Hoʻoponopono hou i ke kāne: He kamaʻilio me nā kāne

Join us for an impactful dialogue featuring men at the forefront of reshaping masculinity and confronting violence within our communities.
 

Domestic abuse affects everyone, and it’s crucial that we come together to end it. Emerge invites you to join us for a panel discussion in partnership with Goodwill Industries of Southern Arizona as part of our Lunchtime Insights series. During this event, we’ll engage in thought-provoking conversations with men who are at the forefront of reshaping masculinity and addressing violence in our communities.

Moderated by Anna Harper, Emerge’s Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer, this event will explore intergenerational approaches to engaging men and boys, highlighting the importance of Black and Indigenous men of color (BIPOC) leadership, and will include personal reflections from the panelists on their transformative work. 

Our panel will feature leaders from Emerge’s Men’s Engagement Team and Goodwill’s Youth Re-Engagement Centers. Following the discussion, attendees will have the opportunity to engage directly with the panelists.
 
In addition to the panel discussion, Emerge will provide, we will share updates about our upcoming Generate Change Men’s Feedback Helpline, Arizona’s first helpline dedicated to supporting men who may be at risk of making violent choices alongside the introduction of a brand-new men’s community clinic. 
Join us as we work toward creating a safer community for all.

ʻO ka ʻōlelo hoʻoholo o ka ʻAha Kiekie ʻo Arizona e hōʻeha i ka poʻe i pakele o ka hana ʻino

At Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse (Emerge), we believe that safety is the foundation for a community free from abuse. Our value of safety and love for our community calls us to condemn this week’s Arizona Supreme Court decision, which will jeopardize the wellbeing of domestic violence (DV) survivors and millions more across Arizona.

In 2022, the United States Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade opened the door for states to enact their own laws and unfortunately, the results are as predicted. On April 9, 2024, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled in favor of upholding a century old abortion ban. The 1864 law is a near-total ban on abortion that criminalizes the healthcare workers who provide abortion services. It provides no exception for incest or rape.

Just weeks ago, Emerge celebrated the Pima County Board of Supervisors’ decision to declare April Sexual Assault Awareness Month. Having worked with DV survivors for over 45 years, we understand how often sexual assault and reproductive coercion are used as a means to assert power and control in abusive relationships. This law, which predates the statehood of Arizona, will force survivors of sexual violence to carry unwanted pregnancies—further stripping them of power over their own bodies. Dehumanizing laws like these are so dangerous in part because they can become state-sanctioned tools for people using abusive behaviors to cause harm.

Abortion care is simply healthcare. To ban it is to limit a basic human right. As with all systemic forms of oppression, this law will present the greatest danger to the people who are already the most vulnerable. The maternal mortality rate of Black women in this county is aneane ʻekolu manawa that of white women. Moreover, Black women experience sexual coercion at papalua ka uku of white women. These disparities will only increase when the state is allowed to force pregnancies.

These Supreme Court decisions do not reflect the voices or needs of our community. Since 2022, there has been an effort to get an amendment to Arizona’s constitution on the ballot. If passed, it would overrule the Arizona Supreme Court decision and establish the fundamental right to abortion care in Arizona. Through whatever avenues they choose to do so, we are hopeful that our community will choose to stand with survivors and use our collective voice to protect fundamental rights.

To advocate for the safety and wellbeing of all survivors of abuse in Pima County, we must center the experiences of members of our community whose limited resources, histories of trauma, and biased treatment within the healthcare and criminal legal systems puts them in harm’s way. We cannot realize our vision of a safe community without reproductive justice. Together, we can help return power and agency to survivors who deserve every opportunity to experience liberation from abuse.

Hoʻokuʻu ʻo Emerge i kahi hana hoʻolimalima hou

TUCSON, ARIZONA - Ke hana nei ʻo Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse (Emerge) i kahi kaʻina no ka hoʻololi ʻana i ko mākou kaiāulu, moʻomeheu, a me nā hana e hoʻokumu i ka palekana, kaulike a me ke kanaka piha o nā kānaka āpau. No ka hoʻokō ʻana i kēia mau pahuhopu, kono ʻo Emerge i ka poʻe makemake i ka hoʻopau ʻana i ka hana hoʻomāinoino pili kāne i ko mākou kaiāulu e hui pū i kēia hoʻololi ʻana ma o kahi hana hoʻolimalima ʻāina e hoʻomaka i kēia mahina. E hoʻokipa ʻo Emerge i ʻekolu hanana hui e hoʻolauna i kā mākou hana a me nā waiwai i ke kaiāulu. E mālama ʻia kēia mau hanana ma Nowemapa 29 mai ka hola 12:00 pm a 2:00 pm a me 6:00 pm a 7:30 pm a ma Dekemaba 1 mai ka hola 12:00 pm a 2:00 pm. Hiki i nā mea makemake ke hoʻopaʻa inoa no nā lā aʻe:
 
 
I loko o kēia mau hālāwai hui, e aʻo ana ka poʻe i hele mai i ke ʻano o ka waiwai e like me ke aloha, ka palekana, ke kuleana a me ka hoʻoponopono ʻana, ka hana hou, a me ka hoʻokuʻu ʻana i ke kumu o ka hana a Emerge e kākoʻo ana i nā mea i pakele a me nā pilina a me nā hoʻoikaika kaiāulu.
 
Ke kūkulu ikaika nei ʻo Emerge i kahi kaiāulu e kikowaena a mahalo i nā ʻike a me nā ʻike intersectional o nā mea ola a pau. Ua kūpaʻa nā kānaka a pau ma Emerge i ka hāʻawi ʻana i ko mākou kaiāulu i nā lawelawe kākoʻo hoʻomāinoino home a me ka hoʻonaʻauao e pili ana i ka pale ʻana e pili ana i ke kanaka holoʻokoʻa. Hoʻokumu ʻo Emerge i ke kuleana me ke aloha a hoʻohana i kā mākou mau nāwaliwali i kumu o ke aʻo ʻana a me ka ulu ʻana. Inā makemake ʻoe e noʻonoʻo hou i kahi kaiāulu kahi e hiki ai i nā mea a pau ke apo a ʻike i ka palekana, kono mākou iā ʻoe e noi no kekahi o nā lawelawe pololei i loaʻa a i ʻole nā ​​kūlana hoʻokele. 
 
ʻO ka poʻe makemake e aʻo e pili ana i nā manawa hana o kēia manawa e loaʻa iā lākou ka manawa e kamaʻilio hoʻokahi me nā limahana Emerge mai nā papahana like ʻole ma waena o ke keʻena, e komo pū me ka Polokalamu Hoʻonaʻauao Men, Community-Based Services, Emergency Services, and administration. E loaʻa i ka poʻe ʻimi ʻimi hana i kā lākou noi a hiki i ka lā 2 o Dekemaba ka manawa e neʻe ai i kahi kaʻina hana hoʻolimalima wikiwiki i ka hoʻomaka ʻana o Dekemaba, me ka lā hoʻomaka i Ianuali 2023, inā koho ʻia. E noʻonoʻo ʻia nā noi i waiho ʻia ma hope o Dekemaba 2; akā naʻe, hiki ke hoʻonohonoho ʻia kēlā poʻe noi no kahi hālāwai ninaninau ma hope o ka hoʻomaka ʻana o ka makahiki hou.
 
Ma o kēia hana hoʻolimalima hou, e pōmaikaʻi nā limahana i hoʻolimalima hou ʻia mai kahi bonus hoʻolimalima hoʻokahi manawa i hāʻawi ʻia ma hope o 90 mau lā i ka hui.
 
Ke kono nei ʻo Emerge i ka poʻe makemake e kūʻē i ka hana ʻino a me ka pono, me ka pahuhopu o ka ho'ōla kaiāulu, a me ka poʻe makemake nui i ka lawelawe ʻana i nā mea ola a pau e ʻike i nā manawa kūpono a hoʻopili ma aneʻi: https://emergecenter.org/about-emerge/employment

Ua hoʻolaha ʻo Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse i ka 2022 hoʻoponopono hou ʻana i ka hale hoʻomaha no ka hāʻawi ʻana i nā wahi hou aʻe COVID-palekana a me ka trauma-ʻike no ka poʻe i pakele i ka hana hoʻomāinoino home.

TUCSON, Ariz. - Nowemapa 9, 2021 - Mahalo i nā hoʻopukapuka like ʻana o $1,000,000 i hana ʻia e Pima County, ke kūlanakauhale ʻo Tucson, a me kahi mea hāʻawi inoa ʻole e hoʻohanohano ana i ka Connie Hillman Family Foundation, Emerge Center Against Domestic Abuse e hana hou a hoʻonui i kā mākou pilikia kūikawā. hale hoʻomalu no ka poʻe ola hoʻomāinoino home a me kā lākou mau keiki.
 
Ma mua o ka maʻi maʻi, he 100% ka hale hoʻomalu o Emerge - nā lumi moe like, nā lumi ʻauʻau like, ka lumi kuke a me ka lumi ʻaina. No nā makahiki he nui, ke ʻimi nei ʻo Emerge i kahi kumu hoʻohālike e hoʻohaʻahaʻa i nā pilikia he nui i hiki i nā mea ola trauma ke loaʻa i ka wā e kaʻana like ana i nā wahi me nā malihini i ka wā haunaele, weliweli a pilikino i ko lākou ola.
 
I ka wā maʻi maʻi COVID-19, ʻaʻole i pale ke kumu hoʻohālike i ke olakino a me ka maikaʻi o nā mea komo a me nā limahana, ʻaʻole hoʻi i pale i ka laha ʻana o ka maʻi. Ua koho kekahi poʻe i pakele e noho i ko lākou mau home hoʻomāinoino no ka mea ua ʻoi aku ka maʻalahi o ka mālama ʻana ma mua o ka pale ʻana i ka pilikia o COVID i kahi hale kaiāulu. No laila, i Iulai 2020, ua hoʻoneʻe ʻo Emerge i kāna mau hana hoʻomalu ulia pōpilikia i kahi keʻena ʻokoʻa ʻole i hui pū ʻia me ka mea nona ka ʻoihana kūloko, e hāʻawi ana i nā mea i pakele i ka hiki ke holo i ka hana ʻino i ko lākou mau home aʻo ka pale ʻana i ko lākou olakino.
 
ʻOiai ʻoi aku ka maikaʻi o ka hoʻēmi ʻana i nā pilikia e pili ana i ka maʻi maʻi, ua hiki mai kēia hoʻololi ma ke kumu kūʻai. Ma waho aʻe o nā paʻakikī i loaʻa i ka holo ʻana i kahi malu ma waho o kahi ʻoihana kalepa ʻaoʻao ʻekolu, ʻaʻole ʻae ka hoʻonohonoho manawaleʻa i kahi kaʻawale kahi e hiki ai i nā mea komo papahana a me kā lākou mau keiki ke hoʻokumu i kahi ʻano kaiāulu.
 
ʻO ka hana hou ʻana o ka hale o Emerge i hoʻolālā ʻia i kēia manawa no 2022 e hoʻonui i ka nui o nā wahi noho ʻole i ko mākou hale hoʻomaha mai 13 a i 28, a loaʻa i kēlā me kēia ʻohana kahi ʻāpana paʻa ponoʻī (lumi moe, lumi lumi, a me ka lumi kuke), e hāʻawi i kahi wahi ho'ōla pilikino a e hoʻēmi i ka laha ʻana o COVID a me nā maʻi pili ʻē aʻe.
 
"ʻO kēia hoʻolālā hou e ʻae iā mākou e lawelawe i nā ʻohana ʻoi aku ka nui ma kā lākou ʻāpana ponoʻī ma mua o ka mea e ʻae ʻia e kā mākou hoʻonohonoho hale i kēia manawa, a e hāʻawi nā wahi kaiāulu i ka manawa no nā keiki e pāʻani ai a me nā ʻohana e hoʻopili ai," wahi a Ed Sakwa, Luna Nui o Emerge.
 
Ua ʻōlelo pū ʻo Sakwa, "He ʻoi aku ka nui o ke kumukūʻai i ka hana ma ke keʻena manawaleʻa. He 12-15 mau mahina e hoʻopau ai ka hana hou ʻana o ka hale, a ke holo wikiwiki nei nā kālā federal kōkua COVID-relief e mālama nei i ka hoʻonohonoho hale no ka manawa pōkole.
 
Ma ke ʻano o kā lākou kākoʻo, ua hoʻopuka ka mea hāʻawi inoa ʻole e hoʻohanohano ana i ka Connie Hillman Family Foundation i kahi paʻakikī i ke kaiāulu e hoʻohālikelike i kā lākou makana. No nā makahiki ʻekolu e hiki mai ana, e hoʻohālikelike ʻia nā haʻawina hou a hoʻonui ʻia iā Emerge i mea e hāʻawi ʻia ai he $1 no ka hoʻoponopono hou ʻana o ka hale e ka mea hāʻawi inoa ʻole no kēlā me kēia $2 i hāpai ʻia i loko o ke kaiāulu no nā hana papahana (e ʻike i nā kikoʻī ma lalo).
 
Hiki i nā lālā kaiaulu e makemake e kākoʻo iā Emerge me kahi haʻawina hiki ke kipa https://emergecenter.org/give/.
 
Ua ʻōlelo ʻo Paula Perrera ka Luna Hoʻokele o ke Keʻena Ola Behavioral ʻO Pima County "Ua kūpaʻa ʻo Pima County i ke kākoʻo ʻana i nā pono o ka poʻe i loaʻa i ka hewa. Ma kēia laʻana, haʻaheo ʻo Pima County e kākoʻo i ka hana maikaʻi o Emerge ma o ka hoʻohana ʻana i ke kālā ʻAmelika Rescue Plan Act no ka hoʻomaikaʻi ʻana i ke ola o nā kamaʻāina o Pima County a ke kakali nei i ka huahana i hoʻopau ʻia.
 
Ua ʻōlelo hou ʻo Mayor Regina Romero, "Haʻaheo wau e kākoʻo i kēia waiwai nui a me ka hui pū ʻana me Emerge, kahi e kōkua ai i kahi wahi palekana no nā mea ola hoʻomāinoino a me ko lākou mau ʻohana e ho'ōla. ʻO ka hoʻopukapuka kālā ʻana i nā lawelawe no ka poʻe i pakele a me nā hana pale ʻo ia ka mea kūpono e hana ai a kōkua i ka hoʻolaha ʻana i ka palekana kaiāulu, ke olakino, a me ka maikaʻi. 

Nā kikoʻī hāʻawi hoʻāʻo

Ma waena o Nowemapa 1, 2021 - ʻOkakopa 31, 2024, nā haʻawina mai ke kaiāulu (nā kanaka, nā hui, nā ʻoihana, a me nā kumu) e hoʻohālikelike ʻia e kahi mea hāʻawi inoa ʻole ma ka helu $1 no kēlā me kēia $2 o nā hāʻawi kaiāulu kūpono e like me kēia:
  • No nā mea hāʻawi hou iā Emerge: e helu ʻia ka huina piha o nā haʻawina i ka pāʻani (e laʻa, e hoʻohana ʻia kahi makana o $100 e lilo i $150)
  • No nā mea hāʻawi i hāʻawi i nā makana iā Emerge ma mua o Nowemapa 2020, akā ʻaʻole i hāʻawi i nā mahina he 12 i hala iho nei: e helu ʻia ka nui o nā haʻawina i ka pāʻani.
  • No nā mea hāʻawi i hāʻawi makana iā Emerge ma waena o Nowemapa 2020 - ʻOkakopa 2021: e helu ʻia kekahi piʻi ma luna o ka nui i hāʻawi ʻia mai Nowemapa 2020 - ʻOkakopa 2021 i ka pāʻani.

Nā Moʻolelo ʻole

Nā Pūʻulu Kūkākūkā ʻole ʻo 2019
No nā makahiki he nui, ua noho ka pilikia o ka hana hoʻomāinoino home (DV) i nā aka me ke kumuhana kapu.

E hoomau heluhelu