Young Asian woman
Resources
NEED HELP?
24-Hour Domestic
Violence Hotline
414-933-2722
Confidential

HAVE A FRIEND WHO MAY NEED HELP?

Facts that Family & Friends Should Know

The work with our clients is completely confidential and our primary concern is for their safety. We cannot release any information about clients, conversations, etc. However, if a client chooses to talk to family and friends about their experience, we encourage you to listen to them.

How You Can Help:

To be available to help someone else, it is very important that you take care of yourself. Make sure you have your own support system, talk with someone you trust and nurture your physical and mental health. Victims need support in many ways. You can help by following these important and sometimes difficult tips:

  • Be there to listen
  • Believe them
  • Allow them to make their own decisions and choices
  • Support their decisions and choices even if you would not do the same thing
  • Keep conversations private and confidential
  • Call them just to talk or to make sure they are safe
  • Create a code word/phrase so that you can ask if they are safe without anyone knowing what you’re really asking. (Example: If you ask, “Did I leave my red sweater at your house” and the answer is no that means, “I need help/police”.)
  • Offer to assist with childcare, transportation, housekeeping, cooking, etc. (when help is needed)
  • If your home is a safe place, allow them to keep important documents/items there (money, birth certificates, evidence of abuse, etc.) so that they do not get damaged/taken
  • Keep important phone numbers handy (shelters, police, crisis lines, etc.)
  • Avoid being judgmental or critical of choices and decisions they make.
  • Provide an unused cell phone so that they can call 911 for help if needed.
  • Emphasize how much you care about them
  • Encourage them
  • Educate yourself about family violence
  • Ask an advocate for a reading list or go to www.timetospeakup.org for more information. Resist the abuser’s attempts to “blame the victim” or justify the violence
  • Encourage the abuser to take responsibility and seek help for their abusive behavior

These tools may help create an environment that allows victims to feel secure, stable and confident in their decisions and in themselves.

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Sojourner Family Peace Center, P.O. Box 080319, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53208, 414-276-1911  414-727-2342 TTY

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Sojourner Family Peace Center is an Equal Opportunity employer and service provider operating under an Affirmative Action and Civil Rights Plan.