Sound of Freedom: Confronting Slavery in the 21st Century

Slavery in the 21st Century

As speakers for the dead, historians shout at the top of our lungs what our forefathers warned us about decades ago. One of those admonitions was “Don’t ignore slavery!” Well, dear reader, I’m here to say we’ve ignored it too long.  Our Society faces—not past tense— present tense: 21st Century slavery.[1]

Tim Ballard, Operation Underground Railroad

I was ignorant of the extent of the atrocity taking place until recently. I learned about the enormity of human trafficking in the spring of 2020. I was perusing social media and came across an article on Tim Ballard. I was immediately intrigued about his work because he has an organization called Operation Underground Railroad (O.U.R.) As O.U.R. indicates, he’s a modern-day Harriet Tubman, although there’s no physical resemblance. Tim looks like a surfer dude from Huntington Beach. But like Tubman, he risks his life to free others. He and his colleagues go undercover to rescue children from the sex trade/slavery industry.  Yes, that’s slavery. It still exists.

Ballard, Caveziel, Sorovino

After I read Ballard’s story, I came across a film based on one of his missions to rescue a little girl. The movie is called Sound of Freedom. Jim Caviezel plays Ballard; his wife is played by Mira Sorovino. I intensely watched the five-minute trailer.[2] It threw me on a roller-coaster of emotion. I was full of rage. I wanted to get a kit together and join the cause. Then I remembered I have little tactical training and would be a liability out there.  So I allowed my grief to overwhelm me. I wanted to curl up in a corner and cry. How could this happen?! Then I recalled what a 1st Minnesotan wrote in his memoirs about their fateful charge into a Confederate brigade on July 2, 1863. “We had no time to weep,” the Minnesota soldier recalled.[3] It’s a sentiment all combat veterans share.

We the People don’t have time to weep either. We’re in the midst of a war on human trafficking: 21st Century Slavery. It’s an ugly subject; it’s an unpopular topic. It’s predominantly ignored by our politicians and main-stream media. Still, a quick look at the numbers indicates that contemporary slavery should be declared a global plight.

“Human Trafficking is a $150 billion a year global industry where more than 40 million people are trapped in modern-day slavery including forced marriages. $100 billion a year is derived from sexual exploitation.  24.9 million of these individuals are used for profit in some form of human trafficking. 6,225,000 children are regularly exploited and held captive for an average of two years . . .”[4]

Human trafficking includes several different forms of slavery: sex trafficking, labor trafficking, and drug trafficking. Forced marriages are considered a type of servitude as well. Human organ trafficking is another form that comes into play in all of the different forms of trafficking. Yes, the U.S. has slavery within our borders. “The U.S. Department of State estimates that 14,500 to 17,500 people are trafficked into the United States each year.”[5] Unlike slavery in America hundreds of years ago, modern day slavery targets every ethnicity and nationality.

Delta Tier 1 Operator

What can we do? We can pray for wisdom. We can pray for the victims. We can’t ignore contemporary slavery. We need to tell others. We need to unite. We can demand our politicians take action against this abomination. We need to hold those responsible at the top accountable, not just those on the streets doing the dirty work.  We need to hold the U.S. companies that knowingly profit from slavery accountable.  We can also take direct action against the slave trade. The U.S. has the best trained military, including Tier I and Tier II operators. I’ll leave it up to your imagination to figure out what these warriors could do. On the other spectrum, we need to set up support programs for survivors of slavery.

In addition, we can continue to learn more about the subject. The movie Sound of Freedom hasn’t been released yet. It may come out January 2022.[6] I don’t know why there’s a delay. There are, however, plenty of documentaries on human trafficking.  Amazon has Tim Ballard’s documentary on one of his missions to Haiti. The film is called “Operation Toussaint.” You’ll need Kleenex. YouTube has numerous interviews of Ballard.  You also can monitor U.S. Marshalls on social media. That agency provides press releases when children and adults are liberated. There are many individuals and organization in this fight. And I’m thankful for those current, and past, Freedom Fighters confronting and eradicating slavery.

Statue honoring Tubman’s work

“I have heard their groans and sighs, and seen their tears, and I would give every drop of blood in my veins to free them.”  — Harriet Tubman, lead conductor Underground Railroad

“It’s funny, because we all read history and we think, ‘Oh, I would … have risen up, I would have fought, I would have been an abolitionist,’ And I tell them, ‘No, you wouldn’t have. If you would have, you’d be doing that right now. You know trafficking exists, you’ve heard of it, but you don’t want to look.” — Tim Ballard, Operation Underground Railroad

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Sources:

[1] Photo 1: https://miamisclc.org/human-trafficking-myths-facts/; Photo 2: Tim Ballard, Facebook; Photo 3: Ballard, Caviezel and Sorovino, Twitter; Photo 4: A Special Operator, https://www.military.com/special-operations/delta-force.html; Photo 5: Tubman rescuing a child, https://harriettubmanbyway.org/tubmans-legacy-to-be-celebrated-at-day-of-resilience-sept-12/

[2] For official trailer go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oZE2nod4i0 or type in Sound of Freedom.  Note: On Youtube there’s a link that says “Sound of Freedom Full Movie.”  This is not the movie.

[3] Duane Schultz, The Glorious Fourth, July 4, 1863 (New York: W. W. Norton, 2002), 258.

[4] https://www.mission823.com/human-trafficking-eastern-europe/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIqfzPiP6L8gIVhp6zCh0LbwbwEAAYASAAEgJqJ_D_BwE

[5] https://www.aclu.org/other/human-trafficking-modern-enslavement-immigrant-women-united-states#:~:text=The%20International%20Labor%20Organization%20(ILO,as%20a%20result%20of%20trafficking.&text=The%20U.S.%20Department%20of%20State,the%20United%20States%20each%20year.

[6] https://liberatechildren.org/blog/sound-of-freedom



11 Responses to Sound of Freedom: Confronting Slavery in the 21st Century

  1. Thank you for this powerful article and your call to action by shining a light on 21st century slavery.

  2. Federal authorities carry a heavy responsibility for these abominations. They must enforce immigration laws and secure the chaotic border. Current policies are facilitating human trafficking, drug trafficking, crime, violence, and slavery.

  3. Good article. It is interesting to note how certain people with certain political views seem to be more outraged over statues that represent a slave society of the past than express concern for modern day slavery in America.

    They also don’t seem to mind that their sneakers and electronic devices are made with slave labor in China.

    I guess it’s a lot more fun to spray paint and tear down General Lee’s statues than deal with real problems!

  4. I agree with Grego. Learn from the past and prevent recurrences of the dark sides in the present. I’m not sure China has actual slave labor and on a per capita basis, it’s a very poor country, but conditions nevertheless can be improved. And human trafficking seems to be a very real thing.

  5. We have it occurring in Fort Worth and several cities in the USA. A family at my church (from Mexico) have a young 13 year old daughter who was lured via a school mate to a mans house who took her captive for weeks and got her hooked on drugs. She was recovered at a mall where she was seen by someone who knew her family. She was placed in a treatment center while her parents waited to have her back home. She escaped with another patient and returned to the kidnapper while she was going through withdrawals. According to someone counseling the parents, her shame was deeply disturbing and when the family learned of her sexual abuse and trafficking they felt helpless, hopeless and needed resources for dealing with this immediately.
    It happens more than we want to realize and people don’t beleive it’s going on. We have groups now talking about this because more and more cases are coming to our church for help.

  6. I have searched everywhere for the Sound of freedom movie, and after the supposed release date of September 8th, I can still NOT find it anywhere!?!? I have been waiting for this movie for 3 long years, and the dark powers that be are working tirelessly to prevent the release of this film! Netflix dropped it without explanation, and its NOT available on any other streaming platform. This movie must hit the nail directly on the head and drive it home with one strike! The powers that be must be shaking in there RED shoes, fearing d the massive targets that this film will paint on there backs for all to see. There will be NO MERCY for them and there atrocities. We The People DEMAND the release of this film!!

  7. Anyone who thinks that the legacy of slavery is over for Black People is living in a fool’s paradise, no matter when or where slavery occurs it is horrid, but to think that because it happened to one race of people a long time ago that it is over again people are foolish to believe such.

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