In July of 2025, the Foundation was pleased to announce funding for the Narrative Justice Project. The project was created by our Treasurer, Geeta Kohli, Esq., in 2019, through her work with the New York Foundation for the Arts. The Narrative Justice Project explores the intersection of social justice and feminist culture.
The Foundation’s donation will fund the work of 3 MFA students from Columbia University, who will help law students prepare written contributions to the magazine, “Justice Reads.”
The three Fellows are:
Britt Middleton, a novelist, poet, and journalist from Los Angeles. She is an alum of the Yale Writers’ Workshop and a former finalist of Disney Entertainment Television’s Writing Program (Comedy).
Rachel Mikita, a writer and poet from Blacklick, PA, and Flint, TX, currently based in Brooklyn, NY. She was the winner of the Columbia Journal 2022 Print Poetry Contest, and a finalist for The Plentitudes 2023 Prize in Poetry.
Jessica Hoppe, a Honduran Ecuadorian writer and the author of “First in the Family” (Flatiron Books, 2024), which was longlisted for the Brooklyn Public Library Book Prize and selected by Esquire, People, San Francisco Chronicle, Marie Claire, Latina Media, and HipLatina as one of the best books of 2024.
The Foundation wishes these three all the best in their work with the Narrative Justice Project this year!
NYWBA FELLOWSHIP AT SANCTUARY FOR FAMILIES
By Rachel Blume, Law Student, Fordham University School of Law
For the final semester of my law school career, I had the opportunity to work with the Immigration Intervention Project at Sanctuary for Families. I had previously worked closely with survivors of gender-based violence and my work at Sanctuary expanded my horizons to the intersection of different legal challenges immigrant gender-based violence survivors face. This niche area of law provided me with new challenges in learning how to communicate with clients to gather important information while balancing their need to share their stories and receive validation. For many clients, speaking about the abuse they endured was very difficult. I used my trauma-informed lawyering skills to ask questions in a way that made clients feel as comfortable as possible discussing some of the worst moments of their lives.
I worked with two incredible attorneys on the Immigration Intervention Project, Deirdre Stradone and Elizabeth Wood. I enjoyed having multiple supervising attorneys because I learned unique strategies from both about how to approach client meetings, drafting motions, and revising my own work. They both provided me with great feedback that I hope to incorporate in my future legal career.
This semester I worked several different types of immigration cases with clients from around the world with a common goal of finding safety and security in the United States. These clients’ vulnerabilities made working with them even more challenging than other previous survivors I had worked with in separate contexts. I worked on several asylum cases in the beginning of the semester and this experience gave me insight into the nuances of drafting a strong asylum application for clients. Working asylum clients made me appreciate the need for trauma-informed lawyering and bringing in my prior experience working with survivors of domestic and sexual violence. I enhanced and honed my communication skills by working with asylum clients as well as clients on other types of immigration cases.
I also worked in filing for a Special Immigrant Juvenile Status case for a young woman about to age out of the ability to file for the status. This case showed me the interactions between family court and immigration courts and the movement between the two systems to help secure legal status. Additionally, I aided in filing for VAWA application and T-Visa application. Getting to work on multiple types of cases taught me about how to frame my legal arguments in the best light possible to make it easy for others to understand and clear why my clients qualified for these statuses.
Working for Sanctuary also allowed me to understand the challenges non-profit organizations face in terms of caseload and resources. There are so many people in need of help and the lawyers often take on many cases to try to give their advice to as many people possible. This sometimes means that lawyers work on tight deadlines and are constantly managing cases and clients. The attorneys at Sanctuary do a great job at making their clients feel respected, valued and cared for. This work showed me how much more we should be contributing to agencies like Sanctuary that do so much for our community.
This experience made me appreciate how complex immigration cases are and the struggles immigration clients face trying to establish their lives here in the United States. Immigration clients often have a multitude of needs beyond seeking legal status and aiding them involves helping to connect them to many different resources and systems that can help meet the needs. As a lawyer, it is natural to want to fix all of your clients’ problems but often that puts an enormous toll on attorneys and creates unrealistic workloads that prevent cases from progressing. Working at Sanctuary has taught me to better understand my role as a legal advocate and when I need to outsource certain areas of concern to different support systems. I truly enjoyed working at Sanctuary and will take the skills I learned with me in my future legal work.