Tuesday's Children
Formed in the aftermath of Tuesday, September 11, 2001, Tuesday’s Children is a response and recovery organization that supports youth, families, and communities impacted by terrorism and traumatic loss.[1] Since 2001, Tuesday's Children has helped more than 10,000 individuals impacted by Tuesday, September 11, 2001 and other tragedies, including: families of 9/11 victims, responders and military service members; international youth; global victims of terrorism; and local communities, such as families affected by the Sandy Hook Elementary tragedy in Newtown, CT. Tuesday's Children has spent nearly 15 years providing trauma and grief support, mental health counseling, youth mentoring, skills-building workshops, parenting advisement, community and family engagement events, and volunteerism opportunities. Their evidence-based programs strengthen resilience, foster post-traumatic growth and build common bonds.
History
Tuesday’s Children was founded by family and friends of 9/11 victims in the days following the September 11 attacks. In 2008, Tuesday’s Children expanded its efforts in the First Responder Alliance, which serves First Responders that worked in the rescue and recovery after 9/11 and have suffered side effects, as well as their families.[2] In 2008, Tuesday's Children also began to include the international community through Project Common Bond, which brings together teens, ages 15–20, that have lost a loved one because of terrorism.[3] The camp has taken place in locations from Belfast, Northern Ireland to this year’s Boston, Massachusetts. Most recently, the organization has received generous funding from Johan Santana of the New York Mets to expand programming to reach more Spanish-speaking 9/11 families.[4][5]
Service populations
In partnership with experts from around the world and in collaboration with renowned facilitators and mental health professionals, Tuesday’s Children serves communities altered by an act of violence.
·9/11 Family Members: Tuesday's Children serves all members of the September 11th community including, but not limited to, children, spouses, young adults, and individuals.
·Military Families of the Fallen: Tuesday's Children has demonstrated success engaging, mentoring, and blending military families in events and programs that build community and promote resilience.
·9/11 First Responders: Connects First Responder families to other members of the September 11th community.
·International Young Adults Impacted by Terrorism: Tuesday's Children serves international adolescents who have experienced the loss of a family member because of an act of terrorism, violent extremism, or war at Project COMMON BOND.
·International Peace Builders: Offers training for international chaperones from organizations that provide services in the fields of conflict resolution, social services, and mental health.
·Local and Global Communities Impacted by Traumatic Loss: Tuesday's Children has developed services for local & global communities impacted by traumatic loss, such as those impacted by the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, CT.
Project Common Bond
Project COMMON BOND is a program that brings together young adults, ages 15-20, from around the world who share a ‘common bond’ — the loss of a family member because of an act of terrorism, violent extremism, or war. Launched in 2008, Project COMMON BOND has created an international community of teenagers and young adults from 20+ nations and territories. Project COMMON BOND participants engage in a dialogue of healing and community-building activities that enhance interpersonal communication and conflict negotiation skills, promote dignity, and empower them as agents for positive change in their lives and communities. Each summer, new Project COMMON BOND participants attend a summer symposium focused on global leadership activities, peace building and negotiation, skill building, and collaborative and therapeutic arts - music, drama, movement and sports.
Project COMMON BOND also holds activities throughout the year for participants, chaperones, and staff members. These serve as an interactive forum for follow-up with past participants on their experience with the program and how they have incorporated the program’s lessons into their everyday life as well as orientation for new participants and chaperones. In January 2016, Project COMMON BOND launched a Winter Session in conflict negotiation for alumni of the summer symposium.
Program chaperones are international activists from private organizations, NGO’s, universities, and governmental agencies who come to Project COMMON BOND to learn Tuesday's Children's Long-Term Healing Model and bring this knowledge and training back to their communities.
Publications
The Legacy Letters were published by Tuesday’s Children, edited by New York Times best-selling author Brian Curtis, and feature a compilation of a hundred letters of family members to their loved ones lost in 9/11.[6][7] The ISBN number is 0399537082.
Fundraising
Major sponsors for Tuesday’s Children include Allstate Insurance, American Red Cross, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, NASDAQ, the New York Stock Exchange, the New York Mets, the New York Giants, and other notably large corporations.
References
- ↑ http://www.tuesdayschildren.org/about/#who-we-serve-section
- ↑ "First Responder Alliance". www.tuesdayschildren.org. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- ↑ "Project Common Bond". www.tuesdayschildren.org. Phil Brown. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- ↑ Hamill, Denis (June 5, 2012). "Johan Santana pitching in for charities on and off mound". New York Daily News. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- ↑ DiComo, Anthony (2012-05-30). "Mets, Santana donate to Tuesday's Children". MLB.com. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- ↑ "The Legacy Letters". www.tuesdayschildren.org. Phil Brown. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- ↑ Delozier, Dave (September 6, 2011). "Remembering 9/11: Letters to Loved Ones Lost". NBC Channel 9 News. Retrieved 19 June 2012.