Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Stolen Girls Of Nigeria
The Stolen Girls Of Nigeria
Jan 22, 2026 6:07 AM

If you are a parent, imagine your child is missing. You cannot find him or her. Gone. Nothing you can do. If you are not a parent, try to imagine how it must feel to have a loved one, the most loved one, taken from you. It is heart-wrenching. Gut-churning. Evil.

The parents of 219 girls in Nigeria are living this. Their daughters were stolen from them two months ago, and they are still missing. Two months. Just imagine that. Your precious child – gone – a hole in your family, now for 60 days.

Voice of America is reporting that while 57 of the girls who were initially kidnapped by Boko Haram were able to escape, the whereabouts of 219 are still unknown.

The latest figures on the number of missing e from a final report released by a government mittee appointed by [Nigerian] President Goodluck Jonathan.

Submitting the final report, Brigadier General Ibrahim said Friday that the militants initially took 276 girls, but 57 escaped —either as the trucks drove away or soon after.

Sabo said mittee members met with resistance when they visited Chibok last month to talk to some of the escaped girls.The militants raided a secondary school in Chibok village and forced the students onto trucks.

The girls who have escaped and their families are being protected due to fear of reprisal from Boko Haram. Also, many details of the report given to the Nigerian government are being kept secret, in hopes that information in the report may lead to the location of the school girls.

Girls are an easy target for extremists – they are not physically strong, they are easy to control through fear and sexual abuse. We hear of incidents in India, Iraq, Afghanistan. Many times, the “crime” the girls mitting is fighting to e educated. Gordon Brown, special envoy to the United Nations for Global Education:

The killings, the rapes, the mutilations, the trafficking and the abductions shock western eyes because the assaults seem so out of the ordinary.

However, they are not isolated incidents, but part of a pattern where the violation of girls monplace. A pattern where girls’ rights are still only what rulers decree and where girls’ opportunities are no more than what patriarchs decide.

Consider this. This week, and every week, at least 200,000 school-age girls in Africa and Asia — many just ten, 11, 12 or 13 years old — will be married off against their will because they have no rights that can stop this occurring.

Thousands more will be subjected to genital mutilation because they have no power to stop a practice designed to make them acceptable as child-brides and for adolescent childbirth.

And girls as young as eight, nine and ten will be in full‑time work, down mines, in factories, working the fields and in domestic service. Many will be trafficked into prostitution as part of a subterranean world of slave labour.

They are children who have a rightto be at school. Today, almost 70 years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, we are in the midst of a liberation struggle that has yet to establish every girl’s right to life, education and dignity.

219 missing girls. 219 girls who represent the wicked repression of the human spirit, human dignity and the right for all young people to be educated safely and in freedom. 219 stolen girls. Let’s not forget.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Asking the Right Question about Poverty
Writing for a special New York Times section on giving, Alina Tugend looks at the knotty problem of how best to help those in need. She digs into things like the economics behind food pantries and how relief donations to those devastated by natural disasters often wind up making things worse. For her story, Tugend interviewed Michael Matheson Miller, Acton research fellow and producer of the new documentary Poverty Inc. “Look seriously into yourself,” said Michael Matheson Miller, director and...
Explainer: What You Should Know About the Latest Contraceptive Mandate Challenge
The Supreme Court recently agreed to hear a challenge from religious nonprofit groups to federal government’s contraceptive mandate. Here are some answers to questions you may have about that case. What is this case and what’s it about? The case the Supreme Court will hear, Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged v. bines seven challenges to the Health and Human Services’ (HHS) contraceptive mandate. To fulfill the requirements of the Affordable Healthcare Act (aka ObamaCare) the federal...
Sisters of St. Dominic Rap ExxonMobil’s Knuckles
Religious shareholder activists egging on a federal investigation of ExxonMobil include the Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment, which counts the Sisters of St. Dominic of Caldwell, New Jersey, among its faith-based members. The narrative promulgated by the activists is that the energy giant conducted climate-change research and buried the results when the data inconveniently proved burning fossil fuels was a major contributor. All this might be a tempest in a teapot if not for Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) pressing U.S....
Over-Educated and Under-Trained: Mike Rowe on the Need for Philosophizing Welders
Marco Rubio has inspiredplenty of chin-stroking over his recent remarks about welders earning more than philosophers. “We need more welders and less philosophers,” he concludedin a recent debate. The fact-checkers proceeded to fact-check, withmany quickly declaring falsehood (e.g. 1, 2). Yet the series of subsequent quibbles over who actually makes how much continue toside-step the bigger issue. Thoughthe liberal arts are indeed important and ought not be viewed simplyin terms of “vocational training,” mainstream American culture is certainly fond of...
3 questions to counter arguments from the economic left
Overthe past few decades, economist Thomas Sowell has been one of the most effective, yet under-appreciated, proponents of conservative and libertarian economic thought. He is also one of our most powerful critics of the often destructive and harmful effects of liberal economic policies. Sowell frames the differences between the left and the right as a “conflict of visions”, a political divide separated by “constrained” and “unconstrained” visions. As Wikipedia helpfully summarizes this view: The Unconstrained Vision — Sowell argues that...
Arthur C. Clarke’s Inhuman Trade-Off in ‘Childhood’s End’
The fears of the past resonate in the present, and it’s no wonder humanity sometimes grasps desperately for answers in response to a frightening and unknowable future. Sometimes these e to us through literature and film which may allow us to dispense with the worst of them, given enough time. The Overlords of Arthur C. Clarke’s Childhood’s End – a classic 1953 science-fiction novel that serves as the basis for a Syfy network miniseries beginning Dec. 14 – turn out...
Greens Go After ExxonMobil for Expressing Opinions on Climate Change
Environmental activists representing some 50 seemingly disparate groups are calling on U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch to conduct a criminal investigation of ExxonMobil for allegedly misleading the public on climate change. Boy howdy, when a representative from The Foundation of Women in Hip Hop aligns her agenda with Green America, the Natural Resources Defense Council and a whole bunch of clergy and religious you can bet the farm there’s an open-and-shut federal case against pany foolish enough to stand in...
Corruption and lack of transparency in Rome
The recent “Vatileaks” scandal is almost entirely an Italian problem, according to Kishore Jayabalan, director of Istituto Acton. In a recent article for The Stream, Jayabalan describes his own experience moving to Italy and dealing with some of the corruption and problems he immediately faced, and how this culture ultimately caused the Vatileaks controversy: When I first moved [to Italy] to work for the Vatican, my boss told me the hardest part of the transfer would be finding a place...
Acton Institute’s ‘Poverty Inc.’ Wins Templeton Freedom Award
Poverty Inc., the new documentary that has grown out of the Acton Institute’s PovertyCure initiative, was awarded Atlas Network’s Templeton Freedom Award at an event last night in New York. Brad Lips, chief executive of the Washington-based Atlas Network, which administers the award, said the documentary is “without question” worth the attention it is receiving. “Shining a light on an fortable side of charity — where a paternalistic mindset puts the aid industry at the center of efforts to rescue...
Beyond Humanitarianism: Michael Mattheson Miller on the Goal of Human Flourishing
In a recent episode of EconTalk, Russell Roberts chats with Acton Institute’s Michael Mattheson Miller about Poverty, Inc., the award-winning documentary on the challenges of poverty alleviation in the developing world. The entireconversation is rich and varied, ranging from the ill effects of Western do-gooderism to the dignity of work to the need for institutions of justice. You can listen to the whole thing below: Later in the episode, Miller discusses the need for us to reach beyond mere humanitarianism...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved