through education; and
WHEREAS, Victims of human trafficking need support in order
to escape and recover from the physical, mental, emotional,
sexual and spiritual trauma associated with their victimization;
and
WHEREAS, Human traffickers use many physical and
psychological techniques to control their victims, including the
use of violence or threats of violence against the victim or the
victim's family, isolation from the public, isolation from the
victim's family and religious or ethnic communities, language
and cultural barriers, shame, control of the victim's
possessions, confiscation of passports and other identification
documents, threats of arrest, deportation or imprisonment and
withholding or depriving the victim's basic needs to survive,
such as shelter, food, nutrition, medication, health care and
essential goods, if the victim attempts to reach out for
assistance or to leave; and
WHEREAS, Although laws to prosecute perpetrators of human
trafficking and assist and protect victims of human trafficking
have been enacted in the United States, awareness of the issues
surrounding human trafficking by those people most likely to
come into contact with victims is essential for effective
enforcement because the techniques that traffickers use to keep
their victims enslaved severely limit self-reporting; and
WHEREAS, The effort by individuals, businesses, organizations
and governing bodies to promote the observance of "National
Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month" in January of
each year represents one of the many examples of the ongoing
commitment to raise awareness of and to actively oppose human
trafficking; therefore be it
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