How You Can Support Us
Please help us. Your gracious tax deductible donation can be submitted online
using the following link:






or can be sent to:

Sacred Sistahs, Inc.
4790 Dovehurst Way
Fontana, CA, 92336,

Sacred Sistahs, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. For more information, you may also contact us at
info@sacredsistahsinc.com, or visit our website at www.sacredsistahsinc.org .

By and large, African American and Black women and children top the list of victims of violent crime, make up
increasing rates of health disparities, account for the greatest proportion of HIV/AIDs, and continue to
exist on the margins of society facing gender and economic inequities and injustices. Please keep in mind the
following statistics regarding the health and well-being of African American/Black Women:
  • One-quarter of the African American population lives in poverty, which negatively influences health
    status and complicates access to health services.
  • African American women are less likely than other women to get quality healthcare
  • “Mortality rates for African-American women are higher than any other racial or ethnic group for
    nearly every major cause of death, including breast cancer. Black women with breast cancer are nearly
    30% more likely to die from it than white women, and less likely to get life-saving treatments.”
  • “African-American women are 85% more likely to get diabetes, a major complication for heart disease.
    And, like breast cancer, more black women die from heart disease than white women.”
  • Research conducted by the Centers for Disease Control in neighborhood interviews with over 650
    African American women indicate that women with high levels of daily stress report poorer health and
    increased symptoms of depression.
  • “Young women, women who are separated, divorced or single, low- income women and African-American
    women are disproportionately victims of assault and rape.”
  • African American women are disproportionately affected by HIV.  Of all the women living with AIDS
    in the U.S., 60% are African American and two out of three African American women got HIV from
    having unprotected sex with a man.  In 2002, HIV/AIDS was the number 1 cause of death for African
    American women aged 25–34 years.
  • African American females and males have the highest rates of imprisonment in state or federal prisons
    and local jails by ethnicity and in all age groups in the United States.

In addition, African American children bear a disproportionate burden of many health and social problems as
well. For example:
  • One in four (26 percent) young women between the ages of 14 and 19 in the United States – or 3.2
    million teenage girls – is infected with at least one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases.
    One in two (fifty percent) of African-American women (48 percent) are infected with an STD,
    compared to one in five or (twenty percent) of young white women
  • The number of black teens having babies increased more than any other group in a recent study
    conducted by the Centers for Disease Control  
  • The percentage of pre-term birth and low birth weight is significantly higher among African American
    infants than among infants of any other ethnic group which can often have deleterious developmental
    effects affecting schooling.  
  • Infant, child, and adolescent mortality rates are higher for African Americans than for any other
    ethnic group.  
  • African American girls are among those at highest risk for becoming overweight.  As a result, some
    medical doctors recommend that African American female teenagers know their blood pressure,
    cholesterol, and blood sugar levels.
  • Research conducted by Cornell University shows that African women working on the African continent
    can negatively affect children's health in that it often diminishes the quantity or quality of child care
    resulting in serious adverse consequences for the health of preschool age children and
    disproportionately impinges on girls’ ability to attend school particularly if they have younger siblings
    to care for and other domestic responsibilities.  

Sacred Sistahs seeks to improve the overall self concept of these women and children so that they will
become productive and fully functioning members of world living their best lives and prepared to give the
world, and us, their best. It is our goal to empower these women and prevent our young women from becoming
statistics.

With your donation, you can join us in

  • Conducting rites of passage programs for young women with focused sessions on education, health, and
    financial literacy
  • Providing scholarships to eligible students wanting to attend college
  • Investing in and sponsoring African children’s,  especially girls’, educational expenses and providing
    information to African families on the benefits and options for education
  • Offering care packages to violated women and children at various local Women’s and Children’s Trauma
    Centers

We welcome your support of Sacred Sistahs, Inc. in its mission to empower, serve, and improve the overall
health and well-being of African American and African women and children through education and scholarships,
community service, rites of passage programs, mentorship, and sponsorship. Investing in the education of
young African women now will have longstanding benefits to us in the future by making the institutionalization
of education for all girls one that will cycle through generation after generation. What’s more, how
empowering for these women it would be if they could personally ensure that their daughter’s education
became a reality. We are reminded that “poor schooling for girls can have a devastating effect that is passed
on intergenerationally, since a mother's education is strongly linked to household income, daughters' education
and child health.”

Many Thanks,


Tonia Causey-Bush, Ph.D.
President/CEO, Sacred Sistahs, Inc.
Copyright Sacred Sistahs, Inc. All rights reserved.
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