Blog

Featured Posts

All Blog Posts

Blog Blog

Letters to Congress from Dreamers in our Community

This is an excerpt: These letters were written specifically for North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis as part of a public hearing hosted by a grassroots group, Siembra NC in High Point, NC. Siembra NC is an immigrant-led group comprised of undocumented immigrants, among them local DACA recipients.

Read More
Blog Blog

Pass the Dream Act

This is an excerpt: By Citlaly Mora, Senior Director for Women’s Resource Center and Latino Family Center, YWCA High PointOn a day to day basis, I work with women, immigrants, and the Latinx population in High Point, a rural city in North Carolina.

Read More
Blog Blog

No Man is Sacred

This is an excerpt: By Danielle Marse-Kapr, YWCA USA Communications & Marketing DirectorGrowing up, I had the same impression many people have. Men who commit sexual violence are notably bad people. They hang out in back alleys or drug your drink from across the bar. You can spot them in a line up. They aren’t your friends or family.

Read More
Blog Blog

Historic Firsts this Election Day!

This is an excerpt: We made history last night through our local elections! We are thrilled to see so many “firsts” during this election season, particularly as many of the firsts were women and people of color. This is what progress looks like.

Read More
Blog Blog

On a Mission to End Violence in the Wake of Another Mass Shooting

This is an excerpt: By YWCA AlaskaOctober 1st, 2017, was a terror filled night for America. The act of violence that occurred in Las Vegas was undeniably horrific; and sadly, we’ve experienced it before. At YWCA Alaska, we cannot in good conscious ignore this opportunity to address how violence surrounds us, and who most often perpetrates this violence.

Read More
Blog Blog

Refusing Silence

This is an excerpt: By Caitlin Lowry, Senior Policy Analyst, YWCA USAFive years ago, I became the victim of a stalker who sent thousands of harassing and threatening messages to my email and across several online platforms.

Read More
Blog Blog

Taking Campus Sexual Assault Seriously—Always

This is an excerpt: By Lily Eisner, YWCA USA Public Policy & Advocacy Intern, Summer 2017One day last spring, vandals scrawled messages threatening sexual violence in common areas and stole several pairs of women’s underwear from laundry rooms in a sorority at my school, Dartmouth College.

Read More
Blog Blog

In Our Community: Collaborating to End Domestic Violence

This is an excerpt: By Sharon K. Roberson, President & CEO YWCA Nashville & Middle TennesseeA few months ago, Maria had one arm in a sling, while the other carried her infant baby.The beating from her husband had put her in the hospital, and now that she was being discharged, she couldn't go home.

Read More
Blog Blog

Take Action: Call on Congress to Work to End Gender-Based Violence

This is an excerpt: At YWCA, we know that not all violence is acknowledged or responded to equally and that some victims go unrecognized altogether. That's why for more than 20 years, we have set aside the third week in October as a Week Without Violence to raise awareness around ending violence against women and girls with the World YWCA.

Read More
Blog Blog

Week Without Violence: Join Us

This is an excerpt: The numbers are staggering. We all already know this. One in four women will become a victim of domestic violence in her lifetime. Every two minutes someone is sexually assaulted. One in three women experience gender-based violence.

Read More
Blog Blog

Showing Up for Black Women

This is an excerpt: Last Saturday, YWCA USA was proud to be a sponsor of the March for Black Women and the March for Racial Justice. As our CEO, Alejandra Castillo said in her blog last week, “when women of color lead change, everyone is elevated with us.”

Read More
Blog Blog

Speaking Out In Support of the Dream Act

This is an excerpt: Today, on October 3rd, YWCA USA stood with our partners on Capitol Hill to call on Congress to act immediately to protect the more than 800,000 DREAMers who have received DACA protection, and some 200,000 "little DREAMers" who have been waiting to turn 15 to meet DACA's age requirements.

Read More