Archive for February, 2012

Calling all 21st Century Abolitionists:

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

A Call to Action for Modern Society
Advocate Offers Tools to End Horrific Practice

 

FROM: Ginny Grimsley
National Print Campaign Manager (see below)

 

In January, MSNBC.com posted a report of its four-month investigation into a slavery network emanating in Eastern Europe. Every year, it says, some 200,000 women and girls are smuggled out of impoverished former Soviet countries and sent to the Middle East, Western Europe and the United States, where they’re held captive.

In Haiti, UNICEF reported thousands of children were illegally trafficked out of the country following the devastating earthquakes two years ago. Selling orphaned children as slaves is a common problem following natural disasters, it says.

“Modern-day slavery is an even bigger problem than it was during the years of legalized slave trade from Africa to the Americas,” says Lucia Mann, the daughter of a woman who was held as a sex slave in South Africa in the 1940s. Mann, a former journalist, tells a slightly fictionalized version of her family’s story in Rise Above Hate & Anger (www.luciamann.com).



There are ways individuals can help end the suffering and reach out a hand to victims, says Mann, who created the Modern-Day Slave Reporting Centre as a tool to address the problem. Here are details about the reporting center and other resources.

 

• At The Modern-Day Slave Reporting Centre, www.mdsrc.org, anyone who suspects a person is being held captive, or any person who is being held their will, can file a report. The information will be reported to law enforcement officers and the person filing can request they remain a confidential source. The Web site also includes links to relevant law-enforcement agencies in Canada and the United States.

• At www.slaveryfootprint.org, people can take a short online survey that calculates the number of slaves working for you around the world based on the clothes, cars, electronic items and other consumer goods you own. The number is calculated according to what’s known about slave labor in the regions where the raw materials are produced and the goods are manufactured. (Google Chrome is required to take the survey.)

• At www.chainstorereaction.com, are email prepared letters and surveys to any of 1,566 companies asking what steps they’re taking to ensure no slave labor is used in their supply chains. Companies who complete the survey and go out of their way to describe ongoing and current efforts are tagged with a “Thank You.” Companies that complete the survey are tagged with “View Response.” As of mid-January, 70 companies ranging from Fruit of the Loom to Campbell’s Soup had earned a “Thank You.” Another 25, including Avon and Best Buy, had completed the survey. Most, though, had not responded despite numerous emails. Duracell, for instance, was sent 432 emails and Bounty was sent 221.

• In California, the Transparency in Supply Chains Act became effective Jan. 1. It requires retailers and manufacturers with gross receipts of $100 million to disclose what they’ve done – or haven’t done – to eliminate slavery in their supply chains. While there are no punitive consequences, advocates say the law will raise awareness and allow consumers to reward or punish companies with their shopping choices. Residents of other states can lobby legislators for a similar law.

 

“There is nowhere in the world now where slavery is legal, and yet more than 27 million people are held captive as forced laborers or sex slaves,” Mann says. “That’s more than twice the number enslaved during 400 years of trans-Atlantic trading.

Raising Americans’ awareness and concern is the first step to ending slavery, Mann says.

“If there is no money to be made from enslaving people, it will end.”

 

About Lucia Mann

 

Lucia Mann was born in British colonial South Africa in the wake of World War II and lives in British Columbia, Canada. She retired from freelance journalism in 1998 and wrote Rise Above Hate & Anger to give voice to those who suffered brutalities and captivity decades ago.

If you would like to run the above article, please feel free to do so. I am able to provide images if you would like some to accompany it. If you’re interested in interviewing Lucia Mann via phone/email, let me know and I’ll gladly work out details. Lastly, please let me know if you’d be interested in receiving a copy of her book, Rise Above Hate & Anger, for possible review.

Ginny Grimsley
National Print Campaign Manager
News and Experts
3748 Turman Loop #101
Wesley Chapel, FL 33544
Tel: 727-443-7115, Extension 207
www.newsandexperts.com

Black History: Did You Know?

Saturday, February 11th, 2012

 

February is Black History Month. Which means it’s a great time to stir up reminisces about some of our country’s African-American greats.

 

DID YOU KNOW THAT:

 

  • In 1773, slave poet Phillis Wheatley wrote Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral,” the first published book by an African American?
  • Nat Turner, an enslaved African-American preacher, led the most significant slave uprising in American history?
  • George Washing Carver, agricultural chemist, discovered 300 products that could be made from peanuts?
  • Fredrick Douglass founded an abolitionist newspaper called the North Star?
  • Harriet Tubman, best known for her work on the underground railroad, was never captured?
  • In 1870, Hiram Rhoads Revels (R-MS) became the first African American U.S. Senator?
  • Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier when he is signed to the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947?
  • Howard University’s first female law student, who also became the first black woman lawyer in 1972, was Charlotte Ray?
  • 5,000 Blacks, both slaves and freemen, fought in the Continental Army on the Patriot side during the American Revolution?
  • African slaves combined elements of several African tribal languages with English to creat their own unique language known as Gullah?
  • The Father of Gospel Music was Thomas A. Dorsey?
  • In 1964, Martin Luther King, Jr. received the Nobel Peace Prize?
  • A nuclear-powered submarine is named after inventor George Washington Carver?
  • The Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott lasted throughout the year of 1956?
  • School segregation was determined to be inherently unequal and in violation of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by the landmark Supreme Court decision Brown vs. Board of Education (1954)?
  • The first black person to hold a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court was Thurgood Marshall?
  • Colin Powell, former Joint Chiefs of Staff and Secretary of State was born in Harlem?
  • Barack Obama became the first African-American president and the country’s 44th president in 2009?


Can you add to this list? Let’s make it pages long!