Note: This commentary contains sensitive information that may not be suitable for children.
Tonya was only 12 when she was approached by a man as she walked down a city street. Over the next few months, his gifts and compliments impressed herand soon, she thought she was in love.
The minute he gained Tonyas trust, the manwho was actually a pimptook her to another city and forced her into a nightmare world of sexual slavery. She was forced to sell her body to countless men. To keep her in line, the pimp beat her violently. He kept all the money she madewhich came to a great deal because, as Tonya put it, I looked like a baby.
Tonya lost her childhood to this pimp. He controlled her for five years, until he was finally arrested.
Why am I talking about Tonya on Valentines Day? Because her trouble all started with false love and false promises that exploited a little girls dreams of romance.
Tonya is not the only child who becomes a victim because she is desperate for affection. Shared Hope International, which rescues girls and women from prostitution worldwide, believes there are as many as 300,000 girls just like Tonya in the United States alone.
These are not girls who have been trafficked from other countries, but girls who were born right heregirls just like your daughters and my granddaughters. They are tricked into prostitution, like Tonya. Many runaways are forced into itoften because they are hooked on drugs. Others, including many middle-class girls, meet men online, arrange to meet them at the mall, and are then drugged and taken to faraway cities.
There, they are sold at hotels, on the streets, and in parking lots all over the country to everyone from business executives to political activists to truck drivers. Former Congresswoman Linda Smith, who founded Shared Hope, says many people know the trafficking of underage girls takes placelike hotel staff and taxi driversbut they look the other way.
It is a human-rights tragedy, and it is only going to get worse. Our society seems to have an increasing willingness to regard other people as objects to be used and manipulatedbought and sold on the market. This worldview is evident in everything from embryo-destructive research to organs bought from the poor by the richand little girls bought by adult men.
As a society, we have come tragically far from the Christian worldview, which says all of usno matter what our station in life, no matter how poor or small or helplessare made in Gods image and are worthy of respect. Trafficking of children may be illegal, but if everyone turns a blind eye, it is clear which worldview is prevailing.
Tonya was one of the lucky ones. She was rescued out of sexual slavery. Shared Hope is now assisting in her healing; she is finishing high school and plans to become a doctor.
On Valentines Day, when we typically think of our one true love, I hope you will also think about people like Tonya, whose desire for love is tragically used against them.
You can contact Shared Hope to find out how you can help stop the buying and selling of our little girlsand help bind up the broken lives of the victims.
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From BreakPoint®, February 14, 2008, Copyright 2008, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. BreakPoint® and Prison Fellowship Ministries® are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship
















