“Running to Freedom:” FTS on the Scene of Inspiring India Rescue

When I got the news, I rushed to the site with our local colleagues. I knew that this day would be especially important. Labor Department authorities were raiding a brick kiln. Freedom was within reach for 27 adults and 24 children. The raid was triggered by one courageous man, Ram ji (that’s him in the […]
July 26, 2012

When I got the news, I rushed to the site with our local colleagues. I knew that this day would be especially important.

Labor Department authorities were raiding a brick kiln. Freedom was within reach for 27 adults and 24 children.

The raid was triggered by one courageous man, Ram ji (that’s him in the photo below on the right). He had escaped the kiln, and sought advice from a local community vigilance committee (CVC). Part of what a CVC does is to work like a neighborhood watch, keeping traffickers away and strengthening a village’s resistance to slavery.Ram ji

CVC members explained to Ram ji that everyone could break free from the kiln, if he would go back and prepare them for a rescue. Despite the danger, Ram ji said yes. And his risk paid off.

Freedom came on the hottest day of the season. At first the workers were scared, and when I arrived there was an unusual silence. Many girls and women were hiding in small huts; labor officials were unable to reassure them. When I told the workers that we could ensure their freedom and safety, they gradually began to share their appalling stories. We compelled the authorities to take the whole day to get a statement from everyone (photo below on the left).

Supriya ensures authorities take full statements | MSEMVS photo“We had been living under the threat of being thrown into the kiln furnace,” one of the women explained. This is what the brick kiln manager would say to them every day.

They had been lured from their village by small up-front payments and promises of good work, but when they arrived at the kiln they were told they were in debt. They were forced into two years of labor without wages. They were beaten almost every day.

As the rescue unfolded, rather than waiting at the kiln for a truck to bring them home, the men and women immediately headed up the road.

As I helped one man pick up his bundle of belongings, he laughed, saying, “I’m running to freedom!” (That’s him in the photo on the right, literally running to freedom.) For a moment, I could feel what this was like: not wanting to lose the opportunity to run away from slavery.

The silence was broken by the excitement of the children who saw their parents rushing to get on the truck. We lifted the small children up inside. Finally the women began to smile.

As I lifted those kids, I knew they would remember this day, and they would never get on another truck to be taken off to slavery.

We escorted the survivors back to their village, where they have now formed a joint savings group to protect each other from future illegal debts.

Many of the children are back in school and many of the adults now have paying jobs.

The brick kiln has been closed.

This story demonstrates not only the courage of one man, but the importance of community vigilance committees. Without them, the slave who initially escaped, Ram ji, would have had no one to turn to. Without the training that the CVC received from FTS and our local partner, MSEMVS, the villagers would not have known what to do. The brick kiln slaves would have remained hidden in slavery – like so many thousands of others in India.

Editor’s note: FTS has supported 10 similar raids on brick kilns in northern India during the past year. You can read more about our innovative and inspiring India projects on the FTS website.

Can you help end the conditions that cause modern slavery?

Related Posts

Community Safe Migration & Migrant Worker Protection Webinar

Community Safe Migration & Migrant Worker Protection Webinar

In September 2024, Free the Slaves and Verité hosted a webinar to share findings and lessons from the 19-month Fostering Fee Accountability and Cost Tracking (FFACT) Project, which tackled the complex issue of unsafe migration in South Asia. This event brought together 38 participants from India, Nepal, and Bangladesh to discuss solutions to safeguard migrant workers. The webinar also marked the first steps towards establishing a regional network for international migrants, set to launch in early 2025.

read more
Efforts to Protect India’s Migrant Workers from Trafficking and Exploitation

Efforts to Protect India’s Migrant Workers from Trafficking and Exploitation

Many Indian migrants who seek employment abroad are forced into construction, domestic work, factories, and other low-skilled sectors in regions like the Gulf countries or Malaysia. This often follows recruitment during which migrants face fraud and exorbitant recruitment fees associated with high risks of debt bondage. Indian migrant workers, in Gulf countries report exploitation, particularly as a result of recruitment deception and recruitment debt, as well as non-payment of wages, contract violations, and physical abuse. Some women are exploited in sex trafficking while migrating for employment.

read more