The Fond du Lac Reporter carried a front
page article about Theresa Flores’ traumatic experience of being trafficked
from her own home as a high school student in an upscale Detroit neighborhood.
She was in Fond du Lac on August 8th for
the Community Church’s Second Annual Human Trafficking Conference. “It can
happen to anyone,” she said. She launched a S.O.A. P. project to reach victims
with information about where they can get help.
Issues
Nonviolence . . . Human trafficking . . . Women . . . . The elderly . . . Immigrants' rights . . . Housing. . . Children . . . Prisoners' rights . . . Health care . . . World Hunger . . . Globalization, as it affects Latin America . . . Care of the earth . . . Seamless ethic of life
Note: The ideas and opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author's and should not be ascribed to the Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes or its members.
Note: The ideas and opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author's and should not be ascribed to the Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes or its members.
Friday, September 4, 2015
Sex trafficking common in Midwest
The Fond du Lac Reporter carried a front
page article about Theresa Flores’ traumatic experience of being trafficked
from her own home as a high school student in an upscale Detroit neighborhood.
She was in Fond du Lac on August 8th for
the Community Church’s Second Annual Human Trafficking Conference. “It can
happen to anyone,” she said. She launched a S.O.A. P. project to reach victims
with information about where they can get help.
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