading system. (This system is based on what Free2Work can gather via publicly available information/lack of action.)
Want to see why the likes of Godiva, MARS and Hershey are receiving D's? Check out Free2Work's list and reasoning here: http://www.free2work.org/products?cat=21. An overview of how the major companies scored (as of V-Day 2009) can also be viewed here:
http://www.laborrights.org/sites/default/files/publications-and-resources/ChocolateScorecard09.pdf.
Eating chocolate may never be guilt-free... but by looking for ways to buy slave-free chocolate, it can be much less so.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Valentine's Day
Love146 is once again doing something very cool. (See why I love them so much?)
Do you want a really original, sweet, and productive way to celebrate the day of love?
Start by reading Diana's story here: http://love146.org/Diana.
Then break out your creative juices and make a valentine for the girls in Love146's Philippines safe home: http://love146.org/valentines
And for some really cool ideas for Valentine's Day, read this PDF of suggestions from the Love146 office: http://love146.org/sites/default/files/I%20Shall%20Not%20Be%20Moved.pdf.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Super Bowl XLIV

I will be rooting for the Colts with all my heart tomorrow... but this will be on my mind, too.
CNN: Volunteers try to help young sex workers on Super Bowl weekend
"I don't want the idea [of fighting underage sex trafficking] to go away when Super Bowl ends. The reality is that it's more concentrated on Super Bowl weekend, but they're still out there come Monday morning." - Eddy Ameen, StandUp For Kids MiamiIt's funny how important a football game can seem until you remember what's going on outside of the stadium, tomorrow and every day thereafter. That's when it becomes clear that there is a much more crucial battle to be won.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Time to Refresh the World
Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher are supporting GEMS for the Pepsi Refresh challenge--hopefully you will, too. (It's easy!)
Mr. and Mrs. Kutcher have been very vocal advocates against human and child sex trafficking over the past several years. Their latest step in this area was to launch the DNA Foundation--D and A, get it?--on January 25. As part of this initiative Demi Moore submitted her Refresh Idea on behalf of GEMS to win Pepsi's $250,000. The grant would go toward 10 outreach workers to help thousands of girls get help, counseling, etc. for exiting the sex trade and be reintegrated into society.
Go to http://www.facebook.com/refresheverything to learn more and cast your vote.
Special thanks to my sweet Aunt Martha for telling me about the DNA Foundation after seeing it on the Today Show!
Hearts for Haiti
It's been almost a month since I last posted. I apologize for such a long absence, and I plan to be blogging much more regularly. Since my last post, I've started a new job, went home to Indianapolis to visit my family, and turned 26. But all of those things are silly and fleeting compared to what else has occurred since my last post... the devastating earthquake in Haiti.
One of the first things that went through my mind, as well as through the minds of many others who have interest in fighting child trafficking/exploitation, was what was rumored to have happened in the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami: traffickers taking advantage of the chaos and newly orphaned children. The news surrounding the "trafficking/adoption" controversy of Americans in Haiti this week serves to highlight the other risks children face after such a massive natural disaster. The bottom line is that extreme poverty already made child and human trafficking a reality in Haiti in the years before the earthquake. Now that the world has turned to look, I hope we can make some bit of good come out of the immense suffering by standing with Haiti and rebuilding the country with a traffick-free future. You have probably been overwhelmed with requests to give, but if this moves you to give just a little more, consider donating to a trusted organization like World Vision, Partners in Health, World Relief, or the Red Cross.
I have so many things that I want to blog about that have piled up during my blogging break, but this one tops the list. To keep both you and me from being overwhelmed by TMI, I'm going to try to post briefly on the things I think are worth taking a minute or two to check out. So there might be a flurry of posts after this one. Or at least to follow over the next week or so.
Thanks for sticking it out with me. <3
Monday, January 11, 2010
National Human Trafficking Awareness Day
It's January 11th--National Human Trafficking Awareness Day. Let's not let this day just pass by as if it were any other. Here are a couple of things you can do to mark 1/11/10.
Take a moment to read Benjamin Skinner's recent article in TIME: "South Africa's New Slave Trade and the Campaign to Stop It." Even now, child sex traffickers are preparing for major business during the upcoming World Cup. If anyone you know is traveling to South Africa for the games, bring this up. Ignorance and silence always works in favor of traffickers.
Check out some of the events taking place around the country today in honor of Human Trafficking Awareness Day, listed courtesy of Change.org.
Visit the Polaris Project Action Center for ways to keep informed and ideas to be actively involved.
Do a Google News search today on "human trafficking" "child sex trafficking," and read up on this week's news. Social networks are one of the best opportunities to get the word out and raise awareness--consider Tweeting or sharing these articles on Facebook to help open your friends' eyes. Or even set up Google Alerts for these terms to stay up-to-date every day.
Here's a chance to honor those who are enslaved by making the most of this awareness day.
Photo by herby_fr
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Ten Years Ago, Ten Years From Now
10 years ago this month, I was a fifteen-year-old walking home from school in Japan. I was surprised to find my dad at home in the middle of the work day. He met me at the door and I immediately knew that something was very, very wrong.
Doctors had found a large tumor growing behind my thirteen-year-old sister’s eye. She had rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare childhood cancer, and it had already progressed to stage 4.
***
This month, I sent my twenty-three-year-old sister a small bunch of flowers. They arrived at an apartment door where she lives downtown, instead of to a headstone. The past ten years saw radiation and chemotherapy treatments, lost hair, countless hormone imbalances, atrophied leg muscles, months of physical therapy, impaired vision, tutors for a school year spent in the hospital, injections every day (to this day).
They also saw learning to walk again, high school and college graduations, good friends, a first job, family vacations, opportunities of a lifetime and a remission that by all accounts will likely last until she is a sassy grey-haired lady.
***
In times when the fight seemed like it would be lost, and that there was no end in sight, I wish I could have seen what I know now. That in the end, she lives; that she thrives. That there is second life after terrible darkness. This is my hope for all of the young girls (and boys) who are at this very moment fighting a different kind of heartbreaking battle, and my hope for those who are fighting it with them.
Happy 2010! Here’s to what's possible in the years to come.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Counting Blessings, Giving Thanks
It's that time of year where we look around and give thanks for our blessings... and I have many this year.
I'm reading Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn's "Half the Sky," and each chapter makes me realize even more how blessed my life has been. So in the spirit of Thanksgiving, here are a couple of things I'm giving thanks for this year.
- My family, friends and loved ones, of course
- You, who are reading this
- My husband, who is the picture of a good man
- My parents, for valuing my life, unlike millions of girls all over the world
- My education, literacy and the opportunities it has granted me
- My job, during a time when many are searching for one, and that it allows me to use my brain rather than my body
- The amount of awareness that came out in 2009 about human/child sex trafficking, in the U.S. and around the world
- The April Love146 partner trip I took this year, which I think about every single day
- Clean water that comes in different temperatures and is easily accessible, and indoor plumbing
- All the food I'm going to eat tomorrow, and the fact that I have never felt true hunger in my life
- Medical care and vaccinations, and the health insurance to pay for it
- A safe place to live, and the privacy and peace of mind that comes along with it
- The opportunities my future children will have simply based on the place they are born
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Anti-Trafficking Talks and Networking at the Kennedy School
Last night in Boston was cold, rainy, and inspiring; I spent it at a networking event on anti-human trafficking at The Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School.
Panelists included Cherie Jimenez of Kim’s Project, Jeff Gulati, who is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Bentley University, and Katherine Chon, President and Co-founder of Polaris Project.
This was a much better dialogue than the last Harvard event I attended, focusing on practical issues rather than terminology/semantics. The speakers were from very different backgrounds and are currently playing various roles in the fight against trafficking, and they each had interesting things to say. I jotted down some notes as they were talking and wanted to share the highlights with you below.
When discussing the strengths and skills needed to be in a career that fights trafficking, Cherie, who founded Kim’s Project based on her own experience in the sex trade, said that first and foremost there is a need for compassion and understanding of how to empower people. One of my favorite points that she made throughout the night was that “just as everyone has a story for how they ended up in the sex trade, they will each have a different story for how they get out.”
Jeff talked about how people who are going to engage in fighting trafficking have to be willing to take the long view—and need to understand that making a large-scale difference in this process won’t yield immediate returns. This isn’t a light-switch sort of problem. Katherine proposed that those interested in an anti-trafficking profession need to identify answers to three preliminary questions:
- What’s already out there, being done, from an organizational standpoint?
- What are my particular passions/skill sets?
- How much of my life am I willing to/want to put into this?
Jeff added to this point by mentioning that he often examines how the issue of human trafficking is portrayed in the media. It’s something that I will be more aware of as I read news stories: Are gender/race inequalities being addressed as part of the larger picture of systemic causes, or does most of the coverage solely center on the problem being built out of organized crime?
Based on her years running Polaris Project, Katherine discussed the challenge of experiencing secondary trauma in a job that makes you face the brutalities of human trafficking day in, day out—and the importance of finding the right balance. She mentioned how sad it is to see brilliant, caring people become burned out and leave, and that working with survivors of human trafficking will never be a 9-to-5 job.
Finally, an issue that came up repeatedly was how divisive the activism field can be. People will always have differing ideas of how and why to get something done, and it can get nasty dealing with politics—especially if you’ve invested a lot of yourself. Anti-trafficking organizations need to pay their own bills and be sustainable, but we can often become lost in our own branding, reputation, and individual strategy instead of how we can most effectively attack the problem from a collaborative standpoint.
After the panel we had the opportunity to meet others who are interested in taking a role in anti-trafficking activism, and I had a number of conversations with some great people, including law students, future policy makers and even one of the representatives from Minga. Most encouraging was the turnout—the room was full, and interest was high.
A special thanks to each of the panelists and to Christina Bain at the Kennedy School for a night that has given me a lot to think about.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Links of Light: Recommended Posts on Trafficking
There are some really great bloggers out there that are consistently writing good posts on child trafficking and modern-day slavery. So I'm introducing a new, semi-regular category called Links of Light that will pick out some of my recent favorites by other bloggers and share them with you.
The first installment:
- Regarding Thanks--and Giving: some tales of selfless giving to Love146, even during hard economic times, written by their wonderful accounting administrator, Jennifer Franz.
- "They are Merchandise Because They Are Just Pounds of Meat:" a look at the documentary "Lives for Sale" by Diana Scimone. Diana jotted down some thoughts she had as she watched the film, including this telling quote from a state attorney in the U.S. who prosecutes traffickers: "One of the first things I have to do is convince a jury that slavery actually exists."
- "Human Rights Remain Off the Radar Screen:" an op-ed by Paul Bernish on President Obama's recent trip to Asia and the lack of any direct address to human rights violations in the area.
- "Incredible Slavery Survivor-Activists Honored at Freedom Awards:" an encouraging look from the Emancipation Network at two modern-day heros in the fight against human trafficking. Read about how Sina Vann and Veero are singlehandedly saving hundreds of their neighbors from the slavery they escaped from.
Monday, November 16, 2009
A Sad Day, and a "Beautiful Slave"
There is a lot of heartbreak today, in the abolitionist community and beyond, about the news that 5-year-old Shaniya Davis was a victim of child sex trafficking and murder in North Carolina.
I keep coming back to a song I heard and video I saw over the weekend from a nonprofit Christian "musicianary" band called Take No Glory. "Beautiful Slave" is a song that sounds like it could have been played by Evanescence, woven into a simple children's hymn that people who grew up going to Protestant churches will recognize: "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands." The transition happens around the 3:25 mark.
Locked in brothels in Southeast Asia or trafficked by relatives in North Carolina, they are precious in his sight. This little girl is at peace now, and for the rest who are still waiting: we will come for you.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Trafficking: Hidden in Plain Sight
The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) department is going public with a campaign to educate U.S. citizens about human trafficking that is literally happening in front of our eyes.
According to the ICE website, "Posters, billboards and transit shelter signs were rolled out last month bearing the slogan 'Hidden in Plain Sight.' They are displayed in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, Newark, New Orleans, New York, St Paul, San Antonio, San Francisco and Tampa. The campaign's goal is to raise public awareness about the existence of human trafficking in communities nationwide, and asks members of the public to take action if they encounter possible victims."
When I was in Cambodia, it amazed me how many World Vision billboards I saw on being alert for child sex trafficking and providing a phone number to call for reporting. Now it is time for us to face the reality of human trafficking within our own borders.
I'm greatly encouraged by this step by the government and the Emma Thompson-backed "Journey" exhibit on sex trafficking taking place in New York City. Someone, somewhere, who is currently enslaved in our country is going to be saved by the awareness this brings and by the seeds that it plants.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
CNN: Child Traffickers Prey on Powerless
At the End of Slavery
...where will you be?
At The End Of Slavery - Extended Trailer from International Justice Mission on Vimeo.
See the film on Nov. 14. Presented by International Justice Mission.
For more information go to http://www.attheendofslavery.com.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Ten Dollars and a Bicycle for Love146

Image by Georgios Karamanis
This is one of those posts that is going to get tagged "things that make me cry."
You might remember me writing about a community we saw in Phnom Penh that has been horribly mistreated by the government. They were stripped of their housing and whatever possessions they had and trucked off to a no-man's land beyond the airport, away from potential jobs, schools, and shelter. Many simply live under blue tarps and have no healthcare, privacy, sanitation or running water. I saw it with my own eyes, and it made me want to weep. Whenever I am lying in my warm bed when it rains or feel grateful when I'm taking a hot shower, I think of that place.
Last week, about 80 children living in this area were given bicycles by Love146. This is crucial because they now have a way to get to school, earn an education, and therefore decrease their chances of being trafficked. You can read more about the event here and here. I only wish I could have been there to witness the ceremony where these children were given such a small but significant gift.
I recently learned that Love146 is part of this year's Giving Challenge. Basically, whichever charity receives the most number of unique donations (starting at $10), they will win. So the more people who give $10 or above, the better chance Love146 has of winning.
And if they win, they'll have $50,000, to keep on doing some more beautiful things for the children who need it the most.
Please consider giving $10 today. I just did, and it's extremely easy to do--just click right here. And one more small favor to ask: will you please spread the word and tell someone else?
Friday, October 30, 2009
Human Trafficking in Charisma Magazine
Diana Scimone has written an amazing piece on human trafficking in the November issue of a Christian publication called Charisma magazine. She highlights the issue of trafficking as well as all of the fantastic organizations who are lending a hand in the fight to end it (and even mentions this blog in the "Everyday Abolitionists" sidebar--thanks so much, Diana!!)
Please check out the piece in full here!
I hope this article continues to open eyes and hearts toward the full realization of abolition.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Child Sex Trafficking of Runaways in the U.S.

Photo by Sunny laid back L.A.
I read a great article in the NYTimes today, and it was especially relevant on the heels of yesterday's big news.
"For Runaways, Sex Buys Survival," looks at the business of trafficking runaways for sex on America's streets. It's a growing problem according to law enforcement and child protective service agencies, and the Internet plays a large part in attracting "clients."
“It’s definitely worsening,” said Sgt. Kelley O’Connell, a detective who until this year ran the Boston Police Department’s human-trafficking unit, echoing a sentiment conveyed in interviews with law enforcement officials from more than two dozen cities. “Gangs used to sell drugs,” she said. “Now many of them have shifted to selling girls because it’s just as lucrative but far less risky.”(excerpted from NYT article)The article featured interviews with convicted pimps, who talk about the tactics they use to ensnare young girls into prostitution--including targeting girls with large backpacks on, who have clearly just left home. The pimps' bottom line was that they recognize these girls' starvation for love and attention, and they can easily "hook" them with a few gifts of jewelry and nice dinners.
One of the pimps put it this way:
"With the young girls, you promise them heaven, they'll follow you to hell."NYTimes content doesn't stay free and available for long, so I'd recommend reading the story as soon as you can. Ian Urbina has put together 4 pages of an extremely important and well-written look at the reality of sex trafficking in America.
The question I'd ask now is--does it matter that these girls are runaways? Does it make them less worthy of our attention and care, as opposed to a little girl on the other side of the world who has been kidnapped or sold? Do we care more or less that this is what sex trafficking looks like in our cities and on our streets?












