Rosie's Place 2014 Spring Newsletter

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SPRING 2014 A Timeline of Rosie’s Place’s First 40 Years Q & A with Overnight Advocate Rev. Laura Ahart Our Executive Director Reflects on Our Anniversary

NEWS

Food Stamp Cuts Affect Rosie’s Place Guests Newly Redesigned Website Debuts New Items from WCC Artisans

Rosie’s Place: The First 40 Years

Photo courtesy of the Bay State Banner

Q&A

As we celebrate the anniversary of our founding 40 years ago, we’d like to share a bit of Rosie’s Place’s history, from its humble beginnings in an old supermarket to a thriving community center that today gives hope and help to 12,000 poor and homeless women annually. We are grateful to every one of our kind and generous friends who have supported us along the way.

REV. LAURA AHART OVERNIGHT ADVOCATE

Among her many roles, the Rev. Laura Buchanan Ahart has for the last two years served as a part-time overnight advocate for the 20 women staying at Rosie’s Place. She also is pastor of the United Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain, a prison chaplain, chair of the Criminal Justice Committee for the Black Ministerial Alliance and a visible, approachable presence on the streets of Boston. Rev. Ahart was recently named a Woman of Courage and Conviction by the National Council of Negro Women, Boston chapter. What led you to take a job at Rosie’s Place? I was ministering to men and women at the Nashua Street Jail in Boston, but in 2005 the women were moved to the South Bay House of Correction. At Rosie’s Place I found I could stay connected to women with the same kinds of issues. Do you find the concerns of our guests very much the same or different from those of the men you see at the jail? You might be surprised, but there are mostly similarities. Whether you’re incarcerated or homeless, you don’t want to be in that situation. You’re feeling hopeless, discouraged. You’re missing your family. You want to be independent but you don’t know how to get out of that hole. What is your approach with people you minister to? I always try to bring a nurturing attitude to people, whether they’re gang members on the street or felons or my congregation or Rosie’s Place guests. I am not judgmental. I treat people with respect and I don’t tolerate disrespect toward me, so I fit in well here. I raised two sons as a single parent in the South End and I found tough love and having something to focus on in their lives kept them on the right track. That model can work for lots of people. What do you think Rosie’s Place guests are seeking? They want to know that someone cares, that someone will look out for them. They are used to hearing negatives, what they can’t do. So I give lots of encouragement, no matter where they’re at. I can also provide leads for services they can use and support for taking that first step toward trying to turn things around. At the end of the day, I just try to be where the need is.

On Easter Sunday 1974, Kip Tiernan, with four other volunteers and $250 donated by friends, opened the doors to Rosie’s Place in the empty Rozen’s Supermarket on Columbus Avenue in Boston’s South End. It was the first women-only shelter in the United States. Kip chose the name Rosie’s Place because it held no connotations and sounded like it could be a women’s coffeehouse or favorite aunt’s kitchen; “Rosie” is no one in particular, yet all our guests. A decision was made at the outset to accept no city, state, or federal money to ensure Rosie’s Place’s independence from outside demands, policies, or prejudices.

On opening day there were more volunteers than guests. Small, pink notices that read “If you need a meal, come here and we’ll help you” were distributed among women in the neighborhood. From that day, the word about Rosie’s Place spread and the number of women who sought us out began to grow. Through a fire, downturns in the economy and many other challenges, Rosie’s Place has continued to expand in size and scope in order to meet our guests’ needs. What has never changed is the unconditional love, understanding and acceptance offered to every woman who walks through our doors.

1998 A capital campaign was launched to expand and rebuild Rosie’s Place. Commitments of more than $3.2 million were made for the reconstruction.

1974 Rosie’s Place opens on Easter Sunday in the former Rozen’s Supermarket on Columbus Ave., Boston.

1977 Rosie’s Place moved into a five-story row house in Washington Street in Boston’s South End, and purchased a triple-decker on Columbia Road, Dorchester. Not long after, this became our first permanent housing for nine formerly homeless women.

1984 Shortly after Rosie’s Place’s 10th birthday on April 24, fire destroyed the top two floors of the Washington Street building. Staff, volunteers, guests and neighbors came

1996 The Women’s Craft Cooperative was formed and this social enterprise, which gave job training and permanent, part-time employment to Rosie’s Place guests, began “turning buttons into brooches.”

1995 Rosie’s Place converted a tripledecker in Dorchester into a home for women living with HIV, after starting a pilot program on one floor of the Columbia Road, Dorchester house.

2000 Rededication took place in June. New services in the renovated building included a dining room that seats 150, new showers and laundry facilities, a wellness center, and the Rosie’s Place Groceries food pantry.

2010 A new Women’s Education Center was completed in the space adjacent to Rosie’s Place at 887 Harrison Avenue. In classrooms on four floors, women attend free onsite ESOL, computer and literacy classes.

2014 Rosie’s Place continues to grow, in recent years adding a Self-Advocacy department and enhancing community outreach with the launch of Outreach services.

together to offer assistance and support and, with the help of the Boston community, all services were restored

1986

within 24 hours. Plans started on renovating the former

Rosie’s Place’s new home was dedicated on June 2. The previous location on Washington Street was then converted into a lodging house that provided a permanent home for 13 women.

location of St. Philip’s Church at 889 Harrison Avenue, Boston, where Kip had volunteered earlier.

Monjoa’s Story

It was only when she took a secret journey of 5,532 miles from her home in the village of Limbe, Cameroon to Boston and Rosie’s Place that Monjoa finally felt at peace. Although she is currently undocumented and homeless, she says, “Since I have been here, my life has changed. I am happy.”

Monjoa was only five when her mother died in childbirth. She was taken in by a succession of families as a helper and had to forgo schooling. She was married at 16 and not long after the birth of her second child, her legs lost all their strength. She could not stand or walk unassisted. Sadly, her husband and his family did not believe or help her; they would not pay for medical care, and traditional remedies she underwent were painful

and cruel. “I was suffering, but these experiences made me strong,” Monjoa says. Amid feelings of abandonment, isolation and shame, Monjoa prayed and found inspiration. She learned how to sew from a neighbor; not only did she now earn her own money for medical treatment, but the pedals of the sewing machine strengthened her legs. She got through each day the best she could. Her husband eventually died and she refused another man’s offer to marry. He habitually sexually assaulted her until she fought back one night and an elder from another township came to her aid. “I did not think of a future, I just wanted to die,” Monjoa says. Papa, as Monjoa calls him, knew

the only answer was for her to leave. He arranged for her to clandestinely fly out of the country with him. She stayed with his family in Washington, D.C. and other temporary connections in the Boston area. Today Monjoa receives medical treatment and assistance from Boston Medical Center; her legs are strengthening with the cane and care they provided. She has stayed in the Overnight Program throughout the past year and while she waits for housing, spends most days here, enjoying meals, and taking part in self-advocacy and arts activities and iPad classes. She has improved her English through close friendships with our guests. “Rosie’s Place has built me back up,” Monjoa says. “I was in the dark and now I feel some light.”


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