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I was also asking myself, and the Lord, what I was doing there. And just then my cell phone rang. Always on time!
"Yes?” I answered.
"We’ve got an entrance into the club. Can you come with me?”
"What?!” I exclaimed. "I… I can’t! I’m on my way to the Mass!”
There was an almost eternal silence on the other end of the line.
"Hello? Are you there?” I asked.
"Yes.” She answered and fell silent again.
"Do you want me to go with you?” (Stupid question!)
"I wouldn’t call you if I didn’t.” She was so concise and matter of fact, the way she always is.
"Ok. I’m coming.” What else could I answer?
So I said hello and goodbye to all the different chiefs of
police. "An unexpected turn of events,” I explained, and
hurried back down that steep, cobblestone slope, trying to keep my
heels and emotions under control. On the way down I called my
Pastor. "We’re going in. Pray for us!”
"Call me as soon as you get out,” he said.
In the parking lot my friend and one of the girls were waiting for
me. We got into the car and drove about 10 kms to the next town.
We parked out of sight near the back door. The rusty elevator jostled
and bumped us to the fourth floor. When we got out my heart
sank. My friend looked at me with sadness in her eyes.
There was a cage-door at the entrance to the hall and more locked
railings at each apartment. A double-door jail.
When we rang the bell the young mother came out with her 3-week-old
newborn in her arms. She unlocked the door and smilingly
let us in.
Their home was the last apartment on the right. The only one with the jail-door open.
"Do you want to hold her?” She asked.
"Yes!” I love babies.
"What’s her name?” I asked as I looked into the tiny newborn’s dark brown eyes.
"Princess,” said her mother. "Her name is Princess.
Do you want to change her? She needs a change.”
"Of course!” But when I took off her diaper I saw she
needed more than just a change. "Do you want me to give her a
bath?” I asked.
"Oh yes, please! I haven’t given her one because I’m scared to,” explained the child-mother.
So there I was in my high-heels kneeling on a towel beside the bathtub,
giving this precious Princess her first tub-bath. While the
mother was giggling and filming the event on her cell phone to send to
her mother, the Princess was looking into my eyes. I had to lean toward
the phone so her mother could get a good shot of the baby’s
face. Her tiny body relaxed into the water as if it were saying
"Ahhhh!” She enjoyed her bath.
When my friend and I left we walked down the stairs instead of risking
that elevator again. Floor three had no jail-doors, floor two
only had one at the entrance to the hallway. Only where the
Princess lives is the prison double-guarded.
Since I’ve started to become aware of the women around me that
are victims of traffic and sexual exploitation they seem to
multiply. How can it be that there are so many!? Is it
something new or is it that I just hadn’t even noticed it
before? The well-known passage of the prophet has taken on new
meaning now.
"The Sovereign Lord has filled me with his spirit. He has chosen
me and sent me to bring good news to the poor. To heal the
broken-hearted, to announce release to captives and freedom to those in
prison.” Isaiah 61:1
The prison is poverty, it’s abuse, and the victims are
mostly women, women and girls. People that make money off these
oppressed are more than just human rights violators, they are slave
traders. More money is made here than in the drug trade because a
person can be sold and used over and over again. Over 90% of the
women in prostitution in Spain are foreigners and victims of the
trafficking network. Their weak cry for help must not fall on
deaf ears, we can not look away!
Begin today, right now, with a prayer. Ask God to protect the
poor, the weak and brokenhearted. Speak with the leadership in
your church, ask for their prayers and support. Then ask your
government officials what they’re doing about this, in your town,
in your area, in your country. Living in a democracy means our
governments should reflect our needs and petitions. We must say
STOP to human traffic. (stopthetraffik.org).
Susana Mefford Pritchard
Denia (Alicante) Spain
November 2008
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