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Hallowed Halloween: Trick-or-Treating for the Kingdom
Halloween in Columbia, Missouri, is much like Halloween anywhere else. Pop-up stores appear in non-descript strip malls, filled with the standard array of ghoulish kitsch: witch masks and Jack Skeletons, string cobwebs and tombstones. At dusk, trick-or-treaters swarm neighborhoods like costumed locusts. Candy is given out and eaten, as often by parents as by the children that collect it.
But Halloween is different here in one particularly interesting way. For the past three years, the 果冻视频 chapter at the University of Missouri has trick-or-treated, not for candy, but for household items that support survivors of human trafficking.
This tradition began in 2017 when Danny Poon, Campus Staff Minister of the Asian American 果冻视频 (AAIV) chapter at Missouri, was working at a local Korean restaurant in addition to his staff work. A customer saw Danny鈥檚 jade cross necklace and recognized it as a symbol of Asian Christianity. The two struck up a conversation. It turned out that Nanette, an energetic Japanese American woman, oversaw the Central Missouri Stop Human Trafficking Coalition.
鈥淚t was a slow day, so I got to chat with her. We bonded over the ways that God called her into working with [human trafficking victims] and how I鈥檓 in ministry as well,鈥 Danny said. 鈥淲e met up again a couple weeks later, and I thought, 鈥楾his is something my students need to hear.鈥欌
God had been preparing them to hear it. In Danny鈥檚 AAIV chapter, conversations around justice and community outreach had begun to percolate after an earlier outreach event in Chicago. Challenged by the experience, students began to ask missional questions like, 鈥淗ow can what is happening in our chapter expand to serve the whole city of Columbia?鈥 A partnership with Nanette鈥檚 organization was a natural fit, and the students were enthusiastic. But what could they, as mere college students, do to help human trafficking survivors?
The students brainstormed together, finally landing on the idea of combining service with trick-or-treating鈥攁 student-friendly, nostalgia-filled night of fun that doubled as a way to provide basic needs, like food and household items, to newly freed survivors of trafficking. What began with 10 Missouri students has now, after three years, grown to a group of about 30 trick-or-treaters helping to serve some of the most vulnerable in Columbia.
The logistics of the event are impressive. A week before Halloween, students canvass different neighborhoods with flyers letting residents know that they鈥檒l be seeing some students in costumes trick-or-treating and inviting them to partner by donating items when they come to the door.
That night, students dress up. 鈥淭here have been some good costumes,鈥 Danny recalled. 鈥淭he inflatable dinosaur is always a fun one. And last year, a bunch of students dressed up like all sorts of fruit.鈥 They fan out through different neighborhoods. Six or seven cars wait at strategic locations to collect the donated items from students and deliver them. Then everyone heads back to Danny鈥檚 house for a massive bonfire.
This event has given incalculable help to those who are newly freed from human trafficking.But Danny has also seen it galvanize his students and chapter. 鈥淢y student leaders are now seeing creative ways to engage a campus and invite people to see Jesus through service,鈥 he said. 鈥淥n our campus, I鈥檝e loved the way that students have become fired up to make change in the world. To see them connect [with God鈥檚 mission] has been amazing.鈥
The campus has taken notice. Students at Missouri鈥檚 School of Journalism, one of the largest in the country, have interviewed Danny every year about the event. With more and more students interested in conversations about social justice, Danny鈥檚 chapter, and their 鈥榟allowed Halloween鈥 event, is helping bridge the gap between these discussions and the good news of Jesus. By embodying Christ鈥檚 servant heart, they鈥檙e helping Missouri students see an important truth.
鈥淏eing a Christian isn鈥檛 just about planning the best Bible study or being the best preacher,鈥 Danny said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about finding ways to walk alongside Jesus like this [event], even if people don鈥檛 recognize that it鈥檚 because of Jesus. The hope is that it will spark conversations later . . . but the end goal is just to draw closer to him.鈥