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Posts Tagged ‘Women’s Philanthropy’

WHY SEE ABBY DISNEY?

You know that show that catches you on television; the one that you didn’t know you cared about but was so compelling, you couldn’t stop watching?  Or the video that becomes viral because it touches something in each of us we didn’t know was there?  Or the group of women you don’t see often enough but when you do, it feeds you for months afterwards? 

That feeling, that profound connection with our humanity, is why you want to see Abby Disney.  We see the violence on television, war torn countries with bloody streets and white sheet-covered bodies.  For us the story may be a two minute news spot.  For those living in war torn countries, it is their life. 

We often hear of military casualties, we might even hear the language “collateral damage”.  Abby Disney puts a face and a story to the women who are disproportionately impacted by war and subsequently left out of the peace-building process.  You will feel the intensity of the situation and you will also hear the stories of hope, reconciliation and deep, lasting peace.

Women, War and Peace is a series that you will want to record and watch with your family (not for young children!)  Share the experience of listening and learning from Abby Disney on October 24th.  Bring your partner, your girlfriends and your humanity to spend some time with a woman who brings the often silenced voices of women to public television.

You won’t want to miss the opportunity to meet Abby Disney in person on:

October 24th, 2011

5:30-7:30 p.m.

Arena Grand Theater

Click here for tickets.

Program provided with support from The Women’s Fund of Central Ohio and WOSU Public Media.

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Watch Social Change Happen

You’ve read about our grant partners, but now we want to share with you these powerful videos of grant programs in action. Follow the link below to hear testimonies from participants in programs from Doma International, CATCO-Pheonix and Rwanda Women in Action.

Doma: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLs2bR0Raa0

CATCO-Pheonix: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSTofN6l0dE

Rwanda Women in Action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ttknpOq4tw


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The Power of Women

“Teach a woman to fish, she’ll feed the whole village.”

-Hillary Rodham Clinton

 Put a woman in power, she’ll feed the whole world.

That is what Josette Sheeran is striving to do. In her role as Executive Director of the World Food Programme (the food aid branch of the United Nations), Sheeran oversees more than 80 of the world’s poorest countries, providing food to 90 million people last year alone. She is one of the individuals featured in the 10 Most Powerful Women at the United Nations, a list leading up to Forbes’ The 100 Most Powerful Women 2011 due to be released in August.

Also included on that list are Valerie Amos, Judy Cheng-Hopkins, and Helen Clark, equally high-ranking and prominent officials, essential to the operations of the UN. There is Angela Kane, the Under-Secretary-General for Management, who supports tasks of the UN Secretariat, and Susana Malcorra, who directs field operations in her role as the Under-Secretary-General and Head of the Department of Field Support. Michelle Bachelet and Radhika Coomaraswamy work to protect the rights of those too oft-forgotten and mistreated: women and children. Together, Patricia O’Brien and Navanehtem Pillay direct the legal concerns of the UN in their positions as Under-Secretary General for Legal Affairs and the UN Legal Counsel and The High Commissioner for Human Rights respectively. All ten of the women are members of the UN Senior Management Group.

And all ten of the women use their positions in power to feed, rescue, care for, and protect those in the world. Just imagine what ten million in power could do.  

Click on this link to read the article, The 10 Most Powerful Women at the United Nations, written by Avril David: http://blogs.forbes.com/avrildavid/2011/05/02/the-10-most-powerful-women-at-the-united-nations/


Written by: Eleanor Rooke

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Keyholder with Goldie Hawn

We send you our many thanks for the inspiration, celebration, and success experienced at Keyholder with Goldie Hawn!

Your generosity raised $400,000 to further positive social change for women and girls in central Ohio.  How awesome?! 

And to everyone who made a tribute – wow!  We love hearing your stories.  If you missed it or want to see that fabulous video one more time, you can do so by clicking the image at the top of this page.

If you weren’t able to make a donation at the show, there is still time to double your money and have your contribution matched dollar for dollar.  Just click here. 

Until we see you next, stay connected with The Fund on Facebook and Twitter for other news and upcoming events.

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What I Learned at the Bridges Out of Poverty Training Seminar

The Getting Ahead program blogged about earlier this week was derived from the Bridges Out of Poverty curriculum—a program based around raising awareness about the truths of those in poverty, middle class, and wealth, specifically highlighting the hidden “rules” that govern all of our lives (whether we are conscious of them or not). “Bridges” gives a new lens through which we can view the whole of our community, including ourselves, our neighbors, and the systems that affect us all. Kathleen Kishman and I had the privilege to attend a half day Bridges Out of Poverty workshop yesterday led by Louise Seipel. I think everyone, whether he or she is in social service, health care, law enforcement, or simply living in our community, can benefit from what was taught:

  • “An individual brings with him/her the hidden rules of the class in which he/she was raised.” A key point in the curriculum, we need to be aware of the hidden rules found not only in our personal lives, but in the societies and socio-economic groups around us. The mental models of those in poverty, the middle class, and the wealthy are different, down to the very things that drive us and what we give the highest value in our lives. People in poverty tend to think in the present, in survival mode, while those in the middle class can (literally) afford to be more future thinking. For the poor, Relationships are of the utmost. For those in the middle class it is Achievement. For the wealthy, Connections. And these driving forces can be seen everywhere. For example:
    • When regarding food, the greatest concerns are:
      • For those in Poverty: Did you have enough?
      • For those in the Middle Class: Did you like it?
      • For those in Wealth: Was it presented well?
    • When regarding one’s destiny:
      • For those in Poverty:  Believe in fate, cannot do much to mitigate change
      • For those in the Middle Class: Believe in choice, can change future with good choices now
      • For those in Wealth: Noblesse Oblige 

We need to be aware of the hidden rules to better partner with others and help them toward success.

  • “No significant learning occurs without a significant relationship.” – Dr. James Comer Relationships are a strength of those in poverty. Therefore, a gift of charity is no gift at all if one has not established a relationship with the person they are giving to, if they don’t know what that person truly needs. Rather than judging or even mentoring, take the time to get to know someone in poverty first.

          Actually, we might apply this to everyone we come across.

 

Written by: Eleanor Rooke

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Sexual Assault Awareness Month

As you may know, April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month. It is incredibly important to become educated not only on the topics of safety and prevention, but also on the issues which victims of sexual assault face each day.

Let’s take a look at the facts. In America, 1 out of every 6 women has been the victim of an attempted or completed rape in her lifetime. How does this trauma affect the lives and well-being of so many women? The annual cost of lost productivity due to domestic violence is estimated as $727.8 million with over 7.9 million paid workdays lost per year.[1] Studies have shown 75 percent of women in treatment programs for drug and alcohol addictions report having been sexually abused.[2] Nearly 90 percent of women who have become dependent upon alcohol endured severe violence at the hands of a parent or were sexually abused as a child.[3]

Last Friday, The Women’s Fund had the privilege of attending Portraits of Recovery, a luncheon created by our Grant Partner Amethyst, Inc. At this event three amazing women shared their testimonies of abuse and recovery. Although the factors which led to their addictions varied, each of these women attributed their ability to share their own story of struggle and success because of Amethyst’s comprehensive program.  Amethyst offers drug and alcohol treatment for women, which addresses economic self-sufficiency, supportive services and trauma counseling. This program takes into account the role traumatic experiences can play in addiction and the recovery process if left untreated.

We are lucky and proud to partner with Amethyst, which understands the effects of sexual assault are lasting and can play a significant role in the future of the individual and the lives that they touch. These three brave women undoubtedly touched each of us, and we want their stories to be heard. Sexual assault is not acceptable, and it needs to stop – now is the time.



[1] Corporate Alliance to End Partner Violence, 2003

[2] American Journal on Addictions, June 1997

[3] Journal of Traumatic Stress, December 1999


Written by: Kathleen Kishman

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Fall Grant Partner Announcement!

Today we celebrate the funding of 12 new 2011 Grant Partners. In just 10 short years of promising social change for women and girls, The Fund has awarded grants to 117 programs totaling a $1.3 million dollar investment to put more women in leadership positions, strengthen girls’ life skills, and empower more women to achieve economic independence. 

 

The 2011 Grant Partners are:

Amethyst, Incorporated: Supported Employment Program

Supported Employment (SE) provides access to vocational support while promoting economic independence for women recovering from addiction by helping them find employment and reducing the stigma against women in recovery from policy makers and employers.

 

CATCO-Phoenix: Full STEAM Ahead

CATCO-Phoenix will implement Full STEAM Ahead, a unit of activities for an after-school program that uses drama/theatre as a delivery system to illuminate STEM concepts for middle school girls.

 

CMAA Refugee Services: Capital Park Women’s Empowerment Project

The Capital Park Women’s Empowerment Project will impact 380 families living in Capital Park Apartments by empowering and training 12 Somali refugee women to become leaders around the issue of safety in their surrounding neighborhood.

 

Community Refugee & Immigration Services: Providing Knowledge/Pointing the Way

CRIS assists immigrant women exercise their rights, deny abusers the ability to use women’s immigration status as a tool of control, and help participants transform their situations from dependence to self-sufficiency.

 

Doma International: Project Green Light

Trained volunteers through Abolitionist U become mentors to advocate for and to walk alongside a woman in recovery from Human Trafficking, seeking to reduce the number of women who relapse and exit recovery programs.

 

Girl Scouts of Ohio’s Heartland Council, Inc.: It’s Your World: Change It! aMaze Leadership Journey

It’s Your World – Change It! is a gender-specific program in the Columbus City Preparatory School for Girls supporting the developmental, social, and academic needs of middle school girls by enhancing self-concepts and cultivating skills necessary to enable girls to become confident and effective leaders.

 

HelpLine of Delaware & Morrow Counties: The “Thank Goodness I’m Female” (TGIF) Initiative

A teen led and developed approach, the Thank Goodness I’m Female (T.G.I.F.) Initiative emphasizes the development of healthy female friendships and peer relationships through open dialogue, skill building and youth mentoring utilizing art exhibitions, a social-norm campaign, and social networking “Youtube-like” videos to change aggressive attitudes and behaviors among girls.

 

Mental Health America of Licking County: Bridges Out of Poverty Initiative

Bridges Out of Poverty inspires women from businesses, churches, and other organizations to volunteer as Allies to help hard-working, low-income women, especially single mothers, escape from poverty

 

Planned Parenthood of Central Ohio: Peer Education Project

PPCO will engage 10 teenage women as Peer Educators, developing them into informed leaders that will provide education for 300 to 400 of their female peers in the prevention of unintended pregnancies, STI’s, and HIV/AIDS, as well as advocating for changes in government and school policy to encourage women’s rights and comprehensive sexual education.

 

The Interprofessional Commission of Ohio: Ruling Our eXperiences (ROX)

The ROX Ruling Our eXperiences program empowers girls through training young women on issues of body image, gender roles, female leadership and career development, dealing with harassment and discrimination, healthy relationships with peers, sexual violence, and physical self defense.

 

Rwandan Women in Action: Refugee Women Transitional Support Program

Refugee Women Transitional Support, in collaboration with Children’s Hunger Alliance, certify refugee women to become childcare providers and start their own cooperative daycares.

 

The Ohio State University ACCESS Collaborative Program: College and High School Aspiring Mothers Partnership for Degrees (CHAMPS)

The CHAMPS program provides promising young single parent college women the opportunity to develop leadership skills by implementing a college shadow program for expecting or parenting teens.

 

This grant slate represents new and proven programs, programs in Franklin, Licking and Delaware Counties, and deep work to help women and girls reach their full potential.  Thank you for your leadership in recommending funding to The Women’s Fund Board.  Your wisdom is reflected in this balanced, profoundly impactful grant slate. 

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Striking Gold

Simply put, women are dynamic by nature. Flip through your contact list. I’ll bet you know women who are doctors, teachers, mothers, lawyers, business owners, philanthropists, friends, writers, CEOs, and everything in between. Each of these women probably wears more than one hat, too.

When we started planning Keyholder this year, we wanted to bring someone we could all relate to; someone who has fully embraced the ability of women to be successful at whatever it is that drives them. So, who is this woman?

She is Goldie Hawn. Although most of us know her for her bright career in acting, singing and writing, she is much more than that. She is a visionary, a philanthropist. She sends a message of mindfulness; mindfulness of who you are and what you can do for those around you. Her foundation focuses on children, realizing they are the future and they have limitless potential. All in all, she gets what it means to be a dynamic woman.

Her Hollywood roles cover everything from the quirky girl on Good Morning, World to a woman coming into her own in Private Benjamin, to her Academy Award performance in Cactus Flower. Her book A Lotus Grows in the Mud is not so much a tell-all of the Hollywood life, but rather an introspective journey to wisdom and self-fulfillment. She is a business woman, a mother, and an inspiration.

So, are you ready to Strike Gold?


Written by: Hallie Kloots

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You Have to See This!

A local woman elected official and friend of mine sent me the link to this video yesterday.  Please take the time to watch it.  I hope it reminds you why you give to the Women’s Fund and inspires you to continue to change the world by funding social change for women and girls.  Rock on!

– Liz Shirey

Click here to view the history of women and philanthropy.

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