Thursday, September 13, 2012

Escaping the Thesis – “My Days Off”



For several days one week, I was hired by the Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development (RCSD) to accompany them on a high-level capacity building workshop on the Return, Repatriation and Reintegration of Trafficked Persons.  There were five delegations from five countries (Myanmar, Viet Nam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand) comprised of high-level officials within Ministries border guard and police forces that convened in Thailand for two weeks to discuss issues involving trafficked persons.  

Trafficked victims at the shelter
For three days, I had the opportunity to travel with them to various government agencies within Thailand, and learn about the current issues facing trafficked victims.  We mainly focused on government-sponsored shelters, where victims of trafficking were rescued and placed in a shelter until enough information could be collected to send them back to their countries safely.  In Thailand, the majority of trafficked victims come from Myanmar and are trafficked for migrant work (especially in fisheries) and sex work.  Other victims come mainly from Laos, Cambodia and Viet Nam – with a recent large influx of Vietnamese women trafficked as surrogates in Thailand.  We visited migrant shrimp factories and fisherman boats, migrant communities, and shelters where trafficked victims were being cared for.

Walking around the Kredtrakarn Protection and Occupational Development Center, where trafficked women and girls were sheltered, was surreal.  It was incredibly difficult to witness the interaction between border police, deputies, directors and officers with children from their own country.  The girls were separated by age, and as we would walk into each room, the delegations would say in their native language, “Raise your hand if you are from Myanmar? Laos? Cambodia? Thailand?”  These delegations would isolate girls from their country, and by going down a row of girls under the age of twelve, they found that some girls were trafficked from their state, their district – even one woman from her hometown.  As they smiled behind their sewing machines or grinned over their textbooks, these girls, no older than twelve, had been taken or sold from their home countries and villages and brought to Thailand for the purpose of prostitution.  In the nursery, one five year old girl from Myanmar was asked whether she knew why she was brought to Thailand.  “Yes” she said and her face lit up with acknowledgement of her knowing the answer, “Sex.”  The Myanmar delegation let out cries, gasps and sighs – we all did.  The Myanmar officer then asked her if she knew what “Sex” meant, and she looked at the floor and shook her head no but that her parents said it would help the family, so she had to go.  

With such emotional and difficult stories I had to restart my emotional intake button with each room we entered.  So many women and children with lives that were destroyed – and often by people whom they knew and trusted.  In one discussion, we met with trafficked women, who had been tricked by their own family members and neighbors, into ‘working in a Thai restaurant’ only to learn when they arrived in Japan that there was no ‘restaurant’ and they were sold into prostitution.
I had been feeling rather sorry for myself and incredibly stressed with school – I wasn’t sure if I could handle anything else and debated whether or not I could take this job.  After seeing the children, hearing their stories, and witnessing the interactions between these government officials and victims, you come out overwhelmed - thankful for all of the reasons you are so blessed.  In closing, I will leave one story, perhaps my favorite story, because it speaks about the wrongs of first impressions, perseverance, heartbreak and the start of rehabilitation.  In this moment, I realized exactly why I am so passionate about what I do, and why I wanted to continue working for development, and for victims such as these:

One of the Pakkred Boys getting a haircut!
At the Pakkred Reception Home for Boys, we learned about young boys – as young as six years old, who were trafficked across the border (often times by their parents) for work and sexual exploitation.  Listening to the Shelter’s Superintendent list statistics and describe stories of these children was gut-wrenching and difficult to absorb.  But what was most effective for me personally on this trip, was what came after the presentations and fact-reciting.  During one presentation, the breakdown of nationalities of children within the center was given.  One individual from the Vietnamese delegation stood up and asked to speak with this child, and was upset when the Superintendent stated that would not be possible because the child was protected.  She further explained that he has a very upsetting and emotional experience and was undergoing a serious criminal procedure to catch his perpetrators and for these reasons, was unable to be questioned or seen at this time.  If I learned anything from my time in Viet Nam – it is that Vietnamese people are persistent.  I grimaced watching the delegation huddle together and strategize and prepared for more trouble.  We received a tour of the facilities, and it was at this point I immediately recognized the strategy they had so secretively devised - the Vietnamese group had panned out, approaching each child, and quietly speaking in Vietnamese, waited for a reaction, or acknowledgement from one of the children that they understood the language.  On our tour of the facilities we observed the occupational room where boys were learning to be barbers; the arts and crafts room, where they were making bows; the education center where they were practicing their Thai; the physical fitness area, where they were playing football; and finally, the nursery.  And there he was.

It was difficult to watch these ministers, directors, and border guards reach out to a child from their country that they did not know or had never met.  Some cried, others smiled and spoke with the child, asking for his name and family back home whom the center had not been able to locate.  The man who I felt was incredibly arrogant with his questioning and demands to see the child in the beginning seemed aloof, as he took a step away talking on his cell phone, yelling to someone on the other end.  The Center volunteers and social workers were overwhelmed at this group’s persistence, but were overly cautious of the boy and kept telling the group to step back.  All of a sudden, the loudmouth Vietnamese man comes shoving past social workers and our group and presses his cell phone against the boy’s ear.  The boy’s face goes from sheer terror, to utter joy, and he exclaimed “Me?!” which is Vietnamese for “Mom?”  It turns out that he was the Director of the Department of Investigation with the police force on social-related crime within the Department of Police on Crime Prevention in Viet Nam.  He was within the Ministry of Police and spent the past twenty minutes calling every deputy in the region to locate this boy’s family.  Watching the power of these six people from Viet Nam – was not only impressive, but beyond inspirational.  I truly have no words.

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