I was talking to a reporter today who described The Business of Me as a financial literacy program for survivors of domestic violence. Yes The Business of Me teaches the financial literacy skills which are as important in life as knowing how to use a knife and fork.  But the program is also about change and building community.

More specifically The Business of Me takes a disparate group of women who come together at a domestic violence shelter- who in all probability have never met until they arrived there. They come from different socio-economic backgrounds, different ethnic backgrounds, and different life experiences. But they have one thing in common and that is their need to get out and stay out of an abusive relationship.

The program guides the women to focus on their futures and to be continually seeking new opportunities for themselves. The Business of Me provides a support mechanism to help our participants develop their goals and the means to accomplish them.  The program also provides the framework for the women to support each other on into the future.  It’s about women helping women who share a common objectivel.

Acclaimed Yale University anthropologist David Levinson, in a study he conducted of family violence that focused on battered women, found that in the 90 societies that he studied, incidents of battering were practically non-existent when women have economic independence and support from other women-and that is what The Business of Me strives to accomplish.