Life in rural Sierra Leone offers few economic opportunities to parents like Baindu Momoh and even fewer to her children. Surviving through subsistence farming and small-scale trading, Baindu has struggled to feed and educate her daughter. |
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So when a distant relative living in a larger town offered to take Baindu’s daughter
into her home and send her to school, Baindu felt relief. It was an opportunity for
her child to secure a future and one fewer hungry belly for her to worry over. |
Learn more about CenHTRO's programs in Sierra Leone |
But bad actors abuse the tradition, meaning children wind up being forced to work
in agriculture or cleaning houses when they should be learning math and science. To help recover from her experiences, Baindu’s daughter was taken to WHI’s Recovery Centre. Social workers trained in trauma-informed practices cared for the girl. Baindu met with her daughter at the shelter. Counseled by therapists, they prepared to return home. As CenHTRO’s research noted that poor families required additional post-trafficking support, the family received school supplies and food. Baindu received income-generating support, meaning social workers helped her buy goods to sell at her local market. This small amount of help, Baindu said, relieved the economic pressure on her family. Today, Baindu’s daughter is attending school and doing well. |