RYSE to the Future, Now in the Past ✨

RYSE to the Future, Now in the Past ✨

From everyone here at RYSE, we’d like to thank our beloved community for attending Be a Kid! RYSE to the Future in April. We had a lot of fun and hope you did too!

We successfully raised $60,000 for RYSE’s Youth Emergency Care Fund. With your contribution, we are able to provide timely and direct funds to young people to access basic human rights – safe housing, food, and health services.

Happy Pride from RYSE: Appreciation for a Legacy of Power, Love and Care

Happy Pride from RYSE: Appreciation for a Legacy of Power, Love and Care

RYSE exists because twenty years ago, Queer and Trans BIPOC Young People had the courage to organize and demand a space in their city that centers their collective healing, bold visions, and immense creativity.  Young people who understood the assignment of justice for all, including the generations after them.  Today’s generation of youth and adults feel the power, love, and care of our youth founders as they enter the RYSE Campus. It is the foundation and ongoing  fire for us to take bold steps together toward RYSE’s Theory of Liberation.  

Double the Happiness, Double the Fun: AAPI Month at RYSE

Double the Happiness, Double the Fun: AAPI Month at RYSE

Turón, tulum, lumpia, spring rolls, punipuri, mango lasi, and thai tea aromas filled the kitchen toward the end of May at RYSE. This Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Month came with intention. The end result was a vibrant AAPI Spirit Week capped off with our first inaugural Asian Rysing: Double the Happiness, Double the Fun cultural event, but all of that vibrance started with our Asian Rysing staff and their drive to introduce the space to the specific tastes, sounds, fashions, and arts the community has to offer.

International Women's Month at RYSE

International Women's Month at RYSE

A mid-March conversation with RYSE’s Community Health Program Manager, Fahima Zaman, was filled with an electricity reflective of the dedicated, forward-thinking energy felt at our Health Justice Center. Threaded into RYSE’s core values, we took some time to discuss health for femme-identified youth, including cis, trans, non-binary, gender non-conforming youth in 2024. A generation is coming of age amidst an old struggle in a new landscape and Fahima noticed one pattern: members just want access to knowledge.

Liberation for All of Us: Black Future's Month at RYSE

Liberation for All of Us: Black Future's Month at RYSE

This Black Future’s Month we reflect on Black joy, laughter, healing, togetherness, rage, creativity, community, solidarity, food, fashion…all things past, all things present, and imagined futures. If you strike up a conversation with young people here on campus, you are bound to hear about their dreams: some explain theirs at a whisper, some exclaim theirs loud enough for the area to hear, and regardless of which, this expression is why we’re here. Young people and their futures are unwritten and full of possibility…

2023 RYSE Member LIT

2023 RYSE Member LIT

Young people's experience at RYSE, the relationships between members and with staff, and whether young people feel safe, loved, listened to, powerful and like they belong are the most important measures of whether RYSE is successful in meeting our Theory of Liberation goals. 

Every year, RYSE asks young people to share their feedback - this informs our programs and work in the year ahead. 

In May 2023, for the first time since we have been back in person in RYSE's new campus, 86 members shared their opinions.

Decolonization Month

Decolonization Month

As RYSE honors our ancestors for Dia De Los Muertos, we invite the community to participate in our digital Altar here. On our hearts and minds in the RYSE community are the members and staff we lost over the years, the ancestors listed below, as well as the community members whose names never got lifted up. From November 1st through the 10th we will have an altar in the space for community members to visit and add the names of their loved ones who have passed away.