Assisting Abused Women

 

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Abused Women Help Centers

This project, based initially in Lebanon, aims to provide assistance for young women in distress as a result of battery, substance abuse, and sex crimes.
Our goal is to open centers that will help these women regain confidence and rebuild their physical, mental, and spiritual health, in order to allow them to rejoin society.

The program will also deal with literacy, teaching creative, artistic and various trade skills, as well as other means of self-support.

Our Mission is to:

  • Help physically and mentally abused women regardless of one’s religion, sect, age, nationality, etc and to find safe and secure places for them after leaving our Help Centers & Homes.
  • Help women addicted to intoxicating substances to be rehabilitated in order to become fully integrated in society.
  • Help women emotionally, psychologically, physically, and spiritually.
  • Help women improve their education and technical skills, and train them to find suitable jobs.
  • Help establish other similar centers.
Home of Tenderness

Beit el-Hanane

Home of Tenderness is a non-profit, non-denominational (non-sectarian), non-discriminatory, charitable organization that deals with the problems of abused women in Lebanon. It promotes community awareness and education to break a cycle of violence and abuse; and it provides an environment of encouragement, compassion, and support for all who come in contact with it.Our goal is to open centers that will help these women regain confidence and rebuild their physical, mental, and spiritual health, in order to allow them to rejoin society.

The program will also deal with literacy, teaching creative, artistic and various trade skills, as well as other means of self-support.

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Indigenous Women

More than 1 in 3 Native American and Alaska Native women will be raped in their lifetime and more than 6 in 10 will be physically assaulted. Native women are stalked at more than twice the rate of other women. Native women are murdered at more than ten times the national average. Non-Indians commit 88% of violent crimes against Native women.”  According to Dr. Sandi Pierce, a leading sex trafficking researcher and Native scholar.

Our goal is to train women who have escaped human trafficking at a safe house along with a team from the Air Force Academy who will conduct a two-day self-defense course.

 

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