Human trafficking victims are 'women crucified', says Pope

 Pixabay

The Pope has called on individuals and institutions to play their part in ridding the world of the "disgusting vice" of human trafficking and prostitution.

He called the sex trade a "disease of humanity" as he described the "humiliated, afflicted and suffering women" he had met in a house run by the Pope John XXIII Community for victims of human trafficking. 

The comments were made in his foreward to a new book on the subject, Women crucified: The shame of human trafficking as told from the street, written by Fr Aldo Buonaiuto, who is a priest in the Pope John XXIII Community.

He said that the women he met at the home were "truly, women crucified ... some of them with their child in their arms".

He recalled how, following the visit, he had felt the need to "ask forgiveness for the real tortures they had to endure because of their clients, many of whom call themselves Christian".

He praised the rescue and rehabilitation work being done by Fr Aldo, as well as his new book, saying it was necessary to tell the stories behind the "shocking numbers" of people being trafficked into the sex trade for "illegal and shameful profit". 

"A person can never be offered for sale," he wrote, adding that the sex trade was "torturing" defenceless women.

He concluded with a call for individual and corporate action. 

"Individuals and institutions cannot remain indifferent before their cry of pain," he said. "No one should turn away or wash their hands of the innocent blood that is shed on the roads of the world".

News
Top BBC journalist to speak at London church service
Top BBC journalist to speak at London church service

A leading BBC journalist will share insights gained while covering the war in Ukraine during a poignant remembrance service in London on the evening of 11 November.

Heroes of rescue: from war’s frontlines to today’s fight for freedom
Heroes of rescue: from war’s frontlines to today’s fight for freedom

We may not be on a battlefield today, but we still live in what CS Lewis called ‘enemy-occupied territory’.

Churches remember the fallen on Remembrance Sunday
Churches remember the fallen on Remembrance Sunday

Churches across the country are joining in Remembrance Sunday commemorations in honour of all those who have served and sacrificed on behalf of the nation in both World Wars and subsequent conflicts.

Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech

A church leader was apparently warned by a police officer that a Bible verse displayed on the back of his campervan could be considered "hate speech" in certain contexts.