Sunday, August 1, 2010

Prime time for selling children into slavery

A week or so before my recent ministry trip to Ghana ended, I visited the Central Region to gather information to enable our organization, Every Child Ministries, to begin combatting child trafficking at one of its major sources. We are hoping to raise the $18,000 needed to open a center and begin work in the Central Region this year. I left Ghana on July 29 and arrived home on July 30. When I got here, I read that on those days, police intercepted three large groups of children being trafficked. One of them was a group of 118 children being sent out of the Central Region where they lived, to serve as slaves in the fishing industry to the west. I thank God for the diligence of the Ghana Police to intercept children being trafficked in the country. I pray that PLEASE Lord, ECM may begin to work in the Central Region this year. Right now, while schools are out on vacation, is prime time for selling children into slavery. My prayer is that before the next vacation season comes, ECM will be there, actively acting as a deterrent to the trade and helping to rescue and restore children who do get caught in the traffickers' nets.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Children's Pastors' Conference

Children's Pastors' Conference

The thunder god falls before the cross!

Check out my article in the May 2010 online newsletter from the International Network of Children's Ministry.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Ugandan government recognizes Karomoja problem

I just got a news article from ECM's Uganda Director. The Minister of Gender in Uganda has asked the authorities to set up check points along the Karamoja-Kampala route to curb child trafficking. The government is aware of the problem of children being sold into slavery (some in the cattle markets!) and ending up begging on the streets of Kampala for someone else's benefit.

I encountered that myself a few years back. I was in a Christian bookstore that has a place to sit and read in front of big windows. Looking out on the street, I observed a young child sitting all by herself on the sidewalk for a long time. It was obvious she was meant to be begging, but she was too young and too uncomfortable to be actively doing so. Basically she just sat there and looked pitiful. No sunshade, no water, nothing. People were just ignoring her and walking around her. I don't usually give to beggars. I've seen too much abuse resulting from well-intentioned giving. But I also felt her pain. I had some bananas, so I went out and gave her a banana, and asked my co-worker to go down the street and buy her a bottle of juice. I figured I'd stay there while she ate and drank to make sure it went into her tummy. There was no one obviously watching her that I could see, but as soon as she got the banana in her hand, a lady appeared. She said she was not the child's mother. I stayed there until the child finished the banana and the drink. I later found out that this was a child from Karamoja who was trafficked to the city to beg on the streets for a master.

I read that the government rounded up 400 of them, women and children, in the past year, and is trying to resettle them. But unless we find a way to stop the trafficking, there will be more. Lord, please allow us to start the Karamoja child sponsorship project soon!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

A Secret I've been Hiding

Yea! It's finally done. I can finally talk on my blog about the big secret I've been hiding for so long. For several years now, I've been involved with our African staff in working towards the liberation of other girls and women held in ritual servitude. Too much media attention too soon nearly destroyed our last liberation back in 2005, so this time we were very wary. It was hard--needing the prayer of the saints but not being able to advertise that need widely, writing an abolitionist blog yet unable to talk about the things I had been spending much of my time on.

This week, that liberation finally became a reality. Servants of the thunder god yeve were freed--55 of them. I won't repeat here the details you can read on ECM's website at http://www.ecmafrica.org/504365.ihtml . I'll just talk a little about my own involvement. It's really neat to realize that this could never have been achieved without the commitment, prayers, gifts, and effort of many people on both sides of the ocean. Yet it's also satisfying to realize that I had an important part in it, too. After our first four liberations, I felt an increasing desire to share the Gospel in a much deeper way with everyone involved in the shrines. I began to know the priests and priestesses and shrine devotees of different kinds as individuals, as people just like me. I began to realize that the Gospel had been presented rather superficially if at all to them, and I knew the Gospel was the power that could really free them at the most profound level. Every time I was in Ghana, I tried to make time to visit them, pushing our staff to do the same. During those visits, we were able to see the areas where we already had agreement and the areas where we needed to make the Gospel clearer. God enabled me to develop teaching guides emphasizing certain key areas.

Late last year we learned that one of the priests had accepted the Gospel so thoroughly that he WANTED to free his shrine servants. I went to Ghana recently in hopes of helping our staff through arranging all the details of a liberation. Three weeks was hard to take out of my regular duties, but I thought that with that amount of time we would be sure to be able to get the job done. I was wrong. We ran into technical difficulties with one of the area officials, and were not able to resolve the problem. At least, not in time. It was an intense time. Besides the gigantic job of interviewing 55 women in depth, we were running back and forth with reports and letters. When I left Ghana, the necessary information had been gathered to begin helping the women after the liberation, the details of the liberation were decided upon and paid for, and an overall strategy was agreed upon. It was bitterly disappointing not to be able to see it and to rejoice with the women. This was the first liberation I did not personally attend. However, the really important thing is not whether I got to see it, but that it happened.

This was Every Child Ministries' first time freeing servants of the thunder god called yeve (the shrine servants called yevesi). As far as I know, it may be the first time any were ever liberated, although FESLIM (Fetish Slaves Liberation Movement) has advertised "The thunder god next!" for many years.

Well, now I am ungagged. I can talk, and will write more about the liberation in future posts.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Handicapped Boy Brings Blessing

Yesterday I was sorting donations of goods that have come in for our various projects in Africa when one of our missionaries called me from Africa. Social welfare workers in one of the countries where we work were looking for help with a young hydrocephalic boy. He was 8 but looked 4, could only speak a few words, could not stand or care for his own toilet needs. His mother wanted to throw him out to die, but oh yes! only after calling a witch doctor to perform some ritual to absolve her of guilt. The father refused, so the mother left. It was evident that the father really loved his son and was seeking what was best for him, but how could he work and also care for his handicapped son? In discussing the boy's situation, and searching for an answer together, the social welfare worker learned of ECM's intense interest in helping free trafficked children. He knew of children he strongly believed were trafficked into a certain heavy duty type work in his area. What stopped him from investigating and intervening? Only a few dollars of transport money! Our worker wanted to know if ECM could facilitate the investigation. Yes! Lord, please provide the very best answer for this handicapped young boy. You love him just as You do all Your children. And thank you for using him to bring us the opportunity to help in the investigation of other children who are trafficked and abused for selfish ends. Please multiply our ministry and our effectiveness in that area. I offer this prayer in the name of Jesus who welcomed the children and who gave His life that I might be free.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Doctor trafficks girls for private baby factory

Children are a precious treasure from God. I helped choose that as one of the "tags" of our mission organization, Every Child Ministries. So my heart broke with what I read today in my daily updates of child trafficking in Africa. A Beninois doctor, instead of using his healing gifts to bring children safely into loving families, has been arrested for running a baby factory. Trafficking teenage girls to Enugu, Nigeria, from his own home country of Benin, he was deliberately impregnating them, then tearing their newborn children from their arms to sell them for his own benefit. Five girls were found kept by the doctor in various stages of pregnancy. All pointed to the doctor as the one who impregnated them, and he confessed to defilement and selling their children.

How far will our self-centeredness go? Are we really at the point of "anything goes for personal profit"? What more hideous expressions of "Me"ism will our Me-centered world come up with?
Me-centeredness is no longer just a philosophy we talk about. It sees expression every day in human trafficking.

The doctor does damage to the girls, to their families, to the children born into his factory, and to his own soul. He also does damage to every family who wants to adopt a legitimately-born infant and be assured that their act of love is helping solve the problems of the world's children, not adding to them. None of that matters to Dr. Chike Uzomo. His universe revolves around himself.

Thanks to the Nigerian police for their astuteness in pursuing this case. Let's pray that it will not come before officials who are also me-centered. Integrity in law enforcement is a must if child trafficking is ever to be arrested.

There's a solution to this problem. When our lives are centered around Jesus Christ our Creator, Me-ism goes out the window and we are able to relate to others in love and compassion. As for me, I'm praying that more and more will find the ultimate solution.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Preparing for Urbana, Recruiting for Slave Project

We have been very busy preparing to leave the day after Christmas for the Urbana Student Missions Convention in St. Louis. One of our big goals is to recruit help for our African anti-slavery initiative. We are looking for two women who can partner with our African staff women in rehabilitating and discipling former trokosi slaves. We can also use someone who could organize vocational opportunities as part of that rehabilitation, a school director and a director for our children's home where we welcome children of former trokosi who need a safe, loving place to stay for any length of time.

These needs are urgent. Would you pray with us that God would bring us the right people?