National News
Women's religious orders work to ward off sex trafficking at Super Bowl
Mark Pattison
Catholic News Service
Washington
Picking up from efforts to stem sex trafficking at the 2010 World Cup in South
Africa, 11 women's religious orders from Indiana and Michigan are working to
stop sex trafficking at this year's Super Bowl.
The orders are members of the Coalition for Corporate Responsibility for Indiana
and Michigan, established in the early 1990s. The coalition is a member of the
Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, which spearheaded the anti‑sex
trafficking efforts two years ago in South Africa.
The nuns aren't always the biggest football fans, but they've picked up some
of the terminology.
When ICCR's human trafficking working group mentioned during its meeting
last June that Super Bowl XLVI would be held in Indianapolis, "we
picked up the ball and ran with it," said Sister Ann Oestreich, an
Immaculate Heart of Mary sister who ministers as justice coordinator for
the Sisters of the Holy Cross in South Bend., Ind., and is the two-state
coalition's justice co‑chair.
"In CCRIM, we had done a process in terms of picking one issue that was
important to all of our members. Prior to the Super Bowl, the issue of human
trafficking came up," Sister Ann told Catholic News Service during a January
12 telephone interview from South Bend.
"It's such a broad issue. How do we get at it as investors, as socially
responsible investors? So we decided to take a look at the hospitality industry
and purchasing stock in their companies so we could get into a conversation with
the hotels."
Coalition representatives contacted the federal Department of Health and Human
Services for assistance. "We asked for printed copies of brochures on their
website, and HHS was kind enough, when they heard what we were doing, to provide
2,000 printed copies of those brochures."
The coalition prepared its own fact sheet to help hotels detect sex trafficking,
including a list of phone numbers to call as well as a shelter for trafficked
women.
The goal was to contact 220 hotels within a 50‑mile radius of Indianapolis by
January 17.
To date the response from the hotels has been quite good, Sister Ann said.
Based on a January 12 conference call with coalition members, "we've got
about 50 responses so far for the hotels," she added. About half of the
hotels have asked for further info that we're offering them in terms of training,
in terms of signing the ECPAT code." ECPAT is an acronym for Ending Child
Prostitution and Trafficking, which has developed a code of conduct to deter
child sexual exploitation.
SISTER MARGARET ANN NOWACKI/CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE