This Christmas, Counter the Lies of Slave Owners
A message from IJM President Gary Haugen
December 2011
But, try as he might to pretend that little girls like Malavika and men and women like her parents didn’t matter, their owner was wrong. He had enslaved people created in the very image of God. People of infinite value.
Last year, this was Malavika's entire world: More than 20 slaves were held in this granite quarry. Children like Malavika were forced to work to help their parents.At this time last year, my IJM colleagues in India had just discovered the brutal prison in which Malavika was spending her childhood. |
On December 1, 2010, the reality that she and her family were indeed of very great worth became apparent to the man who had enslaved them. In a coordinated operation, IJM and the local government freed the families enslaved in the quarry. The owner who had spent the past five years tormenting these children, women and men was placed under arrest. Gloriously, Malavika’s family left forever the place where they had known so much pain.
On December 1, 2010, everything changed: The oppression at the quarry came to an end through an IJM-supported rescue operation. Malavika and her family were freed. |
Theirs is now the story of a family leading an ordinary, dignified life together. It is not a complicated story, but it is a good one.
As Christmas approaches, we remember another story – that our Maker placed on each of us such great value that he sent his own son into this world. The slave-owners and thugs and tyrants are wrong – and terribly so. There are no worthless people. And at Christmas, we are reminded of this truth forcefully. In the grand story, you matter. We matter. Little girls like Malavika matter.
But even now, other families like Malavika’s toil in slavery, told in word and deed that they are forgotten, worthless. This Christmas, let’s proclaim the truth that those who wait for rescue matter. Will you help us continue the work of rescue with a year-end financial gift?
With deep gratitude for your partnership and wishes for a joyous Christmas season,
Gary A. Haugen
President and CEO, International Justice Mission
President and CEO, International Justice Mission
Today, instead of helping her parents work in a rock quarry, she's dreaming of a career as a doctor when she grows up. |