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Building Bridges of Freedom: The Interfaith Movement to End Slavery

Posted: 05/26/2011 1:00 pm

What do a minister, a rabbi and a nun have in common? In the case of myself, Reverend David Schilling of the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility and Sister Estrella Castalone of Talitha Kum, it is the fierce desire to see an end to modern slavery. David's organization harnesses the power of socially responsible investing and shareholder resolutions to demand that corporations eliminate slavery from their supply chains. Sister Estrella heads an international coalition of orders of religious women who fight trafficking and bring comfort and support to its survivors. And Rabbis for Human Rights-North America is the moral conscience of the American Jewish community, mobilizing our members to speak out against this largely invisible human rights atrocity.

Last week, thanks to the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See and St. Thomas University, we spoke together in Rome to ask how faith communities, government, non-profits and the business sector can work together to end slavery. "Building Bridges of Freedom: Public-Private Partnerships to End Modern Slavery" brought together leaders from all these constituencies to share knowledge, promote best practices, and to stratigize about coalitions to fight human trafficking and modern slavery. We were challenged: How can faith communities do more than just provide services to victims? What corporations are leaders for transparency in supply chains and what legislation is needed to ensure that others follow? How do we engage the human rights community at large to focus more on the problem of slavery? How can we work together to be most effective in a time when resources are stretched?

Let's not use euphemisms when talking about the problem. Not slave-like conditions, not low wages or lack of benefits, but slavery. Slavery may be illegal everywhere, including for nearly 150 years here in the United States, but it flourishes. More than 800,000 to 2 million people are trafficked across borders each year, including nearly 20,000 to the United States. Add to this number the millions of people held as forced prostitution, child soldiers, indentured domestic servants and debt laborers within their own countries, and estimates of the number of modern slaves rises to a range of 12 million to 27 million people -- and some of the activists I have spoken with think these estimates are conservative. There are more people enslaved today than at any other point in human history. And human life is cheap: You can easily buy another person for $50 to $100, a price point that makes it more effective to buy a new person than to heal a sick one. As Ambassador Luis CdeBaca said, "Human trafficking is not a crime of movement, but of exploitation."

Slave-produced raw materials are found in the supply chains of the clothes we buy and the food we eat. I think, in our hearts, most of us realize that there are compromises being made for the low price of the food that we eat and the clothes that we buy. We chose to look away because it is overwhelming not to. I was speaking recently with another activist rabbi about an article on Trader Joe's refusal to sign onto the Campaign for Fair Food of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, which fights slavery in the Florida tomato industry. The other rabbi was troubled and she said to me: "You know, food justice is just something I don't want to look at, because once I do, once I know the problems and human rights abuses in every stage of production, I'm just going to be paralyzed every time I go to the grocery store." And I understand -- after all, that's what it's like to go grocery shopping with me -- and none of us want to think about child slavery in the Ivory Coast as we eat a chocolate bar. We have to acknowledge that our decision to not know is a choice, pretending for a moment that we live in a just world so that we can finish our grocery shopping and get on with our daily lives.

Jewish values demand that we protect the most vulnerable members of our society. We're just past Passover, when we celebrate the story of the Exodus from Egypt, and the Jewish experience of having been slaves becomes the basis for the Jewish moral code. Because we were slaves, we are expected to protect the stranger in our midst -- to know their heart. So important is the commandment to protect the stranger that the Torah mentions it more than the laws of keeping kosher or observing Shabbat. Victims of human trafficking are today's stranger.

So what do we do? How do we tackle a problem that seems entrenched and unsolvable? This is where the partnership model behind the conference in Rome becomes so important. Non-profits, communities of faith, businesses and the government have to work together. For the past 10 years, American anti-slavery efforts have focused on three Ps: prevention, protection and prosecution. But to be effective and reach the heart of the causes of modern slavery, we need another P: partnership. None of us can end slavery alone.

Fighting slavery cuts across political lines. This year, Congress will pass the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, the cornerstone of the American effort to end slavery at home and overseas, and it is a bipartisan piece of legislation, representing a moral consensus: Slavery is wrong, and we should not benefit from unpaid labor.

If we do this together, we will face our responsibility toward the most vulnerable members of our society. The Talmud teaches (Shabbat 54b) that any who can protest against something wrong in the whole world and does not speak up, is accountable together with all citizens of the world. We cannot feign ignorance any longer, especially not in today's interconnected global community. Older systems of morality privileged those who were close at hand because one's sphere of influence was more limited -- we weren't responsible for people hundreds or thousands of miles away because our choices would neither help nor hurt them.

Today, our complicity and our responsibility radiate outwards. As Abraham Joshua Heschel said: "Few are guilty, but all are responsible" ("The Prophets," p. 19). It is amazing to me how many victims of modern slavery have been found because an individual saw something that didn't seem right and took responsibility. The State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons has a list of 20 steps you can take to fight slavery. It's a great start.

 
What do a minister, a rabbi and a nun have in common? In the case of myself, Reverend David Schilling of the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility and Sister Estrella Castalone of Talitha Kum...
What do a minister, a rabbi and a nun have in common? In the case of myself, Reverend David Schilling of the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility and Sister Estrella Castalone of Talitha Kum...
 
 
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12:12 AM on 06/10/2011
Slavery exists in Africa, the Arab Middle East and in Asia from what I read.
02:41 PM on 05/29/2011
Good luck to the abolishment of a instution that truely stinks!
02:27 PM on 05/27/2011
Thank you for so powerfully representing this important work.
11:34 AM on 05/27/2011
The is a God and then there is a god. Good or bad one. There are slaves to the God and then there is slaves to the god. The world -slave, servant- have different meaning to each God or god. Each God, god has his own Government Laws. One Government is a Government of Righteousness, righteous laws, that gives equality rights to all, freedom. The other god has his Government of unrighteous laws, giving not equality rights to all. Know in the Holy Bible it speaks of the God, and the other god. There were faithful righteous men of God which God gives us their names, and there were unfaithful unrighteous men who also became slaves servants to their god, who gives not freedom for all. By God giving us those names of his faithful slaves, servants, calling them righteous men of God, if one reads their stories how they lived. To be called Righteous men of God. Read Daniel, Issiah. :Love all. Like the Greek word which all gospels writings all came from the Greed meaning of the world -virgin- only meant a 'young woman of marriage able age'. Messiah does not mean savior either in Greek, Messiah means -anointed one- many priest, Kings, prophets, etc were anointed with oil chosen by God. So does word slave, slavery also have spiritual meaning understanding to men other then what we are taught it to mean to God. Jesus was a slave to His Master also.
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
09:15 AM on 05/27/2011
This is a terrific initiative, unfortunately it is probably "too hard" for our secular West to take on and make progress on. I will keep this movement in my prayers. Veritas.
12:45 AM on 05/27/2011
Seriously, I don't get something. Yes, there's some passages in the Bible that allow for slavery. Nobody's denying that. (Whether they mean what some people think they mean is a different story, one I don't want to go into more than I have in other posts).

It seems, though, that those passages are being used as an attack either on this organization or the author of this article, even though the article is about advocating the need to end modern day slavery. Maybe I'm wrong on this, but that's honestly how it's reading to me.

I don't get it. The author and the organization are fighting slavery. What more do you want from them?
09:54 AM on 05/27/2011
The author of the article opened herself up to attack by referencing Jewish tradition as the source of her organization's opposition to slavery and human trafficking--the very same tradition that in no uncertain terms grants these things and did much to spread it for centuries.

Instead of proudly standing on that tradition, she should have repudiated it by proclaiming, "Our Scriptures have been the historical cause of much slavery in the past. To atone for that grievious injustice, our organization works to end it worldwide."
10:36 AM on 05/27/2011
Granted religion has been used by some people to justify slavery, labeling it as the historical cause of much slavery in the past is reaching. Slavery pre-dates Judaism and Jewish law, and is more about greed than religious doctrine.

And there is a great deal of Jewish tradition that commands Jews to seek justice and take action against evil deeds. Just because there's objectionable parts in Jewish law and tradition, you think it's wrong for her to cite Jewish tradition as a motive for wanting to end slavery? (Also, the way you worded your comment, you make it sound like she's proudly standing on the parts that allow for slavery).
11:00 AM on 05/27/2011
God's word does not allow slavery as slavery, as we were falsely taught, deceived to understanding the false meaning of slavery. The Bible is ONE book and through that whole Book called the Bible, there is a beginning, there is a end. And in that Bible, there were good Kings and there was bad Kings. There were holy faithful righteous men who were slaves to their master, God. There was men who were not men of God, unrighteous men who were slaves to their master Satan. There were given God's Government Laws, and Satan has his Government Laws. God gives all a glue right in the beginning a warning to all. Told Adam Eve, "Do not eat from the Tree of Good and Evil. Or you will surely die. Satan told them no you won't, God says Yes you will. The tree of Good and Evil, are truths mixed with Lies? God said What does good and evil have in common? God said Nothing. No good fruit at all on that tree of good and evil. God is all truth, God is not half and half. God is not a God of chaos or confusion is HE? But that Tree of Good and Evil sure makes God look like he contradicts himself right? I ask are we still eating from that Tree of Good and Evil today? Long before man took pen to hand, Nations ruled for generations ORALLY, to song, engraving the laws of God in their hearts to memory of those songs. God's Government Laws all Laws, were given to the Law giver Moses, who recited the words orally to song, to God's chosen people before they entered the promise land. I love all. God spoken (Word) orally and said Let there be, and it existed. Love all. The shepherd knows his sheep, but the sheep knows the voice of his shepherd.
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
11:45 PM on 05/26/2011
Religions are a barrier in the way of stopping slavery.
12:36 AM on 05/27/2011
Based on this article, I'd say just the opposite.

If anything, the real barriers to stopping slavery are greed and apathy.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elliot Miller
May you be happy!!!
11:42 PM on 05/26/2011
Lets get our signs and go to Trader Joes. Why not?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NYC123
10:57 PM on 05/26/2011
Interfaith sounds good.........but as long as religious organizations are paid by the government in the form of tax exemptions to stay out of the political arena and not question elected leaders' stewardship of the country -- religious groups are just like politicians, MULES! They do not the bidding for the masses -- but rather in their silence the bidding for the money merchants!
07:47 PM on 05/26/2011
I wonder how many people have noticed that during the last 30 years, as the "religious right" has gained increasing political power in America, Israel, and Arab countries, the rich have gotten incredibly richer while the working poor and the poor have gotten much poorer.

Is that coincidence? I think not. I think that the theocratic bent of those who claim to serve God and Country as they preach strict religious dogma and "self reliance" has affected us all negatively, and it has caused less adherence to true universal spiritual values.

I think that is why, for instance, that America has very high rates of crime, violence, child abuse, poverty and homelessness --- all while extreme right-wing politicians have been thumping their bible while they wave the flag and preach the "Gospel of Prosperity" that has so benefitted the wealthiest few while being so disastrous for everyone else.

I think there is more suffering in the world, generally, because good people have remained silent while the forces of greed and self-interest have masqueraded as good and abused power.

Now is the time for all good people to come to the aid of The Humanitarian Coalition for Peace and Freedom. See http://cjcmp.org
12:36 AM on 05/27/2011
And this has what to do with the article?
04:02 PM on 05/27/2011
The article speaks of an Intervaith Movement to End Slavery. I belong to an Interfaith Movement to End Poverty, and they are very much related.
07:31 PM on 05/26/2011
Some of you guys citing biblical justifications for slavery are giving the New Testament a huge pass. Jesus and Paul didn't beat around the bush on the issue. They clearly supported it. Check out "Aching and Praying."

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Aching-and-Praying/206554196043197?sk=info
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ratedrstar316
06:29 PM on 05/26/2011
Abolish cheap labor! What will that do to the economy in China? What kind of jobs will be avalible to illegal immagrants (like mexicans)? Ouch! what will my grocery bill look like? I don't think that will ever happen.
06:18 PM on 05/26/2011
There's still slavery in the world?! You guys do realize that in Africa they enslave their own people right? It's not a matter of religion either.
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blindhammer
The future is not what it used to be.
05:35 PM on 05/26/2011
Global capitalism requires cheap / free labor, meaning that slavery will never be abolished until the economic system changes.
03:44 AM on 05/27/2011
let me guess, sophomore ?
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blindhammer
The future is not what it used to be.
11:29 AM on 05/27/2011
Try post-grad professional degree.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RobH413
05:28 PM on 05/26/2011
Thanks to all who work tirelessly to end this practice. These people are God's children as much as any of us are.

Many of these slaves are children. If the child next door were sold into slavery and forced into a life of prostitution, no expense would be spared to rescue that child.

You are all doing important work. God's work. Than you.