Definition of Slavery

Posted by on Mar 10, 2010 in Slavery Information | No Comments

Kevin Bales who first put forward the number of 27 million slaves in the world today also came up with the definition that probably is narrow enough to quantify slaves and broad enough to include the many different kinds of slavery in the world today. In Slavery Today he defines slavery this way:

Slavery: a social and economic relationship in which a person is controlled through violence or the threat of violence, is paid nothing, and is economically exploited.

E. Benjamin Skinner is his work A Crime So Monstrous subtitled Face-To-Face With Modern-Day Slavery he words Bales definition a little more simply. For Skinner slavery is defined as:

Slavery: Human beings forced to work, under threat of violence, for no pay.

The basic idea is the same. People are working, they are not free to leave, are often controlled by violence, psychological & physical torture.

In some ways it seems so out of place to the average American that slavery still exists in the world today. And yet is does in abundance. Kevin Bales first put forward the estimate of 27 million slaves world wide in 1999. He asked for others to critique his number and give him evidence of a better number if there was evidence to suggest it. As more people have studied the issue the number has only become likely to be a good guess.

Since slavery is illegal in virtually every country on the planet its not easy to get an accurate number. Most slavery is hidden from public view. Slaves aren’t showing up at polling stations registering themselves as such. Still the work done to accurately assess and work against slavery grows each year unfortunately as the population grows in many developing countries slavery is still growing with it.

Defining and quantifying the problem is the first step towards fixing it. Because of that, we are grateful to Kevin Bales for his work of bringing the problem of slavery to into the light so that people around the world can do the work of stopping slavery.

Made to Count

Posted by on Mar 8, 2010 in Reflections | No Comments

Our lives were made to count for something beyond ourselves. All my adult life I have wanted my life to count for the things that are going to matter for all of eternity. I like to challenge others to live for things beyond themselves as well. As we have continued to research, meet, discuss, plan, pray, raise money, visit Thailand and Cambodia and look for ways that we can be used of the Lord God has continued to move my heart to sacrifice and live for others.

Other than making my life count I have had two other huge desires in my life. Running a successful business and having a great marriage. I have walked away from the business thing a couple of times as God called us to Japan for 6 1/2 years in 2000 and then back to Japan in 2007. Just recently as God has continued to enlarge our vision for the work of Stop Slavery I have been thinking, “I would be so sad right now if God handed me a fully operational, highly profitable business where I could disciple the people that work there and be a light in the world.”

I guess it’s just strange to see my heart shifting and being moved for those who are enslaved, in extreme poverty, without the hope of the gospel or suffering the effects of human trafficking. I have been to 20+ countries, all 50 US states and had not been to a Third World country until 3 months ago. It simply wasn’t something I was interested in beyond a little curiosity.

I don’t know that God will take away my desire for business forever but I do know that as I become more clear on what is important I know that I need to do all that I can to connect those who have everything with those who have nothing.

If you would like your life to count for the things that are going to count for all of eternity please consider giving to Stop Slavery at www.stopslavery.org/donate

Free Burma Rangers

Posted by on Mar 7, 2010 in Stop Slavery Story | No Comments

Help us win up to $800

Posted by on Mar 1, 2010 in Uncategorized | No Comments

If you happen upon our site before March 2nd please help us win up to $800 by watching the video below.  The best video wins $400 and the video with the most views wins $400.  We want to use the money to support the Unit 14 school in Cambodia to help educate some of the world’s most at risk children for slavery.

Trafficking Deterrence and Victims Support Act of 2009

Posted by on Feb 18, 2010 in Advocacy | No Comments

We thought you might want to know about the Trafficking Deterrence and Victims Support Act of 2009 that will be appearing before the U.S. Senate.

You can read the bill for yourself by clicking here S. 2925

Please spend the five minutes it will take to read the bill if you are going to contact your senator.
Some talking points to remember as you write them.
* Human Trafficking is the second largest, fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world.
* 100,000 children are at risk for prostitution in the United States.
* 13 is the average age when a child is first prostituted in the United States.
* Sex trafficking is not only as lucrative than selling or trafficking drugs it is less prosecuted therefore less dangerous for the criminals.

Click here to contact your senator.

Be sure to thank them for their time and urge them to support this important legislation.

Not for Sale

Posted by on Feb 1, 2010 in Uncategorized | No Comments

Children Trapped in the World of Sex Slavery

Posted by on Dec 15, 2009 in Stop Slavery Story | One Comment

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Everyday 13 year old Maly looks at the blank four walls around her, thinking hopeless thoughts and counting the days since she last saw her family. She doesn’t wonder about when she’ll see them again, because it’s been months and she’s used to the desolate loneliness in the small room. She can only look forward to more hours locked away in dark rooms, being poorly taken care of, and being treated like property. Because, at least in the perspective of the men who bought her, that’s all she is. She’s scared of those men. Their faces, their mean smiles, and the way they look at her and talk to her. She’s also scared of the other men, the men whom she’s sent to day after day, to do things she’s too ashamed to think of, even though she’s trapped with them in her nightmares. She is a sex slave. A year ago her mother took an “advance” on her earnings in a garment factory and two weeks later she was working in a brothel.

Though the above story was a work of fiction, it’s sad to say that it is the real story of many children throughout the world. Many actual stories are much more graphic and horrific. Wives placed in brothels by their husbands who should be protecting them and caring for them. This occurs especially in Asia, which is the continent of the world with the biggest concentration of slaves. Twenty-four million out of twenty-seven million slaves are in Asia. And the numbers are growing every day. The story behind each child entering sex slavery is often very similar; they were either kidnapped, or, more commonly, sold into it by a close and trusted relative or friend. Imagine the emotional damage each child goes through as they’re sold into a painful life of slavery usually by a family friend or relative.

The life of an Asian sex slave is tough to say the very least. As American’s we can’t fathom living without the freedom to make nearly every choice for our own happiness. Often slaves are forced into drug addiction, which keeps them dependent on their captors and buyers. Sometimes they can’t take their chance of escape because that would mean leaving their supply behind. Their lives become a haze of highs, unwanted sex, and unspeakable things in between. The girls and boys are made to wear, say, and do things that degrade them. They are treated as less than human. Their captors abuse them physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. They use their confusion and shame against the slaves to keep them from standing up to their captors or trying to leave.

Customers select the slave they want by age, gender, and looks. Usually younger girls between the ages of thirteen and sixteen are preferred. Before or recently hitting puberty is preferable as well. The customers pay the captors for an allotted amount of time in which they can do anything to the slave and make the slave do anything in turn. If a slave refuses, they are either punished, verbally abused, shamed into doing an act, or all of the above. Often the captor’s guilt and shame the slaves into doing filthy things by taking advantage of their cultural views. One example of such a situation is a young girl refusing to have sex with an older man. The captor would then rape the girl and present a twisted logical argument to convince her to have sex with the older man (like saying, “Since you’ve already given it up to me, you might as well give it up to all those other men as well.”). The girls tend to see logic in that and are too flustered and shocked to think about their own rights and value.

“There was a woman in my village who was about ten years older than me. She had left the village a few years before and one day she came back and brought her husband with her. She had nice clothes and said she and her husband had good jobs in Calcutta and a beautiful house and jewelry and good clothes. She said to me, ‘Come to Calcutta and I can get you a good job and you can help your family.’ At first my mother said no but eventually she agreed because there was nothing else I could do and we did not have enough food after my father died.”

The above excerpt from Sex Slaves: The Trafficking of Women in Asia is the true story of a fourteen year old prostitute, told in her own words. The leading astray of young girls from desperate families in the way above is a common method of forcing children into sex slavery.

The time to bring an end to slavery around the world has come.  Will you join us and do your part to help slavery?

Unit 14

Posted by on Nov 29, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments

Today it was really neat to see Unit 14 after hearing stories and talking about it for the last couple of months.

We didn’t take pictures during much of the time because we were in meetings but I did get a bunch of photos of the unit and project when we were driving around after the meetings.

Wow. The internet is really slow in this cafe. I’ll have to upload pictures later today if I get a chance.

They were really passionate about education and we asked them about the need for a school one of the ladies said they needed that more the well projects that they were working on because without education they are planting things but not seeing a harvest because they don’t know how to grow things well. When I asked how many of the ladies could or couldn’t read they all pointed to one lady. I was feeling bad as they singled out the one lady that I assumed couldn’t read.

It turned out that out of the 22 ladies she was the only one that could read and write.

First Stop Slavery Prevention Project

Posted by on Nov 26, 2009 in Stop Slavery Update | No Comments

You can download the Project Page that gives an overview of the first project that we are looking to fund under the Prevention arm of Stop Slavery. It is for Special Forces Unit 14. On Saturday we get to meet with the General in charge of the camp and look over the details of the project.

Unit 14 Stop Slavery Prevention Project

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