I first met Katrina on one of our monthly outreaches. In a drunken stupor, she railed
at me, “Why won’t God just let me die?” She’s tried to overdose, walked in
front of cars; all to no avail. She’s still very much alive, although her real name
is not Katrina.
With
courage no doubt brought on by the alcohol, she recounted a story that
shattered any naiveté I may have had about the human trafficking epidemic that
plagues the GTA.
While
driving with her boyfriend (I learned that part of the victim mind set is to
refer to your pimp as your boyfriend) she dared to challenge him on the new
girl he’d been seeing. Angered by her
audacity, he threw her out of the car in the middle of the city, leaving her
with nothing. No money, no ID, and no water, on one of the hottest days of the
summer. Afraid and tired, she stumbled wearily into a park rife with the city’s
lost and broken.
“You know
who actually helped me?” she asked. “A homeless crack head. He gave me water,
food, and bus fare to go back to my boyfriend. Only someone who knows what it
is to be looked down upon would help someone like me.” Bitterness etched on her
face, she weaved side to side in her stilettos.
“You do
know that I’m being trafficked?” she asked matter-of-factly.
This
information is seldom if ever offered. It is an unspoken truth among many of
these working girls.
Feeling
inadequate at this point, I dared to ask, “Have you ever tried to get away from
him? Have you gone to the police?”
“I have a
nine-year-old brother. He’s already told me that he’ll hurt him if I ever try
to leave,” she said, trying to hold back her tears. “Besides, he has my
passport, my driver’s licence, everything.”
And then
the moment is over. The club’s manager barged into the change room and
bellowed, “Katrina, you’re up,” signalling her turn on the dance floor.
So how do
you tell someone whose experience seems hopeless, that there is hope?
That their life does, in fact, have purpose when their identity and every
tangible piece of evidence that says that they even exist, has been stripped
from them?
By showing
up. Remembering her name – not her club name, but the one her parents gave her
at birth. Being persistent in your pursuit of connection. Texting until one finally
gets answered and leads to a dinner together at the Keg. A dinner that requires
training on how to safely meet up with a trafficked woman in the sex trade.
This is
eye-opening in and of itself. You’re given a cultural lesson on the difference
between a common street pimp, and the more dangerous variety, one involved in
organized crime. Should the pimp be present when Katrina arrives at the
restaurant, you’re not to be afraid to make eye contact. He will be more afraid
of you than you are of him, you're assured. After all, for him to show his face
to a square person, he is exposing himself. Aside from attempting some
intimidation tactics such as a menacing stare-down, there shouldn’t be any
issues.
With some
semblance of confidence, you proceed. You discover over steak and merlot that
she’s just a girl – a girl with a family, a girl with a painful past. You laugh
as she refers to you as the church lady, even more so when she learns that you,
too, have a story. Maybe not as racy as hers, but certainly one that didn’t
begin in a church. Then she stops calling you the church lady. We become
Katrina and Monica.
Where
choices seem to be far and few between, there is a light slowly being shone
into this darkness. Ontario’s Ministry
of Community and Social Services has developed a strategy to combat human
trafficking. In June, with an estimated 72 million dollars in the kitty, the
Provincial Anti-Human Trafficking Coordination Office will announce funding for
groups that submitted proposals to collaborate their efforts to build services
for those who are seeking to exit the sex industry.
The
priorities are transitional and longer term housing, employment and job
training, as well as addiction treatment. In addition, this initiative is also
seeking to better prepare and train police services and the Crown Attorney’s
office to be more sensitive and thus more effective when these cases make it to
the courtroom, which, thankfully, has been on the increase.
I am not
as strong as Katrina, but then again, I don’t have to be. I am blessed to know
her, to walk alongside her, and to learn what it truly is to be strong, when
it’s the only choice you have.
Monica Catto is an aspiring writer and Social Justice activist working in
the Human Trafficking field with the White Rose Movement of Toronto. She lives in Mississauga, Ontario.
See Brian Henry’s schedule here, including writing workshops
and creative writing courses in Algonquin Park, Bolton, Barrie, Brampton,
Burlington, Caledon, Georgetown, Guelph, Hamilton, Ingersoll, Kingston,
Kitchener, London, Midland, Mississauga, Oakville, Ottawa, Peterborough, St.
Catharines, Saint John, NB, Sudbury, Thessalon, Toronto, Windsor, Woodstock,
Halton, Kitchener-Waterloo, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York Region, the GTA,
Ontario and beyond.
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