June 2021

T E X A R K A N A M A G A Z I N E

she’s going to love me.’ Everything I asked for in a wife, He gave to me even more with Karen.” Artie was shopping with his daughters at Walmart one Friday, when he saw Karen for the first time. “She had her back turned to me, and I said, ‘She looks good from the back!’ She turned around, and I said to myself, ‘Oh, she’s PRETTY!’ We spoke, and I went on to the check-out counter. I kept looking back, and she was smiling at me.” The couple married in 2005. Because of her experience with Rose, Karen was passionate about giving back. “I was on a mission trip with Church on the Rock in Africa,” Karen explained, “and I remember God telling me that charity begins at home. So, when I returned home, I was at work one day and a guy came in who asked for me specifically. He begged me to come to a service at Church Under the Bridge. I had never seen the man before and have never seen him since. But I dragged Artie there with me that first time and we haven’t turned back.” At the Saturday morning services, their eyes were opened to the often unseen, impoverished population of homeless in Texarkana. In getting to know these men and women, they saw each one had a story and needs like everyone else: clothes, food, shelter and an opportunity to be back in the workforce again. When the Rayfields heard many were unable to wash their clothes, they started a laundry ministry. Still happening today, “they have to be homeless and attend the service at Church Under the Bridge. Afterwards, we transport them to Tanglewood Laundromat and provide the quarters and laundry detergent they need,” Karen said. They also became aware of the hungry elderly staying at the motels on State Line. “They need perishable food because they don’t have a microwave or refrigerator,” Artie said. “Chicken Express gives me chicken every Monday. I pick it up and take it to the homeless camps in the woods and the elderly in the motels.” Karen and Artie call their ministry “Project Hope,” and they work to not only help clothe and feed those in need, but also to help break the cycle for moms and their children caught in extreme poverty, sex trafficking and prostitution. “Karen has helped so many women, I can’t even count them,” said Pastor LaNell Miller, wife of Lead Pastor John Miller at Church on the Rock. “She has such a reputation in town that these women know who to go to when they need help. She’s not afraid. I remember she confronted a pimp here in Texarkana about a young, pregnant woman. She stood up to him and said, ‘I’m not judging you, but she’s no good to you. She’s pregnant, so give her to me.’ That’s Karen. Her heart is for these moms and kids, rescuing women out of the sex trade and off the streets. Artie fully supports her mission, and our church is behind them, whatever is needed.” Karen’s passion is to help women get back on their feet and able to support their families. “I’ll hear where a woman in need is and go to help her. I tell her, ‘Just because life has dealt you a bad hand, you don’t have to stay here.’” Through the support of Church on the Rock, Karen opened Grace House for moms and kids to reestablish themselves. The five-bedroom home is currently filled with ten kids and five moms, which includes a house mom who helps homeschool all the children and provides childcare while the women search for employment. “My long-term goal is to have a larger facility that is big enough to house 40 families,” Karen explained. “We would need churches and organizations throughout Texarkana to partner with us. This is not about me and Artie. This is about the generation we’re leaving behind. Because for these kids, it wasn’t their fault.” In addition to opening Grace House, Karen (51) and Artie (67) are temporary parents to six young children, ages six years old and under. “This last year, God has just touched my heart. I’ve had girls who have called and asked will

Twenty years ago, most of us had never heard the term “human trafficking.” However, because of the hidden nature of the crime, it is essentially impossible to know with certainty how many people are trafficked in the United States. Unfortunately, Texarkana, USA is not exempt from these detestable practices and it is up to all of us to be watchful and step up to offer a helping hand to victims. Today, worldwide, there are 40.3 million victims. 75% women and girls, 25% children. *The International Labour Organization Human trafficking is modern-day * Department of Homeland Security Sex trafficking occurs when force, fraud or coercion is used to cause a commercial sex act with an adult. Force, fraud or coercion need not be present for sex trafficking to occur with a child under the age of 18. When a commercial sex act occurs with a child under the age of 18, it is by definition sex trafficking. *U.S. Department of State 4.8 million people are involved in forced slavery and involves the use of force, fraud or coercion to obtain some type of labor or commercial sex act.

sexual exploitation worldwide, with more than 1 million of those victims being children under the age of 18.

* International Labour Organization

Human trafficking is a $150 billion industry worldwide.

* International Labour Organization

90.8% of trafficking survivors reported being arrested, whereas we estimate fewer than 10% of buyers are arrested.

* National Survivor Network

92% of victims are physically assaulted.

* Loyola University’s Annals of Health Law To report a tip with an anti-trafficking service in your area or to request information, call the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at (888) 373-7888. To find more information visit https://usiaht.org/the-problem/#facts- about-human-trafficking.

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C OMM U N I T Y & C U L T U R E

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