May Highlights

May Highlights

Freely In Hope

Zambian Scholars In Safe House

This month, we started individualized tutoring, group therapy, and we attained textbooks for our high school scholars in Zambia! They are all living together in a safe hostel to support their academic and emotional healing during this time, where they are doing daily devotions together. Our scholars are developing public speaking skills, improving their leadership skills, and taking up responsibility. We’ve been impressed and encouraged by their growing leadership!

Freely In Hope

96 scholars and family members have been provided with food baskets. Due to schools being closed in Kenya and Zambia, our scholars are pressured to find ways of supporting their families, but providing food allows them to prioritize their studies.

Freely In Hope

10 girls participated in our first Zoom Leadership Lab that focused on financial management. We are raising up women to learn about financial independence and growth!

See the impact of your donations, the lives transformed, and the programs provided last year. We couldn’t have done it without you!

Read our 2019 Annual Report

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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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