Friday, December 5, 2008

The REST of the Big Picture

Last weekend I spent a few days traveling through a part of eastern Ghana called the Volta Region. It is in this region as well as other parts of West Africa including Togo and Benin, that the practice of Trokosi slavery is widespread. It is this region that four of our children at Haven of Hope used to call home.

Trokosi is a belief system in which entire villages believe in and worship a variety of gods. However, in addition to idol worship, this religion requires that in order to atone for sins and appease the gods, one must offer a child, preferably a virgin daughter to the Trokosi priest over the local shrine. That child is then enslaved for a lifetime, at the will and whim of the priest. They are his, for work or for pleasure. There are hundreds of these shrines throughout West Africa, but thanks to the concern and efforts of Every Child Ministries and its full time employees in the Volta Region, three shrines have agreed to the liberation of their slaves just in the past few years and another is being negotiated at this time, hoping for another liberation ceremony in the summer of 2009!

As I mentioned, four of our children come from this region of the country and our mission last weekend, at their request, was to take them to their former homes in order to greet what may remain of their families. While each reunion had its own unique circumstance, their commonality was a lack of attachment, emotion, and love in each instance. As we passed from Sogokopie to Aflau over countless rivers and through soaring coconut trees, I began to ask myself what it was that made these reunions different from those we had witnessed previously in Accra. As much as I tried to avoid the Sunday school answer, it was the only answer that made any sense. The difference was God. Even though they have struggled through poverty, prostitution, and despair, many of the mothers in the streets of Accra know God and believe in the sacrifice of His son. These families in the Volta Region, who participate in an idol worshipping, child enslaving religion completely devoid of the knowledge of the one true God, know nothing of love because God is love. Today I ask that you pray for ECM and its employees in the Volta Region ministering daily to those trapped in the Trokosi traditions, that they may radiate Christ’s love in a land where there is very little.

Additionally, I ask that you pray for our child of the week, or in this case, children. Grace is a 17 year old girl with a beautiful one year old baby boy named Seyram. She and her baby accompanied us on our venture to the east. Once a Trokosi slave herself, she now bares the scars of her tribe etched on her face, a constant reminder of her thorny past. Please pray the she will be able to see herself as a desirable young woman and not something that has been simply used and discarded. Pray that she will be encouraged as she cares for her child and sees the miracle of life that she has been blessed with.

Thanks!

Love,
Yevu (the word for white girl in yet another tribal language of Ghana!)

1 comment:

Andy HoboTraveler.com said...

I heard comments in Niger about slavery of sorts, although not the traditional sense, this is still a problem. Thanks for this educational blog post. Here is a link from Wikipedia to help...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritual_servitude

Andy HoboTraveler.com Travel Blog