Team Members
Simran holds a dual bachelor’s degree in American Studies and Political Science from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and a dual master’s degree in Public Administration and Social Policy from the University of Pennsylvania. She currently serves as a board member for Building Movement Project and Borealis Philanthropy and is a proud member of Universal Partnership’s Warriors for Embodied Liberation. In her spare time, she loves to read, create music, travel, and spend time with family.Based in Philadelphia, PA, Simran was born into a Punjabi Sikh, Hindu, and Parsi family in New Delhi and raised outside Baltimore, MD.
Wanda is an Afro-Boricua powerhouse for the grassroots of the South Bronx. Determined to build
people power into economic power for black and brown women, Wanda is on the cutting edge of the social equity reparations cannabis initiative in New York State. Rooted in decades of organizing low-income tenants, marginalized youth and immigrant women, Wanda aims to build worker-owned cooperative businesses that keep wealth in the community.
Wanda has been Executive Director of MOM since 2002, developing leadership among people of color at the intersection of education, environment, housing and economic justice.
Wanda’s vision for empowering Bronx residents was born at the age of ten when she arrived to the South Bronx from Carolina, Puerto Rico in 1975. The Bronx was “burning” as building owners set their run-down buildings on fire for insurance, leaving tenant families out in the cold, devastated by demolition and abandonment. Wanda organized the girls on her block to clean up and reclaim an abandoned lot and form a baseball diamond and the first girls’ baseball team in the neighborhood.
She is the recipient of the Diario La Prensa Latina of the Year Award, 2000; A City Council Proclamation of Recognition 2001; and the Uptown Girl Power Majora Carter Award in 2009 and the Comité Noviembre “Lo Mejor de Nuestra Comunidad” Award in 2020.
Rusia is authoring several books, one based on over 2 decades of organizing, that introduces a new model for social change in the 21st century. Drawing from experiences as a master trainer and facilitator, an executive director, and a frontline organizer, Rusia has piloted this new community organizing model, Embodied Organizing™, for the past four years and officially launched the program in 2018 with five organizations. To date, 400 organizers from over 47
organizations, across 25 states have been training to be Embodied Organizers.
Rusia has also developed a model for coaching social change agents, called Embodied Coaching™, that is based on her developed model of embodied leadership.
Over the last 25 years, Rusia has primarily worked in non-profit, community-based organizations and foundations across the U.S. Her organizing career started with 9 years as a street-level community organizer, & grew to leading organizations, notably helping to establish Families United for Racial & Economic Equality, co-founding the national intermediary, Social Justice Leadership, and as the Founder of Ma Mukti. More recently, Rusia is currently the founder and principal of UP and the CO-Director of Ma Mukti. Through this experience & her many years as a trainer, coach & consultant, Rusia
brings a well-grounded expertise of basic to advanced organizing training as well as
organizational & leadership development.
From 2000 to 2016, she was employed with the NYC Administration for Children’s Services. Maria also taught Pre-Kindergarten and volunteered as an art teacher with the Mary Mitchell & Family Center.
For the past 20 years, she has worked with a diverse group of global and local stakeholders to challenge the policies that limit communities, especially Black and Brown women, girls, and femmes, from reaching their full potential. Her perspectives are rooted in an experience that includes being a law student in her native Dominican Republic, an immigrant grassroots Bronx organizer and pioneering co-founder of Sisterhood of Survivors, a Florida-based group led by survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault, Executive Director at the Miami Workers Center, a workers rights community-based organization. Through it all, Olivo remains committed to bringing a gender lens to social and economic justice and unapologetically centering solutions on the leadership of black and brown femmes.
Under Cristina’s leadership, UWD grew into a powerful network of one million members that shifted the politics and narrative about immigrants and immigration, ultimately delivering policy changes at the local and national levels. Cristina was instrumental in United We Dream’s successful campaign for President Obama to sign Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) into law.
In recognition of her work as a community organizer and movement strategist, Cristina received a 2017 MacArthur Fellowship, the Four Freedoms Award, and a spot on the 2018 TIME 100 Most Influential People List. Cristina has appeared in hundreds of national and local media outlets including USA Today, CNN, MSNBC, HBO, The New York Times, the LA Times, ABC, NPR, The Huffington Post, Univision, Telemundo, and La Opinion. Her writing has been published in The New York Times, CNN, USA Today, Huffington Post, and El Diario. She currently serves on the board of the Hazen Foundation, Rockwood, Equis Labs, Make the Road New York Action, and the Dream.US.
cjimenez28@gmail.com
Born in a political family, people were an everyday part of my life. From sunrise to midnight, our house was filled with people waiting to meet my father to resolve issues of their life. At a very early stage of my life, my father instilled in me an influence to help people in any way I can, even if it was just giving away a favorite toy or sharing chocolates. “Always put people above your own interest” my father would tell me. Putting a smile on someone’s face was like an eternal feeling that gave a sense of great satisfaction to my father which he passed onto his children.
As a child, beautiful creations always inspired me. I was privileged to grow up in a landmark mansion, all the intricate details of the house left a lasting impression on me. Entering the house was sequential, first a dark room then a lighted room, then a low ceiling, and then finally high ceilings then moments of light coming in passing through the wide verandas wrapped around the house. Such alternation of spaces used to mesmerize me. My favorite game was to follow the rays of sunlight filtering through the high clerestory windows of our house as if it was playing hide and seek through the colored stained glass windows creating a kaleidoscopic pattern on the floor. I used to dance along with the shifting rays of the sun, choreographing the experience.
Ssimple things like doing a drawing or organizing a space in my home or even cooking a meal for someone used to give me lots of pleasure and soon I realized my passion for creativity and serving people. Inspired by such rich memories from childhood defined my passion to create meaningful spaces that make a difference in people’s lives.
Even though the journey to become an Architectural Designer was not an easy path but at the end of the day the profession gives a great sense of satisfaction to see the fruit of our labor and the smile on our client’s face, makes it all worthwhile.
Through this foundation, I eagerly anticipate acquiring the knowledge to spark and empower leadership among women of color, leading them towards a shared and tangible sense of liberation.
maliha.86321@gmail.com
zaida@northwestbronx.org
angel6g@gmail.com
stephbhess@gmail.com
mithuf@yahoo.com
Rusia is authoring several books, one based on over 2 decades of organizing, that introduces a new model for social change in the 21st century. Drawing from experiences as a master trainer and facilitator, an executive director, and a frontline organizer, Rusia has piloted this new community organizing model, Embodied Organizing™, for the past four years and officially launched the program in 2018 with five organizations. To date, 400 organizers from over 47
organizations, across 25 states have been training to be Embodied Organizers.
Rusia has also developed a model for coaching social change agents, called Embodied Coaching™, that is based on her developed model of embodied leadership.
Over the last 25 years, Rusia has primarily worked in non-profit, community-based organizations and foundations across the U.S. Her organizing career started with 9 years as a street-level community organizer, & grew to leading organizations, notably helping to establish Families United for Racial & Economic Equality, co-founding the national intermediary, Social Justice Leadership, and as the Founder of Ma Mukti. More recently, Rusia is currently the founder and principal of UP and the CO-Director of Ma Mukti. Through this experience & her many years as a trainer, coach & consultant, Rusia
brings a well-grounded expertise of basic to advanced organizing training as well as
organizational & leadership development.
From 2000 to 2016, she was employed with the NYC Administration for Children’s Services. Maria also taught Pre-Kindergarten and volunteered as an art teacher with the Mary Mitchell & Family Center.
maria@mamukti.org
meelee2@yahoo.com
chhaya@seafn.org
julissa.bisono@maketheroadny.org
Under Cristina’s leadership, UWD grew into a powerful network of one million members that shifted the politics and narrative about immigrants and immigration, ultimately delivering policy changes at the local and national levels. Cristina was instrumental in United We Dream’s successful campaign for President Obama to sign Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) into law.
In recognition of her work as a community organizer and movement strategist, Cristina received a 2017 MacArthur Fellowship, the Four Freedoms Award, and a spot on the 2018 TIME 100 Most Influential People List. Cristina has appeared in hundreds of national and local media outlets including USA Today, CNN, MSNBC, HBO, The New York Times, the LA Times, ABC, NPR, The Huffington Post, Univision, Telemundo, and La Opinion. Her writing has been published in The New York Times, CNN, USA Today, Huffington Post, and El Diario. She currently serves on the board of the Hazen Foundation, Rockwood, Equis Labs, Make the Road New York Action, and the Dream.US.
cjimenez28@gmail.com
mejicuba@gmail.com
Specialties: Community organizing and Volunteer training, Development, Program development and event planning.
mogeorgew4@gmail.com