Stopping Traffic

Stopping Traffic
Directed by Sadhvi Siddhali Shree
Produced by Siddhayatan Tirth
Edited by Jason Calhoun
Production
company
Siddhayatan Tirth
Release date
September 29, 2017
Running time
79 minutes
Country The United States, Philippines, Mexico
Language English

Stopping Traffic is a 2017 American documentary film directed by Sadhvi Siddhali Shree and produced by the team of monks at Siddhayatan Tirth.[1][2][3]

The film explores the extensive reach of sex trafficking and sexual abuse especially of children in the USA and worldwide. Using commentary by victims and activists and investigations into practices in the US and abroad, the film traces the links between child sexual exploitation, pornography, social media, and sex trafficking. It calls on the viewer to join the movement to end sex trafficking.

Stopping Traffic made its world premiere at the Global Cinema Film Festival of Boston, a human rights festival, on March 11, 2017 where it won Best Picture prize.[4]

Synopsis

Stopping Traffic investigates the international crisis of human sex trafficking, particularly of minors, in a deeply personal point of view. It features interviews with child sexual abuse and sex trafficking survivors and veteran activists, and additional commentary from social service agents, doctors, academics, and young activists.

Citing a 2014 report by the International Labour Organisation, the documentary tells that 21 million people are being trafficked worldwide every year, delivering $150 billion a year to their captors.[5] The story explores cases throughout the Philippines, Mexico, Thailand, Iraq, and major U.S. cities to provide raw images and first-hand documentation of human trafficking crime across the globe.[6][7] It explores the practices within families and in the streets, explaining how a child or young adult are turned into being trafficked, at an average cost to a trafficker of $90, but with a potential to yield thousands. The creators establish the U.S. as the biggest source of sex traffickers’ customers with the Super Bowl being the most popular event for scoring a trafficking arrangement.[8]

Production

The film is the first by Sadhvi Siddhali Shree, a 33-year-old Jain monk, Iraq War veteran and child abuse survivor.[9] It was inspired and is based on the teaching of non-violence by Acharya Shree Yogeesh, who is the executive producer of the film. Jeannie Mai, co-host of the Emmy Nominated "The Real" daytime TV show, is also an executive producer of the film.

The documentary also features talking points by celebrities such as an actor Dolph Lundgren and other celebrities who raise awareness about human trafficking.[10] This film is a volunteer endeavor funded by a Kickstarter campaign.[11][12]

The film was screened as an 'Official Selection' at the 2017 Global Cinema Film Festival of Boston, Show Me Justice Festival, Fort Worth Indie Film Showcase.[13]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.