Cal State Fullerton’s Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) organization collaborated with Access California Services and hosted the Stigma Arts writing workshop for SWANA students in the Diversity Initiatives Resource Center’s Brave Space on Monday.
Access California Services is a nonprofit organization that empowers communities such as the Arab American and Muslim American communites.
“Think of us as a one stop shop. When people come and they just feel lost, we help them from everything as soft as acculturating them to the customs of Southern California to some of the more concrete operational things,” said Maisune Abu-Elhaija, facilitator for the mental health workshops.
Though Access California Services predominantly focuses on serving the Arab American and Muslim American communities, they are part of a larger network of similar organizations under the Multi-Ethnic Collaborative of Community Agencies.
The goal of the workshop is to create a safe environment in a familiar space.
“We go out to the community and do workshops just like what we did today. So, we go to colleges, we go to local churches and mosques and we meet the people where they’re at,” said Sara Alsabbagh, the mental health service manager at Access California Services.
Monday’s workshop focused on using writing as a therapeutic outlet. At the workshop, prompts were provided, with some that asked to write about times of happiness, a moment they didn’t like how they felt about themselves and a self-description as if they were their own friend.
“When we think about self-love and self-care, writing about your mental health is literally like writing a letter to yourself or having a conversation with yourself. As much as it is important to talk to other people or seek professional help, it’s also important to love yourself in that way where you write messages about your own thoughts to yourself and analyze it and think about it and see it visually on paper,” Abu-Elhaija said.
The workshop aimed to break down the stigma surrounding mental health in the SWANA community.
“Because of the negative beliefs and the negative comments that we have about ourselves, that prevents us from getting help or seeking help and we continue to suffer throughout our lives without getting treatment,” Alsabbagh said.
Naser Alosaimi, a member of the SWANA community, said that men are often labeled as unmanly if they talk about mental health, but also noted the irony within that stigma from a religious perspective.
“The religion of Islam is really influenced in SWANA countries, and in that religion we always talk about, ‘It’s okay to talk about your problems, it’s okay to cry, it’s okay to do that,’ but it’s so weird that now we don’t follow what we used to do,” Alosaimi said.
The SWANA community is fighting for resources that are focused on cultural identity, along with a push for proper mental health resources which are equally important to the discussion of inclusivity on campus.
As a CSUF alumna, Abu-Elhaija stressed the significance of events such as the Stigma Arts workshop within the SWANA community.
“Making sure that our SWANA students are being taken care of and normalizing the conversation about mental health will help them as they kind of increase their own sense of belonging at this campus,” she said.
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