Hill Tribe Villages of Northern Thailand
I guess it was about halfway up the mountain atop my elephant that I realized that I was no longer in Kansas. I am traveling with a group of my University of San Francisco students this week, and our goal today was to reach a tribal Acha village high in the Thai mountains. The roads are impassable, and in the extreme heat I feared we might lose half of the students (and more likely the professor!) to heat stroke. So we rode elephants. Remarkable how these enormous beasts are so adept at keeping their balance and placing their feet in the right place.
The hill tribe people are the most trafficked native population in Thailand. They live on the edge of sustenance, with agriculture and animal grazing a marginal source of family income. Our partner here in the hill tribe area is called The Mirror Foundation, founded nearly two decades ago by a group of Thai university students. We will be collaborating with them to bring education to primary schools, using theater and music to share the signs of trafficking behavior. We also will start marketing in our Freedom Stores some of the products that they make in the villages.
When our elephant caravan reached the top of the mountain, we met a village of about 200 people. The school barely has enough resources to survive, and one teacher tries to tend to 51 children of all ages. It takes only $3600 to pay the salary of a teacher for an entire year and give him/her the supplies needed for classroom teaching. Can you imagine the impact on so many children’s lives, only for $3600 year?!
Our guide from the Mirror Foundation laments that teenagers see no future in the hill tribe villages. They go to the city looking for work, and there traffickers seek the advantage. Undermining trafficking means bringing justice, economic justice as well as legal justice. Where there is no justice, the poor will be exploited. Every day, everywhere.
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