Monday, April 18, 2011

The Red Thread Movement - - We wear their freedom on our arms.

http://www.eternalthreads.com/redthread/

In itself, wearing a red bracelet is not important.  It is merely some threads woven together and worn on one’s arm.  But what if there was a story behind that bracelet?  What if the person who wove those threads together was a twelve-year-old girl from Nepal?  And what if that same girl had been rescued on the border of her country from a sex trafficker, before being enslaved by one of the most prominent international crimes to date?

Freedom is something we may take for granted, but it is denied many women and girls around the world. By wearing a Red Thread Movement bracelet, you are proclaiming that freedom has not been forsaken, as you seek to restore it.

The impact of the Red Thread Movement is three-fold.  First, wearing the red bracelet creates awareness of sex trafficking [it’s happening more than we might think, with as many as 12,000 girls trafficked across the Nepal border each year].  Second, making the red bracelets provides employment for girls in Nepal who have been rescued from the hands of sex traffickers at the border.  Third, the revenue from the Red Thread Movement [each bracelet costs $3] employs not only the rescued girls but also funds the safe house that welcomes them and continues the establishment of border units.  These border units along the Nepal/India border each rescue as many as 100 girls per month from the bondage of slavery.
What we find unavoidable we deem acceptable.  Sex trafficking is not an unavoidable crime, and it must be combated.  Wearing a Red Thread Movement bracelet promises victimized girls that we will not leave them.

We wear their freedom on our arms.

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