One night, a young woman named Srey, who had escaped from the same place a year earlier, returned in secret. She had connected with a local NGO called Chhlat ("Hope" in Khmer). Srey slipped a note to Mina through a crack in the wall: "We know. A van will come Tuesday night. Leave your window unlocked."

Mina, 15, lived in a small village in rural Cambodia. Her family was deeply in debt after a bad harvest, and a broker from the city promised her mother a good job for Mina—weaving silk in a "training center" that would send money home. Desperate, her mother agreed.

Terrified but determined, Mina convinced two other girls to join her. On Tuesday, under the buzz of a broken security light, they climbed out onto a drainage pipe and into a waiting van driven by Chhlat's volunteers. The NGO had already notified trusted local police, who arrested the factory owner within the hour.

The Weaving Girl

Mina returned to school, and later became a peer counselor for other rescued teens. She now helps design awareness campaigns so families know the signs of trafficking. "My hands once wove silk for a cage," she says. "Now they write letters of freedom." If you or someone you know is in a similar situation, help exists. Organizations like ECPAT International , Children of the Forest , or local child protection hotlines (such as Cambodia’s 1288 hotline) provide rescue, rehabilitation, and reintegration services. No debt is worth a child’s freedom.

At Chhlat's shelter, Mina received medical care, counseling, and—for the first time in months—three meals a day. She learned that she was not at fault, and that her mother had been tricked too. Through the organization's legal aid, her family's debt was renegotiated, and her mother found work with a fair-trade cooperative.