April 12th, 2011 by
Maggie Heffernan from Carroll University
Carroll University has finally reached the end to our semester long campaign promoting awareness and action towards the injustice of human trafficking. Our last events were geared toward giving a tangible depiction of what human trafficking is and the magnitude to which it is affecting the world. Since awareness without action is dead we wanted to then provide tangible ways the Carroll Community could respond to human trafficking.
From March 27-April 4th we put 2,700 flags on our campus main lawn representing 27,000,000 people enslaved in the world today. To accompany the flags was a sign that explained that each flag represented 10,000 people and a quote from Martin Luther King Jr.: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” This event was really powerful; it really brought into perspective how massive this issue is and how badly we need to take action. One person enslaved is horrific; 27,000,000 people enslaved is inexplicable. This event was also used to advertise for our “Trafficked” event.
On Thursday March 31st we organized an event entitled “Trafficked”. For this event we set up the main gathering room in our campus center as a maze. For the first half of the maze students went though an interactive experience where they heard the story of an individual that had been trafficked. There were two sides to this section. One side students followed the story of a young girl who had been taken while riding her bike alone in South America. On the other side students followed a woman who thought she was being offered a job in the Czech Republic, however was forced into prostitution upon her arrival into that country. To go though these experiences members of our human innovation team lead groups through these tragic stories. Each room was set up according to the section of the story hey were hearing and there was an audio recording of someone speaking as if they were the woman that went though that experience. This allowed students to see the living conditions in which modern slaves are living in, the hardships of their daily lives, and to come into personal contact with this injustice. In the beginning of the maze each student also received a card that gave them a new identity of someone whom had been trafficked. At the end of the interactive section students were able to read what happened to their characters.
Once students had the opportunity to better understand what human trafficking we wanted to show them how they have the ability to take a stand and make a change. To do this we had a “response area” of the maze where students encountered numerous ways to combat human trafficking. We had an art section, a letter writing booth, a social worker form Milwaukee who has worked with child sex workers in the area, information about human trafficking in Milwaukee, a fair trade shopping booth, a prayer booth, slavery in Asia booth, and how you can make a change in the medical field. This event overall was very successful. We had over 120 students go though the maze, we raised over 400$ for World Visions Bangladesh project from selling human wrong shirts, and we wrote over 85 letters to our congress members asking them to support the reauthorization of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act.
On April 4th Jesse Eaves, policy advisor for World Vision, ended our semester campaign. Jesse spoke on why we do Social justice and why it is important to let our representatives in Congress know what is important to us. This was a great wrap up to our campaign and a great leaning experience for Carroll’s future social justice initiatives.
This campaign has been full of a ton of hard work from all of the members of Carroll’s Human Innovation Team. It has been wonderful to see how when willing God will use you in mighty ways. Carroll’s Justice group on campus has already begun planning events for next year to bring awareness and action towards stopping human trafficking and other forms of injustices around the world.