Rita was 60 years old when she finally had a way out.
Her story didn’t start in a red-light district. It started the way so many do: with a husband who became violent, four children she was trying to protect, and a desperate need to survive. A friend offered her work. She didn’t know what kind.

Years passed. Exploitation layered on top of exploitation. When she escaped one abuser, she found another. The streets became the only life she knew, not because she chose them, but because she had nothing else. “I really wanted a different life,” she said, “but I had no opportunities.”
Then someone invited her in.
In her city in Southeast Asia, of more than 8.6 million people, an estimated 2,000 women work in prostitution. Many were led there by poverty, deception, or force. Most want out. Very few escape.
For four years, Send Relief partnered with a small employment center run by trusted ministry partners to help survivors of exploitation find a way forward. Women came to learn to sew and make jewelry, earn a fair wage, and work in a place that treated them with dignity. Each morning began with devotions. Every week included a Bible study. Counseling was available, alongside legal guidance, English classes, and money management training.

Every woman who walked through the door got the same thing: someone who showed up for her, day after day, and gave her a reason to hope.
Nina is 52, a single mother of six who ended up on the streets just to feed her children. “My heart kept crying to get out of that job,” she said. When she was invited to apply, she was doubtful she’d be accepted. She was. Little by little, she was able to leave the streets for good.
Sali, 46, had told herself that working the streets would bring freedom and happiness. It didn’t. “Instead of feeling happy and free, I felt dirty and sinful.” Something shifted when she found this community. “I have received so much meaningful wisdom, and now I hope my life can change and become better in the future.”
And then there’s Sara, who said it the way only someone who has lived it could:
“This work helped change me from street dust into a very valuable diamond.”
That is what this ministry believes about every woman who walks through its doors. Not that she is broken beyond repair. Not that her past defines her future. But that she is seen, known, and loved by God.
Every December, the team hosts a Christmas gathering for the women and their families. Last year, at the end of the evening, they went around the room and asked each woman who she thought Jesus was. One by one, the answers came: a Prophet, a good Teacher.
Then it was Tammy’s turn.
Tammy had been an artisan there since she was 17 years old. She had heard the gospel many times, at morning devotions, at Bible study, in quiet conversations across a sewing table. On this night, she gave a different answer. “He is Lord and Savior of the world.”

That is what this work is ultimately for.
The team doesn’t just run an employment center. They prayer walk the red-light districts of the city, build relationships one conversation at a time, and reach out to the women’s families. They plant seeds, patiently, in very hard soil. And they remain to see one of those seeds break open.
Stories like this one are happening all across the Asia Rim.
Since 2021, Send Relief has supported more than 50 women’s empowerment projects in multiple countries in Southeast Asia. More than 120,000 people have been impacted through this work, because believers around the world answered the call of compassion to pray, give, go, and tell others what God is doing through compassion ministry in the darkest corners of the world.
This is how God provides. Through His people, He gives women like Rita, Nina, and Tammy something they could not find on their own: hope and healing through the love of Christ.