Save the Children!



Every day, children all over the world are being abused-- beaten, raped, tortured, or kidnapped by a parent, a friend, a sibling, or any other adult-- and are being forced to grow up or even die before their time. The sad truth is that most of these children do not even recognize that what is being done to them is wrong. It's time to face the truth-- that, yes, this can and does happen.


How can you help?



The Power of Silence
by Nancy Faulkner, Ph.D., 1996 c

The nightmare of the victim's torture chamber
is securely sealed with secrecy and fear;
Behind the prison bars, -- in solitary,
is the child who sheds a lonely, silent tear.

Stripped of dignity and hiding in the shadows,
bravely waiting for the safety of daylight;
A trusting child becomes the helpless victim,
without essential weapons for the fight.

The bars remain invisible to callous passers by,
who do not stop to help the frightened child
Or pause to see the pain inflicted cleverly,
as the innocent is silenty defiled.

Predators retain the keys with clever subtle threats,
and captivate the hostage through deception;
A child is subject to the violation --
veiled as "friendship," or shrouded as "protection."

The villain gains its abject cunning power
through apathetic silence of the masses
And the passive stance of all the sightless people,
who will not loose the choking silent lashes.

To turn away will sacrifice the child
and support the power of the covert beast,
While we leave the keys that lock the dungeons' secrets
in the evil hands of those we trust the least.



Guardian Angel Award
Thank you, Mary!


Fact: The typical child sex offender molests an average of 117 children,
most of whom do not report the offense. (Sad, but true!)
Source: National Institute of Mental Health, 1988





It Takes a Village Award
Thank you, Susy!


We can't let this go on! It's time to encourage children to speak up about what's being done to them, and it's time for adults who have been abused to put and end to their silence. Please, if you are or ever have been abused, TALK to someone-- a counselor, a trusted friend, anyone. And if you know someone who has been abused-- a sibling, a friend, even a parent-- LISTEN to what they have to say.

Children have voices-- listen to them!





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