Page 23 - 201212 - The 'X' Chronicles Newspaper - December 2012
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       	                      Rented Silence by Lucia Mann                                                                A woman was recently sentenced to 140 months in prison after using two                                                                Nigerian immigrants as personal unpaid servants in her luxury home in                                                                Atlanta,  Georgia.  A  few  days  later,  two  Ukrainian  brothers  were                                                                convicted  of  smuggling  desperate  villagers  into  the  United  States  to                                                                work long hours, cleaning retail stores and office buildings at little or no                                                                pay. The prosecuting U.S. attorney in Philadelphia, Daniel Velez, said it                                                                was “modern-day slavery. It’s hiding in plain sight.”                                                                However, according to a woman who lived through the racial                                                                prejudice, segregation and slavery in post-World War II Europe, the                                                                slavery crisis in the modern world is far greater than that.                                                                “Anyone who thinks slavery died when America abolished it in the                                                                1800s has a shock coming to them,” said Lucia Mann, whose mother                                                                was a sex slave and a WWII concentration camp survivor.  Mann, a                                                                former journalist and author of Rented Silence                                                                (www.rentedsilence.com), a novel about slavery and racial prejudice                                                                based on her life experiences and those of other persecuted souls she                                                                witnessed says, “According to the United Nations, there are more than                                                                27 million slaves worldwide, which are more than twice the number of                                                                those who were enslaved over the 400 years that transatlantic slavers                                                                trafficked humans to work in the Americas. Many are forced into                                                                prostitution while others are used as unpaid laborers used to        manufacture goods many of us buy in the U.S. In fact, it’s almost impossible to buy clothes or goods anymore without        inadvertently supporting the slave trade.”        "Rented Silence is a story of human suffering during a brutal period in the British Colonial history. But at the same time        it is an inspiration tale of hope and love, but mostly the testimony of the human spirit to survive against the odds.        Rented Silence will move you to tears, anger and a wide range of other emotions and will make you ask: Where was        God in the midst of this evil? Rented Silence will stay with you long after you've closed the book."                                   About Lucia Mann : Lucia Man is part Sicilian and part British South African, born in British                                   Colonial South Africa in the wake of WWII.  She is a citizen of Britain and Canada who recently                                   applied for a U.S. Green Card because she believes she is an American at heart. She was educated                                   in London, England and retired from freelance journalism in 1998. After suffering from racial                                   prejudice most of her early life because she was part Italian and part South African, she saw and felt                                   firsthand the pain and suffering of those who were thought to be inferior because of the color of                                   their skin. Her mission is to end prejudice and slavery now and in the future.
       
       
     
