Beauty From Ashes Videos
Friday, April 30, 2010
URGENT CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS - Miami Porn Show OutREACH Prep
BFA Mission: REACH Victims of Commercialized Sexual Exploitation and Consumers of Porn at Miami Porn Expo May 14-16, 2010
BFA Project: Miami Porn Expo OutREACH Preparation
Volunteers Needed To: Package 5100 DVD's, Bibles, label thousands of beauty supplies & assemble hundreds of gift bags to give away
Dates and Times: Saturday, May 1st 9-5pm (we will be working later than 5pm if you can stay - great!)
Monday, May 3rd 3-9pm
Saturday, May 8th 9-3pm
Monday, May 10th 3-9pm
Meeting Location: Colonial Country Club
Fort Myers, Florida 33913
Attendance Confirmation & Questions: 239-849-2089 (Attendance confirmation required in order to advise guard house of gated community. Address will be provided at time of confirmation.)
For more information on outREACH and to assist financially: CLICK HERE
Thank you for your help and looking forward to seeing you soon!
Ann Elizabeth Peterson
Event Coordinator
Beauty From Ashes Ministries
Where Victims Become Over-Comers
239-849-2089
Ann's Email
Friday, April 23, 2010
BFA Founder Quoted in Human Trafficking World Cup Story

IOM South African division just launched the anti-human trafficking campaign prior to FIFA World Cup scheduled to be held in June 2010. A Campaign Designed to Drop Sales created a bright yellow poster with a hotline number to report human trafficking incidents. IOM aims to raise the awareness of human trafficking among South Africans before the flood of pimps and traffickers officially launch their business to target sports fans during the World Cup season.
The unprepared government and the importance of the awareness raising effort
According to the Campaign's Fickr page, there are more than 4 million people disappearing annually all over the world. According to Global human trafficking news roundup data gathered for the past few months, women and children all over the African countries are either trafficked or migrating into South Africa prior for World Cup season. However, the legislation to combat human trafficking is only on a pending stage, which limits law enforcement officials from cracking down on human traffickers and pimps during the World Cup. Hence, IOM's such campaign against human trafficking becomes more vital to South Africa than anything else. The same fickr page further states IOM's position on the campaign as follows:
There is currently a strong partnership between the Government of South Africa, civil society, and local communities to take action against human trafficking. IOM applauds TBWA for its support to these efforts through a creative campaign that opened the eyes of community populations and school children, and urged them to see the truth when offered dubious opportunities that promise a better and easier life.
A mega sports event remains as a magnet for sex industry
According to a sex industry survivor and the founder of the organization, BeautyfromAshes, Julie Shematz says that people working in sex industry look forward to mega sports events as the events become the opportunities to generate high profits. Whether one works for herself or pimps on someone else, she or he knows that one can profit a lot by targeting sports fans who are drunk and sexually charged. A Sex workers coalition once were furious that the number of trafficking victims estimated prior to the mega sports games have been exaggerated and only creates unreasonable fear among the public. But, the fact that the news report constantly alarms public of different trafficking incidents involving South Africa shows that the awareness raising effort shows that the country is not immune to human trafficking. Further, everyone knows it's true. If sex workers can make profit from the event, so do the traffickers and the pimps.
Source: Norfolk Human Rights Examiner
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Feds Should Expand Porn Prosecutions

Hatch, R-Utah, pressed U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder this week to prosecute the makers and distributors of more ubiquitous hard-core images, which account for a major percentage of what is available online and elsewhere.
"There has been a pattern at the Department of Justice to prosecute only the most extreme obscene materials. This particular type of material may virtually guarantee a conviction but it is not the most widely produced and consumed and therefore its prosecution may have very little impact on the obscenity industry," Hatch told Holder during a Justice Committee hearing Wednesday.
This is far from the first time Hatch has prodded an attorney general to go after porn producers, having been frustrated by the lack of action during the presidency of George W. Bush.
Hatch told Holder that for years the Justice Department has taken "a misguided and narrow approach to law enforcement in this area."
Holder seemed to stick to the status quo in his response, saying the department focuses on child obscenity cases prosecuted by career staff, not political appointees.
"We will certainly enforce the laws with the limited resources that we have and go after those cases that I think -- as we always do -- have the potential for the greatest harm," Holder said.
Hatch believes federal prosecutors with the help of the FBI could target a high percentage of the pornography out there, getting convictions based on community standards in most parts of the country.
What is acceptable and now readily accessible has changed in recent years, said Jerry Mooney, an attorney based in Utah and Los Angeles who has fought the government on obscenity cases.
"People have been voting with their mouse on what they find to be acceptable material," he said.
Mooney also said federal law enforcement is rightfully focused on terrorism cases and major financial malfeasance.
"It seems like this is not the time to redirect resources back into that area when they need to be spent on things that are more important," he said.
Diane Duke, executive director of the Free Speech Coalition, a group created by the adult entertainment industry, also made the case that pornography has become more acceptable over time.
"Prosecutors are less enthusiastic about prosecuting for obscenity because they realize that our society is becoming more supportive of adults rights to be adults and to access adult materials," she said.
Robert Peters from Morality in Media says federal agencies are to be commended for going after online sexual exploitation of children, but adds they "have for the most part turned a blind eye towards the explosion of hard-core adult pornography on the Internet and elsewhere."
The government hasn't aggressively targeted pornography since the administration of George H.W. Bush.
At the time, Patrick Trueman ran the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, he has since gone into legal practice building a case that pornography harms people. In a 2005 congressional hearing Trueman said he collected $24 million in fines and pushed cases that resulted in 50 convictions.
The Clinton administration changed priorities, telling the division to focus on child porn cases and despite public pronouncements that they would beef up prosecution cases, little changed under George W. Bush.
In 2005, Bush's Attorney General Alberto Gonzales created a new obscenity prosecution task force and named Brent Ward, a former U.S. Attorney for Utah, to head it up.
According to a 2008 American Bar Association article, the task force prosecuted only 10 cases in its first three years, a span that included a U.S. Attorney firing scandal, which resulted in some of Ward's e-mails entering public court records.
One e-mail, which Ward wrote 10 months after his appointment to the task force, said his team had only two cases with indictments and only one with the help of the FBI. "In light of this, the Task Force would have to be considered a failure so far."
Trueman says little has changed since then.
"Such enforcement is at a standstill at the department," he said Thursday, applauding Hatch's push for more prosecutions.
Ward, who still leads the obscenity task force, declined to comment.
The legal test is known as the Miller standard and it says pornography is obscene when "taken as a whole, [it] appeals to the prurient interest in sex; portrays, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and taken as a whole, does not have serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value."
A jury members must find that the material in question is obscene by the standards of their community.
For every girl trafficked across international borders, there are 100 inside the U.S

According to Steven Wagner, president of Renewal Forum, a Washington, D.C., non-profit organization dedicated toward the abolishment of human trafficking and the restoration of its victims, the federal government can only do so much. Most of its efforts concern immigrants and those brought into the U.S. from other countries, with not enough directed toward domestic trafficking. (The June 2009 State Department’s annual report on trafficking contained more than 220 pages on efforts to fight trafficking abroad, and less than one page on the fight against domestic trafficking.) “We need local (state) governments enacting effective laws to wither the exploitation and local police monitoring, investigating it,” he said. Wagner was in Kansas City to facilitate a 2-day multi-disciplinary conference on human trafficking. The conference, co-sponsored by Renewal Forum, The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, the Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kan., and Veronica’s Voice, a local organization dedicated to educating, encouraging and empowering victims of trafficking and prostitution to recover their lives, was intended as a first step toward making Kansas City a model city in the effort to fight human trafficking.
The city’s Midwestern location is ideal for the model, Wagner said. “It’s the heartland, right in the middle of the country.”
Melissa Snow, of Shared Hope International, a non-profit organization founded in 1998 to serve sexually exploited women and children, had also touched on the Midwest in an interview with The Catholic Key in 2007. She said that Interstate 35 bisects the country from Laredo, Texas to Duluth, Minn., with access to east-west highways. Truck traffic on I-35 may be carrying more than meets the eye, she said.
Human Trafficking is a $32 billion dollar crime industry world wide, running a close third behind drug and arms dealing according to the conference’s keynote speaker, U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan). Each year, between 17,500 and 20,000 men, women and children are trafficked into the United States from more than 48 source countries for purposes of sexual or labor exploitation, according to a report released in June 2007 by the State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons. But it is no longer just an international problem, Brownback said. The U.S. State Department estimates that more than 250,000 American citizens and legal residents, most of them children under age 18, are being trafficked within this country. Brownback noted that the Kansas City area is “becoming a hub” for traffickers and their victims, of which 80 percent are women and girls. He said many times young girls are lured by traffickers by expressions of affection: Come, be my girlfriend. Later “Be my girlfriend” metamorphoses into “Be his girlfriend, I need money, and he’ll pay for it.” Drugs can and do enter the picture, as do physical and emotional abuse and unwanted children. It’s all about relationships; often people who become victims of trafficking have blown through relationships or are casualties of familial relationships blown apart, Brownback said. Children and adults abducted or lured into sexual exploitation or forced labor become disposable, he said, as evidenced by Kevin Bales’ 1999 book, Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy. Brownback went on to say that the usual age of a trafficked child’s first exploitation is 12-13, with some as young as 9. “In many world cultures, women and children are devalued, ‘disposable.’ Too often we look at people in troubling situations as problems, instead of inherently dignified human beings, children of a living God.
“Persons become commodities,” Brownback said, “commodities to be used for utility or pleasure. Human trafficking has become a tremendously important problem that has not been handled well in this country.”
Sergeant Byron Fassett and Detective Catherine De La Paz, of the Dallas Police Department’s High Risk Victims and Trafficking Child Exploitation Squad, presented the Dynamics of Domestic Prostitution/Trafficking of Children: Investigative/System Response. Fassett said that the squad routinely handles about 1,500 cases a year of sexual abuse, Internet crimes and the exploitation of children. He made it very clear that sexually exploited “children are not prostitutes; they are human beings who are victims of prostitution. It has become a national problem that is bigger than international trafficking. For every girl trafficked across international borders, there are 100 inside the U.S.,” he said. He also said that “we play into traffickers hands if we only look at the home turf. We have to look at trafficking globally.” It can get confusing, even to the point where people exhibit a “see no evil” reaction.
Child sex trafficking is the most overlooked form of child sexual abuse, Sergeant Fasset said. “Because we don’t always notice the effects (the bruising and branding, the look in the eyes), it can be easy to dismiss these kids as bad kids.” The majority of trafficked kids are chronic runaways or throwaways (children and teenagers who have become inconvenient to have around), he said.
Wagner had said much the same thing. “Most trafficked children and teens are runaways or throwaways. These are serious missing kids, and only about 1 out of 5 cases are reported to law enforcement. There are several reasons for this,” he said. “Parents or relatives are embarrassed by the evidence of abuse; the child has become inconvenient or a hassle — mom has a new boyfriend; drugs or other illegal activities at home.”
Traffickers have become very astute, Wagner went on, at picking up kids over the Internet or in shopping malls. “It’s the law of supply and demand,” he said. “The supply is met by emotionally hungry kids and the demand by men addicted to pornography and sex.”
Pornography is not a victimless crime, Wagner said. “Kids are exploited in production and the result creates a demand for real live children to exploit. A great deal of child marketing occurs on the Internet, which has become the new ‘street.’”
Sergeant Fasset also commented on the marketing of children through the Internet. Buying or selling a child or teenager under the age of 18 for prostitution or pornography is a “technology facilitated abuse.” But what is being done about it? Not much and pimps are counting on that, he said. “Kids won’t tell; adults won’t listen, and even if they do listen, adults and cops won’t do anything.” There’s a good reason why trafficked and prostituted kids won’t tell, he said. More often than not the children or teens were born into a family without a father figure, mother a drug or alcohol dependent who is in an out of the child’s life, raised by relatives, a chronic runaway with problems at school; the list goes on. Pimps, who usually are sociopaths, lure teens with promises of affection, attention, security and clothes or jewelry, and lots of money. In a short time, they gain control over the young girl or woman (or boy) with physical abuse, branding, threats of reprisals against family members or themselves, monitoring by other girls, and drug addiction. “With no one to yell, ‘foul’ for these victims, what’s to stop the pimps?” Sergeant Fasset asked. “We have to yell ‘foul,’ we have to recruit these young people back to life, lure them away from ‘the life,’ and support the healing process. We must investigate, arrest and prosecute each and every pimp we can get our hands on. We have to become the pimp (theoretically), we have to understand him, his street smarts, and exceed him.”
B. Julie Johnson, Ph.D. and MPH, spoke of sexual exploitation from a survivor’s perspective. Although she has been out of “the life” for 27 years, recalling her experiences brought her to tears more than once. As a young Houston-area graduate student in fear after a home invasion, she moved around constantly for several months, staying with friends. Then she met a woman who promised her a way out, offered her safety and a way to make money. Johnson moved in with the woman, realizing after a short time that she was living in a brothel. Hiring Johnson out to men with sadistic or violent temperaments made the madam extra money, almost none of which trickled down to Johnson. Over the next 5 years, she remained in the industry, eventually becoming a call girl, which is still prostitution, she said. “It’s all the same, just different points along the spectrum. Whatever you call it, prostitution turns human beings into commodities, resulting in a hollowing out of the soul. Often the harm is invisible,” she said.
“Prostitution has been called the oldest profession. The reason for its longevity is that human beings often deny its existence. And those who extol it through books and rap music, well that’s the biggest trick they ever turned.”
Naïve people have suggested that legalizing prostitution may eventually abolish it. “In places where prostitution is legalized or ignored,” Johnson countered, “human trafficking increases because there are more venues for the trafficker.”
Author Beth Grant, of Project Rescue International, spoke about working in India for more than 25 years to rescue children sold into slavery by parents and kidnappers for sexual exploitation. “We are here today because there is hope,” she said. She spoke of the work of Project Rescue, then about the harm inherent in sexual exploitation. “It’s much more than sexual captivity,” she said. “It affects all aspects of a girl: physically, mentally, emotionally, relationally and spiritually.”
The most obvious sign is in the eyes, Grant said. “When I look in the eyes of a 12-year old girl who has been sold and raped repeatedly, day after day, I am looking into the eyes of death. She may be physically alive, but in order to survive emotionally and mentally, something inside has died.”
Laura Lederer, former senior advisor on trafficking in persons to the U.S. Undersecretary for Global Affairs in the State Department, now teaches at Georgetown Law Center and is vice president of Global Centurion, a non-governmental organization working to curb the demand side of sex trafficking, especially child sex trafficking. She also is a mom with daughters. Her focus was on reducing the demand for commercial sex in all its incarnations. “Sex trafficking is a transnational crime, and for that we need a transnational solution, she said. “We need to find out who are the perpetrators.”
Domestically, human trafficking is still virtually ignored by the media, and girls and women who are caught in investigations are usually prosecuted as criminals rather than victims. There is very little recidivism because, Lederer said, “When the guy is done he’s out of there, but the woman or girl on the street corner, she’s the one who gets arrested time after time.”
In 1993, the first case of human trafficking was brought to prosecution in this country. In 2000, the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the first comprehensive trafficking act in the world, was drafted and passed into federal law. The TVPA allowed prosecution of all the people involved in trafficking — recruiters, keepers, buyers, brothel guards — and increased penalties so traffickers can receive prison sentences of 20 years to life. It also set up a victim-centered approach, to rescue and restore victims to real life. Reauthorization of the act occurred in 2003, 2005 and 2008. But the problem is still rampant, because it is underplayed in this country. Christine Ladner, Assistant Attorney General of the State of Kansas and chair of the Kansas Human Trafficking Advisory Board said, “The bottom line is you can’t find what you’re not looking for.”
The stories are different and yet the same, said Kristy Childs, trafficking survivor and director of Veronica’s Voice, a local organization she founded in 2001 to help women and girls reclaim their lives from prostitution.
A chronic runaway trying to escape from an abusive home, she was trafficked by truckers who demanded payment for rides. Childs was 12 years old. She landed in Denver and was picked up by a pimp. At first she was grateful for a bed to sleep in since she had been sleeping on the sidewalk, but soon she was frightened, wanting to leave but afraid to. She suffered beatings, rape, humiliation and more. She and her “stable sisters” were told they were bad and deserved punishment.
“I had heard this before,” Childs said. “I was told I was bad at home, then by my pimp, johns (men who pay for sex), and when I was arrested for prostitution, law enforcement told me I was bad.
“Prostitution is what victims do,” she said, “not what they are. They are women and girls.”
Childs said the hip hop rap culture has glorified the pimp game. “There is a lot of money to be made when the girls each bring in $500-800 a night. And with a whole stable full, that’s hundreds of thousands of dollars,” she said.
“We learn to maintain,” Childs said, “and if we can maintain we can heal.”
Never underestimate the power of survivor to survivor, she said. Childs estimates she has been in contact with more than 5,000 women and girls over the past 9 years. She advocates education, particularly in middle school, “Because it’s naïve children who will become prey. That may be easier said than done, however, since there is a bias against our population,” she said.
“It takes courage for a woman to change, but the community needs courage also, courage to change their perception of these women.” Childs summed up, “If someone would have cared enough to find out what was going on in my home, they could have stopped it before it started.”
Renewal Forum’s Steven Wagner said the organizers took recommendations for the future, both from the panel and the audience. For example, he said, “a police officer proposed creating a matrix of agencies willing to provide services to victims, which is something we will get to work on right away.”
The adequacy of the legal environment was discussed. “One of the highpoints was Sam Meier,” a counseling psychologist who facilitates men’s groups for breaking the cycles of pornography in the Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kan., “speaking about the link between pornography and exploitation. He said that an effort addressing pornography addiction should be part of a demand reduction strategy.”
Wagner said he was “especially interested in the discussion of what could be said to young men in high school settings as part of a prevention strategy. The discussion gave the audience a chance to weigh-in, and I think was a productive feature of the conference.”
There are a growing number of NGOs and non-profit agencies directed toward recovery and healing of trafficked and prostituted adults and children. But the number of trafficking victims is also growing, unseen. In the ongoing effort to stem this tide, Wagner plans to return to Kansas City the week after Easter to “keep things moving forward.”
Source: The Catholic Key
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Podcast of BFA Founder, Julie Shematz, Interview on Quest for Character 4/13/10

Mike Dunn's Interview with CEO/Founder of “Beauty from Ashes Ministries, Inc.”, Julie Shematz.
Julie Taylor Shematz is an enthusiastic pioneer who loves to encourage others with truth. Passionate about intimacy with God and inspiring people to fulfill their destinies, Julie has a powerful testimony of beauty from ashes. Growing up fatherless, she’s overcome sexual & domestic abuse, offense, rejection, abandonment, depression, addictions & being a victim of human trafficking. From her greatest pain has come her most profound personal mission in life.
To listen, click here
Monday, April 12, 2010
Internet porn a wide-ranging problem, even in the church

A new report says much of America today has a similar naive attitude toward Internet pornography and that it needs to wake up and see porn's destructive impact not only on individuals but also marriages, children and society in general -- before it's too late.
The 53-page report, called simply, "The Social Costs of Pornography," was released by The Witherspoon Institute in Princeton, N.J., and was signed by more than 50 scholars from a wide variety of backgrounds: conservatives and liberals, Democrats and Republicans, atheists and Christians.
Gone are the days, the report notes, when porn was the sole domain of shady nightclubs, dark alleys and adult theaters. Today, porn is easily accessible and affordable, and -- with most Americans having a computer -- its users can remain largely anonymous.
"[A]lthough pornography has existed for millennia, never has it been as widely available or used as it has been in recent years," the report says. "... There is evidence that more people -- children, adolescents, and adults -- are consuming pornography -- sporadically, inadvertently, or chronically -- than ever before."
Internet porn, the scholars say, can be psychologically addictive and can even reach levels of what psychologists call a "compulsive" addiction -- meaning that it continues "despite negative consequences" to a person.
Similar to what is required of cigarettes, the report says all porn -- print and digital -- "should carry a warning" about porn's addictive potential and possible psychological harm.
How wide is the problem? The report cites one 2008 study of undergraduate and graduate students ages 18-26 that showed 69 percent of the men and 10 percent of the women viewed pornography more than once a month. But it's not just adults. In 2009, the fourth-most searched word on the Internet for kids ages 7 and under was "porn," according to data by OnlineFamily.Norton.com. For all kids -- those up to age 18 -- sex was No. 4, porn No. 5.
Hollywood makes 400 films a year to the porn industry's 11,000.
The report did not cite any data specifically about Christians' use of Internet porn -- reputable data is largely non-existent -- but Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, said the problem is very real among believers. He called Internet porn "perhaps the greatest challenge Christians face today."
"I am convinced that millions of men and boys are being destroyed by pornography, and statistics show that women and girls are joining their numbers," Land said. "Their abilities to be godly marriage partners are being warped by it, and it is one of the major causes of divorce. Pornography is an evil that thrives in silence and proliferates in the dark. And the sad truth is that believers are not in any way, shape or form impervious to its lure."
Focus on the Family's Daniel Weiss agrees.
"The church needs to be concerned about this," Weiss, senior analyst for media and sexuality, told Baptist Press. "I'm concerned the church is not taking this seriously enough. The number of people coming to this ministry looking for help is pretty high.
"The test of character is what you'll do when no one's looking. That's true on the Internet as well, and a lot of people are failing that test when it comes to this material. Part of the reason is that it's highly addictive stuff. It's kind of like putting a really desirable drug on the table and then just saying, 'I'm not going to touch that.' A lot of people are going to try it if it's sitting there long enough. It draws a lot of people in, and it draws Christians in as well."
Porn's usage among Christians is significant enough that a growing number of ministries and Christian publishers are releasing materials designed to encourage mental purity and to help those with addictions. The book "Every Man's Battle" (By Stephen Arterburn, Fred Stoeker and Mike Yorkey) remains a popular resource and has seen spinoffs aimed at young, single men, women and even small groups. Christian singer Clay Crosse wrote a book with his wife Renee ("I Surrender All: Rebuilding a Marriage Broken by Pornography") detailing his victory over porn addiction. The ministry Freedom Begins Here (FreedomBeginsHere.org) has a "personal toolkit" for individuals as well as resources for small groups featuring Gary Smalley, Ted Cunningham and Mark and Deb Laaser. And the group Music for the Soul has made a DVD named "Somebody's Daughter" (www.somebodysdaughter.org) featuring gripping testimonies from four Christian men who were addicted to porn. The DVD also includes the testimony from a wife. Music for the Soul also sells a discussion guide, and a CD with songs accompanies the DVD.
The Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC.com/pornography) and Focus on the Family (PureIntimacy.org) have online resources.
Every home computer, the ministries say, should have an anti-porn filter. (Two of the more popular ones can be downloaded at InternetSafety.com and BSecure.com.)
"We can try and write porn off in the church and say, 'Well it's not that bad, because I didn't really sleep with anybody.' But Jesus was clear about that," Music for the Soul's Steve Siler told BP. "He said if you've lusted after a woman in your heart you've committed adultery. That's not a parable that's hard to understand."
Porn's negative impact on marriages cannot be overstated, the report argues. It cites a Time magazine story about a 2003 meeting of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, where of the 350 attendees, 62 percent said the "Internet played a significant role in divorces in the past year, with excessive interest in online porn contributing to more than half of such cases." And, for those marriages that survive, porn causes the men to lose the desire to have a physical relationship with their wives, the report says.
As Pamela Paul, one of the report's signers, wrote, Internet pornography touches "all aspects" of an addict's life. She penned a 2005 book about Internet porn addiction, "Pornified."
"Their work days became interrupted, their hobbies were tossed aside, their family lives were disrupted," Paul wrote. "Some men even lost their jobs, their wives and their children."
The report quotes one scientist who says frequent pornography users develop "new maps" in their brains based on the pictures and videos they see. Those news maps develop a "hunger to be stimulated," so much so that the men at their computers are likes rats in a lab cage, "pressing the bar to get a shot of dopamine or its equivalent."
Exacerbating the problem, pornography by its very nature de-sensitizes men so much that images they once would have thought disgusting they now find appealing; to reach the same "high," they must try something new, the report says. This slippery slope can even lead to the viewing of child porn, the report says.
The report also quotes a 2009 Princeton University study that used MRI scans to study brain activity. The study showed that "after viewing pornographic images, men looked at women more as objects than as humans."
Pornography is, the report says, "one of the great social diseases."
"The triad of pornography consumption, dependency, and addiction is clearly not the only problem facing our society. However, it is a serious problem as well as an under-recognized one, which is why the signatories urge readers of all beliefs and political persuasions to attend to the empirical record of its harms," the report says. "Those who would ignore that record do so to the detriment of the society it is shaping, not only for the adults among us, but for those others who surely deserve to become adults in a world less glutted by pornographic imagery."
Source: Baptist Press
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Change.org/End Human Trafficking Features Story on BFA

"BFA is both well-designed and rich with information. The sidebar offers a solid, basic resource for those interested in the lowdown on human trafficking facts and stats here in the U.S., as well as several other unique ideas about the fight against sex trafficking. Most exciting, however, is the BFA Vision for comprehensive aftercare in its home base of Florida and potentially throughout the nation.
With nearly 300,000 estimated children at risk for commercial sexual exploitation in the U.S., it is clear we have a dire need for victim services. However, options are super-scarce: currently, there are only five specialized homes with 29 beds available. What to do?
BFA’s response is FREEdom Homes, a trademarked model for addressing the full spectrum of short- and long-term needs for sex-trafficking survivors. Julie knows first-hand that victims of the sex industry need “more than a prayer and encouragement” to ensure a thorough recovery, and that’s why she has developed a program that includes medical, dental and mental health care, as well as educational and vocational opportunities. (You can read the full details of this project here.)"
Read whole story, click here.
Huge thanks to Change.org journalist, Angela Longerbeam, for a great story. Keep up the great work. Together we are better & can make a difference!
Julie Shematz
Founder & CEO
Beauty From Ashes™ Ministries
Where Victims Become Over-Comers
239.939.9218
877.4BFA SOS (423.2767) Toll Free Help Line
Friday, April 9, 2010
BFA OutREACHes, Events, Needs, Requests & More
BFA on KJSL RADIO: Tuesday, April 13th 8-9pm CST. BFA Founder, Julie Shematz, will be a guest on Mike Dunn's Quest for Character. KJSL 630 AM
MIAMI PORN SHOW OUTREACH: Thursday, May 14 - Saturday, May 16 After 4 years of supporting & serving other ministries going into porn shows, BFA will be debuting our very own booth, Real Orange, in our region, at the South East's largest porn show. We'll be distributing Bibles, Magdalena: Through Her Eyes DVD's, Ian McCormick's DVD testimony and lotsa beauty supplies. We are in need of Bibles, volunteers to help with labeling beauty supplies, assembling gift bags and a Miami area church to host the Diverse Gathering, pre-porn expo evening of praise, worship and prayer open to anyone on Wednesday May 13th. For more information click here
OTHER EVENTS: Tampa Heal Me Crusade, May 6-8, St. Petersburg Gay Pride June 26, team meetings, porn prep meetings, weekly global prayer, theCALL2XXX & more, click here
OUR CURRENT NEEDS: Become a slavery abolitionist. Simple ways you can get involved. For more information click here
PRAYER REQUESTS: We have a team that prays over every request. To submit, click here. To join our prayer team, click here.
NEW WEBSITE: We launched our new website by FaithNetwork April 1st and we are adding daily to it daily. Check it out for the latest in domestic human trafficking news, trainings, etc., click here.
BFA E-NEWSLETTER: Sign up, click here
Thank you for your continued support. Together we are better and are making a difference!
In His passionate love & consuming fire,
Julie Shematz & the FREEdom™ Team
Beauty From Ashes™ Ministries
Where Victims Become Over-Comers
239.939.9218
877.4BFA SOS (423.2767) International Toll Free Help Line
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
A New Weapon Against Sex Trafficking

In 2006, a Nevada police officer reported catching a female in a truck “engaging in an act of prostitution” with the truck driver.
As Smith paraphrased the police report, “A 12-year-old girl was handcuffed, placed under arrest and transported to the juvenile detention facility in Las Vegas. The man, nearly 48 years old, was allowed to drive away.”
The sequel: “The child is now turning 15 years old and is again in juvenile detention under prostitution-related charges,” said Smith. “Her pimp reclaimed her after she was released the first time ...”
Twelve-year-old handcuffed; 48-year-old john waved off. It turns the stomach.
Smith, who leads Shared Hope International, an anti-trafficking organization she founded in 1998, helped persuade the 2010 Legislature to pass a bill that should make such travesties less likely, at least in this state. Signed into law last week, the bill dramatically increases the risks for “commercial abuse of a minor,” upping it from a class C to a class B felony.
That could have landed the 48-year-old trucker in prison for as many as 12 years.
“Promoting commercial sexual abuse of a minor” will go from a class B to a class A felony. That could have landed the pimp in prison for more than 26 years.
Another provision requires that the suspected john’s vehicle be immediately impounded, which would get a truck driver’s attention. Nor could the john or the pimp get off the hook by claiming not to know the girl’s age.
Under the new law, prostituted minors would not be treated as juvenile offenders when first arrested; they would be “diverted” to social services designed to help them escape the street and the pimps. Heavy fines on the perpetrators would help fund those services.
The law promises to make a small, local dent in a massive, hideous, international industry. This isn’t something that happens only in Bangkok or Manila. Shared Hope International estimates that at least 100,000 children – average age, 13 – are forced into the trade every year in America. They may be raped, exploited in child pornography sold on the street, or all of the above.
The consequences of exploitation don’t automatically evaporate at the age of 18. Those who think that adult prostitutes all got into the trade by choice might want to ask one of them when they first started selling sex
.
In October, a three-day sweep coordinated by the FBI rescued 52 prostituted children from their pimps and arrested nearly 700 suspected traffickers and other predators. One of the children was found in Everett, eight in Seattle. The slavery goes on under our noses.
Common sense suggests that many, many more children have yet to be rescued. Washington’s new sex-trafficking legislation promises to make that a little easier.
Source: The News Tribune
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Beauty From Ashes New Website Launching 4/1/10

Officially online 4/1/10, on the anniversary of Steve Jobs launching Apple (whooop, whoooop!) and in the middle of holy week....just in time for Resurrection Sunday....it's only NATURAL for us to launch the new & super improved BFA website! Then it occurred to me today that exactly 7 years ago on 4/1/10 I moved into my first apartment by myself after I had left the sex industry. I met my husband within 7 days at a local church I went to. Timing is perfect. The prophetic lover I am, I had to check into the numbers AFTER we set the date & of course, I'm not surprised....haha....God is sooooo cool!
4/1/10
4 = The earth (four winds, four corners), reign, rule, kingdom and creation
1 = Unity, God, beginning, first, rand, order, new
10 = Judgment, try or trial, test, temptation, law, order, government, restoration, responsibility & testimony.
Whoooop! Whooop!
The new site will feature videos, a media center, our improved vision, mission & purpose statement, lotsa artwork, resources, BFA testimonies, our Child of God theme song & CD, human trafficking facts, the BFA Sex Trafficking Restoration ~ FREEdom Project plan, budget, the FREEdom™ Children's Home Business Plan and MORE! We are making ALL our resources available & encourage anyone to run with the vision(s) God has given us and we don't even care if our name is on it! If they inspire you, take 'em, run with 'em and improve 'em! I am a visionary that casts visions & have come to realize others will bring them to pass! I simply CANNOT do it all & it's taken months & years of tests, trials & temptations to receive that message.
Our vision is for domestic victims of sex trafficking to have the opportunity to receive the comprehensive services they need & as long as it happens we could care less if BFA's name is on it or not.
Have fun checking the new website out (I LOVE IT ) & a huge thanks to FaithNetwork for developing it! Thank YOU for all your support in the past 5 years of being an official not for profit public charity (and before :+).
Together we have make a difference & will continue to do so!
Oh and Happy Resurrection Sunday! He is alive! Because He lives I do and we ALL have hope!
In His lavish love & consuming fire,
Julie Shematz
Founder, Beauty From Ashes
Monday, March 29, 2010
New Safehouses for Trafficking Survivors Open in California

A significant shortage of safe shelter options for human trafficking survivors is a little closer to being alleviated this week, with two shelters opening in California. These shelters will provide women who have been exploited in the commercial sex industry and wish to leave with a safe place to recover and rebuild their lives. But more housing options for human trafficking survivors are still needed around the country.
Anti-trafficking advocates in California say providing housing options for survivors in the state is incredibly important, since California is a hub for people being brought into the country from Mexico and Central America, as well as Americans trafficked internally for commercial sex. The houses will serve adult women, primarily those who have been in forced prostitution, from the U.S. and other countries. Both homes have been funded through a combination of local organizations and individual donations. One of the homes is staffed by Catholic nuns.
Adequate shelter for human trafficking victims has long been a significant deficiency in the fight against human trafficking. Victims need a safe place where pimps and traffickers can't find them with access to specialized counseling to help them overcome the significant trauma of slavery. They may need medical care, job skills, language assistance, immigration paperwork, child care, transportation, and a number of other services in order to get back on their feet. Existing women's shelters, such as domestic violence shelters, and homeless shelters, are often ill-equipped to handle the specific needs of this population.
While these two shelters in California are a great start, more are needed across the U.S. If someone manages to escape slavery in Atlanta, the last thing they want is to be shipped off to California to live, especially if they have ties and support systems in Atlanta. Similarly, law enforcement may need to keep survivors close as part of ongoing investigations. That means having appropriate support services on both coasts and key places in between.
Source: End Human Trafficking
Friday, March 26, 2010
Get caught hiring a prostitute & your name goes on sex offender list in Kansas

Thinking of hiring a lady of the evening in Kansas? Might want to think again.
The Kansas House today endorsed legislation to target human traffickers, but not before amending the bill to put those convicted of hiring a prostitute on the state’s sex offender registry for 10 years.
The amendment’s sponsor, Rep. Mike Slattery, an Mission Democrat, said the idea is to go after the demand for prostitutes, which he noted are often the victims of human trafficking.
“As the father of a young daughter it is the most atrocious thing I can think about,” he said of the practice of forcing young women into the sex trade.
But to the Scarlet Letter for hiring a prostitute wouldn't be permanent.
“Let’s say an 18 year old kid does something stupid,” he said. “Putting them on the sex offender list for their entire life might be overkill.”
Lawmakers in the House liked the idea and added it to the human trafficking bill before passing it. SB 359 now goes back to the Senate, which hasn’t considered Slattery’s idea.
The bill’s other components would redefine the crime of human trafficking to make it easier for police and prosecutors to go after offenders. It would also allow authorities to seize property and money from human traffickers, much in the same way that law enforcement already seizes the profits of drug dealers.
Source: Prime Buzz
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Sporting Events Still Remain Magnets for Sex Industry - Interview w/BFA Founder, Julie Shematz

However, Julie Shematz, a sex industry survivor and a founder of Beauty From Ashes, an organization working for sex industry survivors, shows that the link between the mega sports event and increase in prostitution or sex trafficking seem to be more than a myth or fictions."
READ ENTIRE STORY: Human Rights Examiner, March 24, 2010 Sporting Events Still Remain Magnets for Sex Industry
Julie Shematz speaking on behalf of the victims of human trafficking and addressing demand at FGCU

In an effort to put a voice and a face with the countless victims of commercialized sexual exploitation, Beauty From Ashes founder, Julie Shematz, after being asked to speak on behalf of the victims at a human trafficking awareness event, asked women from across the nation that she interacts with, "if you had one thing to say, what would that be?"
BFA's Human Trafficking Voiceless & Faceless Victims Revealed is a compelling and captivating multi-media presentation that finally puts faces and voices to the victims and survivors. You will find out what's on their heart and what they want you to hear from them.
Additionally, the presentation addresses demand and what is fueling the sex-for-sale industry.
Julie will be giving the presentation at Florida Gulf Coast University on March 25th 5:30 - 7pm. Event is sponsored by the Student Abolitionist Movement & the Florida Coalition of Human Trafficking.
Here are some of the comments made the first time Julie shared this unique presentation at the "Out of the Shadows" Human Trafficking Symposium at Florida Gulf Coast University:
"Was a great presentation!"
"Julie Shematz was exceptional, well spoken & brave..."
"Not a person in the room moved and Julie's presentation captivated everyone."
"Everyone needs to see and hear this."
Friday, March 12, 2010
Strip Club Outreach, Bibles & Housing Needed, FGCU & More

BIBLES NEEDED: We are in desperate need of new & gently used bibles for outreaches & those we work with. If you, your church, small group, business or organization can assist us with this need, please contact us ASAP.
FGCU: Over-comer & founder of BFA, Julie Shematz, will be speaking on behalf of the voiceless victims of human trafficking and discussing this modern day slavery at Florida Gulf Coast University on Thursday, March 25th 6-7:30pm. Event is sponsored by the Student Abolitionist Movement.
PRAYER REQUESTS: Weekly, we are working directly with 10 CSE & human trafficking victims currently and another 10-15 indirectly. Their needs vary from salvation, re-dedication, faith, deliverance, jobs, strength, wisdom, food, safehomes to be restored in, to godly mentors, children, pregnancies & addictions. Please agree with us for God's perfect will to be done in their lives. May they have a hunger & thirst for His Word & receive the revelation of who God is in & who they are in Him. Send your prayer requests here: prayer@beautyfromashes.org
HOUSING NEEDED: A mature, godly, woman who relocated to Fort Myers, FL two years ago to serve Beauty From Ashes is in need of renting a room, an efficiency and/or one bedroom apartment. She has been a faithful servant of God, BFA and is a widow. God's Word is very clear to us in that we need to care for widows and she needs our help. She is employed. Please contact Pastor Julie if you or someone you know could provide a loving home for her to live in.
FINANCIAL SUPPORT: BFA needs your donations today in order for us to continue reaching, rescuing & restoring victims of commercialized sexual exploitation & human trafficking. Will you please consider giving a one time give or committing to becoming a monthly partner with us? Perhaps you could speak to your pastor and inquire if they add us as home missionaries for their one time or monthly support?
Currently 80% of human trafficking is sex trafficking with 80% of women and children being the primary victims. This horrific crime is happening in our backyards, not just in other countries. Right now the United States of America is the #1 place to have sex with children. Currently, as a nation we are giving millions of dollars to assist illegal immigrants and victims in other countries and little to nothing to help OUR OWN CITIZENS. We need your help and are taking the steps to acquire federal & grant funding for these victim's comprehensive restoration needs, but the needs are URGENT NOW. We receive emails weekly that break our hearts and we are limited to what we can offer them due to a lack of funds. By supporting us, you, your church, your business or organization will be fighting to abolish modern day slavery in the USA and contributing to the restoration of innocent lives. Any amount will help, $5, $10, $50, $100, $1000 or $5000. Please consider giving today.
CHILD OF GOD FUND RAISING CD: For your gift of hope that enables us to reach, rescue & restore women, children & men, we will give you our private label, Child of God, CD for a minimum donation of $35 plus $5 shipping as a way to say thank you. To give securely online, CLICK HERE or send cash, check or money order to 5100 S. Cleveland Avenue, Suite 318-148, Fort Myers, FL 33907.
WEEKLY GLOBAL PRAYER FOR CSE & HUMAN TRAFFICKING VICTIMS: Please join us every Friday 8am-9am EST to pray for the victims, survivors and over-comers, as well as the organizations reaching, rescuing, restoring & advocating for these individuals. Prayer Guide, CLICK HERE
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED:
Outreach Team
Accounting/Bookkeeping
Administrative Assistant
Event Coordination
Case Management
Mentors
Social Networking/Moderation:
http://www.twitter.com/BeautyFrmAshes
http://www.twitter.com/thecall2xxx
http://www.twitter.com/FREEdomHomes
facebook fan page
facebook group page
facebook cause page
Please contact us if you are interested in becoming part of the BFA FREEdom™ Team.
E-NEWSLETTER SIGN UP: Email us at newsletter@beautyfromashes.org
God bless you!
Steve, Julie & the FREEdom™ Team
Beauty From Ashes™ Ministries
Where Victims Become Over-Comers
239.939.9218
877.4BFA SOS (423.2767) International Toll Free Help Line