Audience With The Participants Of The World Day Against Trafficking, 12 February 2018 © Vatican Media

‘Pray for the Reception of Victims of Trafficking,’ Says Pope Francis in the Preface to the Book ‘Crucified Women: The Shame of Trafficking Told from the Street’

Authored by Father Aldo Buonaiuto of the Pope John XXIII Community

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After hearing the story of the women freed from prostitution and sheltered in the John XXIII House, Pope Francis felt “almost the need to ask forgiveness for the real tortures they had to endure, caused by the clients, many of whom say they are Christians. A further impulse to pray for the reception of the victims of trafficking of forced prostitution and violence.”
The Holy Father wrote the Preface of the book entitled: “Crucified Women: The Shame of Trafficking Told from the Street” (Rubbettino), by Father Aldo Buonaiuto, priest of the Pope John XXIII Community.
Pope John XXIII Community
 The Pope John XXIII Community Association is an international organization of faithful of pontifical right. Father Oreste Benzi founded the Community in 1968. Since then, it is specifically and continually committed to the fight against marginalization and poverty.
In a press release published on the occasion of the book’s going on sale, Giovanni Paolo Ramonda, the Community’s President, said that the battle against prostitution was started by Father Oreste Benzi 30 years ago when he met a prostitute in the Rimini station and learned about the abuse that prostitution entails.
This battle has continued to our days, with more than 100 volunteers of the Pope John XXIII Community, who every week go out into the streets to try to liberate these women.
Gratitude
 Giovanni Ramonda thanked the Holy Father “for giving, once again, a significant sign of closeness to the struggle against this modern slavery” and, the book’s author, Father Aldo “who, following Father Benzi’s steps, has rescued on the street and received these very young former slaves of trafficking.”
The trafficking of human beings, from antiquity to our days is the subject of the book, published by Rubbettino.
Here is the unabridged Preface, written by Pope Francis for the book, which was published today, July 29, 2019, by “Vatican News.”
* * *
On one of the Fridays of Mercy, during the Extraordinary Holy Year, when I entered the House of the Pope John XXIII Community, I did not think I would meet inside there such humiliated, afflicted and exhausted women — really crucified women. In the room, where I met with girls liberated from the trafficking of forced prostitution, I breathed all the pain, the injustice and the effect of oppression — an opportunity to relive Christ’s wounds. After listening to the moving and very human stories of these poor women, some of them with their child in their arms, I felt a strong desire, almost the necessity to ask forgiveness for the real tortures they had to endure caused by the clients, many of whom describe themselves as Christians — a further impulse to pray for the reception of the victims of trafficking of forced prostitution and violence.
A person can never be put on sale. Therefore, I am happy to be able to make known the precious and courageous work of rescue and rehabilitation, which Father Aldo Buonaiuto has been doing for many years, following Oreste Benzi’s charism. This also implies the will to expose oneself to the dangers and reprisals of the crime, which has made of these girls an inexhaustible source of illicit and shameful earnings.
I would like this book to be heard in the widest ambit possible so that, knowing the stories that exist behind the scandalous numbers of trafficking, it can be understood that without stopping the very high demand of clients, the exploitation and humiliation of innocent lives will not be able to be checked.
Corruption is an illness that doesn’t stop on its own. There must be awareness at the individual and collective level, also as Church, to really help these unfortunate sisters of ours and to impede the world’s iniquity falling on the most fragile and vulnerable creatures. Any form of prostitution is a reduction to slavery, a criminal act, a repugnant vice that confuses making love with venting one’s instincts by torturing a defenseless woman.
It is a wound to the collective conscience, a deviation from the current imaginary. The mentality is pathological by which a woman must be exploited as if she were merchandise to be used and then discarded. It is an illness of humanity, an erroneous way of thinking of society. To free these poor slaves is a gesture of mercy and a duty for all men of goodwill. Their cry of pain cannot leave individuals or institutions indifferent. No one must look the other way or wash his hands of the innocent blood that is shed in the roads of the world.
Francis

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