The house lights dim as 11 young women take the stage in a theater in New York City. This isnât a Broadway production, itâs the latest cohort of Girl Be Heard, an arts and leadership- centered organization performing their very own theatrical performance, âRise: The Pursuit of Utopia.â
The Brooklyn-based organization, which seeks âto advance dialogue about social justice issues, from racism to gender inequity,â teaches skills in activism, performance and communication in after-school and weekend programs, to help participants amplify their personal stories and work through their own trauma by using art and community healing.
More than 600 young people â girls, young women, and those who are gender expansive â are enrolled in their programming each year, and Girl Be Heard has performed in front of over 15,000 people globally.
âRise,â written and produced by the cast, reflects themes of liberation and community healing which Cynthia Renta, the executive director, said is integral to her organization.
âThe reality is that the community has a lot to do with the amount of validation, and the amount of support that they could be giving young people to make sure that they are journeying safely through life,â Renta said.
For her, the mission to help improve young peopleâs confidence and mental health is personal.
âI lost a very close friend to suicide, a beautiful Black woman artist in the community,â she said. âAnd at the same time that I was organizing her funeral. … I was actually coming on board to Girl Be Heard. And so in this time, that has also been a time of deep grief for myself and transformation for myself, I have found a clear connection for my work moving forward around mental health.â
âGirl Be Heardâ has helped thousands of young women. Three alumni have gone on to become New York City and National Youth Poet Laureate, and two others have been finalists or runners up.
The organization remains committed to supporting their participants, who come from very different backgrounds.
Anastasia Calixte, 20, is one of those women. Not too long ago, Calixte found herself sitting in the subway with all of her possessions in a suitcase.
âI was in the station with my suitcase, just sitting there like, I donât know where to go,â Calixte recalled. Calixte said she also struggled with her mental health while growing up.
An estimatedâŻ4.2 million youth and young adults âŻexperience homelessness in the U.S., putting them at an increased risk of mental illness, substance use and abuse.
âI did go through a lot of depression,â Calixte said. âI had lost a lot of my family members and a lot of my friends. So it was very tough to deal with my mind and the thoughts that would come up.â
She said she had to become her own advocate in order to persevere.
âWhen you donât have people who really are there for you, who would like, you know, tell you, âIâm proud of you, you go, girl!â You know, I have that now, but I didnât have that before. I had to be the one in my life to tell me, âyou got thisâ and âkeep going.ââ
Calixte eventually found a youth shelter in midtown Manhattan, where she and Divinity Nix-Sow, 20, learned about Girl Be Heard.
Both women now live independently, and they are paid to perform with the company. Nix-Sow said Girl Be Heard allowed her to discover her talents and voice as a poet.
âNo matter how much Iâve been through, or things that have tried to stop me, I never let it,â Nix-Sow said. âI never allowed it because thereâs something in my spirit that is called perseverance and thatâs something that I know that canât be taken away from me.â
Renta, the executive director, helps curate spaces where young women like Nix-Sow and Calixte can speak about their trauma and issues openly, in a nonjudgemental environment.
âWe are finding that young women have things to say that they donât have space to say them in,â she said. âThere are certainly huge, social issues that weâre seeing with young people. And it really starts with âare we making space for their voice?ââ Renta said.
âI want to, definitely, emphasize the importance of seeking clinical help, with mental health issues, but also promoting the power of community around, creating spaces of safety and inspiration and healing.â
Renta and the performers said they hope their organization can encourage others to create space for listening, learning and community healing.
âWe are in a crisis around connection within our society,â Renta said. âAnd so the more opportunity that we have for our young people to connect with each other and also see themselves reflected in each other, really, offers, wonderful opportunity for transformation for the future.â
But for Nix-Sow, performing and healing go hand in hand.
âWhen I feel like Iâm onstage,â she said, âmy only goal is to touch a heart, no matter if itâs one heart or a billion.â