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A Century Later Human Trafficking Activists Continue Her Work By Sr. Maryann Mueller, CSSF Women's History Month was first observed in Sonoma, California, in 1978 as Women's History Week. Nine years later, after petitioning from the National Women's Project, Congress extended the observance of Women's History to...

Let Us Celebrate Courage, Resilience and Compassion By Jeanne Christensen, RSM February 8 is the feast day of St. Josephine Bakhita. Why do we celebrate her? Because she is the patron saint for persons who are trafficked and exploited. Human trafficking is an insidious, violent, demeaning and...

Connecting the Dots By Sister Anne Victory, HM Remember those childhood puzzles and exercises of “connecting the dots?”  By following the numbered sequence, an image would emerge that was not apparent at the start. What looked like a random scattering of numbers and dots was transformed into...

Embracing the Radical Hope of Advent By Jennifer Reyes Lay, Executive Director of AEHT Focusing on the reality of human trafficking and working to end it as my full-time job, I am frequently asked by people, “How do you do it? How are you able to face...

Dignity: A Grasp For The Enslaved By Margaret Nacke, CSJ The largest single sale of enslaved persons in U.S. History, the Great Slave Auction called the Weeping Time, was held in 1859 at the now-defunct Ten Broeck racetrack in Savannah, Georgia. Men, women, children, and infants were sold in...