Most traditional Jewish sources seem to condemn trafficking and prostitution, but some of the messages are mixed
ed note–chock full o’ goodies, as we like to say here–
‘In addition, some texts from the Torah seem to apply different standards to Jewish and non-Jewish women and are tolerant of Jewish men patronizing non-Jewish prostitutes….In Genesis, Abraham essentially pimps out his wife Sarah to protect himself (Genesis 12:10-20 and 20)’
‘Yet the law allows Jewish male soldiers to rape foreign captive women (Deuteronomy 21:10-14) and permits slavery, including sexual, calling for differential treatment based on the slave’s religious or cultural origin…Thus the Torah text simultaneously condones yet regulates rape..’
‘…when Esther becomes queen, her cousin Mordecai tells her to initiate sex with the king in order to save their people…’
‘In 21st-century Israel, prostitution is legal, and sexual trafficking of women not uncommon. In the past decade, approximately 25,000 women, nearly all from the Former Soviet Union, were smuggled into Israel via the Egyptian border to be brutalized as sex slaves. Once in Israel, victims were repeatedly sold and resold to pimps and brothel owners…In confronting this issue, religious leaders advocating on behalf of trafficked women generally take a human rights approach and disavow or ignore the problematic biblical and rabbinic texts that condone prostitution and sex trafficking’