Today we’d like to introduce you to Jazmine Frazier.
Hi Jazmine, it’s an honor to have you on the platform. Thanks for taking the time to share your story with us – to start maybe you can share some of your backstory with our readers?
Jazmine Frazier Swint
I didn’t start out thinking I would ever do this work. I survived trauma and much more. And there was a season where all I could focus on was trying to simply live. But as I healed, I realized two things:
1. There were so many girls who are trapped with no voice
2. Silence was helping the problem, not solving it
So I decided my pain wasn’t going to just sit inside me and it was going to get used.
I earned my B.A. from Cleveland State University, and I’ve studied trauma, trauma responses, and trauma-informed care frameworks. Today, I am the Executive Director of Eternal Reign Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit (eternalreign4girls.org) dedicated to human trafficking prevention, education, and empowerment for youth. I specifically work to give young people tools to understand trafficking way before it becomes a crisis moment.
I also now serve as Chair of the Youth Aware and Safe Work Group 2 on Georgia’s Criminal Justice Coordinating Council (CJCC) State Human Trafficking Task Force.
I recently launched Human Trafficking (HT) Advocates, my podcast is for real conversations around human trafficking awareness, addressing the gaps in awareness, survivor stories, the solutions that actually work, shedding light and truth. I’m the founder of Divine Comfort & Company (Divinecomfortco.com).
Alongside my husband, I am passionate about building strong healthy families because trafficking thrives where family structure breaks and I am committed to creating spaces where people can reclaim freedom.
My story is still being written but every single day, I wake up choosing to use what tried to destroy me as fuel to free others.
Would you say it’s been a smooth road, and if not what are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced along the way?
No, it hasn’t been smooth at all. Healing while building the work has been the hardest part. I had to face my own trauma, triggers, and imposter syndrome all while trying to make space for others to feel safe.
Funding, credibility, and constantly having to prove the importance of this work has also been a challenge.
But I’ve learned how to lead without abandoning myself.
This journey has been tough but it’s also been God-led, and every struggle has made me stronger and more committed to the mission.
Appreciate you sharing that. What should we know about Eternal Reign for Girls ?
Eternal Reign for Girls is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to human trafficking prevention and youth empowerment. We focus on preventing and stopping exploitation by educating young people, parents, schools, churches, and communities on what trafficking truly looks like today. We specialize in prevention education and equipping youth to understand their value, identity, and purpose, so they can recognize red flags and avoid exploitation.
We are survivor-led and we are also rooted in research, trauma education, and evidence-based practices. We combine lived experience + research + knowledge + faith to create programming that is real, credible, and safe.
We restore, we empower, and we speak life into the next generation.
For readers I want them to know Eternal Reign is more than an awareness organization. We are building prevention frameworks, healthy family culture, leadership pathways, and safe spaces for youth to become leaders so cycles of exploitation are broken for good.
More at: eternalreign4girls.org
Can you talk to us about how you think about risk?
I think risk is a part of purpose. I don’t take reckless risks but I take purpose-led ones. Honestly, starting Eternal Reign was a major risk. I stepped out into a field where stigma still exists, where funding isn’t guaranteed, and where telling your truth can open you up to judgment. Launching a nonprofit, launching a podcast, stepping into state-level work, all of those were risks because I was saying “yes” to something bigger than my fear.
But I believe the greater risk is staying silent.
My perspective is: if God is calling you to something, faith will always feel risky to the flesh. I’ve risked criticism, comfort, old identity, and financial uncertainty to build something that frees others. And every time I take a risk that aligns with the assignment God gave me, it bears fruit.
So yes I’ve taken major risks.
But they were obedient risks.
And those are the ones that change lives.
Contact Info:
- Website: Eternalreign4girls.org
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealjaslee/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eternalreignforgirls/
- Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/@HumantraffickingAdvocates
- Other: https://linktr.ee/TherealJaslee?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=29655ad7-22c0-4a8d-a52d-fc13908a3b14





