Holy Names sisters initiate effort on trafficking of women
The Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary Washington Province
have initiated a campaign of education and action in response to the
order’s stand opposing the trafficking of women and children for sexual
exploitation and forced child labor.
“According to the U.S. State Department, about 4 million women and
children are trafficked across international borders each year—about
50,000 into the United States,” said Margaret Ames, SNJM associate and
Seattle-area project coordinator. “After arms and drugs,
trafficking women and children for sexual exploitation is the third
most lucrative business in the world for organized crime.”
Because Washington is one of the international gateways, the Holy Names
Sisters decided to begin the efforts here. Smuggling East of the
Cascades rose in 2004 because of increased security on the Western
Washington border, said Sister Linda Haydock, SNJM, director of the
Intercommunity Peace and Justice Center in Seattle, which is working
with the Washington State Anti-Trafficking Task Force Coalition.
In Spokane, the Sisters of the Holy Names are providing educational
opportunities on the issue, along with striving to meet needs of
vulnerable populations through participation in such ministries as
Women’s Hearth, Educare and Our Place, said Sister Marcia Schrapps,
SNJM.
Holy Names Sisters Phyllis Taufen and Karen Conlin, and SNJM associate
Sally Duffy have visited several travel agencies and the police in
Spokane to educate them about what to look for. They are also
visiting health and human service agencies to inform them.
Internationally, the sisters are collaborating with 800 other religious
communities to eradicate “this outrageous and growing epidemic of
trafficking in women and children,” said Sister Mary Pat Leroy, the
order’s leader.
For information, call 328-7470 or see www.ipjc.org.
Copyright © May 2005 - The Fig Tree