New York State is generally divided into two areas: New York City at the southernmost tip, and everyplace else. Upstate New York has some absolutely spectacular wildlife, wonderful forests, nice rivers, farms of all sizes–many of them traditional in different regards–small towns and cities, etc… New York City is the kind of city that makes most other cities seem like they aren’t cities at all–the “downtown” area of most cities is nothing next to Manhattan.
Obviously the difference between NYC and the rest of the state has all kinds of political and socioeconomic dimensions–where do taxes go, what kind of diversity are you likely to run into in New York City vs. Upstate, what corruption do you have to deal with, what’s Republican and what’s Democrat, what’s the Gini Coefficient, etc…
But while New York City is someplace we’re likely to think of when we think of Human Trafficking in the US, upstate New York is not.
Slavery isn’t confined to our biggest cities. It may not be happening within fifty miles of us–but it may also be around the corner, no matter where we live. Eleven women were found held as sex slaves in the quiet suburbs of Western New York last December, and consider: (1) those are only the ones we know about, (2) slavery isn’t confined to suburbia, and (3) sex slavery isn’t the only kind. From a WBFO article:
“LEWISTON, NY (2008-05-15) Western New Yorkers were shocked in December when a police sting closed down several massage parlors operating a sex slavery business. But members of the local human trafficking task force say no one should be surprised. Members of the task force and others gathered Wednesday to begin educating the public on who is being victimized and what is being done to stop it.”
“Amy Fleischauer is coordinator for Trafficking Victims’ Services at the International Institute in Buffalo. She said the community can not pretend it is not happening here.”
She goes on to identify the Buffalo Niagra region as a significant spot for human trafficking. It’s “a pass through and training ground for Toronto and New York city,” she says, and she points to local demand aside from that, not only for sex slaves but also slaves kept for agricultural and domestic labor. And she adds, because people do not know, that “some are United States citizens, and include women, girls, men and boys.”
It’s important to say that it happens to our citizens, because it does, and that fact helps to drive the problem home. Yet I dislike emphasizing that part, because we shouldn’t care who it’s happening to: we should care that it’s happening. If the slave next door is a Tibetan girl, I should care no less than if she’s an American. It shouldn’t matter what labels we put on her; she is real.
Still, it drives the terrible realities of slavery home, and we often care a little more, when we realize it could happen to our friends. It could happen to us. It could happen to our children.