53 of these girls have escaped on their own. But the focus on their story is new–due to the unrelenting efforts of their relatives and social media to bang the drums and let us know that this story matters, that each one of these girls matters.
That is why my letter this week is to them.
Dear young women of Chibok, Nigeria,
It’s me, Melissa.
I cannot begin to comprehend the terror you are feeling. You, who were already surviving in a country facing terror on a daily basis, as evidenced by the car bomb explosion in Nigeria’s capital on Thursday that killed at least 12 people just days before your nation was set to host a major, international economic forum.
And this attack occurred across the road from the site of a massive explosion less than a month ago that killed at least 75 people, the same day you young women were kidnapped from your school.
But the reality of your country’s woes does not excuse us from being absent in demanding more attention be paid to your story. Because you matter.
Nor does it excuse your president, who took two weeks to make a public vow to bring you back after you were taken at gunpoint, and your school burned down. Now there are reports that you are being sold off for $12 a person to your captors, being taken across the border, and trafficked into slavery. Twelve dollars?








