Local

[Print]  [Email]        

3 Minute Interview Nadia Moritz

By: Susan Ferrechio
Chief Congressional Correspondent
September 16, 2008

Nadia Moritz is the founding director of the Young Women’s Project, a program established in 1992 that aims to provide leadership, training, employment opportunities, project work and other services so that teens can educate and organize their peers and work to bring about policy changes that benefit young women.

How does the program work?

We build teen women leaders in Washington, D.C. We provide support and training to teenage women so they can not only improve their own lives but also develop community-based projects and improve the institutions that are affecting their lives.

What are some examples?

The school system, the foster care system, policies that affect access to reproductive health care. We have a teen staff we train as advocates and they conduct campaigns. Right now we have a campaign that is focused on reproductive health.

We train them as advocates and they testify in front of the D.C. Council and work with the mayor’s office.

How many teens are in the program?

We work directly with 300 teens a year, bringing them into the program and training them as leaders. We probably reach about 1,000 or more teens through our work.

How did you get involved with the program?

I was one of the collective members who started the program. I came here right after college to do journalism and writing, and then I got involved on the activism and training policy end of things.
 At the time, I was a very young woman and dealing with some of the same issues personally. It was kind of a self-education, peer support, self-empowerment project.

What’s the job’s most rewarding aspect?

The work we do has pretty significant impact on the lives of the women that we work with. You can really see the changes in the women when they come into the program and when they leave the program. Teen women are just such a powerful group with so much potential and I think the reason we are successful is we really tap into that and put it to good use in the community


To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines



 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Display Name:

Comment:




Sports

President of the Italian Tennis Federation Francesco Ricci Bitti and U.S. Fed Cup player Melanie Oudin meet the media  ahead of the Fed Cup tennis final between Italy and the United States, in Reggio ...

ITF president says hefty fine — not ban — likely for Serena Williams over US Open tirade

Top-ranked Serena Williams will most likely receive a "significant" fine but no suspension for her U.S. Open tirade, the president of the International Tennis Federation said. Full story

Politics

Demonstrators chant on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2009, during a Republican health Care reform rally. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

House Democrats clear impasse over abortion holding up vote on health care legislation

Capping months of months of struggle, House Democrats cleared an abortion-related impasse blocking a vote on sweeping health care legislation late Friday and officials expressed optimism they had finally lined up the support needed to pass President Barack Obama's top domestic priority. Full story

Entertainment

'Golden Girls' star McClanahan has bypass surgery

Rue McClanahan, who played sexy Southern belle Blanche Devereaux on "The Golden Girls," was recovering Thursday from heart bypass surgery at a New York City hospital. Full story