| Community Women Against Hardship helps women in crisis to help themselves |
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| By Robert Joiner, Beacon staff |
| Posted 4:31 am Tue., 1.12.10 |
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R&B singer Melba Moore couldn't have been a more appropriate choice for last fall's concert at the Sheldon to raise money for Community Women Against Hardship, a self-help group. Its mission is to lift up women and families experiencing streaks of bad luck not unlike the kind that Moore herself once faced.
The organization owes its creation, in 1988, to a report about the pervasiveness of poverty among female-headed black families in St. Louis. At that time, no fewer than 50 percent of these households lacked basic necessities; the number is now down to about 30 percent. Alarmed by the statistics, Gloria L. Taylor and the late Betty J. Lee, both administrators at the University of Missouri, decided to make a difference. Their solution was Community Women Against Hardship, which helps people in need so that they might one day be in a position to give back to others.
"Some of the things that my family needed may seem small now," Johnson says, "but at that time I couldn't afford a lot of things that were important to somebody with children, trying to get to and from work and trying to stay in college." She has since remarried, earned two master's degrees in education -- one from Fontbonne and another from Lindenwood -- settled into a job as a public school teacher in a St. Louis County district and is enrolled in an online program to earn a doctorate in education. Community Women's big payback has been its ability to tap into the skills and resources that Johnson and others develop over time. Johnson, for example, is now a regular volunteer, having set up academic and tutoring programs for children of clients. Johnson is also about to become a CWAH board member. "The program was really helpful to the well-being of my children and in getting me started on the journey that I am on now," says Johnson. "What this program says is that people can be a good resource to help others once their own basic needs are met. Giving back is the spiritual part of this organization."
"We all feel that God is the center of all of this," Taylor says. "The question is why are you so special that you should have all these things that people (like Johnson and the welfare mother) shouldn't? What we're saying is that maybe if we provide these women with a little help, they could do almost anything they wanted to do." Taylor talks constantly as she leads a visitor to various rooms inside of the group's building, an old school annex at 3964 West Belle Place. CWAH paid $1 for the site and then renovated it through donations and in-kind services worth about $500,000. The building is large enough to handle all of the group's operations -- its food pantry, health and nutrition outreach programs, workshops for parenting, tutoring for children, and educational programs for people wanting to earn GEDs or gain computer skills. Taylor strolls into a large room containing coats, dresses, skirts and other donated clothing, all hanging neatly on racks and displayed as meticulously as they would be in a department store. "Women like jewelry, too," she says as she pauses and points to a glass display case filled with donated bracelets, earrings and necklaces. "It makes them feel good about themselves." Then, shifting back to the center's real work of putting women on the track to self-sufficiency, Taylor says, "Every one of us should have some investment in the inner core of the city. We have got to stop isolating it and start including it." She then thinks out loud about Patrice Johnson and wonders how much human potential is lost in cities "if society takes the attitude that we shouldn't help people like her because she's got two kids and one on the way, and we can't imagine her going for a Ph.D." Community Women strives to work with about 100 new families each year. All are recommended by the public with the final selection by a panel. One of the biggest boosters of the group's self-help philosophy has been St. Louis American publisher Donald Suggs, who says Taylor "exemplifies the traditional black values of caring and sharing for our neighbors." CWAH has two full-time paid staffers and a number of volunteers. For its financial support, the group depends on golf tournaments and concerts, such as Melba Moore's performance last fall; donations, such as a $5,000 contribution from AmerenUE for a Walk for Life walk-a-thon; and grants, such as the one from the St. Louis Mental Health Board. Some services require paid professionals, but much work is done by volunteer case workers, teachers and other professionals. "We didn't say we were going to do it all or had all the answers" Taylor says. "We don't have the wealth, but we know we have a lot of talent. People understand that you have to be able to give something back." (Taylor photo taken by Robert Joiner. Johnson photo was provided by her. Moore photo from Wikipedia.) Contact Beacon staff writer Robert Joiner.
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Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon
This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.
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M.W. Guzy fears his daughters' affection for trash TV might have been genetically inherited, as he finds himself drawn to the anybody-but-Mitt show, playing on a loop on cable "news' channels.
Miguel Dulick recounts a trans-Honduras tour that, again, reminded him of the power and joy of keeping siblings and parents connected.
In this week's Beacon Roundtable, Dick Weiss, Jason Rosenbaum, Jo Mannies, Robert Joiner and Dale Singer sit down to talk about the Missouri primary and redistricting, the controversy around…
General manager Nicole Hollway is back to the Beacon blog and she's trying to piece together what social media is and means to people.
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The Beacon's nationally recognized Barroom Conversations program on race, class and other issues that divide will be held on Monday, Feb. 13, 2012, at 7:30 PM discussing Education and Class. RSVP on Facebook and invite your friends! We'll pick up where we left off at Six Row Brewing Co., 3690 Forest Park Avenue at Spring. We look forward to seeing you again!