On Slavery Remembrance Day, Solomon Northup's Descendants Raise Awareness About Human Trafficking

They're participating in a Google Hangout on Northup's legacy and modern forced labor.

An illustration of Solomon Northup. (Photo: Creative Commons/Wikimedia)

Mar 25, 2014· 0 MIN READ
Culture and education editor Liz Dwyer has written about race, parenting, and social justice for several national publications. She was previously education editor at Good.

At the 2014 Academy Awards, 12 Years a Slave, the story of Solomon Northup, a free black man who was kidnapped and sold into slavery, racked up the accolades: best picture, best adapted screenplay, and best supporting actress. Now that we've seen Northup's story at our local multiplex, and it has won Hollywood's biggest awards, are we finished with stories about slavery? While some Americans don't understand why we have to talk about it anymore and wish everyone would just "move on," the United Nations doesn't feel the same way.

Every year the U.N. designates March 25 as International Day of Remembrance for the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade. The day honors the more than 15 million men, women, and children who suffered and died because of slavery. The U.N. also aims to raise "awareness about the dangers of racism and prejudice today."

Two of Northup's descendants—Irene Northup-Zahos, a 72-year-old retired nurse who's Northup's great-great-granddaughter, and Melissa Howell, Northup's 42-year-old great-great-great-granddaughter—are teaming with the International Labour Organization and journalist Holly Young for a Google Hangout about Northup's legacy and the horrors of modern-day slavery: forced labor and human trafficking across the world.

According to the ILO's 2012 Global Estimate of Forced Labour, about "21 million people are victims of forced labor—11.4 million women and girls and 9.5 million men and boys." Like Solomon Northup, they're "trapped in jobs into which they were coerced or deceived and which they cannot leave."

Tune in to the hangout today at 11 a.m. ET/8 a.m. PT.