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A Crime So Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern-Day Slavery

November 3 at 7:30 p.m.
Bonchek Lecture Hall
Barshinger Life Sciences and Philosophy Building

A lecture by E. Benjamin Skinner, journalist, author and fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University

Born in 1976, Ben Skinner was raised in Wisconsin and northern Nigeria, where his father had served as a British colonial administrator. He first learned about slavery as a child in Quaker meeting. The Quakers, who believed the divine spark animates every man, were the first abolitionists. Skinner’s Sunday school teachers spent as much time on Harriet Tubman and William Lloyd Garrison as they did on Moses and Jesus.

Skinner himself comes from abolitionist stock. His great-great-grandfather, Robert Pratt, served with the 1st Connecticut Artillery at the Siege of Petersburg, the 10-month campaign that bled white the Confederate Army and led to General Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox.

In 2003, as a writer on assignment in Sudan for Newsweek International, Skinner met his first survivor of slavery. He had first flown in under enemy radar with an evangelical group purporting to buy slaves en masse to secure their freedom. Afterward, on his own, he hitched a ride on a U.N. Cessna to the frontlines of the north-south Sudanese civil war. There he met Muong Nyong. Like Skinner, Nyong was 27 at the time and pondering what to do with the rest of his life. Unlike Skinner, he had spent the first part of that life in bondage.

After meeting Nyong, Skinner traveled the globe to find others like him. Scholars estimate the total number of modern-day slaves is greater than at any point in history. Skinner defines slaves as people who are forced to work, under threat of violence, for no pay beyond subsistence. Going undercover when necessary, Skinner has infiltrated trafficking networks and slave quarries, urban child markets and illegal brothels. In the process, he became the first person in history to observe the sales of human beings on four continents.



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