June Highlights

June Highlights

Freely In Hope

6 scholars dreamed about their future careers

Our team in Kenya conducted a career test where our high school scholars were able to align their education with their future aspirations! They have big dreams and we are excited to collaborate with them!

Freely In Hope

10 scholars supported through individualized tutoring

We have been providing individualized tutoring in safe spaces for our high school scholars in Zambia. As a result, their grades have been improving! We are proud of their academic growth and success.

Support Black Women-Owned Businesses

Compliments ‘N Coffee is a Black female-owned business, selling mugs that feature affirming messages. Compliments ‘N Coffee will be donating $5 from the first 100 pre-orders to Freely in Hope! Get yours today!

Donor Spotlight

Freely In Hope

Katey, San Francisco

Katey, 14, is making masks to support Freely in Hope’s COVID-19 Relief Fund! Our donors all around the world have collaborated with Freely in Hope in meaningful ways to support our scholars during the pandemic. 

Freely In Hope

Upcoming Webinar with Nikole Lim

Jul 09, 2020, 04:00 PM

Jul 09, 2020, 05:00 PM

Join us at The Courage 365 Show for abuse survivors, advocates, and those who love them. The show is filled with healing tips and inspirational stories to help you live a life of courage. My episode will be simultaneously LIVE streamed to Courage 365’s Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube.

Freely In Hope

At Freely in Hope, we believe that recognizing the inherent dignity of oppressed peoples is essential to the pursuit of justice. We stand for Black lives. Decolonizing and dismantling our education systems, religious systems, and justice systems is part of our work of ending sexual violence and empowering survivors to thrive.

Read our statement here.

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When Children Find Their Voice: Building Safety From Where I Stand

I used to dream of a community where children could grow up not feeling afraid. Where women didn’t have to scream every night. Where survivors could rise as leaders and lean into their lived experiences to bring the change they wanted to see. The dream didn’t come from some abstract place, it came from living in Kibera, from knowing what it feels like when poverty exposes girls to vulnerabilities, from understanding firsthand what happens when children don’t have the language to recognize violence as it’s happening to them.

Principles of Survivor-Centered Ethical Storytelling for Nonprofits

The “survivor complex” is real, and it deeply impacts the people we walk alongside. The survivor complex is a psychological and relational pattern that develops when a person has survived trauma and begins to relate to themselves primarily through the identity of “survivor.” It often forms because systems, communities, and even support programs repeatedly reinforce this identity, sometimes unintentionally.

Q& A From Pain to Power – The Super Girls Revolution with Magdalene

As a survivor of sexual violence, I started SGR in my mother’s backyard because the need to ensure girls were supported through mentorship, education, and empowerment was so urgent. My dream was always consistent: to mentor girls to take up space and be leaders, allowing every light in the community to shine.

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