Our Services.
Our focus on young immigrant women and gender-expansive youth ages 16-24 allows us to provide tailored, trauma-informed services, facilitate a cohesive community of young people with shared experiences, and hone specialized legal strategies. Having a narrowly focused target population helps ensure that our events and programs are inclusive, accessible, and impactful.
Legal Advocacy.Our legal advocacy model includes:
Learn more about our Legal Advocacy in our 2022 Impact Report. |
Mentorship.We started the Mentorship Program in 2020 to help our members explore career paths, build confidence, and have the support of a long-term positive role model. Mentors and Mentees connect at least once a month after mentors complete a robust onboarding process which includes an interview, background check, and a required, in-house Trauma-Informed Care training led by a Licensed Social Worker.
Learn more about our Mentorship Program here |
New Moms Assistance.We support our new and expecting young moms with community events, resources, and donations. To date, we’ve hosted four community baby showers, provided cash assistance to new moms, and connected expecting moms with community support and government assistance programs. Our mobile app has an entire section dedicated to Pregnancy and Motherhood, with transitional housing, low-cost resources, free grocery delivery for moms, free clinics, and community.
Learn more about our new and expecting moms assistance program here |
Holistic Support.We have a full-time fellow who leads our holistic support, engaging in in-depth case rounds with current members and leading our onboarding of new members. These comprehensive case rounds happen once per quarter and assess the social, emotional, educational, career, health, and legal needs of members. Members participate in goal-setting with our case manager and make a plan to be tracked quarterly during their case round.
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English School.Our English school utilizes a peer teacher model, where an older Brave House member or volunteer who is fluent in English leads cohorts of English Learning pods. They all receive an Inglés Para Latinos coursebook and meet virtually once a week as a way of not only learning English but also fostering community.
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App.In January 2021, we built and launched a mobile App that gives our members access to curated resources and direct connection to our growing community. Features include a personalized event calendar, a feedback function, peer-to-peer and group messaging, and access to a vetted, immigrant-friendly resource database, such as Insurance-Free Health Clinics, and Career Resources for Undocumented Workers. The App also includes a private “My Case,” section with important legal information specific to each member with the goal of increasing legal literacy and each member’s agency over their own case.
Learn more about our App here. |
We work 1-on-1 with members to find safe and secure employment and educational opportunities. We leverage our mobile App to share bilingual job opportunities and paid internships, searchable by borough. From our space in Brooklyn, we provide educational support including a mentorship program, homework help, GED/HSE navigation assistance, an English School, and a quarterly Dream Big Workshop, where we pair members with staff and volunteers for on-the-spot job coaching, resume and cover letter writing, college application help, LinkedIn profile creation, and more.
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We host 3-4 community events per month, to foster community, listening to the feedback from our members. Our events include workshops on art, nutrition, meditation and financial literacy as well as fun get-togethers such as art, baby showers, ice-skating, rock climbing, meditation, astrology workshops, and bowling. Community events are led by volunteer facilitators and/or members themselves. We also connect members with fun events happening throughout the city.
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Our Youth Leadership Board consists of 10 Brave House members who meet monthly with a leadership coach to participate in leadership training, provide feedback about our services, and help plan the future of the organization. Youth Leaders, all immigrant women of color, are selected for a six-month term and receive a cash stipend to honor them for their time and energy. From joining our Executive Director on speaking engagements, to being a pathway to leadership in the organization, and serving as a means to distribute cash stipends to members, it is a multi-faceted system of growth, feedback and impact. It has been an incredible and intimate space for members to share what services they believe should be centered at the Brave House.
Meet our 2022-2023 Youth Leadership Board cohort here. |
Health Insurance.We connect members, specifically undocumented members, to different types of health insurance. Through our App, members can access low- and no-cost therapy referrals, no-insurance clinics, Medicaid enrollment support, and more. Our Youth Advocate also conducts monthly check-ins to assist members with all individual healthcare and insurance needs.
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Covid-19 Rapid Response.In response to the Covid-19 global pandemic, the Brave House mobilized to provide our members with hot meals, care packages, emergency funding, connection to local health care services, and a supportive community. In April 2020, we hired a Covid Relief Coordinator to focus on our response efforts. Since then, we’ve distributed over $30,000 in cash assistance to our members through partnerships with the NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and the Hispanic Federation.
Read more about our Covid-19 response here. Mental Health.We support the mental health of our members by connecting them with free or low-cost therapists in the community and hosting our own in-house mindfulness sessions for members focused on self-love, self-care, and observation of our emotions. We hold spaces for sharing, reflections, and vulnerable conversations. Our mobile app has a dedicated section providing crisis hotline numbers, meditation apps, and therapy options. Our team receives quarterly professional training on topics from trauma-informed care to suicide awareness.
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Art.We understand that art is a tool for healing. We integrate art and creativity into our programming, from our weekly virtual art class on Instagram Live led by our volunteers Sam and Candi, to our mural on the Lower East Side, to our in-person Art in the Park summer series of events. Making art offers a chance to pause, let creativity flow, and give the mental break and self-care that everyone deserves.
Watch all of our Creative Break episodes here. |
Meet The Brave House
What We Do
The Brave House is a community of support for young immigrant women and gender-expansive youth, ages 16-24, in New York City, with a focus on those who are survivors of gender-based violence. We provide free legal support, community space, and holistic services, including mentorship, leadership training, in-house English school, one-on-one advocacy, wellness events, job and school assistance, support for new and expecting moms, and much more. Explore our services here. Read more about our impact here. |
Innovation
As the first and only non-profit in NYC to work specifically with young immigrant women and gender-expansive youth, the Brave House is able to provide tailored services designed for this population. This focus helps facilitate a cohesive community, specialized legal strategies, and impactful events. We distinguish ourselves from other non-profits because the youth we work with co-create, lead, and design our programs. We believe that the impacted population should be at the forefront of decision-making. In addition to our Board of Directors and Advisory Board, consisting primarily of immigrants, people of color, and members of the LGBTQ+ community, we have a Youth Leadership Board consisting of current Brave House members. This board helps us to listen to the voices of our members and implement their ideas into our strategic planning. |
Our History
Launched in 2018, the Brave House was born out of our founder's work as an immigration attorney at another non-profit in New York, where she gained a unique perspective regarding the complex challenges that immigrant children face and the gaps in access to crucial services such as help with school, health insurance, mental health services, housing, and finding community. |