Freedom Week–Small University Seeks to End Modern-Day Slavery

This is a story I wrote for a magazine writing class.  I’m hoping to have it published in Collegiate magazine, a Christian magazine produced by LifeWay.  The story is about Freedom Week, the event to raise money and awareness about human trafficking that took place on Montevallo’s campus earlier this month.  Enjoy.  Blog version (more information, my take on Freedom Week) coming later.

The mood in Palmer auditorium changes as she takes the stage at “Freedom Night.”  There is no more chatter, no more laughing.  Every pair of eyes are watching her intently as she tells her story:

“There is a circuit from Atlanta to Birmingham to Nashville to Memphis to Chattanooga, and you’re trafficked quite often.  But it’s not about transportation,” she says calmly.  Looking into the crowd of college students, she continues her story:

“I have been raped more times than I can count.  I stopped counting at 21.  My throat has been cut, and a gun has been placed at my head and the trigger pulled.  By man’s law I should not be here.”

Tajuan Lewis became a victim of sex trafficking at age 15.  She was prostituted, beaten, and raped.  It took her more than 25 years to understand what had happened to her.  She was in and out of prison until one day, her eyes were opened to the gospel, and she received Jesus as Lord and Savior.  She met her husband Kelly, and soon after, she was called to open the Well House, located in Birmingham, which serves the needs of victims of sex trafficking, caring for and helping women who have been abused.

Her story is just one of millions.  27 million, to be exact.  According to the U.S. State Department, there are more slaves now than in any other period of history.  The International Labor Organization reported that human trafficking generates more than $32 billion annually.

At the University of Montevallo, located in Montevallo, Alabama, students stepped up to make a difference during Freedom Week, held March 5-9, 2012.  The event raised money and awareness for modern day slavery and human trafficking.  A campus ministry, Ecclesia, led by Brian Fulton, sponsored the event as a result of hearing about trafficking at Passion Conference in Atlanta.

“We took a group to Passion Conference, and God had already been giving us a heart to help students find a way to be involved in providing and taking care of the poor and the oppressed.  It just made sense to do this and get involved,” Fulton said.

The goals of Freedom Week were to raise $5,000 to go toward three different organizations: The International Justice Mission, The Well House, and She Dances.

Fulton quoted Isaiah 58:6-7, which says “Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of wickedness, to undo the straps of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke?  Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover him, and not to hide yourself from your own flesh?”

“My hope is that people would begin to see that we are responsible, that we owe people justice.  Humans are made with rights, and I believe, as a Christian, made in the image of God.  Therefore, we owe justice.  Justice isn’t a suggestion,” he said.

The average age of entry into prostitution is 12 to 14.  Almost half of all forced labor victims are under the age of 18, and more than one million children are trafficked every year.  Sexual exploitation drives almost 80 percent of all human trafficking.  The Lewis’ believe that the best thing people can do to fight these evils is to talk about it, confront it, and take the chance to be wrong.

“If you’re not willing to take a chance on being wrong, you’re not taking a chance on pulling someone out of the situation that they’re in, and they might be in bondage.  You can’t see the chains, but the bondage can be there,” Kelly Lewis said.

On the night of March 6, more than 250 students attended Freedom Night, the headline event for the week.  The event featured Jeremy Springer from She Dances, Tajuan Lewis, and Olivia Terry, a Montevallo graduate working with Make Way Partners.  After the week was over, $5,700 had been raised.

“God blew our expectations for Freedom Week out of the water. The entire campus became aware that trafficking is rampant today,” Fulton said.

Brett Roney, a member of Ecclesia, added that the week was not simply for money, but for future efforts to help those in need.

“My hope is that through Freedom Week, one student will take the week’s heart-felt purpose, duplicate it in their lives outside of school, and carry it with them into their futures so that others will also come to stand for something bigger than themselves,” Roney said.

As the students continue to listen, Tajuan, becoming emotional, continues to speak.  She explains how trafficking works, and that most victims that enter the Well House come from the state of Alabama.  She says trafficking and prostitution can happen anywhere, and is not just limited to big towns like Los Angeles or New York City.

“In March of last year, there were 40 people arrested in Fort Payne, Alabama.  Fort Payne is rolling green countryside.  It doesn’t happen there.  Or that’s what we think.”

Fort Payne, Alabama is where Tajuan was once abused.

“What’s sad, and what breaks my heart, is that 26 years later, we’re going back to the same house…in the same town,” she cries.

As she finishes her story, she ends on a positive note:

“I’m no longer a victim, and I’m no longer a survivor.  I’m an overcomer!”  She boldly proclaims that she knows Jesus saved her.

Tajuan’s story brings hope.  Hope can be such a fragile thing.  If not for the stories like Tajuan’s, the 27 million slaves around the world might not have any hope.  If not for people like her and other organizations like The Well House, hope would seem like a laughable joke, an object of wishful thinking, not a tangible reality.  This week, this event, and these students, weren’t just raising money or awareness.  They raised something else, something more powerful.  They raised hope.

 

One Story–His Story

I recently had a conversation with a friend about what heaven would be like.  We discussed how we place so much value on the things of this world, to the point where we are caught saying “I’d love to go to heaven, but first, I’d really like to do (fill in the blank).”

In Luke 12, starting in verse 32, Jesus says: “Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.  Sell your possessions, and give to the needy.  Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys.  For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”

With the threat that someone will read this and be offended, let me say this: I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity to study at the University of Montevallo.  A college education isn’t cheap, nor is it to be taken for granted, and I believe that at UM, I am getting a fantastic education.  The professors in the Mass Communication department are wonderful, and have been very helpful to me as I learn to do what my family/Uncle Sam pays for me to learn to do.

But along with that, I have to admit: I’m fed up with the world of media, mass communications, and journalism in general.  I love to write.  Obviously, hence the blog.  I have a great respect for those who are in the business, and who do it right.  My cousin recently graduated with a degree in the field, and if he doesn’t make it, we’re all in trouble.  However, I believe writers, broadcasters, and the world in general has lost it.  There is such a strong focus on “getting your name out there.”  Or “get published and get a big paycheck.”  I want to be successful, and I want to be able to provide for my family.  But it’s easy for those who write, and write well, to be filled with pride.

It’s easy for me to look back at what I’ve written, and at the praise I have received, and become arrogant and prideful.  I’m being told “it’s all about you!”

And in reality, what God is teaching me, is something I’ve known for a while: Neal Embry–It’s not about you.  It never will be.  You will, and should, always be but a byline in the telling of the greater story.  His story.

The gospel of Jesus Christ is the greatest story ever told.  Ever lived, ever written, ever recorded.  It cannot be remade, redone, re-dubbed in spectacular hi-def audio or HD.  It is a story that transforms lives, hearts, that transfers slaves of sin to citizens of the kingdom of righteousness.  The greatest part of this story is that it is not a “story” like we see them.  Unlike many stories that have been written…this story is true.

If I am doing anything other than bringing glory to God by sharing the gospel in my writing, I am failing at what I do.  If, by the way I approach secular stories, God is not being glorified, and Christ is not being made known, I am failing at what I do.  How does that look?  How do I glorify Christ when I write and shoot a story about our government, or about a local frozen yogurt place?  It must be found in the way I treat people, and the level of pride I have in myself.  I have confidence in my ability to do what God has called me to do.  I have confidence in my writing because I believe and know it is a gift that God is developing through me, as I “fan into flame.”  But I must be careful not to fall into the trap the world sets of trying to put my name and my writing and my gift on a pedestal, but instead, to do all I do for the glory of God.

Bylines are such a small thing, and yet we work so hard to get as many of them as we can.  All it is is “By Neal Embry.”  That’s it.  That’s seriously what I’m going to spend my life doing?  Accumulating as many of these as I can?  I only want one!  I want to be just a byline in the greater story.  If one story is written by me, may it be about Jesus, and may my byline fade into the background as His gospel is made known!

If my name is made famous or even known, I want it to be because people see Jesus when they look at me.  If we are the light of the world, why do we spend so much time trying to tell the world about us?  When we do this, all we do is turn our backs and say that our light is brighter than His.  Do I want people to know I’m a good writer?  Sure, may not be a bad thing.  But more than that, I want people to understand who I write for.

Many writers, journalists, authors, and storytellers will spend their entire lives in the hopes of finding that “one story.”  They will search every corner of the world to find one interview, one person, one event…one story.  A story that will make them famous, a story that will change the world.  They will go through their careers trying to win a Pulitzer.  And the sad truth is, they will wind up bitter, grumpy, and dissatisfied, because even if they win the prizes, and find those stories, it will never be enough.  We need something more.  We need Jesus.  I have to admit, that temptation to look for “that story” is incredibly tempting.  Anyone who is a writer can back me up, that this is something we long for, hope for.

But go back to that passage in Luke.  Jesus said “Do not worry about anything” a few verses before.  We are told that the God of the universe, who knows every story that was, is, and will be, wants to give us the kingdom.  I’ve blogged before about Kingdom Inheritance, and this is similar.  We are so rich in Christ, and yet we get bogged down with the things of this world.  I plead with you, wherever you are, whoever you are, to give it all up for Christ.  To realize how rich you are in Jesus.

That “One Story” has already been written.  It’s already been told.  It continues to be told throughout the ages by it’s readers, it’s lovers, it’s subscribers, if you will.  The “One Story” is really His story.  It’s a story of God, who came down in the person of Jesus Christ, God the Son, to give His life for sinners, that we may “become the righteousness of God.”  That story is one that surpasses anything I could ever write.  This story is one to be retold, in its simplicity, down through the ages, that the gospel may continue to impact people’s lives, change their hearts, and free them from sin, bringing them into the kingdom of God.

My greatest joy as a writer is this: To be able to simply share what’s already been written and what’s already been done by Jesus Himself.  I am but a mirror, reflecting His glory, His gospel.

Make Him your treasure, make Him the prize, and He will never cast you out.  I know my riches are in heaven, and if I never find that “one story” that makes me famous, it’s okay.  I want to make Him famous.  I already know the greatest story.  And it is being told, and I have the great pleasure in taking part of it.  He is the headline, He is the message, He is it.  Jesus is all.

I am simply His vessel, His tool, to use for His glory.  I am but a fading, dimming, byline, pointing to the Master.  All glory to God.

God bless,

Neal E.

 

P.S. I will attempt to continue the “Jesus Died” series either this weekend or during Spring Break.  During that marvelous break, hopefully I will be able to write several times.  So, that’s exciting.  Also, more importantly, if you want to know more about Jesus or what it means to be a Christian, please do not hesitate to email me at rembry@forum.montevallo.edu

Feel free to comment below, ask questions, etc. or email me at the address listed above.

See ya next time!