Price of Life NYC

The New York City Price of Life Invitational scheduled for fall 2013 is a city-wide, campus-based, faith-inspired campaign addressing human trafficking in all its forms, sponsored by InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, World Vision, and a diverse coalition of organizations.

Posts tagged advocacy

Jun 8

Passing on a message from our friends at the NY State Anti-Trafficking Coalition:

Click through and learn more about their bill & its progress in the NY legislature!  

Help The New York State Anti-Trafficking Coalition stop the selling of women and girls! Traffickers cause irreparable harm to the most vulnerable in our community.  We must act today to help end this horrible crime.

There are two weeks left in the fight to pass the Trafficking Victims Protection and Justice Act and the legislature wants to cut critical provisions from the bill. WE NEED YOUR HELP. Please click this link to send a letter to your representatives!


Jun 4

May 24

“They’re just kids … what can they do?”

Ever hear something like this? Ever feel like this yourself?

If you feel like you’re too young or too small to make a difference, take a look at this video by a 9th grade class in New York City. These kids learned about human trafficking and created an advocacy campaign around a proposed bill to fix some of the problems with New York State’s laws, the Trafficking Victims Justice and Protection Act.

See the video here or at their Change.org petition.

We need change to break chains!


May 22

New Yorkers - Want to get involved in fighting human trafficking locally?

Bookmark the homepage of the New York State Anti-Trafficking Coalition. Check out its Events posts and Take Action posts for ongoing updates about legislation, petitions, lobbying days, and other public events you can take part in.

Add your voice!


May 17

“Loving our neighbor not only means reaching out to those in need, but also means addressing systemic problems that harm those in need.”

Check out this CNN editorial by two prominent evangelical Christians, Leith Anderson, president of the National Association of Evangelicals, which represents more than 45,000 local churches from over 40 different denominations, and Lynne Hybels, co-founder of Willow Creek Community Church in Illinois, which promotes efforts to raise awareness about human trafficking and exploitation.

Worth reading the whole thing, but here’s a key excerpt (emphasis added):

If the House proposal is enacted, thousands [of trafficking victims] could remain enslaved, too afraid to speak out because some of their most effective safeguards will have disappeared… .

Several provisions would leave immigrant victims of human trafficking and domestic abuse no legal way to break the cycle of violence in which they are trapped… . [T]he bill could validate an abuser’s threat that a call to police could result in deportation. Many women would keep quiet rather than risk immigration consequences.

The bill would also allow abusive partners in domestic violence cases to provide input as to whether their victim should qualify for immigration relief, stripping confidentiality provisions that currently protect victims. Abusive spouses, who are in a position to petition to adjust the status of their immigrant wives through marriage, can choose not to do so as a tool of abuse and fear. Abusers frequently deny guilt and falsely accuse victims of fraud or abuse.

We don’t want a bill that endangers some of the women and children it purports to help. Overall, this bill’s proposed changes to current law would discourage immigrant victims from escaping abuse and reporting crimes, and make all of us less safe… .

As evangelical Christians, we are committed to Jesus’ great commandment to love God and to love our neighbor, with a particular concern for those who are most vulnerable. Through local churches and ministries, we extend that love when we provide counseling and support for victims of human trafficking and domestic violence. In doing so, we point to the ultimate healing and restoration that we believe is found only in Jesus.

We also love our neighbor by speaking up when laws are proposed that could cause harm, intentionally or not. Loving our neighbor not only means reaching out to those in need, but also means addressing systemic problems that harm those in need.

That’s why we’re asking Speaker John Boehner and the House leadership to make sure that the Violence Against Women Act continues to protect vulnerable immigrant women who are victims of human trafficking or domestic violence. They need our protection.