Take some time this summer to support yourself and your learning! Mid-South Peace and Justice Center is offering two unique workshops in July: Emotional Support for Men on Sunday, July 14th from 2 to 6pm, and Parenting from the Heart on Saturday, July 20th from 2 to 5pm. Keep reading for more details on these workshops and for an early look at the workshops coming up in August. Contact gio@midsouthpeace.org to register.
Emotional Support for Men
Led by Laura Sullivan
In our society, males are conditioned in many dehumanizing ways. For example, males are viewed as not having the same emotional capacity as females, and the expression of feelings is frowned upon. Men are expected to be self-sufficient and to have all the answers to every problem, which leaves them feeling isolated and alone with their struggles.
The ways that men internalize the negative conditioning have daily effects, from holding in emotions and developing physical illnesses as a result, to finding it difficult to have close, healthy relationships with women (not only romantic relationships, but friendships and relationships with female family members). Additionally, men are pitted against each other in competition for material success and as ‘breadwinners’ of their families. Men are also viewed as expendable human beings, trained to be prepared to sacrifice their lives, whether in military situations or in other times of danger.
This workshop will help men to:
• Understand how negative conditioning affects your life and relationships
• Have a safe place to explore past hurts and current patterns based in old hurts
• Become better allies to women and to learn how to interrupt sexism
• Develop close, healthy relationships with women and men
• Release pent-up feelings of grief, shame, fear, anger, and confusion
• Reclaim a sense of your own goodness and worth
This workshop will also address how intersectionality of oppression affects men, for example, how race and class identities intersect with men’s conditioning and experiences. The intersections of young people’s and young adults’ oppressions, as well as LGBTQ oppression, with the socialization and struggles of men will also be discussed.
When: Sunday, July 14, 2-6pm
Where: MSPJC, 3573 Southern Ave. Memphis TN 38111 – wheelchair accessible.
Cost: Sliding scale $20-$45
*Limited to the first 10 people who register.
Donations for workshop scholarships gratefully accepted!
For more information or to register contact Gio López gio@midsouthpeace.org or call the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center at 725-4990.
Parenting from the Heart
Led by Elaine Krueger
Are you looking to have a relationship with your child that is based on mutual understanding and respect?
Do you want to be able to set boundaries and teach the lessons you want to teach through cooperation rather than coercion?
Do you want your children to related to siblings and peers with consideration and support of one another?
Do you want your children to be intrinsically motivated and find strategies to meet their needs that work for themselves AND others?
Do you want to be able to express your frustrations and respond to their frustrations in a way your child will feel safe and loved and you will feel heard?
These issues and more will be addressed in the workshop – Parenting From The Heart: Nonviolent Communication for Parents.
Date: Saturday, July 20
Time: 2p.m. – 5p.m. Please, be on time.
Location: MSPJC, 3573 Southern Ave. Memphis TN 38111- wheelchair accessible
*Limited to the first15 people who register
Cost: $20-$45 Sliding scale.
Some scholarships may be available.
Donations for workshop scholarships gratefully accepted!
This August: G.O.T. PODER – Grassroots Organizers Training for Power in Spanish
MSPJC’s fourth annual grassroots organizer training for the Spanish-speaking community will take place August 9th – 11th. This 16 hour training has been vital for the growth of Latino grassroots organizers in Memphis.
Please help us spread the word about this opportunity to your Latino and bilingual friends.
For more information or to register, please check G.O.T. PODER or contact Gio López atgio@midsouthpeace.org or call the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center at 725-4990.
The Community Police Relations (CPR) project has been in high gear in recent weeks, taking the project into the public realm and inviting others to join us. On Saturday, June 22nd, CPR put on a forum at the Union Grove Baptist Church in Frayser, hosted by Rangeline CDC.
The long-term nature of the CPR project, the staunch support it receives from the administrations of Memphis Police Department and the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, and the commitment to developing an Action Plan that addresses lasting systemic change differentiate CPR from many previous efforts to solve difficulties between community members and law enforcement. In the coming months, CPR will hold similar forums all over the city, gathering insights shared by community members and law enforcement participants which will be developed into recommendations toward achieving Community and Police Reconciliation.
Waters highlights the that the CPR project is supported by Memphis Police Relations, Director Tony Armstrong and Sheriff Bill Oldham. Of the motivation for her participation, community leader and CPR Core Group member, Cherisse Scott, founder of Sister Reach, said “I’m in this process because I’m the black mother of a black son. My child has a learned fear of the police that I never taught him. That fear is not perpetuated by me or even the police. It’s just our ignorance of each other as human beings.”
Established in 2009, the Vance Avenue Collaborative is a coalition of residents, faith-based organizations, social service agencies, public schools, and area businesses serving the 38126 zip code, also known as the Vance Avenue Neighborhood, inclusive of the last public housing project in Memphis, Foote Homes. Together, for almost two years, with more than 1,000 local stakeholders through a highly participatory “bottom-up” planning process, we generated the Vance Avenue Community Transformation Plan for the U.S. Housing and Urban Development‘s Choice Neighborhood Grant. We will continue planning efforts through the end of June, and will then work with community stakeholders to ensure that the community vision is reflected in Memphis’ Choice Neighborhood Implementation Grant application for the Vance Avenue Neighborhood, due in the coming months.
Birthed out of the Vance Avenue neighborhood planning process, the primary goal of the Green Machine is to improve the health status of Memphians who live in economically-challenged neighborhoods where access to fresh food, especially fruits and vegetables, is a daily challenge.
The Memphis Bus Riders Union is organizing bus riders and advocates to stand together outside City Hall at 125 N. Main St. on Tuesday, June 18th at 3:00 pm for a press conference and rally in support of adequate funding for public transportation. Cuts to public transportation have a devastating effect on our city’s economy, racial equity, and environmental sustainability. Please join us in urging our elected officials to prioritize the needs of Memphis’ residents.
H.O.P.E. is taking a leap to the next level. We now have five different volunteer project coordinators that will be assisting our members in developing some very exciting projects!
The Garden Crew
Street Watch
92% of women experiencing homelessness have suffered severe physical and/or sexual abuse, and have dealt with issues of sexual harassment, rampant in the homeless services system. As homelessness among those who identify as women is a distinct experience, we need an organizing space made up of women to address and confront these issues. The H.O.P.E. Women’s Caucus will provide a space where members who identify as women can get mutual emotional support, and also participate in twice-a-month self-defense trainings. For more information on how you can support this project, please contact Ace Madjlesi at
It’s “budget season” here in Memphis. As Mayor A C Wharton and city officials present their budget proposals, the grassroots organization, Memphis Bus Riders Union (MBRU) is on the streets getting riders organized and ready for action.
Homeless Organizing for Power and Equality (H.O.P.E.) is the name of a Mid-South Peace and Justice Center sponsored organization whose members are exclusively people who are currently or have formerly experienced homelessness.
A benefit for the
The Community-Police Relations (CPR) Core Group is in your communities, asking the question “What is your vision of community and police relations?” You tell us!
This forum will give you the opportunity to share your story and vision for Community-Police Relations. The experience shared will be used to develop and implement concrete changes toward a safer community. Be a part of the conversation as the community sets the vision of how we will deal with crime and violence in our city as we work to build a better relationship with community and law enforcement. Be a part of the solution.
For more information, contact:
At the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center our members have a shared vision. A vision for Memphis, the Mid-South, Tennessee and our country. A vision where homelessness and poverty is not a crime; where we funnel people into places of help and support not jail cells; where slumlords and big banks are held responsible to the communities they are destroying through predatory lending and foreclosure; where tax dollars are used to lift all of our communities up, prioritizing those that are suffering; where no human being is illegal. A place where the the dignity of the human person is held above the motives of profit and greed.