“Good friend forgive me if I offend, I know I am not the only one with problems. I also understand that there are many people with greater problems than mines. But for you to take the time to consider mines, that I am most grateful. It is good that when one has climbed the ladder of success to the top, that he or she reaches down and help those that are not able to.”
— YK
These are the opening lines of a letter I received earlier this week from a young women whose story is not unlike many of our own. She came to Washington, DC seeking a better life with plans to get an advanced degree so that she could work with the poor and the oppressed, as she explained later in her letter. She was excited to receive a job as a domestic worker, which would enable her to work towards her dreams.
What makes YK’s story different was that she was enslaved within the household, beaten, sexually assaulted, and prevented from leaving.
YK is a survivor of human trafficking.
She was able to escape her situation through community support and currently is part of Polaris Project’s DC Trafficking Intervention Program (DC TIP).
Like YK, Janice* also had dreams that were exploited by a human trafficker. When Janice was 12 years old, she should have been going to school and living the carefree life of other teenagers. However, after an older man offered to take care of her, Janice was forced into prostitution for five years and beaten each time she tried to leave.
Polaris Project was called in after a police investigation and began to provide Janice with food, clothing, and emotional support. We also worked to reunite Janice with her family and she is enrolled in school. Her trafficker was sentenced to prison and now Janice dreams of one day working in the criminal justice field.
While it is shocking that slavery can still exist in the 21st century, it is sobering to know that it is the third largest and fastest growing criminal industry in the world. The United Nations recently projected that human trafficking will only worsen with the state of the global economy. Stories like YK’s and Janice’s show us that the face of human trafficking is often very personal and local, occurring in our own backyards.
In fact, the FBI considers Washington, DC one of the top 14 sites in the country for the sex trafficking of American children.
When we started Polaris Project seven years ago, our mission was simple: find the victims, shape policy, and build a movement.
Interestingly, we began with a $5,000 seed grant from a local social entrepreneurship program and built an organization that has worked with more than 300 victims of human trafficking; testified before Congress four times to help pass landmark federal legislation (twice!); worked with legislators in D.C., VA, and MD to strengthen protections for victims; and, co-founded the DC Task Force on Human Trafficking in partnership with the D.C. U.S. Attorneys Office and D.C. Police with more than 30 other organizational members coordinating on cases and victim services.
Imagine what another $5,000 from winning this vote can do! Click here to vote against slavery before 5 p.m. on Monday, March 30th!
*Names and details have been changed to protect the identity and anonymity of our clients.
Katherine Chon is the President and Co-founder of Polaris Project in Washington, D.C., a Grantee Partner of The Women’s Foundation.