Our Philosophy
We believe that attaining gender equality requires the
elimination of all oppressions. We work to raise awareness about issues
affecting women and other oppressed groups. We provide space for the
empowerment, growth, and encouragement of women. We are dedicated to bringing
about social and economic justice. Therefore, we prioritize group empowerment
over the desires of individuals.
Our Mission
The goal of the Women's Center is justice. We celebrate the
victories, voices, and the survival of women - individually and collectively.
Our mission is:
To provide women with the resources and support they need to
emerge from conditions of domestic violence, sexual abuse, poverty,
discrimination, social isolation, and degradation.
To challenge and change the attitudes, actions, and
institutions that subjugate women.
Our History
During the 60's and 70's, women experienced a pressing need
for information, resources, and support to fight the discrimination they
experienced. They also sought a space for activism. In 1971, a large group of
women dramatized this need through direct action by seizing an abandoned,
Harvard-owned building on Memorial Drive. Inspired by their actions and
subsequent organizing efforts, many local supporters generously contributed
toward the purchase of 46 Pleasant Street in Cambridge - the Women's Center.
Our Achievements
Developed and nurtured the Rape Crisis Center starting in
1973 through its evolution into an independent organization, the Boston Area
Rape Crisis Center, (BARCC) in 1987
Assisted in forming the first battered women's shelter in
the state, Transition House, in 1973
Assisted in the development of Finex House, the first
wheelchair accessible shelter in Massachusetts
Assisted in the development of the Elizabeth Stone House,
which houses battered women and women with mental illnesses
Provided a home, in 1980, to the first mutual support
organization for survivors of child sexual abuse in the country, Incest
Resources, Inc., which continues to flourish at the Women's Center to this day
Developed and organized an annual Women's Health Day
(starting in 1993) held in Cambridge, MA, where women found a wide array of
free workshops and information about women's health issues
Provided free counseling services to hundreds of low-income,
uninsured women
Trained more than 100 women in basic computer and Internet
skills
Developed a project, Women of Action (WOA) in 2002, a
grassroots empowerment organizing group of low-income women working for social
and economic justice. WOA won MBTA access for women with strollers last year
Provided 60 families with free mother-child art classes
during the past year alone
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