Manage episode 514413962 series 3447763
You never forget the first time someone tells you, “I’m hungry, but I’m not allowed to go out.” That sentence set off a chain reaction: an African food bank that feeds dignity as much as stomachs, a Pidgin English translation service that makes NHS guidance usable, and a befriending network that proves single mums are doing double the work and deserve double the support. We sit down with a lawyer‑turned‑founder whose courage and clarity turned personal stigma into a citywide safety net for women and girls.
We trace the journey from a church testimony to a queue of women quietly living with abuse, immigration stress and isolation. The throughline is simple but radical: help starts before therapy. Start with food that families recognise, language they understand, and spaces where culture is a strength. From living‑room gatherings to a registered charity serving Greater Manchester and beyond, she shows how to build confidence after domestic abuse, how to partner instead of duplicate, and why dance therapy beats a cold craft table when you need joy to return. Along the way, you will hear how visa barriers were navigated, why non‑physical abuse must be named, and how a movement grows when former service users become volunteers, drivers, broadcasters and founders.
We go deep on the UK’s first befriending service for single mothers, the realities behind “no recourse to public funds,” and the subtleties of designing culturally appropriate services that actually get used. Expect practical blueprints: referral ecosystems, one‑to‑one basic IT and English support, toy and baby banks, and campaigns that flip stigma into pride. Her book, In A Strange Land, threads the personal with policy, proving you can achieve, organise and lead even before citizenship papers arrive.
If stories of domestic abuse recovery, African diaspora communities, immigration resilience, and community leadership speak to you, you’ll find tools you can use and hope with evidence. Listen, share with a friend who cares about women’s safety and dignity, and leave a review so more people can find this work. Subscribe for more conversations that start where systems stop and carry people the rest of the way.
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Chapters
1. Transforming Hurt into Hope: Leading Community Change (00:00:00)
2. Welcome And Show Purpose (00:00:21)
3. Introducing A Distinguished Guest (00:01:02)
4. Founder’s Mission And Reach (00:01:47)
5. Recognition And Community Impact (00:02:29)
6. Why This Work Began (00:04:16)
7. Stigma, Isolation And Suicidal Thoughts (00:06:08)
8. Visa Barriers And Seeking Help (00:08:47)
9. Finding A Legal Path To Stay (00:11:11)
10. A Church Testimony Sparks A Movement (00:12:52)
11. From Living Room Circles To Charity (00:14:40)
12. Expanding Beyond Borders And Cultures (00:17:12)
13. Beyond Shelters: Rebuilding Confidence (00:19:27)
14. Training Leaders And Reaching Thousands (00:21:24)
15. Supporting Daughters And Young Women (00:22:43)
16. Dance Therapy And Culturally Fit Care (00:24:04)
17. Creating The African Food Bank (00:26:00)
18. Funding, Dignity And Inclusion (00:28:19)
19. Building A Pan‑African Volunteer Network (00:30:06)
20. Language Access And Pidgin Translation (00:31:36)
21. Filling Gaps, Not Duplicating Services (00:33:10)
22. Befriending Service For Single Mothers (00:35:10)
23. Challenging Stigma With Campaigns (00:37:40)
24. Meeting Immediate Needs First (00:39:45)
25. Partnerships And Referral Ecosystem (00:41:35)
26. Host Reflection And Key Nuggets (00:43:00)
27. Vision, Faith And Obedience (00:45:01)
28. Turning Setbacks Into Recognition (00:47:24)
29. Book: In A Strange Land (00:50:02)
30. Achieving Without Citizenship (00:53:25)
31. The Growth Mindset Behind The Mission (00:56:15)
32. Leadership That Builds Leaders (00:59:08)
33. Rest, Boundaries And Self‑Care (01:03:20)
34. Closing Thanks And How To Support (01:09:07)
33 episodes