that was us, a year ago One Year Ago
A year ago on June 9th we went out on a limb and trusted that God was calling us to reach out to show His unfailing love to the girls and women in prostitution here in João Pessoa. We had no idea what to expect, how we would be received, or what it would look like going forward.
We have been amazed and encouraged by God’s constant guidance, the openness the girls have had with us, and the relationships that have blossomed. There have been many mountain top moments and recently some very deep valley moments.
In our last update I shared that one of the girls who had left prostitution had returned, this month we had another blow. The girl who left prostitution six months ago whom we have been meeting with weekly, trying to help her find work, figure out education, is back on the street. This was a really hard hit, even though we knew it was a great possibility, there are often many false starts before someone is able to really break free, it’s hard not to feel like we should have done more.
But the situation she found herself in was almost impossible.
Her husband had been shot, miraculously he wasn’t killed since the bullet passed through his groin, narrowly missing his artery and vein. But because he wasn’t killed, he needed to go into hiding, they had to move from her Mom’s house and into his mother’s house which was at the end of a impassable bumpy road governed by a gang faction that would mean at least the people who tried to kill him couldn’t get at him. We visited with them there, prayed with them and encouraged them to pray together. But they were stuck, he is a fugitive from prison and now escaping gangs.
I sat with her to go over her education and work experience (grade 4, no work experience), and monthly expenses and income. We are trying to connect with other organizations that also connect people to work while also finding out how we could help her get back on to sorting out her education.
They have little to no income. She was helping her mother sell snacks at the market to the truckers who were unloading in the middle of the night, asking for fruit and vegetables or finding some that had fallen, unwanted to the floor. We were helping where we could with some basic food goods, but also trying to find a balance between helping become independent and her becoming dependant on us. A very desperate situation that ended with her back on the street, feeling like she was out of options and us feeling a lot like we had failed her.
Despite the fact that we know women who are trying to leave prostitution often make several attempts before successfully transitioning, we still felt sad and disappointed, not in her but in ourselves, in the system, we want to be able to do so much more but it takes time, resources and more people to do it.
The next time we saw her on the street I was intentional about having a very frank conversation with her, I could see she was acting differently around us. I assured her that nothing has changed about the way we feel about her, the hope we have for her or that we are walking with her. She cried and I hugged her and we promised to continue to fight with her.
I recently read an article about women trying to leave prostitution, this is a quote from it,
Prostitution, if it is anything, is a choice between homelessness and having men we don’t like, do things we hate, to bodies we don’t know how to love.
For this reason, those in prostitution have a tendency to boomerang in and out of it, like the jaded wives of an unfaithful or cruel husband. We pack our bags, we leave in a triumphant storm. But we find few options available to us.
Leaving Prostitution and Staying Out-Nordicmodelnow! The article was written By Alice Glass, a survivor of prostitution
We dream of a day when we see these girls freed from this emotional, spiritual and financial slavery.
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