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Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness & Housing

Helping Homeless People to Rebuild Their Lives. | Building the Blessed City Together.
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For I was hungry and you gave me food. I was thirsty and you gave me drink.
__________
~~ Matthew 25

 

Speakers Bureau Reflections

  • Nazima's Story
  • It Is Good for the Soul

Newsletter

  • Nov. 8, 2011 - Occupy Wall Street Facing a possible 'clean-out by NYPD'
  • Oct. 30, 2011 - Day of Faith at Occupy Wall Street
  • Oct. 15, 2011 - Interfaith Support Grows for Occupy Wall Street

Upcoming events and activities

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The Cornerstone

The Newsletter of the Interfaith Assembly

  • August 3,2010
  • July 9, 2010
  • May 16, 2010
  • April 23, 2010

A half-hour documentary about the loss of rent regulation in NYC. Filmed 2009-2010

Cry out full-throated and unsparingly, lift up your voice like a trumpet blast....

Support our current Life Skills Empowerment Program: Panim El Panim.

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Policy Updates

  • The Affordable Housing Crisis - New York Times
  • NYCHA board sitting on nearly $1B in fed cash
  • Skid Row: Discussion on BronxNet of Movie Documenting Homelessness
  • Priority NYCHA Referrals for Homeless Families Will Save Millions
  • Federal Panel Keeps Redistricting Suit In Place
  • City Loses First Round in Legal Dispute Over Stricter Shelter Rules
  • Testimony Regarding New York Gerrymandering
  • New York City to determine if it will continue to abide by its agreement to provide Advantage Rental Housing Subsidies to the tens of thousands of families remaining in the program
  • NYC Housing Authority's Strategic Plan
  • Biblical Economic Justice: Supply and Demand Isn't Enough
  • 60 Minutes -- Hard Times Generation
  • Excellent Overview of Housing and Mortgages on Affordable Housing
  • End of subsidy threatens the homeless
  • New York City's poverty rate rose to alarming 20.1% in 2010
  • Cuomo urged to create a redistricting panel
  • Inmates key in redistricting issue
  • Oh, Is That the Law?
  • Governor Cuomo Signs Land Bank Legislation
  • Mike McKee Interviews Marc Greenberg
  • Food Stamps and Tax Aid Kept Poverty Rate in Check

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Life Skills Empowerment Program (LSEP) description

  • empowerment

In 1989, the Interfaith Assembly, in partnership with New York Catholic Charities developed the 12-week, 24-session Education Outreach Program (EOP) to assist homeless adults to recover from the trauma associated with their homelessness and be re-integrated into their community. Participants are drawn from city shelters, drop-in centers, therapeutic communities and transitional housing programs. These classes are now offered twice a year to classes of up to 15 individuals through New York Catholic Charities and St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church. As part of the EOP format, each participant works with a mentor who assists him/her in the development of personal goals.

The Assembly has assisted a number of community-based organizations to replicate this model with great success, and is now, thanks to a generous in memory of Andrew Stallman has embarked on an effort to assist many more community partners to help establish additional sites of the Life Skills Empowerment Program based on then Education Outreach Program format.The first of these new programs, Breakthrough, was established in 2008 in partnership with Mercy Haven, Inc., based in Sayville, NY. In Partnership with Congregation Ansche Chesed, "Panim El Panim" was established on Manhattan's Upper West Side, in Bronxville, in partnership with the Reformed Church, "Coming Home" was established to assist men and women returning home from incarceration, in the spring of 2011, "Coming Home Brooklyn" was established in partnership with the office of Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes to help those coming out of prison with a history of substance abuse, and in the spring of 2011, "Living Well" was established to assist women who had become homeless as a result of domestic abuse.


Marc Greenberg and IAHH staff at General Theological Seminary (GTS)
planning replication of the Life Skills Empowerment Program with GTS, Grace Episcopal and Trinity Wall Street.

 

Central to the process of healing from the trauma associated with their homelessness is being able to gain an insight about what has happened and how it felt. Life Skills participants learn to make sense of their experience of homelessness in the context of their life's journey. In sharing with a group with similar experiences, they receive valuable support and affirmation of their inherent value as members of the human family. Graduates are invited to join the Speakers Bureau and share their stories of recovery with the general public to help others to gain an understanding of personal dimensions of homelessness.

Participants are helped to understand the process of identifying and achieving goals in the various areas of their lives and are then matched with a volunteer mentor from the community who assists them in this process. Mentors make a commitment to meet with the participants six times over the 12-week period. Many mentors maintain contact with the participants for years after he or she graduated from the program. A large percentage of mentors have generously continued to volunteer to serve in this capacity for five years and longer. After graduation, a number of program graduates have themselves become mentors for other.

PROGRAM ELEMENTS
  • Life Skills Sessions with Guest Speakers: Speakers offer presentations on important topics including Self-Image, Goal Setting, Healthy Relationships etc.
  • Goal Setting with Mentors: Each participant works one-on-one with a volunteer mentor to set and achieve short and long term goals.
  • Personal Stories: Participants are guided in sharing their life experiences. Toward the end of the program they are asked to share their stories at a public speaking event.
  • Special Sessions: An Orientation where participants are introduced to the program, given useful information, and fill out an expectations agreement. A Speaker’s Night when participants share their stories of recovery and healing with the public, Looking to the Future, when participants discuss how to apply what they’ve learned and grow from this experience. There is also an evening in which program participants join the Interfaith Assembly for its annual Interfaith Convocation for Housing Justice near City Hall and the Graduation when participants, mentors, instructors, friends and family celebrate the successful completion of the program.
ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS
Each session begins with a shared meal and shared reflection on a passage from scripture or inspirational reading. A small stipend is given for each session attended. At the conclusion of the program, graduates are encouraged to participate in twice-monthly support group sessions and other activities with the Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness and Housing and Catholic Charities
PARTICIPANT PROFILE
  • Are recently or presently homeless
  • Must be clean from drug or alcohol abuse for at least 3 months
  • Are committed to staying clean, and if applicable attending day programs, or AA, NA, etc.
  • Are interested in learning and sharing about themselves
  • Are interested in connecting with a supportive group in a positive surrounding
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Thousands of people may live in a community but it is not one of real fellowship until they know each other mutually and have sympathy for one another. A true community has faith and wisdom that illuminate it. It is a place where the people know and trust one another and where there is social harmony.
From Mahaparinirvana-Sutra
Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness & Housing
48 Saint Mark's Place, New York, NY 10003 | 212-316-3171 | info@iahh.org