the SPRING 2016 Newsletter
Transcription
the SPRING 2016 Newsletter
Spring 2016 BWIC’s 40th Anniversary Celebration features The Healthy Village Project HEALTHY VILLAGE PROJECT THE is BWIC’s 40th Anniversary of 2016 providing crisis intervention and ongoing support to victims of domestic violence and sexual assault in Berks County. A year-long observance entitled The BWIC Healthy Village Project is planned to highlight the agency, focusing on community education and sexual assault services. The concept “it takes a village (to raise a child)” also applies to our efforts to engage the community around prevention of power-based and partner violence. The BWIC Healthy Village Project is a series of educational programs and talks that will be presented to a variety of Berks County audiences who have a stake in promoting the healthy, peaceful and supportive co-existence of the people of the Berks County community. Audiences will include high school and college students, legal professionals, medical professionals, faith-based organizations, women’s groups, professional groups and the general public. Educational messages will be presented by nationally-known experts in the field of domestic violence and sexual assault, including Katie Koestner, a college campus rape survivor whose experience was documented in the 1992 film “True Stories: No Visible Bruises – the Katie Koestner Story,” and Gordon Braxton, a Pentagon official and former specialist at Harvard’s Office of Sexual Assault Prevention. In October, Nicholas Kristof, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist and human rights advocate, will present his book, Half the Sky, about the empowerment of women and girls, at the freshman seminar reading event at Alvernia University. This event will be presented in partnership with BWIC. In addition, local survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault will also tell their stories to selected audiences. block party or street fair. Using images, data, and stories collected from our audiences, we will paint a picture of community concerns and talk about the way BWIC and its supporting agencies may be bestpositioned to address them. At the event, keynote speaker Victor Rivas Rivers, Cuban-born Hollywood actor, best-selling author, and NFL football player, will present his story, “I am the Child that the Village Raised: How Teachers, Coaches and Schools Saved and Transformed my Life.” Victor Rivers masterfully conveys own story of horrific abuse at the hands of his father, and the “village” that raised him. For more information about BWIC’s Healthy Village Project and the 40th Anniversary events, please visit our website. 2016 BWIC 40th Anniversary Events: • A pril 9: 2016 WALK FOR NO MORE at First Energy Stadium/Fightins Opening Weekend • M ay 6: PeaceTrust and Friends Luncheon featuring survivor speaker Katie Koestner at the Doubletree by Hilton in downtown Reading • J une 19: Full-page Father’s Day Pledge to End Violence ad in the Reading Eagle • October 5: Silent Witness Dedication & March at R.A.C.C. • October 27: Nicholas Kristof event at Alvernia University • D ecember 12: Celebration of Peace at the Doubletree by Hilton in downtown Reading The December BWIC Celebration of Peace Event will mark the culmination of the Healthy Village Project. This year’s Celebration of Peace will have the feel of a neighborhood Involving Men & Boys in Efforts to End Sexual Assault H istorically, when it comes to sexual assault and rape prevention programming on college campuses and within our communities, we have spent many hours and significant resources teaching women and girls to travel in groups, protect their drinks at parties, and basically to live their lives in a state of heightened alert to keep themselves safe. What else can be done? What messages are we sending to men? Broadcasting the message that men and boys should not commit rape or sexual assault doesn’t work, because the vast majority of men and boys are not perpetrators. Some boys and young men, as well as women and girls, do not understand the laws as they relate to consent. Continued on page 5 Page 2 A MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR We recognize Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM) this year while celebrating the 40th anniversary of Berks Women in Crisis (BWIC) -- a time to honor the THOUSANDS of victims who have transformed their lives due to the support you have given us over these many years. In 1976, BWIC was one of the original organizations in the nation to recognize the problems of sexual assault and domestic violence and take action to address it. Throughout the decades, supporters have enabled us to make history in changing laws, producing leaders in the field, and most importantly, creating opportunity for a better future for those we serve. All who have played a role in this history have much to be proud of and we thank you! We are honoring our 40th anniversary by hosting a year of positive messages to audiences important to our mission of building resiliency in the women, men and children of our community impacted by domestic violence and sexual assault. This effort will be known as BWIC’s Healthy Village Project. Through a series of carefully selected speakers and events, we will illustrate the potential for transforming community through coordinated community action. Ultimately, we will encourage participants to join BWIC in our work and/or in adopting these proven practices in addressing their own passion for a better Berks County. We will also use this opportunity to listen to the community as we prepare to improve existing programs and implement new initiatives -- particularly in the area of prevention -- that are measurable and proven to be successful. You have been with us in our work for these past 40 years, and we ask you to now partner with us in the yearlong Healthy Village Project that will help us to celebrate our past and plan for our future. As always, your support is greatly appreciated and is recognized as paramount in making our vision a reality. Please support as many of the events that comprise our Healthy Village Project as possible at a level that works for you. The events are described more fully in this newsletter and on our website. We ask that you make a commitment to stand with BWIC and end domestic violence and sexual assault in Berks County! MEET BWIC’S NEW COUNSELING DEPARTMENT I n early March, BWIC welcomed four new members of the Counseling Department: the Director of Counseling, two new Counselor/Advocates, and the new Safe Healing Project Director. BWIC’s Counseling Department offers trauma-informed empowerment counseling, including crisis counseling and ongoing support, for survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence. Most BWIC Counseling clients are community (non-residential) clients that were connected to the agency via the Legal Department and various other referral sources. All BWIC Counseling services are offered free of charge, and are strictly confidential. BWIC’s new Director of Counseling is Kathy L. Mallow, MSW, LCSW. Ms. Mallow has extensive clinical and administrative social work experience in multiple settings with diverse populations, including survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and human trafficking. Her most recent experience includes therapy in private practice, including extensive clinical and case management services, in Reading and Hoboken, N.J.; consulting with national employee assistance programs; and forensic consulting and expert witness testimony. She relies upon her yoga and meditation practices to sustain her in this work. The Safe Healing Project (SHP) is a new BWIC initiative that provides individual and group therapy services for child victims of sexual violence. The project is funded by the Endowment Act Fund of 2013, via fines imposed on Continued on page 3 Page 3 MEET BWIC’S NEW COUNSELING DEPARTMENT Continued from page 2 Penn State University by the NCAA following the Jerry spent 10 years doing crisis counseling and support groups Sandusky scandal. BWIC and several other rape crisis with children and adolescents. In her tenure there, she centers across the state successfully competed for the grant worked closely with the Lancaster County Children & Youth funds to begin projects dedicated to supporting child victims caseworkers, forensic interviewers, and law enforcement of sexual assault and cross-agency collaboration with local officers investigating child sexual abuse and assaults. Children’s Alliance Centers. In Berks, BWIC is a member of Olga Rodriguez and Molly Sanders, Esq. are the new BWIC the multi-disciplinary investigative team of the Berks County Children’s Alliance Center, which is a project of Opportunity House. Counselor/Advocates. Both women have been employed by BWIC for a year – Olga as a Community Educator, and Molly as a weekend Safe House Counselor/Advocate. Olga is The Safe Healing Project Manager is Judith Churach, M.S. bilingual (English/Spanish), and also assists in translation Judith was previously a weekend Counselor/Advocate in the of agency documents into Spanish. Molly is an attorney, BWIC Safe House. She also prepared for this new BWIC and received her Juris Doctorate from the University of the position as Child Counselor/Advocate at the Sexual Assault District of Columbia, David A. Clarke School of Law. Prevention and Counseling Center in Lancaster, where she L to R – Counselor/Advocate Olga Rodriguez, Director of Counseling Kathy L. Mallow, MSW, LCSW, and Safe Healing Project Manager Judith Churach, MS. Missing: Molly Sanders, Esq. Page 4 SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 2016-3PM First Energy Stadium - Opening Weekend All walk participants will receive a general admission ticket to Reading Fightins vs. Portland Sea Dogs (at 6:05pm) Participants will raise funds to support BWIC’s core services and programs! To join a fundraising team, or form your own, visit: www.crowdrise.com/2016WALKFORNOMORE CROWD RISE INSTRUCTIONS 1. To join an existing team, go to the bottom of the page and click on the team. 2. To create your own team, click the gray “SET UP your own fundraiser” button. On the next pop-up, click on ‘start your own fundraiser.’ 3. Follow the instructions, including naming your fundraiser, which will give you a URL to use to promote your fundraiser. 4. O nce you are registered, you can upload photos, edit your fundraiser and promote yourself to your friends, family and coworkers. 5. If you have any questions, see NEED HELP button on the right side of the page. Page 5 Involving Men & Boys in Efforts to End Sexual Assault Continued from the cover One primary prevention violence reduction strategy is to challenge traditional and unhealthy gender norms. We can start by taking a good look at how our society defines masculinity, as Berks Women in Crisis’ Education & Community Outreach program does in high schools with the curriculum “Young Men’s Work,” by Paul Kivel. Kivel and others remind us that there are some wonderful things that we teach our boys about manhood. We teach them to be courageous, to be responsible, and to take care of others. Along with these qualities, however, our boys are also encouraged to strive for power, to have control in any situation, to be dominant, and to have sexual conquests. Because we live in a society where power and control are considered desirable (and masculine) attributes, an environment is created where abuse is tolerated or socially sanctioned, even prevalent. One way that we can reduce sexual assault and rape is to teach our boys to embrace the healthier components of masculinity such as being courageous, responsible, and compassionate. If we teach our young boys to value compassion as a masculine concept, there will not be any room for violence, and we would foster a culture of people who take care of each other. We ask boys and men to join us in the understanding that it is the responsibility of all of us to teach these concepts to boys – and, as men, to model them. It is time for us to have conversations with our boys not only about healthy masculinity, but also how to be an “upstander” when confronted with situations where women, girls, and other boys/men may be victimized. We need to teach them to be courageous enough to do their part in keeping their community safe. If we dismantle the attitudes, beliefs, and finally the practices that lead to rape and sexual assault, we can change a community. To learn more about Berks Women in Crisis and our outreach to men and boys, contact Matthew Bailey at matthewb@berkswomenincrisis.org or call 610-373-1206 ext. 122. Luncheon Presentation with Katie Koestner ‘Keeping your Kids Safe in a Hook-up Culture’ May 6, 2016 11:45 a.m. | Doubletree by Hilton, Reading, 701 Penn Street, Reading, PA (amphitheater) 40 for two tickets | $25 single ticket bring a friend! $ Email peace@berkswomenincrisis.org or call Jan C. at 610-370-7604 to order tickets. Contact us on the web at: www.berkswomenincrisis.org For parents, educators, counselors and those interested in building healthy social-connection skills in an adolescent. Katie Koestner: • Appeared on the cover of TIME magazine and was the subject of an HBO documentary, “No Visible Bruises.” • She has been featured on: Lifetime, NBC Nightly News, CNN, CNBC, Larry King Live, the Oprah Winfrey Show, and Good Morning America. • Her highly sought-after lectures have been heard by the top officers of the Department of Defense, incoming classes at MIT, Dartmouth, Brown, Amherst, Williams, West Point, as well as Fortune 500 Companies. HEALTHY VILLAGE PROJECT THE This presentation has been underwritten by sponsors of Berks Women in Crisis’ Healthy Village Project and dedicated to the members of BWIC’s PeaceTrust who faithfully support us. NON-PROFIT ORG US. POSTAGE PAID READING PA PERMIT NO. 155 The vision of Berks Women in Crisis is to eliminate domestic violence and sexual assault in Berks County. RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED Crisis Services Counseling Residential Services Legal Services Education & Community Outreach Systems Advocacy Board of Directors Missy Zimmerman, President Vicki Ebner, Vice President Jennifer Nied, Secretary Steven Pottieger, Treasurer Karima Archie Nina Bohn CALENDAR OF EVENTS SPRING 2016 Joseph J. Cicala, PhD April is SEXUAL ASSAULT AWARENESS MONTH (SAAM)! Karen H. Cook, Esq. Diane V. Duff Jonathan D. Encarnacion Susan Fromm Laura Hayes Amanda Jackowski Jay Mahoney Gerald Malick, M.D. Michele McCartney Mary Ann Moffitt Helen Najarian Stephen Ohsman, PhD Mary Kay Bernosky, Esq., Executive Director Christine Gilfillan, Associate Director April 9: 2016 WALK FOR NO MORE: Together We Can End Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault. See ad in this issue. Screening of The Hunting Ground, a documentary film described by the NY April 13 Times as “an unblinking look at sexual assaults on campus”: Penn State Berks Multipurpose Room, 7PM-8:30PM April 14: Screening of The Hunting Ground: Alvernia University, Campus Commons Living Room 7PM-9 PM April 21: “Take Back the Night,” Alvernia University, Campus Commons Living Room, 7 PM April 21: Screening of The Hunting Ground: Albright College, Klein Hall, 4:30PM. April 21: “Take Back the Night,” Kutztown University Alumni Plaza; 7PM May 6: BWIC PeaceTrust & Friends Luncheon featuring survivor and activist speaker Katie Koestner. See ad in this issue. June 19: BWIC Father’s Day Pledge, on line and in the Reading Eagle. Visit our website for more information. BWIC’s CAMPpeaceworks, A Teen Alliance for Social Justice, Olivet’s Blue June 18-22: Mountain Camp, Hamburg. Youth ages 13-17 may apply to attend free of charge. Visit our website for applications and information. Contact Tasha (610) 370-7811or visit www.berkswomenincrisis.org for additional information on any event. www.berkswomenincrisis.org ContactUs 255 Chestnut Street, Reading, PA 19602; Phone: 610.373.1206; Fax: 610.372.4188; Email: peace@berkswomenincrisis.org