According to the National Human Trafficking Resource Center, there are approximately 20.9 million victims of human trafficking around the world. Human trafficking is a form of modern-day slavery that includes sex trafficking, child slavery, and labor trafficking. Victims of trafficking are typically coerced into slavery due to poverty, young age, little education and opportunity for work, or lack of family and other support system.
Awareness of human trafficking has grown exponentially over the last several years. We are no longer naive to some of the horrors that can exist right around the corner from our favorite local spot, and we are even starting to understand some of the warning signs of trafficking. Numerous organizations are rising up to put an end to slavery and are rescuing people from slavery every single day. Not only are these organizations rescuing victims of trafficking, but they are helping equip the general population to help victims as well.
But what happens when victims are rescued? Do they automatically revert back to how life was before they were sold into slavery? How easy is it, actually, to adjust to life outside of slavery? As most of us can only imagine, those who have been forced into any type of slavery experience both emotional and physical trauma at the hands of their owners, and that trauma has serious implications for the way our brains operate. These changes in the functionality of our brains can impede the way we engage in our daily lives.
To better understand the mental, emotional, and physical processing victims of trafficking go through when they are rescued, here are four things to understand about how our brains change when we are treated as property:
The more informed we are on the issue, the better we are able to relate to and encourage those in our lives who might be victims of human trafficking.
We at Restavek Freedom are committed to making lives better through ending restavek, a form of child slavery in Haiti. If you are interested in joining us, or want to learn more about what we do, visit our website or contact us today.
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