Archive for Events

Kickstarter Campaign till 12/21- Support Chantilly, Amazing PS featured singer-songwriter!

Chantilly is your friendly neighborhood singer-songwriter.  She’s a crazy cat lady, lifestyle blogger, and happens to write the best rainy day songs you’ve ever cried to.  A frequent performer in the NYC scene, she’s been featured in the CMJ Music Marathon, L Magazine’s Northside Festival, and Paradigm Shift’s Artist showcases (2007 & 2009.)

Recently, much time and love was put into creating a magical new set of recordings with producer Saul Simon Macwilliams (Ingrid Michaelson, Jenny Owen Youngs), so she is trying to raise funds for it via kickstarter.  The deadline is December 21st to raise $2,000 dollars.  The money will go directly towards production costs, as well as giving you access to one-of-a-kind prizes.

If you believe in art and love, consider contributing to this artist’s dream!

www.chantillysongs.com
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/chantillysongs/chantilly-makes-new-ep-needs-kisses-love-hope-and
www.twitter.com/chantillysongs
http://chantilly.bandcamp.com

Rally to Save Birth Control!

Rally to Save Birth Control!
Health care reform will let many women access birth control without copay.

But the White House might be caving to pressure from ultraconservative forces. Women whose bosses oppose birth control are at risk of having that coverage taken away.

Join NARAL Pro-Choice New York, Planned Parenthood of NYC, the New York Civil Liberties Union, NOW-NYC, Sistersong NYC, National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, National Organization for Women (NOW) NY State and NOW NY State Young Feminist Task Force and others on Thursday for an emergency rally at the federal building in Manhattan, which houses the Health and Human Services regional office, to send a message to the White House that all women should have access to affordable birth control regardless of where they work!

Rally to Save Birth Control

This Thursday, December 1

12-1:30 pm

Outside the Federal Building

Broadway between Worth and Thomas Streets, Manhattan

Please RSVP here.

The Obama administration is being flooded with calls and letters from people who oppose birth control. We must send a message that caving to this extreme position is not an option.

Can’t make it to the rally? Follow the rally on Twitter under #NY4BC and tweet your message to HHS – we’ll write your message on a sign for all to see.

Facing Gender Violence on NYC Transit

Monday December 5th
Facing Gender Violence on NYC Transit
Hunter West Building at Hunter College – 1st floor Lobby area, Southwest corner of 68th Street and Lexington Avenue
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Facebook event is at: https://www.facebook.com/events/140351099406402/

This event is free and open to the public.

Sexual harassment and assault is a common problem on public transportation; but the issue rarely gets discussed or addressed. Learn from the experts about who is affected and what you can do to protect yourself and others.

Panelists:
Jerin Afria, Chair of the National Organization for Women (NOW), Young Feminist Task Force;
Emily May, Co-founder and Executive Director of Hollaback!;
Susan Moesker, Coordinator of Community Violence Prevention at the Center for Anti-Violence Education
A representative of Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer

Moderator:
Dr. Gail Garfield, Professor of Sociology at John Jay College and author of Knowing What We Know: African American Women’s Experiences of Violence and Violation

Emergency Rally To Save Birth Control!

Health care reform will let many women access birth control without copay.

But the White House might be caving to pressure from ultraconservative forces. Women whose bosses oppose birth control are at risk of having that coverage taken away.

Join NARAL Pro-Choice New York, Planned Parenthood of NYC, the New York Civil Liberties Union, NOW-NYC, Sistersong NYC, National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health and others on Thursday for an emergency rally at the federal building in Manhattan, which houses the Health and Human Services regional office, to send a message to the White House that all women should have access to affordable birth control regardless of where they work!

Rally to Save Birth Control

This Thursday, December 1

12-1:30 pm

Outside the Federal Building

Broadway between Worth and Thomas Streets, Manhattan

Please RSVP here.

The Obama administration is being flooded with calls and letters from people who oppose birth control. We must send a message that caving to this extreme position is not an option.

Can’t make it to the rally? Follow the rally on Twitter under #NY4BC and tweet your message to HHS – we’ll write your message on a sign for all to see.

Discussion Series on FATHERHOOD- How to overcome the challenges?

CONNECTevents

Join Us for the last part of the Discussion Series:
FATHERHOOD
How to overcome the challenges?
Setting the Agenda for Manhood & Fatherhood in 2012:
Which Way Forward?
DATE: Thursday, December 1, 2011
TIME: 6:30pm to 9:30pm

* This event is for men only.  Due to the holidays, the Men’s Roundtable has moved for December only.  The roundtable will resume on the last Thursdays of the month in January.
Stay CONNECTed (facebook)

Stay CONNECTed (youtube)

Fundraiser Happy Hour – New York Abortion Access Fund

Fundraiser Happy Hour – New York Abortion Access Fund
December 14, from 6-10pm
Lolita Bar in the LES http://www.yelp.com/biz/lolita-bar-new-york
Happy hour is until 8 PM ($3 drafts & $4 well drinks) and $5 drafts after 8PM
Cover will be $5–all of which will go to NYAAF

How we can Curb Human Trafficking in NYC w/Rachel Lloyd from GEMS, 12/9

Free event posted here, with link to register: http://www.meetup.com/Fight-Slavery-Now/events/39601202/

How we can Curb Human Trafficking in NYC

Friday, December 9, 2011
12:30 PM – 3:00 PM

FREE and open to the public

RESERVE YOUR SEAT TODAY!

Human trafficking has become one of the fastest growing criminal industries in the world. Although not always recognizable, established networks of human trafficking operations are even here in New York. Victims may be forced to work as prostitutes, domestic workers, landscapers, in restaurants and bars, as forced panhandlers, in cleaning and janitorial jobs, in nail salons, or in other roles.

Rachel Lloyd from GEMS and Miriam Goodman from the Midtown Community Court will speak about their work on human trafficking and how the public can help curb this illegal exploitation of people in New York City.

Rachel Lloyd
Founder and Executive Director
Girls Empowerment and Mentoring Services (GEMS)

Rachel Lloyd is an outspoken survivor of sexual exploitation. She is the founder and Executive Director of Girls Empowerment and Mentoring Services (GEMS) in NYC, and the author of Girls Like Us. She has become a leading expert and advocate, working on behalf of girls and young women who have survived this abuse. Lloyd has been instrumental in helping craft and shepherd landmark legislation like New York’s Safe Harbor Act. She was named one of the “50 Women Who Change the World” by Ms. Magazine, among many other honors and accolades. Lloyd, her staff, and the young women served by GEMS advocate at the local, state, and national level to promote policies that support young women who have been commercially sexually exploited and domestically trafficked.

Miriam Goodman
Clinical Coordinator, Midtown Community Court

Miriam Goodman the women’s specialist at Midtown Community Court (MCC). Miriam oversees and facilitates the Women’s Independence Safety and Empowerment (WISE) program, a comprehensive psycho-educational and therapeutic program for women arrested for prostitution. Miriam’s focus is in trauma work and she has trained extensively in evidence-based practices for working with trauma survivors. Miriam is also a therapist at the Safe Horizon’s Counseling Center, where she provides trauma-focused therapy for crime victims. She received her BA in Sociology from Dickinson College and her MSW from the Silver School of Social Work at New York University.

UPCOMING WOMEN’S INTEREST EVENTS AT 92YTRIBECA

Thu, Dec 1, 12-2 pm, $18

Daytime | Extraordinary Women Leaders | CATHERINE THE GREAT: PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN

Catherine the Great, Czarina of Russia from 1762 to 1796, created perhaps the greatest collection of art in the world in the Hermitage, negotiated cantankerous court intrigue and numerous wars with consummate skill, and managed multiple lovers—all while working to bring Russia into the modern world. Hear about her astonishing life from her biographer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert K. Massie (Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman, Random House, November 8, 2011).

www.92YTribeca.org/Daytime

***JUST ADDED*** Thu, Dec 1, 7:30pm, $12

Film | PART-TIME WORK OF A DOMESTIC SLAVE

Roswitha Bronski divides her time between raising her three kids, caring for her husband, and working to support them by running an illegal underground abortion clinic. Her life is disrupted when police raid her clinic and she is forced to shut it down, and her husband gets a job in a factory, which is then outsourced to a cheaper labor force. This leads her to take part in radical direct action, and engage in social and political struggles outside of the home in order to make a better world for herself, her family, and others. Director Alexander Kluge (one of the founders of New German Cinema) and his sister Alexandra Kluge (in the title role) explore the struggles of women to transcend their traditional social role, and realize their own desires. Co-presented by Red Channels (www.redchannels.org), an open collective in NYC that engages in radical politics on the left through organizing events, screenings and projects.

Director: Alexander Kluge. 91 min. 1973. DVD.

www.92YTribeca.org/Film

200 Hudson Street | www.92YTribeca.org | 212.601.1000

CONNECT Training Institute’s Understanding Domestic Violence: Essentials and Intersections

CONNECT Training Institute’s Understanding Domestic Violence:  Essentials and Intersections

Fridays, 9:30am-5pm
1/13/11, 1/20/11, 1/27/11, and 2/3/11

Register today for our four-day intensive course on the fundamentals of domestic violence (also known as Intimate Partner Violence)!  Learn about the types, tactics, dynamics  of abuse and the intersections between intimate violence and the many health and social justice issues affecting New York City’s communities. Topics include:

Why men batter and abuse,
Trauma and the impact of intimate violence on women and children
How culture and religion shape our responses to domestic violence
How domestic violence affects LGBTQ communities
HIV, domestic violence and substance abuse
The navigation of social service and legal systems.
Safety Planning

Materials fee is $200 per participant.  Sliding scale is available, organizational budget will be required for sliding scale eligibility.  For more information or to register go to www.connectnyc.org or call (212) 683-0015 ext.215. Understanding Domestic Violence is the prerequisite course for all CONNECT Training Institute courses.  Participants who have completed a previous cycle of Understanding Domestic Violence or DV101 are not required to take this class before registering for other CTI courses.

Facilitator(s):
Sharene Roig, MA, Ed.M., full-time trainer and educator for the CONNECT Training Institute (CTI) and CONNECT’s Community Empowerment Program. Sharene is a lead trainer for Understanding Domestic Violence: Essentials & Intersections and facilitator for the Women’s Empowerment and Girls Empowerment courses. Sharene has over fifteen years of experience in working with families that experience violence. Through CONNECT’s Family Violence Prevention Program she trained foster care and preventive services staff, provided technical assistance and DV case consultations. Sharene has facilitated and developed curricula for support groups for victims/ survivors of intimate partner violence for ten years. Sharene also conducts Girls Empowerment workshops to adolescent girls in both High School and Community Based Programs.

Marlon Walker, is lead trainer for the CONNECT Training Institute and co-trainer for a collaborative project called ‘Men and Women as Allies’ that trains Verizon staff and management on domestic violence and workplace bullying. Marlon as an anti-violence activist facilitates workshops for young and adult men on how to end violence against women and girls throughout NYC. Marlon is also currently facilitating ‘Hombres Dialagoando’, a group for Spanish speaking men struggling with violence in their relationships. Marlon previously worked with The Children of New York (formerly known as Queens Child Guidance Center Early Head Start) in several capacities, including Early Head Start teacher, family worker and as male involvement coordinator. Marlon a longtime educator has taught High School, ESL (Spanish) for adults and GED classes for new immigrants. Marlon is also a FDC graduate.

Quentin Walcott, Director of CONNECT’s Training Institute and Community Empowerment programs. Quentin also spearheads CONNECT’s  Male Anti-Violence initiatives, where he creatively develops programs and trainings centered on moving men and boys from bystanders to allies to activists in the anti-violence movement.  Quentin also works locally and nationally with individuals, community groups and service providers as a violence prevention activist, educator, group leader, lecturer and program developer.  His  collaborations include projects with Eve Ensler, creating a curriculum design for young men as Part of V-Day’s New York Stop the Violence Festival; Developed, in partnership with Cornell University ILR School, Men and Women as Allies training program for Verizon management and craft from CWA Locals 1106 & 1108, which creates awareness on Domestic violence, Bullying and Workplace Violence.  Quentin trained, supervised and mentored by Dr. John E. Aponte, began facilitating Batterer’s Intervention groups throughout New York City over 15 years ago. Until recently, Q chaired/co-chaired the NYC’s Coalition on Working with Abusive Partners (CoWAP) for five years.

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CONNECT
P.O. BOX 20217
New York City, New York 10001
www.connectnyc.org
Legal Advocacy Helpline
212-683-0605
CONNECT is dedicated to preventing interpersonal violence and promoting gender justice.

CONNECT Faith hosts RESPONDING TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN COMMUNITIES OF FAITH

Two day training for Religious leaders, Spiritual Activists and All People of Faith
December 2nd and December 9th, 2011
9:30am – 4:30pm
Union Theological Seminary
3021 Broadway on 120th St

Communities of faith and their leaders have the potential to play a significant role in helping to prevent and eliminate family violence. This course is designed to help clergy, lay leaders and seminarians to:
Gain a basic understanding of the complex dynamics of intimate partner abuse and effects on individuals, families and communities.
Learn about intervention strategies: practices and resources needed to help keep victims/survivors safe, and abusers accountable.
Explore approaches to the challenging pastoral, theological and spiritual issues that abuse and violence in the family raise.
Develop strategies for how you and your community of faith can play a critical role in breaking the silence and preventing domestic violence.

For more information please contact Sally MacNichol at 212-683-0015 x216 or CONNECTfaith@connectnyc.org or visit our website www.connectnyc.org.  No cost to attend.

The agenda to end violence against women is enormous, given that we are essentially attempting to turn the tide of centuries of norms, beliefs, attitudes and behaviors that encourage and support violence against women. Faith- based communities represent a critical ally in this effort.
~ Marie Fortune.

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