The Cantinera Documentary
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The Cantinera Documentary Screening in Florence, South Carolina

Cantinera Documentary, Ruth Villatoro, Dottie Laster, ImaginePublicity

Cantinera Documentary, Ruth Villatoro, Dottie Laster, ImaginePublicity

South Carolina is working to improve it’s stand against human trafficking by educating local communities about the various ways it exists within the state. Traffficking in humans is not only seen in the sex trade, but forced labor in transient industries, anything which constitutes “force, fraud, or coercion” against another human being.

The Florence Baptist Association Task Force is sponsoring a screening of The Cantinera documentary on Monday, January 27, 2014 at 7pm Eastern time at the Julia Theater, 1110 S. Irby Street in Florence, South Carolina. The film screening is free and open to the public.

One of the local organizations which provides safe houses and assistance for women and children, the Pee Dee Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Assault, will be represented and accepting donations to continue their valuable cooperation in the human trafficking field.

The purpose of the gathering and film screening is to raise awareness within the community and reach out to other faith based groups in the area, recruit additional community leaders, and secure funding to do even more in the future to combat trafficking.

Florence, South Carolina sits at a crossroads of major highways traveling in all directions (I-95, I-20), perfect for transporting victims to larger cities and resort areas, which is very common among traffickers. South Carolina passed stringent legislation in 2012 against trafficking and has the means to effectively, enforce, charge, and prosecute traffickers to the fullest.

 

The Cantinera Documentary

Five years in the making, The Cantinera tells the story of girls who are forced to work in latin bars, or cantinas, throughout the United States, often forced to drink 20-40 beers a night, 7 days a week. It’s a story often overlooked when studying aspects of human trafficking and forced labor, yet it’s an account of thousands of women who are caught in its web with no way out.Cantinera Documentary,Dottie Laster,ImaginePublicity

As seen in the documentary, filmed in the Houston, Texas area, the cantina is often the hub, set up as legitimate businesses, but used as the place where the clients meet the prostitutes who are constantly monitored. Customarily any sex acts are performed in a nearby house, motel, or building away from the cantina itself, absolving the cantina of any wrongdoing or crime. Victims are often enslaved in nearby brothels where all transportation is done by the trafficker, leaving no way to freely go about a normal daily life. Her life is spent often servicing up to 20 or more men per day.

Through the story of three women, the film navigates through the virtually unheard of subject from the perspective of a cantinera, an advocate and a vigilante. Go first hand into the cantinas while rescuers search for victims and women take a stand against one of the most powerful crime organizations….Ruth Villatoro, Director Statement

The dangers are inherent in this type of trafficking, for both the victims and those who work to rescue them from what oftentimes is the only life they have ever known. One such victim portrayed in the film was introduced to the life of a cantinera by her mother at age 12. Audiences of The Cantinera will see how advocates, Dottie Laster and Cat French, work to rescue the victims and assist them with navigating the US bureaucratic system, as well as get them needed resources to recover.

Anti-Human Trafficking Advocates Featured in The Cantinera

Dottie Laster is the Founder and CEO of Laster Global Consulting and is responsible for the rescue and service of over 200 trafficking victims. She works directly with the Bernardo Kohler Center and is credentialed to practice immigration law. She is trained directly by the US Department of Justice and trains law enforcement, social workers, advocates and organizations across the country. Laster is also available as an expert witness in court cases determining the outcome of trafficking arrests.

Catherine “Cat” French is the director of the Houston office of Exodus Cry, an international anti-trafficking ministry. She is the link between victims and legal representation, the ground runner, making it her business to patrol suspected sex trafficking establishments.  During the filming the advocates and film crew visited 160 sexually oriented businesses in the Houston area and identified possibly 600-700 more.

Elia Chino, Associate Producer,  is the founder and Executive Director of Fundación Latino Americana Contra El Sida., Inc. (F.L.A.S., Inc.) She has dedicated her life to educate and prevent HIV in the latin community. Since cantina owners want their prostitutes to be “clean”, she is welcome in even the most jaded clubs.

The Cantinera Documentary is recommended for audiences at colleges and universities, as well as anti-human trafficking organizations, advocacy groups, law enforcement agencies and any community involvement groups. The goal of the film is to bring awareness to what’s going on behind the scenes in the latin communities across America and the impact it has on the lives of the women held captive by traffickers and pimps.

  

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