|
IMPact House-raising
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
When the IMPact Key Peninsula
organization held its annual fundraising luncheon on May
10, the keynote speaker was Nancy Solomon. She began her
presentation by saying, “I wish I didn’t have to be here
today — I’m angry about it.” The packed room only needed
a moment to understand the meaning behind her statement,
and applauded in support of the sentiment. On that
beautiful sunny afternoon, despite a finely-prepared and
plentiful lunch, despite dining in the company of local
business owners, professionals, and political leaders,
that room was the last place anyone there wanted to be,
because the topic and the reason for gathering was
domestic violence.

IMPact fundraiser's keynote speaker
Nancy D. Solomon, a resident of Gig
Harbor, speaks to the audience about
her own experience growing up in an
abusive home.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
Solomon is intimately familiar with
the silence, denial and pattern of this terrible family
trouble. She knows domestic violence is boundless; she
learned it as a Jewish child in New York. Jewish
families did not suffer this gentile affliction — the
women in her family were adamant about that, and so it
was true: “It must have been her fault.” When she was
32, however, her grandmother said she was afraid “he
would kill you” if she spoke. Solomon’s Aunt Shirley
“didn’t want to get involved”; her Aunt Joyce “didn’t
know what to do,” and so did nothing.
One in four women, and fewer men
(approximately 15 percent), will experience domestic or
sexual violence in their lifetimes, according to
Solomon’s research. Now a counselor who helps victims
find their voices, she says, “We were taught to be
quiet. We can’t be quiet anymore.”
Once she stood on the George
Washington Bridge, and was too depressed to jump; she
felt she wasn’t even worth that. Speaking to the quiet
group assembled on May 10, Solomon said, “Today is an
invitation to help other women get off their bridges.”
She looked audience members straight-on and said, “It’s
what domestic violence victims don’t get that is the
problem. It’s the lack of safety, the warm hug — it’s
what we don’t do today (at the luncheon) that is the
problem.”
As she spoke, purses rustled, men
reached for the inside pockets of their jackets,
checkbooks appeared on tables with pens poised over
them.
Penny Gazabat, IMPact House
executive director, told the audience the organization’s
goal was to raise $100,000 over three years. IMPact
receives $12,000 annually from Target stores, a group of
local women donate on a monthly basis, and the effort
recently received a $500 grant from Pierce County.
Gazabat said that grant would be doled out as needed for
tolls to get women across the new Narrows Bridge to
safety, as there is currently no safe house either in
Gig Harbor or on the Key Peninsula.
Solomon strode back to the podium
and upped the ante. “This is a fundraiser!” she said.
“When we have strong services in an area, not only are
we serving them (victims), we are also saying we have
zero tolerance for domestic violence.” Looking at
Gazabat, she said, “Let’s make the goal $1 million in
three years — starting now!”
Gazabat grinned, nodded, and around
the room, pens started writing.
The IMPact House operated on the
Key Peninsula for several years but was closed Jan. 31
due to operating funds shortage. The May 10 was the
board of directors’ second annual fundraising luncheon
and marked the kick-off for a capital campaign to raise
funds for another safe house. The new shelter would
likely be located in Gig Harbor.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
|
|