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Women鈥檚 rehabilitation centre needs funds to run programs, expand housing unit

Talitha Koum Society helps women in recovery by providing accomodation, resources
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Talitha Koum Society, a women鈥檚 support and housing organization, needs funds for camping equipment to get back to their favourite group activity. (Contributed photo)

A women and children鈥檚 healing centre is once again offering residents the chance to experience the joy of the great outdoors by spending time at Camp Alexandra in South 性视界传媒.

Talitha Koum Society is a non-profit organization based in Coquitlam that helps women overcome addiction through a 12-step program during their stay in the society鈥檚 housing units, by 鈥渓oving them back to living.鈥

If the women are mothers, they have the opportunity to bring their children with them to the centre.

鈥淚 want people to understand the strength and the courage it takes for a woman to walk through the doors to come here,鈥 Mary O鈥橬eill, board president of Talitha Koum Society told Peace Arch News.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a difficult journey that they鈥檙e on鈥 They have to do all the heavy lifting and the work and we鈥檙e here to support and assist as they go through that.鈥

According to the society鈥檚 website, the facility is open to women 19 or over, who have completed a detox program and are drug- and alcohol-free.

Those who are accepted into the program undergo different forms of therapies and workshops. These range from trauma therapy to inner-child healing, boundary setting, conflict resolution and more. At the halfway point of the 12-step process, the women move from the program house to the second-stage house, each one holding nine people, including children.

A large component of the program is camping, but that has taken a backseat for five years now, with clients itching to get back to the outdoors. Being with nature is ideal for the group to 鈥済et back to the land,鈥 said O鈥橬eill.

That opportunity will come in mid-September when they attend Camp Alexandra.

In the meantime, they are seeking donations of camping gear or money to help purchase the equipment that will allow them to get back to camping consistently as soon as possible.

鈥淲e support women from many different backgrounds, from (prison), homelessness, problems with addiction. Our Indigenous population is about 65 per cent of the women that live with us,鈥 said Kimmie Jensen, program director of Talitha Koum Society.

鈥淭he youngest client we鈥檝e had is 16 and the eldest we鈥檝e had, since I鈥檝e been here, is 72.鈥

To best support their significant Indigenous population, the society participates in cultural events often and invites Elders to the organization twice a month to speak to the group.

鈥淚t has been Talitha Koum鈥檚 experience that a high percentage of the women and children who come into our homes have a lot of 鈥榝irsts鈥 with us such as celebrations of holidays, birthdays, accomplishments and unconditional love,鈥 Jensen said.

鈥淎 lot of the time, this is the first healthy and real holiday the women have ever had.鈥

Many of the women who go through the program stay or return to Talitha Koum to work and help other women who need support. Nobody else understands the experience better, O鈥橬eill said.

Jensen was once a client of Talitha Koum, first stepping through the facility鈥檚 doors in 2007, after coming from 鈥渢he streets and prison.鈥

Where she was once apprehensive about camping, she now advocates for it. The experience allowed Jensen to learn more about herself, improve her mental, emotional and physical health and gain techniques to handle different circumstances.

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As the centre struggles to accommodate all the women who need their support, a fundraising effort is underway to add a third housing unit, in this case, apartment buildings, O鈥橬eill said.

Oftentimes, Jensen said, the centre has to turn away women because they don鈥檛 have space for them.

鈥淭hey can stay up to two years in our homes鈥 if our women tend to stay longer, we don鈥檛 have room to bring in more women鈥 sometimes you can be waiting quite a while, sometimes we can get women in pretty quickly. It鈥檚 really not a cut-and-dried situation,鈥 O鈥橬eill said.

Talitha Koum鈥檚 staff work to set up the women in permanent housing after completing the 12-step program as a part of their transition, which is posing an increasingly difficult challenge, especially as the cost of living continues to rise, O鈥橬eill said.

鈥淭hey were saying 鈥榳e want to move out, but there鈥檚 no place to go鈥,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e are finding partnerships for the women to go to, but it鈥檚 a struggle and we have to look for places that are recovery-focused and drug-free so that鈥檚 always a tough one.鈥

Talitha Koum Society is open to all sorts of donations in addition to money, including clothing, toiletries, stationary and more. To learn more, call the centre at 604-492-3393.



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