Please fill out the following form and our staff will contact you within a week. If you aren’t sure how to answer a question you can leave it blank or write “I don’t know.”
Note: people can choose to participate in one, two, or all three programs because dates and times do not overlap!
Youth Movement of Justice and Organizing (Youth MOJO):
Youth MOJO develops the leadership of Chinese high school youth in San Francisco, with a focus on social issues such as healthcare, education, immigration, and workers’ rights. Youth leaders develop leadership, communication, advocacy and organizing skills. Our program aims to empower youth to make a positive change in their community!
The Enoki Collective:
The Enoki Collective is a program for young women and trans, gender nonconforming youth (TGNC)*** to explore the intersections of gender oppression, race, class, and culture. Youth will build their leadership and facilitation skills, learn and build their analysis in different topics and find healing and community with like minded peers. Topics include feminisms and patriarchy, history of women’s rights, reproductive justice, LGBTQ identities, healthy relationships and boundaries, and more. We welcome all those who are ready to dismantle patriarchy and toxic masculinity in our community! ***This program is primarily for high school students in San Francisco/Bay Area who identify as Asian/Pacific Islander, and identify as women/girl/TGNC, including non-binary, gender nonconforming, trans, gender queer, and gender fluid youth.
Young Men's Circle:
The Young Men’s Circle (YMC) is a space for young Asian American cis men to connect with one another about their experiences as men/sons/brothers/dating partners, and tie those experiences to the potential impact they can make towards gender justice. Through YMC, young men will have a peer learning space to navigate honest questions about their identity, name what healthy masculinity is for them, and take action to support themselves that also support young women, femmes, and non binary communities that young men co-exist with.