
| |  | Ramphal and his entire family were slaves in the rock quarries of India for as long as anyone can remember. Slowly - with the help of grassroots activists - Ramphal and the other slaves in his village realized that freedom was possible. Getting there was dangerous. More>>
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Rose and Christie were just teenagers in Cameroon when they were promised a chance to go to school in the United States. What they got was - slavery. They worked 15 hours a day for years - they were paid nothing. Rose was beaten. Finally, she couldn't take any more. More>> | 
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 | Like tens of thousands of children in Haiti, Cam-Suze was held as a restavec, a child slave. Her life changed when she met Free the Slaves’ partner, Limye Lavi. More>> |
Like many stories of trafficking and slavery, Kwame's begins with a dream. His parents were told he would join a successful sales business. And like each of these stories, the promises quickly turned to lies. More>>
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 | These women went to hell and back - a few times. They were slaves. When they began to organize for freedom, they were burned out of their homes by angry slave owners. Samura remembers," There was not one single cloth to wear, no food to eat, no utensils, nothing." More>> |
Rambho was tricked into slavery after his father died. He worked 16 hours a day weaving carpets. When his fingers bled - the slave owner dipped them in oil and lit them on fire. That was before the raid that changed Rambho's life forever.More>> | 
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 | Imagine being abducted into sex slavery and then rejected by your community as unclean when you escaped the nightmare. Imagine uniting with other survivors to save young girls from the same fate. Imagine these outcasts marching on the government and demanding change! More>> |
A community group, organized with the help of FTS and partners on the ground in India, thought something bad was happening to kids in a local carpet factory. More>>
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