Building the Infrastructure That Makes Restoration Possible

Rescue is only the beginning.

Children need years of safe housing, trained caregivers, education, employment, and lasting support to rebuild their lives.

Today, far too few places exist where rescued children can truly heal.

Beyond Rescue

Every rescue is only the beginning.

For most people, that's where the story ends.

For the child, it's where the hardest part of the journey begins.

Healing requires years of safe housing, trained caregivers, education, counseling, employment, and consistent relationships.

That restoration infrastructure simply doesn't exist at the scale children need.

We Don't Know the Number.

That's part of the problem.

America does not maintain a current national inventory of long-term restoration homes for trafficked children.

Depending on how experts define "long-term residential care," estimates range from fewer than 100 child-specific beds to several hundred broader residential placements.

No one knows the exact number.

Everyone agrees the current capacity falls far short of the need.

The crisis isn't rescue.

It's what happens after rescue.

Healing isn't an event. It's infrastructure.


One question remains…

"If a child is rescued tonight,

where does that child go to heal?"

Teshuah is building the infrastructure where healing begins.

Because rescue saves a child for a moment. Restoration changes a child's future.

How We Build Lasting Restoration

Every restored life begins with someone willing to act. Your generosity helps build homes, strengthen mission-driven businesses, and create lasting restoration infrastructure.