Paradigm Shift Presents “YOUNG LAKOTA” Award-winning Documentary Screening with Marion Lipschutz & Rose Rosenblatt- Filmmakers, Shelby Knox- Change.org & Rebecca Nagle, Monument Quilt

4_16_15 Young Lakota Screening with Filmmakers, Paradigm Shift NYC

 

Subway: N,R,Q to 49th St. or B,D,F,M to Rockefeller Center

Join us afterwards at Quinn’s, 356 W. 44th St., NYC, with all of the speakers & Mary Kathryn Nagle, Playwright of Sliver of a Full Moon

$12 online, $15 at door
Tickets- Limited Seating / Buy Online!

Invite friends on Facebook

CO-SPONSORS

Young Lakota 4:6:15 spon logos

City Headshots, Blanche Wiesen Cook, Author & Clare Coss, Playwright, Electrified CollectiveFORCE, The Feminist PressIncite PicturesThe Monument Quilt, WAM!

PARTNERS: Bella Abzug Leadership InstituteHollaback!, International Women Artists’ Salon, Jesse Epstein- FilmmakerMan Question, Manhattan Young Democrats, New York Women In Film and Television, NOW Young Feminists and Allies, Riseup/ NYC Protest Database, See Jane Do, Soapbox Inc., The Women’s Mosaic, Vision Maker MediaWAM!NYC, Women and Hollywood, Women In Media & News, Women Make Movies, Women’s Media Center

PARTNERS & SPONSORS WELCOME
Join as a supporting organization or co-sponsor!
Register: http://www.paradigmshiftnyc.com/sponsorship

SAMPLE POST: 4/16 “Young Lakota” Documentary Screening with the Filmmakers of “The Education of Shelby Knox” Marion Lipschutz & Rose Rosenblatt; Shelby Knox, Change.org; Rebecca Nagel, The Monument Quilt. Award-winning doc about a young Lakota woman’s political awakening. Presented by Paradigm Shift NYC  https://www.facebook.com/events/806743352712110

TWEET! 4/16 @YoungLakota Screening w filmmakers, women’s political awakening with @ShelbyKnox @upsettingrape @PShiftNYC http://bit.ly/1FqDdCQ

Young Lakota follows the journey of Sunny Clifford, a young Oglala Lakota woman who returns to the Pine Ridge Reservation with a dream to change the world around her. Her political awakening begins when the tribe’s first female president, Cecelia Fire Thunder, defies a South Dakota law banning abortion by threatening to build a women’s clinic on the reservation. Embroiled in a controversial political season that hinges on reproductive rights and tribal sovereignty, Sunny, her twin sister Serena, and their neighbor Brandon are drawn into a political firestorm that changes the course of their lives.

MARION LIPSCHUTZ & ROSE ROSENBLATT

Producers/Directors:  Partners in Incite Pictures and Cine Qua Non (a not for profit), Marion & Rose produce and direct feature documentaries that entertain, educate and explore critical contemporary issues. Titles include “The Education of Shelby Knox”, “Live Free or Die”, “Fatherhood USA”, “The Abortion Pill” and “Code Blue: New Orleans.”

Their work has been called “unique and memorable,” “pure gold,” and “balanced and truthful,” by the Milwaukee Journal, Hollywood Reporter and The New York Times, respectively. The Washington Post wrote, “their fly-on-the-wall approach fulfills one of the glorious promises of documentary – to put us in the middle of situations we otherwise might never be in.”

Young Lakota is the latest in a series of films that use the dramatic stories of individual women to explore the fraught terrain of reproductive justice. “The Education of Shelby Knox”, their prior project, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2005, and opened that year’s POV series. The POV series also showcased “Live Free or Die” in 2000 as a November election special.

Marion and Rose’s work has been broadcast on the CBC’s Passionate Eye in Canada, on PBS’s Point of View, Independent Lens, and many other strands around the world. Their films have won Best Cinematography at The Sundance Film Festival, The Audience Award at SXSW, The Emerging Picture Award at Full Frame, and The Jury Prize for Best Documentary at The Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. Personal recognition includes The Full Frame Women in Leadership Award, The Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award, and a nomination for the British Index on Censorship’s Freedom of Expression Award. Though their topics have been specific to the United States, they have durable international appeal, showing in hundreds of festivals, including The Human Rights Watch Film Festival, Hot Docs, The Stockholm International Film Festival, The Seoul International Film Festival and The Festival de Rio de Janeiro.

SHELBY KNOXSenior Campaigner at Change.org & Feminist Revolutionary

As a teenager, Shelby Knox was organizing her Southern Baptist community to fight for comprehensive sex education and gay rights. She became nationally known with the release of the Sundance award-winning film, “The Education of Shelby Knox”, a documentary which chronicled her activism. She’s now a Senior Campaigner at Change.org, where she works on international gender justice campaigns. @ShelbyKnox

REBECCA NAGLE, Co-Founder, The Monument Quilt & FORCE

FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture is an artist/activist effort to change the conversation about rape by mobilizing social media and producing public art events. Force is most widely known for their prank of Victoria’s Secret, pretending the lingerie giant released a line of consent themed slogans on underwear. The spoof created a viral conversation about consent online, and was covered in the New York Times’ annual college edition along with countless other blogs and news outlets.

Force’s most recent project is The Monument Quilt, a crowd-sourced collection of thousands of stories from survivors of rape and abuse. Survivors are writing and stitching their stories onto red squares of fabric, creating and demanding public space to heal. The quilt is creating a new culture where survivors are publicly supported, rather than publicly shamed.

300 quilts were displayed in 13 US cities in August 2014 (read more on CNN and MSNBC), and we will continue to display the quilt via quilt-making workshops, in public displays across the country, until a final, historic display in Washington DC. Blanketing the National Mall, 6,000 fabric squares will ultimately be stitched together to spell “Not Alone.”

MARY KATHRYN NAGLE, Playwright, Sliver of a Full Moon

Sliver of a Full Moon is a portrayal of resistance and celebration. It is the story of a movement that restored the authority of Indian tribes over non-Indian abusers to protect women on tribal lands.

Getting out of the Groove: The Feminist Art Project at the Museum of Arts and Design, NY

As part of this year’s College Art Association conference in New York, the Museum of Arts and Design hosted the Feminist Art Project (Rutgers University) on February 14 for a series of panels entitled Collective Creativity: Collaboration and Collectives in Feminist Art Practice.

 

The event helped me get out of a funk I’d been in since I read Ashton Cooper’s “The Problem of the Overlooked Female Artist: An Argument for Enlivening a Stale Model of Discussion” the previous month. He critiques the art world—namely the publishing industry and the gallery system—for perpetuating the safe, tired, and harmful notion of the female artist who is “‘overlooked,’ ‘forgotten,’ and/or ‘rediscovered’” (¶2). I grappled with advice like his encouragement to consider a woman’s productivity in “the period where she was toiling away in obscurity” (¶26) because that would necessarily mean labeling her as obscure. Every time I risked reinforcing these tropes in the modern art class I teach, I felt like a deer in headlights. Although I touch on systemic art world biases in lectures, these tangents can’t take over the class, and to make these tangents, I need to be able to address the problem before addressing the source of the problem.

 

Cooper’s overall advice was echoed by one of the panelists, but in a way that felt more like a challenge than a reprimand, which helped me to reconcile this situation. In one of my personal highlights from the TFAP panels, poet Dawn Lundy Martin opted to share her presentation in an unconventional format, by playing a recording from her phone into the microphone of her ruminations while commuting on the Long Island Expressway. In this “elliptical utterance,” which she described as being “like standing alongside myself,” she asked, “How do you tell stories that need to be told that don’t deepen the groove of the already told?” One of her closing thoughts, after putting her phone aside and confirming that she was “no longer split,” was, “The desire for narrative is a false narrative.” Admittedly, I want to provide a neat and tidy story that is easy for students to digest, contemplate, remember, and challenge. Maybe, though, I should take the advice of panelist Sheila Pepe, an artist who observed (in reference to communities of otherness) that chaos and messiness are “very tolerable.”

 

There are many ways of expressing “resistance to a singularity,” as Lundy put it: counternarrative (A.L. Steiner, Ridykelous), monologue versus polylogue (Dr. Maura Reilly, University of Sydney), and monologue versus dialogue (Sydette Harry, Body Ecology Performance Ensemble) come to mind. Tactics range from avoiding censorship (as in the reader surveys for M/E/A/N/I/N/G, published from 1986 to 1996) to collaborating. Musician Salome Chasnoff describes collaboration as the “purposeful projection of the self into the other” and an “attempt to absorb each other…we’re trying to merge and it’s impossible.” There’s possibility in the impossible.

 

Jorge Daniel Veneciano, (El Museo del Barrio) believes that feminism “is not even an optional concept” and Lauren Denitzio notes, “It’s not enough to merely call oneself a feminist.” But what, asked artist Kara Rooney, does it mean to be a 4th Wave feminist (or a progressive 2nd or 3rd Wave feminist, as the case may be)? If feminism is a “critique of power,” as defined by both Mira Schor (Parsons, The New School) and artist A.K. Burns, then it must consider multiple power dynamics. Based on the discussions throughout the day, being a feminist in the arts means embracing a pluralistic definition of feminism that accounts for cultural producers in diverse places, of multiple races and cultural backgrounds, of all genders, and with various sexual orientations. This definition lacks the panache of Martin’s poetry, hardly rolling off the tongue, but maybe that’s a sign of getting out of the groove.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Paradigm Shift NYC Presents “No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power” with Gloria Feldt, Feminist Icon

3:19 No Excuses with Gloria Feldt, Paradigm Shift NYC Presents

Subway: N,R,Q to 49th St. or B,D,F,M to Rockefeller Center

Join us afterwards at O’Brien’s, 134 W. 46th St., 2nd Fl.
$12 online, $15 at door – Limited Seating / Buy Online!
Invite Friends on Facebook

CO-SPONSORS

PS spon logos no excuses as of 3:14:15

 

City HeadshotsTake The LeadThe Feminist PressThe Women’s Mosaic, WAM! Women, Action, & The Media

PARTNERS: Abiola Abrams- Author & Speaker, Bluestockings, Circle of 6, Electrified CollectiveFCW SocietyKelly Hoey- Strategist & SpeakerHollaback!, In Good CompanyIncite PicturesJamie Lee- Senior Director Operations at TreSensa & Speaker, Jennifer Silva CoachingMan Question, Riseup/NYC Protest Calendar, See Jane DoSoapbox Inc., Trixie Films, Adaora Udoji- CEO of outLoud Inc.WAM!NYCWillie Mae Rock Camp for Girls, Women’s Therapy Centre Institute

PARTNERS & SPONSORS WELCOME
Join as a supporting organization or co-sponsor!
Register: http://www.paradigmshiftnyc.com/sponsorship

SAMPLE POST: 3/19 Gloria Feldt, Feminist Icon “No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power” Presented by Paradigm Shift NYC https://www.facebook.com/events/1385951191719150

TWEET! 3/19 No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power with @GloriaFeldt, @PShiftNYC Presents http://bit.ly/1LnJUXM

GLORIA FELDT

Gloria Feldt is co-founder and president of Take The Lead, the new women’s leadership movement to prepare, develop, inspire and propel women to take their fair and equal share of leadership positions across all sectors by 2025. The bestselling author of “No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power,” Gloria is an acclaimed expert on women, power and authentic leadership, and an inspiring keynote speaker, who motivates with heart and humor as a practical activist gives practical “Power Tools” for life and leadership.

People magazine calls her the “voice of experience.” Gloria’s expertise in women, power and leadership comes from a deep well of personal knowledge gained on the front lines. Her journey from teen mom and high school dropout from rural Texas to president and CEO of the world’s largest reproductive health and advocacy organization, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, to best-selling author and visionary leader for women’s equality inspires both men and women. Named by Vanity Fair as one of “America’s Top 200 Women Leaders, Legends, and Trailblazers,” Glamour’s “Woman of the Year,” and a Women’s eNews 21 Leaders for the 21st century, among other honors. A world changer who helped pave the way for women today, she believes this is women’s moment to achieve parity. Her passion is to remove the last remaining obstacle: women’s learned resistance to embracing their own power.

Author of four books, she teaches “Women, Power, and Leadership” at Arizona State University. Both a newsmaker and a commentator, Gloria has been widely quoted and published in media, including the New York Times, Washington Post, USA Today, Politico, Salon, The Daily Beast, and Huffington Post, and magazines including More, Glamour, Elle and Ms. She has appeared extensively on television, including CNN, MSNBC, the Today Show, Good Morning America and The Daily Show. Follow her on twitter @GloriaFeldt and connect on Facebook and LinkedIn.

KRISTINA LEONARDI

Kristina Leonardi is a motivational speaker, career/life coach and author who helps men and women make the most of their personal and professional lives, allowing them to recognize, connect to, and fulfill their role in the world at large. She has presented to organizations such as Saatchi and Saatchi, UBS, HR Association of NY, American Women’s Business Association, and New York’s Science, Industry & Business Library.

Kristina offers individual and group coaching privately, as well as in affiliation with New York Women in Communications, and is the founder of The Women’s Mosaic (TWM), a nonprofit organization that has produced over 100 events over 10 years for more than 5000 women to connect to themselves each other and the world around them. Kristina has taught extensively for NYU’s Center for Hospitality, Travel and Tourism and the Center for Career and Life Planning for over 15 years. She was listed as one of Hispanic Magazines Top Latinas of 2004, received Tango Diva’s 2007 Diva Visionary Award, honored by the WNBA’s NY Liberty as part of their 2009 Inspiring Women Night, and has been featured in Forbes.com, Inc. Magazine, Psychology Today and The Huffington Post. She is the author of Personal Growth Gab (PGG), Volume One: Thought-provoking, inspirational and entertaining essays to keep you connected with yourself and make sense of this journey called Life (available on Amazon).  Follow her on Twitter @clearlykristina and on Facebook at Personal Growth Gab.

ARPITA MAZUMDAR

Arpita (Arpi) Mazumdar is currently a Vice President at Goldman Sachs where she is the Business Manager in Global Securities Division Management and Strategy, Office of the COO. Ms. Mazumdar comes with over 14 years of experience solely in the financial services sector and has held a variety of roles within Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. She received her BS in Business Administration from the University of Albany- SUNY, is a 2014 Council of Urban Professionals (CUP) Fellow and Executive member, as well as a VIP member of the National Association of Professional Women (NAPW). Ms. Mazumdar is very engaged in Women’s rights and is currently a sponsor for “Women for Women International” – a nonprofit humanitarian organization that provides practical and moral support to women survivors of war. More recently, she joined the Board of Directors at “ A Global Friendship”, an international nonprofit that focuses on poverty alleviation where she looks forward to continue being an agent of change and providing opportunity to women on a global level.

KARA ROTA

Kara Rota is Director of Editorial & Partnerships at Cookstr.com, a Macmillan portfolio company and recipe site whose mission is to digitally organize cookbooks and recipes of all types and make them easily accessible. She is the host of the Clever Cookstr podcast on Quick & Dirty Tips network. Kara has been a featured speaker at numerous venues including Food Book Fair, the Roger Smith Food Conference, and the Brooklyn Food Conference. She is a former board member of Girls in Tech NYC and Angel Alliance member of the Lower East Side Girls Club, and has supported STEM education for girls as a judge for Technovation International.

Athena Film Fest! Today-2/8…Free Tix Available for friends of Paradigm Shift

Athena Film Festival 2/5- 2/8/15- Featuring World Premiers & Film Icons
UPDATE- FREE TIX FOR FRIENDS OF PARADIGM SHIFT- limited amount!

Now in its fifth year, the Athena Film Festival — a celebration of women and leadership — is an engaging weekend of feature films, documentaries and shorts that highlight women’s leadership in real life and the fictional world.  The four-day festival, which includes conversations with directors and talent and workshops for filmmakers, has quickly established itself as one of the most prestigious festivals of its kind.

The festival will be held Feb. 5 – 8, 2015 in the heart of New York — at Barnard, the most sought-after women’s college in the nation.  The Founding Sponsor of the Festival is Artemis Rising Foundation, Regina K. Scully, CEO and Founder.

Program, tickets, and recent announcements:
The Athena Film Festival is offering a select amount of free tickets to friends of Paradigm Shift to see the world premiere of Rosie O’Donnell: A Heartfelt Stand Up on Saturday! If you’d like to attend the screening, please email athenafilmfestoutreach@gmail.com with the subject line “Paradigm Shift ticket giveaway” and the number of tickets (max. 2) you are requesting. The offer is first-come-first-served pending availability, so get your email in now! You can see the full program of films and events at their website.

Rosie O’Donnell will be in attendance
Featuring Rosie O’Donnell in a hybrid form of standup comedy, inspired by her recent near-fatal heart attack. In a comic and touching performance, she shares her experience with heart disease, the leading cause of death among American women, and explores topics ranging from the challenges of raising five children to her obsession with Barbara Streisand. O’Donnell’s return to the stage is an honest, hilarious and intimate take on life.

The Arts Effect & Feminist Press present 2 SPECIAL PERFORMANCES! SLUT The play

 

Join us and celebrate the release of…
Coming soon from The Feminist Press (on sale 2/10).  
Pre-order today!  http://bit.ly/1huLt5P
 
“SLUT is truthful, raw and immediate! 
Experience this play and witness what American young women live with everyday.”
– GLORIA STEINEM
 
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 7th @ 6pm
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 8th @ 2pm
 
*Q&A following both performances*
 
Tishman Auditorium
The New School
63 Fifth Ave
New York, NY 10003
 
Tickets FREE for middle & high school students!
$7 for college students
$20 for adults
SLUT follows the journey of 16-year-old Joanna Grace Del Marco, who is raped by three friends during a night out in NYC. Through Joey’s story and those in her community, audiences witness the damaging impact of slut culture and the importance of being heard.
 
Written by Katie Cappiello
Directed by Katie Cappiello & Meg McInerney
Featuring the award-winning Arts Effect All-Girl Theater Company
“Powerhouse script!” – TIMEOUT NY   “Engrossing drama!”  – NEW YORK MAG
 
For more information, to request a copy for review, or arrange a media
appearance please contact: Lisa@lisaweinert.com
SLUT: The Play is a part of StopSlut, a youth-led movement to end slutshaming and transform rape culture. More info about SLUT: The Play and the book, visit: www.StopSlut.org
Join the conversation #stopslut and follow us @stopslut
Contact Taryn Mann for group packages: tarynmann@gmail.com

2015 New Masculinities Festival: Call for Proposals

Man Question is seeking proposals for performance pieces for our third New Masculinities Festival! This exciting event will take place in New York City on Saturday, May 9–exact time and place to be announced.

We are seeking performances of all kinds that passionately and curiously investigate the question, “how do you stay human in the face of masculinity?”

Successful performance proposals explore how expectations of masculinity impact people’s lives, both positively and negatively, in overt and in unexpected ways.  Pieces in the festival also experiment with how to create less scripted, more intimate, and more fun lives and communities.

Check out our online submission form and begin your proposal now!

We seek pieces that have the potential to perturb the viewer to see the world in a new way.  We ask applicants to have a clear vision for their piece and background in performance that they need to bring the piece to life. We also warmly invite you to contact us to discuss your ideas.  Pieces in all genres of performance are accepted and encouraged!

Submit your proposal now and breathe new life into what it means to be a man!.

Proposals Due: SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2015

 

Women’s Empowerment Group Every Wednesday beginning Feb. 4, 2015 RSVP Today!

Intimate partner violence can make women feel isolated, trapped and misinformed about their experience. An empowerment group can:

  • Provide a “safe refuge” for women 
  • Provide a space to process experiences for clearer insight
  • Provide knowledge of survivors’ rights and resources
  • Begin the process of safety planning
  • Learn the importance of self-care, and strategies and techniques to begin the healing process

 

RSVP Required

**Light refreshments and free Metrocards will be provided to participants only**

For more information contact Sharene Roig 
or via email at sroig@connectnyc.org

WHEN

 

Wednesdays

Feb. 4, 2015

Feb. 11, 2015

Feb. 18, 2015

Feb. 25, 2015

Mar. 4, 2015

Mar. 11, 2015

11:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. 

WHERE

CONNECT

127 W. 127th Street, Ste. 432

New York, NY 10027

 

RSVP Required

**Light refreshments and free Metrocards will be provided for participants only**

 

BRIGHT HALF LIFE by Tanya Barfield and directed by Tony-nominee Leigh Silverman, produced by Women’s Project Theater

BRIGHT HALF LIFE by Tanya Barfield and directed by Tony-nominee Leigh Silverman, produced by Women’s Project Theater.  

 

“Barfield is unfailingly thought-provoking.”  – The Los Angeles Times

 

The award-winning Women’s Project Theater, the nation’s oldest and largest company dedicated to producing plays written and directed by women, invites you to experienceBRIGHT HALF LIFE. This production will run February 17th – March 22nd at New York City Center, Stage II.

Erica meets Vicki.  Vicki marries Erica.  Lives collide.  Rewind.  Pause.  Fast forward. A kaleidoscopic new play about love, skydiving, and the infinite moments that make a life together.

BRIGHT HALF LIFE  is a fabulous opportunity for Paradigm Shift NYC. BRIGHT HALF LIFE is the beautiful story of a life shared between two women, imagined in a whirlwind of memories, events, and love.

 

WP has a special group rate of $25 per ticket, a savings of nearly 60%*!  You can order your group tickets by calling WP at 212.765.1706.

You can also find more details on our websites: WPTheater.org.

Tickets available from $25*+
 
*For group (of 9+) tickets at $25/ person, use code: 14458
*For individual tickets, you can use code: 14068 for tickets $39.50 per person.
 
*Regular price $60.

Artistic Uprising: February 7 in NYC

Artistic Uprising: February 7 in NYC

Mark your calendars, the REVOLUTION is coming to NYC!

In the tradition of our 2001 V-Day event at Madison Square Garden and our 2008 ten year anniversary event at the Louisiana Superdome, V-Day/One Billion Rising is once again pushing the edge in a one-night-only event at the Hammerstein Ballroom, that will bring together revolutionary poets, singers, dancers and activists! Look Who’s Artistic upRISING: ARTISTS & ACTIVISTS BIOS! >

Saturday, 7 February, 7PM, HAMMERSTEIN BALLROOM, NYC

A Revolutionary evening of Performance & Slam Poetry, DANCING, Music, & Activist Inspiration:

MAYA AZUCENA  |  BATALA NYC  |  BETTY  |  CLIMBING POETREE  |  CHRISTINE SCHULER DESCHRYVER
ASALI DEVAN ECCLESIASTES  |  EVE ENSLER  |  GINA LORING  |  MORLEY  |  EMMA MYLES  |  KATHY NAJIMY
THANDIE NEWTON  |  ROSIE O’DONNELL  |  AGNES PAREYIO  |  SUNNI PATTERSON  |  STREB  |  SWOON
SAIDAH BABA TALIBAH  |  KARABO TSHIKUBE  |  MONIQUE WILSON  |  Y3K  |  JAHA ZAINABU  |  ZOYA
& MORE TO BE ANNOUNCED*  subject to change

Come dressed as your revolutionary self!  On this night, with *this event, we will ignite the revolution that will last for years to come.  Join us as we usher in this year of risings across the world!

Buy tickets here

CONNECT Women | Upcoming events and trainings!

When we women offer our experience as our truth, all the maps change.” ~ Ursula K. Le Guin

CONNECT Women upcoming events. 

Join us!
Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2015
6:00 – 8:00 p.m.

Join the CONNECT Women’s Circle in February as we discuss emotional abuse – one of the most common, overlooked, minimized and dismissed forms of domestic and intimate partner violence.

Click here to RSVP

Feb. 4 – Mar. 11, 2015
(To meet every Wednesday)
11:15a.m. – 12:45 p.m.

This Support Group will provide a safe space for women to come together to process their experiences, learn about rights and resources and self-care strategies.

Click here to RSVP

Women’s Empowerment Training Snapshot: Women’s Experience
Thursday, Feb.  12, 2015
2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
 
Join us for a one-day workshop that offers tools needed to facilitate support groups with survivors and victims of intimate partner violence. This course is a shorter version of our Women’s Empowerment course.
ONNECT Women celebrates the power, wisdom, and resilience of women. We offer transformative education, support, and space for women to gather, share experiences, and think critically and creatively about what it means to be women living in a culture where violence against women is the norm. All 
CONNECT Women programming is trauma- informed and explores the ways gender, race, class and sexuality shape our responses to Intimate violence.
For more information contact us: connect@connectnyc.org

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