Ninth World Day of Prayer and Reflection against Human Trafficking, 2023

Author: Pope Francis

Video Message for the Ninth World Day of Prayer and Reflection against Human Trafficking

‘The shameful scourge’

Human trafficking is a shameful scourge that disfigures dignity, Pope Francis stressed in a video message to mark the Ninth International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking, observed each year on 8 February, the liturgical feast day of Saint Josephine Bakhita. The following is a translation of the Holy Father's words.

Today we remember Saint Bakhita, patron saint of victims of human trafficking. I join you in celebrating the Ninth International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking, on the theme “Journeying in Dignity”, which involves young people as protagonists.

I address you, young people, in a special way: I encourage you to care for dignity, yours and that of every person you meet. I heard that it was you who chose this theme: “Journeying in Dignity”. It is very important: it indicates a broad horizon for your commitment against human trafficking: human dignity. In this way you can contribute to keeping hope alive, and I would also add joy, which I invite you to preserve in your hearts, along with the Word of God, because Christ is the true joy!

Human trafficking disfigures dignity. Exploitation and subjugation limit freedom and turn people into objects to be used and discarded. And the system of trafficking exploits the injustice and inequality that force millions of people to live in conditions of vulnerability. Indeed, people impoverished by the economic crisis, by wars, by climate change and many forms of instability are easily recruited. Unfortunately, trafficking is growing at an alarming rate, affecting, above all migrants, women and children, young people like yourselves, people full of dreams and the desire to live in dignity.

We know that we are living in a difficult time, but it is precisely in this reality that all of us, in particular young people, are called to join forces to build “networks of good”, to spread the light that comes from Christ and his Gospel. The light that will be symbolically handed over in these days to the young people who have come to Rome to represent the organizations, which for years, have collaborated in this Day of Prayer and Awareness against trafficking. With this gesture, you are sent forth as missionaries of human dignity, against human trafficking and every form of exploitation. This inaugurates a special year of the involvement of young people, until the next Day in 2024. Guard this light and you will be a blessing for other young people. Never tire of seeking pathways to transform our societies and prevent the shameful scourge of human trafficking.

Journeying for dignity, against human trafficking, without leaving anyone behind. I would like to repeat some of the beautiful expressions you have written: “Walking with open eyes to recognize the processes that lead millions of people, especially young people, to be trafficked for brutal exploitation. Walking with an attentive heart to discover the daily paths of thousands of people in search of freedom and dignity. Walking with hope guiding our feet to promote anti-trafficking actions. Walking together hand in hand to support one another and build a culture of encounter that leads to the conversion of hearts and inclusive societies, capable of unmasking stereotypes and protecting the rights of every person”.

I hope that many people will accept your invitation to walk together against trafficking: walking together with those who are destroyed by the violence of sexual and labour exploitation; walking together with migrants, displaced persons, those who are searching for a place to live in peace and family. Together with you, young people, to reaffirm courageously the value of human dignity.

I thank you and say to you: go forth with courage! Go forth with courage! May the Lord bless you and may Our Lady protect you. May Saint Bakhita pray with us and for us. I offer my heartfelt blessing to all of you who work against trafficking and every person you meet on this journey for dignity. Thank you!

     [Saint Josephine Bakhita, as she is now known, was born in 1869 in a village in Darfur, South Sudan. When she was nine years old, she was kidnapped and sold as a slave, eventually forgetting even her own name. Arab slave merchants gave her the name “Bakhita”, Arabic for “fortunate one”. After 10 years as a slave, Callisto Legnani, the Italian Vice-Consul, bought her from traffickers in Khartoum and took her back to Italy, where she worked as a nanny before meeting the Canossian Sisters of Venice. In 1890, Bakhita received the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and First Communion and took the name Josephine Margaret Fortunata. In 1893, she entered the novitiate of the Canossian Sisters and professed her vows three years later. For the next 45 years, Sister Josephine served as the cook, sacristan and doorkeeper of the convent at Schio. She died of pneumonia on 8 February 1947, an exemplar of mercy having once said, “If I were to meet those men who abducted me, or even those who tortured me, I would kneel and kiss their hands, for if that hadn't happened, I would not be a Christian and a religious today”.]
 

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L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English, 10 February 2023, page 20