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One Word for Human Dignity

By January 13, 2026Featured, News

The National Human Trafficking Awareness Day event held on January 12 at St. Thomas University College of Law was a powerful and deeply meaningful event. Through the simple yet profound prompt of choosing one word to represent human dignity, students, faculty, and staff were invited to pause, reflect, and engage in a collective moment of awareness.

The Reflection Wall quickly became the heart of the event. By the end of the day, nearly 100 carefully chosen words filled the space, each one a testament to the values that define our academic community. Words reflecting respect, freedom, justice, perseverance, compassion, and hope, among many others, transformed the wall into a living expression of the College of Law’s shared commitment to human dignity.

Participation was enthusiastic and wide-ranging, with members of the campus community stopping by the Cordero Breezeway throughout the day to contribute. The presence of the Honorable Tarlika Nunez Navarro, Dean of the College of Law;  Dr. Roza Pati,  Founder and Director of the John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy; Dr. Siegfried Wiessner, Associate Dean for Scholarship and Faculty Development; Ms. Ana Vallejo, Assistant Dean of Experiential Learning and Administration; Ms. M. Florencia Cornu Laport, Assistant Dean for Academic Success and Bar Preparation; and Mr. James Konschnik, Assistant Vice President of Philanthropy, added special significance to the moment, underscoring the institutional importance of this initiative and the essential role of education in addressing human rights violations.

Hosted by the John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy, the event demonstrated that awareness does not always require grand gestures. Sometimes, a single word can carry extraordinary meaning. Together, these words formed a collective voice that reminded us that human trafficking is not only a legal issue, but a profound violation of dignity, freedom, and humanity.

What emerged was more than a wall. It was a shared declaration of values, convictions, and our humanity, a space for reflection, and a visible reminder that dignity is not abstract. It is something we must actively recognize, protect, and uphold.

Throughout the day, the Human Trafficking Academy staff, Maribel Rodrigues and Doris Tobon, welcomed and spoked with the STU community.