We are a group of concerned high school students who believe that even the smallest of groups can make a difference in the world.
Goals:
1. Raise awareness in our school and community about violent conflicts around the world.
2. Support non-violent protests and demonstrations.
3. Raise money that will go directly to organizations that will help victims of conflict, such as the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and Women for Women International.
S.A.V.E.
Students Against Violent Engagements
We are SAVE
Friday, September 28, 2012
The White House condemns modern slavery.
Here is the transcript of President Obama's speech against modern slavery. It has been copied and pasted from the White House blog at: www.thewhitehouse.gov/the-press-office.
Remarks by the President to the Clinton Global
Initiative
Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers
New York, New York
New York, New York
12:34 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very
much. (Applause.) Thank you. Appreciate it. Please,
please, everybody have a seat.
Well, good afternoon,
everybody. And, President Clinton, thank you for your very kind
introduction. Although I have to admit, I really did like the speech a
few weeks ago a little bit better. (Laughter.) Afterwards, somebody
tweeted that somebody needs to make him "Secretary of Explaining
Things." (Laughter.) Although they didn’t use the word,
"things." (Laughter.)
President Clinton, you are a
tireless, passionate advocate on behalf of what's best in our country.
You have helped to improve and save the lives of millions of people around the
world. I am grateful for your friendship and your extraordinary
leadership. And I think I speak for the entire country when we say that
you continue to be a great treasure for all of us. (Applause.)
As always, I also have to thank
President Clinton for being so understanding with the record-breaking number of
countries visited by our Secretary of State. (Laughter and
applause.) As we’ve seen again in recent days, Hillary Clinton is a
leader of grace and grit -- and I believe she will go down as one of the finest
Secretaries of State in American history. So we are grateful to
her. (Applause.)
To the dedicated CGI staff and every
organization that's made commitments and touched the lives of hundreds of
millions of people, thank you for being an example of what we need more of in
the world, especially in Washington -- working together to actually solve
problems.
And that’s why I’m here. As
Bill mentioned, I’ve come to CGI every year that I’ve been President, and I’ve
talked with you about how we need to sustain the economic recovery, how we need
to create more jobs. I’ve talked about the importance of development --
from global health to our fight against HIV/AIDS to the growth that lifts
nations to prosperity. We've talked about development and how it has to
include women and girls -- because by every benchmark, nations that educate
their women and girls end up being more successful. (Applause.)
And today, I want to discuss an
issue that relates to each of these challenges. It ought to concern every
person, because it is a debasement of our common humanity. It ought to
concern every community, because it tears at our social fabric. It ought
to concern every business, because it distorts markets. It ought to
concern every nation, because it endangers public health and fuels violence and
organized crime. I’m talking about the injustice, the outrage, of human
trafficking, which must be called by its true name -- modern slavery.
(Applause.)
Now, I do not use that word,
"slavery" lightly. It evokes obviously one of the most painful
chapters in our nation’s history. But around the world, there’s no
denying the awful reality. When a man, desperate for work, finds himself
in a factory or on a fishing boat or in a field, working, toiling, for little
or no pay, and beaten if he tries to escape -- that is slavery. When a
woman is locked in a sweatshop, or trapped in a home as a domestic servant,
alone and abused and incapable of leaving -- that’s slavery.
When a little boy is kidnapped,
turned into a child soldier, forced to kill or be killed -- that’s
slavery. When a little girl is sold by her impoverished family -- girls
my daughters’ age -- runs away from home, or is lured by the false promises of
a better life, and then imprisoned in a brothel and tortured if she resists --
that’s slavery. It is barbaric, and it is evil, and it has no place in a
civilized world. (Applause.)
Now, as a nation, we’ve long
rejected such cruelty. Just a few days ago, we marked the 150th
anniversary of a document that I have hanging in the Oval Office -- the
Emancipation Proclamation. With the advance of Union forces, it brought a
new day -- that "all persons held as slaves" would thenceforth be
forever free. We wrote that promise into our Constitution. We spent
decades struggling to make it real. We joined with other nations, in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, so that "slavery and the slave
trade shall be prohibited in all their forms."
A global movement was sparked, with
the Trafficking Victims Protection Act -- signed by President Clinton and
carried on by President Bush.
And here at CGI, you’ve made
impressive commitments in this fight. We are especially honored to be
joined today by advocates who dedicate their lives -- and, at times, risk their
lives -- to liberate victims and help them recover. This includes men and
women of faith, who, like the great abolitionists before them, are truly doing
the Lord’s work -- evangelicals, the Catholic Church, International Justice
Mission and World Relief, even individual congregations, like Passion City
Church in Atlanta, and so many young people of faith who've decided that their
conscience compels them to act in the face of injustice. Groups like
these are answering the Bible’s call -- to "seek justice" and
"rescue the oppressed." Some of them join us today, and we are
grateful for your leadership.
Now, as President, I’ve made it
clear that the United States will continue to be a leader in this global
movement. We’ve got a comprehensive strategy. We’re shining a
spotlight on the dark corners where it persists. Under Hillary’s
leadership, we’re doing more than ever -- with our annual trafficking report,
with new outreach and partnerships -- to give countries incentives to meet
their responsibilities and calling them out when they don’t.
I recently renewed sanctions on some
of the worst abusers, including North Korea and Eritrea. We’re partnering
with groups that help women and children escape from the grip of their abusers.
We’re helping other countries step up their own efforts. And we’re seeing
results. More nations have passed and more are enforcing modern
anti-trafficking laws.
Last week I was proud to welcome to
the Oval Office not only a great champion of democracy but a fierce advocate
against the use of forced labor and child soldiers -- Aung San Suu Kyi.
(Applause.) And as part of our engagement, we’ll encourage Burma to keep
taking steps to reform -- because nations must speak with one voice: Our
people and our children are not for sale.
But for all the progress that we’ve
made, the bitter truth is that trafficking also goes on right here, in the
United States. It’s the migrant worker unable to pay off the debt to his
trafficker. The man, lured here with the promise of a job, his documents
then taken, and forced to work endless hours in a kitchen. The teenage
girl, beaten, forced to walk the streets. This should not be happening in
the United States of America.
As President, I directed my
administration to step up our efforts -- and we have. For the first time,
at Hillary’s direction, our annual trafficking report now includes the United
States, because we can’t ask other nations to do what we are not doing
ourselves. (Applause.) We’ve expanded our interagency task force to
include more federal partners, including the FBI. The intelligence
community is devoting more resources to identifying trafficking networks.
We’ve strengthened protections so that foreign-born workers know their rights.
And most of all, we’re going after
the traffickers. New anti-trafficking teams are dismantling their
networks. Last year, we charged a record number of these predators with
human trafficking. We’re putting them where they belong -- behind bars.
(Applause.)
But with more than 20 million
victims of human trafficking around the world -- think about that, more than 20
million -- they’ve got a lot more to do. And that’s why, earlier this
year, I directed my administration to increase our efforts. And today, I
can announce a series of additional steps that we’re going to take.
First, we’re going to do more to
spot it and stop it. We’ll prepare a new assessment of human trafficking
in the United States so we better understand the scope and scale of the
problem. We’ll strengthen training, so investigators and law enforcement
are even better equipped to take action -- and treat victims as victims, not as
criminals. (Applause.) We’re going to work with Amtrak, and bus and
truck inspectors, so that they’re on the lookout. We’ll help teachers and
educators spot the signs as well, and better serve those who are vulnerable,
especially our young people.
Second, we’re turning the tables on
the traffickers. Just as they are now using technology and the Internet
to exploit their victims, we’re going to harness technology to stop them.
We’re encouraging tech companies and advocates and law enforcement -- and we’re
also challenging college students -- to develop tools that our young people can
use to stay safe online and on their smart phones.
Third, we’ll do even more to help
victims recover and rebuild their lives. We’ll develop a new action plan
to improve coordination across the federal government. We’re increasing
access to services to help survivors become self-sufficient. We’re
working to simplify visa procedures for "T" visas so that innocent
victims from other countries can stay here as they help us prosecute their
traffickers.
This coming year, my Office of
Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships will make the fight against human
trafficking a focus of its work. (Applause.) They’re doing great
work. And I’m also proud to announce a new partnership with Humanity
United, which is a leader in anti-trafficking -- a multi-million dollar
challenge to local communities to find new ways to care for trafficking
victims. And I want to thank Johns Hopkins University, which will be
focusing on how to best care for child victims. (Applause.)
Now, finally, as one of the largest
purchasers of goods and services in the world, the United States government
will lead by example. We’ve already taken steps to make sure our
contractors do not engage in forced labor. And today we’re going to
go further. I’ve signed a new executive order that raises the bar.
It’s specific about the prohibitions. It does more to protect
workers. It ensures stronger compliance. In short, we’re
making clear that American tax dollars must never, ever be used to support the
trafficking of human beings. We will have zero tolerance. We mean
what we say. We will enforce it. (Applause.)
Of course, no government, no nation,
can meet this challenge alone. Everybody has a responsibility.
Every nation can take action. Modern anti-trafficking laws must be passed
and enforced and justice systems must be strengthened. Victims must be
cared for. So here in the United States, Congress should renew the
Trafficking Victims Protection Act. Whether you are a conservative or a
liberal, Democrat or Republican, this is a no-brainer. This is something
we should all agree on. We need to get that done.
And more broadly, as nations, let’s
recommit to addressing the underlying forces that push so many into bondage in
the first place. With development and economic growth that creates
legitimate jobs, there’s less likelihood of indentured servitude around the
globe. A sense of justice that says no child should ever be exploited,
that has to be burned into the cultures of every country. A commitment to
equality -- as in the Equal Futures Partnership that we launched with other
nations yesterday so societies empower our sisters and our daughters just as
much as our brothers and sons. (Applause.)
And every business can take
action. All the business leaders who are here and our global economy
companies have a responsibility to make sure that their supply chains,
stretching into the far corners of the globe, are free of forced labor.
(Applause.) The good news is more and more responsible companies are
holding themselves to higher standards. And today, I want to salute the
new commitments that are being made. That includes the new Global
Business Coalition Against Trafficking -- companies that are sending a
message: Human trafficking is not a business model, it is a crime, and we
are going to stop it. We’re proud of them. (Applause.)
Every faith community can take
action as well, by educating their congregations, by joining in coalitions that
are bound by a love of God and a concern for the oppressed. And like that
Good Samaritan on the road to Jericho, we can’t just pass by,
indifferent. We’ve got to be moved by compassion. We’ve got to bind
up the wounds. Let’s come together around a simple truth -- that we are
our brother’s keepers and we are our sister’s keepers.
And finally, every citizen can take
action: by learning more; by going to the website that we helped create
-- SlaveryFootprint.org; by speaking up and insisting that the clothes we wear,
the food we eat, the products we buy are made free of forced labor; by standing
up against the degradation and abuse of women.
That’s how real change happens --
from the bottom up. And if you doubt that, ask Marie Godet Niyonyota,
from the Congo. Think about Marie’s story. She was kidnapped by
rebels, turned into a slave. She was abused -- physically and
sexually. They got her pregnant five times. In one awful battle,
her children were killed -- all five of them. Miraculously, she survived
and escaped. And with care and support, she began to heal. And she
learned to read and write and sew, and today Marie is back home, working toward
a new future.
Or ask Ima Matul. She grew up
in Indonesia, and at 17 was given the opportunity to work as a nanny here in
the United States. But when she arrived, it turned out to be a
nightmare. Cooking, cleaning -- 18-hour days, seven days a week.
One beating was so bad it sent her to the emergency room. And finally,
she escaped. And with the help from a group that cared, today Ima has a
stable job. She’s an advocate -- she’s even testified before Congress.
Or ask Sheila White, who grew up in
the Bronx. Fleeing an abusive home, she fell in with a guy who said he’d
protect her. Instead, he sold her -- just 15 years old -- 15 -- to men
who raped her and beat her, and burned her with irons. And finally, after
years -- with the help of a non-profit led by other survivors -- she found the
courage to break free and get the services she needed. Sheila earned her
GED. Today she is a powerful, fierce advocate who helped to pass a new
anti-trafficking law right here in New York. (Applause.)
These women endured unspeakable
horror. But in their unbreakable will, in their courage, in their
resilience, they remind us that this cycle can be broken; victims can become
not only survivors, they can become leaders and advocates, and bring about
change.
And I just met Ima and Sheila and
several of their fellow advocates, and I have to tell you they are an
incredible inspiration. They are here -- they’ve chosen to tell their
stories. I want them to stand and be recognized because they are
inspiring all of us. Please -- Sheila, Ima. (Applause.)
To Ima and Sheila, and each of you
-- in the darkest hours of your lives, you may have felt utterly alone, and it
seemed like nobody cared. And the important thing for us to understand is
there are millions around the world who are feeling that same way at this very
moment.
Right now, there is a man on a boat,
casting the net with his bleeding hands, knowing he deserves a better life, a
life of dignity, but doesn’t know if anybody is paying attention. Right
now, there’s a woman, hunched over a sewing machine, glancing beyond the bars
on the window, knowing if just given the chance, she might some day sell her
own wares, but she doesn’t think anybody is paying attention. Right now,
there’s a young boy, in a brick factory, covered in dust, hauling his heavy
load under a blazing sun, thinking if he could just go to school, he might know
a different future, but he doesn’t think anybody is paying attention. Right
now, there is a girl, somewhere trapped in a brothel, crying herself to sleep
again, and maybe daring to imagine that some day, just maybe, she might be
treated not like a piece of property, but as a human being.
And so our message today, to them,
is -- to the millions around the world -- we see you. We hear you.
We insist on your dignity. And we share your belief that if just given
the chance, you will forge a life equal to your talents and worthy of your
dreams. (Applause.)
Our fight against human trafficking
is one of the great human rights causes of our time, and the United States will
continue to lead it -- in partnership with you. The change we seek will
not come easy, but we can draw strength from the movements of the past.
For we know that every life saved -- in the words of that great Proclamation --
is "an act of justice," worthy of "the considerate judgment of
mankind, and the gracious favor of Almighty God."
That’s what we believe. That’s
what we're fighting for. And I'm so proud to be in partnership with CGI
to make this happen.
Thank you very much,
everybody. God bless you. God bless America. (Applause.)
END
12:57 P.M. EDT
12:57 P.M. EDT
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Kony 2012
In the past week, my students have delivered around thirty presentations on genocides and human rights crises around the world. In addition, I have done my own research on the issues in Syria and Sudan. I have to admit that it has taken a toll on my caring capacity. I have felt a little overwhelmed and, at times, a little hopeless. The link below is to a video that brought tears to my eyes and offered a solution. Please watch Kony 2012. It is a 27 minute movie about getting justice for tens of thousands of children by hunting down the world's most wanted criminal. Kony 2012
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Eyes (and ears) on Syria
Some are calling the violence in Syria the next Rwanda. Listen to more on NPR. The World Watches Syria: What Will It Do?
Red Cross Restricted As Killing Continues in Syria
Red Cross Restricted As Killing Continues in Syria
Monday, February 27, 2012
What is modern slavery?
Check out Free the Slaves' website for a comprehensive look at modern slavery.
Free the Slaves
Free the Slaves
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Are you a slave owner?
Check out the link below to assess whether your dollars are contributing to the global industry of human trafficking. The results are eye-opening!
Slavery Footprint
Slavery Footprint
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Buy Fair-Trade Chocolate
Turns out not even delicious, comforting chocolate is innocent. Check out the link below to take a look at CNN's expose of the chocolate industry, which employs thousands of slaves.
CNN Freedom Project
CNN Freedom Project
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Today in SAVE, we discussed USAid's 50th anniversary campaign. Below is the link to their site. The campaign, which they call a "social exhibit," is a compilation of photos, videos, audio, and infographics filed under nine categories including: education, agriculture, and women and health. Take a look; there is something for everyone.
USAID 50th Anniversary
USAID 50th Anniversary
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