Welcome to the New York Asian Women's Center

New York Asian Women’s Center NYAWC provides services for survivors of domestic violence, human trafficking and sexual assault among New York City’s Asian immigrant population. It offers culturally sensitivity and linguistically tailored services to people who are culturally, migrant- and language-sensitive in nature but otherwise difficult to access support. It is an intervention that fills in where mainstream services do not reflect the complexity of these survivors’ lives. With services in more than a dozen Asian languages and dialects, the charity doesn’t make any survivor feel alone or misdiagnosed in its support.

At the heart of NYAWC’s services lies language diversity: the company provides services in more than a dozen Asian languages and dialects such as Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Tagalog and Hindi. Such multilinguality removes one of the biggest impediments to reaching out, so that survivors can be heard. Being able to speak with clients in their mother tongue builds trust and provides survivors with the sense that they are seen, heard and appreciated during some of their worst days.

Beyond linguistic help, NYAWC counters the loneliness that most survivors feel through intensive counselling and advocacy. It is also a time when survivors feel forced to keep quiet by family and society, often because of traumatic experience. As a place for survivors to be heard without judgment or retaliation, the company allows them to speak their own truth and start healing. Expert counsellors deliver trauma-sensitive treatment, which recognises the traumatic emotional and psychological consequences of abuse.

NYAWC’s mission is primarily about supporting survivors with education and training. Workshops and training programmes provide people with the skills they need to get by without abuse. Whether it is financial education courses or job training, these programmes promote hands-on competence and reestablish self-worth and agency. The empowerment focus enables the organisation to help survivors regain control and visualize a future without violence.

NYAWC also advocates for public policy and systems improvements in response to gendered violence. Working in alliances with local governments, the police and other nonprofits, the organisation pushes for changes that are protective of survivors and punishers. Its work goes even further, on immigration policy, where survivors who don’t have legal status can get protections without fear of deportation. These interventions are essential in creating a climate in which survivors can be found, both on a personal and a systemic scale.

The organisation understands that trauma is not to be dealt with one way only, and integrates mental health services. The counseling and psychotherapy are culturally and personally adapted for survivors’ specific challenges – both temporary and permanent. Such mental health attention recognises the underlying psychological cost of violence and also celebrates resilience and recovery. NYAWC’s trauma-informed care model shows that the institution knows how complicated recovery is.

Outreach and education is key to NYAWC’s work because it is essential to reduce the incidence of domestic violence, sexual assault and human trafficking among Asian populations. The agency organizes workshops, seminars and public meetings to overturn culture that is silenced around abuse. By reaching out to local leaders, religious institutions and other community groups, NYAWC builds awareness among all of these groups that survivors matter and removes the stigma surrounding getting help.

The work of the organisation is supported by an engaged cadre of staff and volunteers, all with cultural competence and compassion. Most of their team members are immigrants or survivors themselves so they are authentic and relate to the clients. This peer-to-peer model of care builds trust and shows how lived experience fuels recovery and transformation. Training and development keep employees up-to-date with evolving issues in the workplace.

NYAWC is also an invaluable tool for helping to solve the special problems of survivors of human trafficking. Its anti-trafficking initiatives provide tailored services, from the provision of legal advice and medical attention to case management, to this most marginalised group. Such efforts reveal the organisation’s flexibility and commitment to working through intersecting patterns of oppression and exploitation. In these initiatives, NYAWC illuminates an invisible problem and offers survivors a route to protection and healing.

With its broad services and constant pursuit of equity and justice, the New York Asian Women’s Center is an ally for hundreds of survivors. Not only does it meet the immediate needs of victims of abuse but also the structural causes of violence cycles. NYAWC provides survivors with opportunities for safety, strength and change by raising awareness in communities.